After my short call with Bibiana, Iâd retired into the library. It was stocked mainly with non-fiction and old classics, nothing I was usually drawn to, but I didnât want to go in search for Dante, nor did I want to ask my mother if she wanted to come over. She would have thought something was wrong, and even though that was probably the case, I didnât want her to find out. Sheâd been so happy since she found out I was going to be Danteâs wife. I didnât want to ruin it for her by admitting that Dante couldnât care less about my presence.
I grabbed a book that taught basic Russian. The only languages I spoke were Italian and English. I might as well get familiar with the language our enemies spoke, and it would keep me occupied in the hours Dante was busy ignoring me.
Eventually, the growling of my stomach lured me in the direction of the kitchen. It was already almost seven but nobody had called me for dinner. As I entered the kitchen, I found Zita, Gaby and two men gathered around the wooden table, eating dinner together.
I hesitated in the doorway, unsure if I should enter, but then Zita glanced my way and I couldnât back out anymore. I slipped inside, feeling acutely overdressed in my sleek brown dress. Everyone turned my way, and the two men rose immediately. They wore gun and knife holsters over their black shirts. Both were in their late thirties, and probably the guards.
âThe Master has already had dinner in his office,â Zita informed me.
âI was busy reading anyway,â I said, hoping I sounded indifferent. I focused on the two men still standing and watching me. âWe havenât met yet.â
I strode toward them and I extended my hand to the taller man with a buzz cut and a scar in his eyebrow. âIâm Valentina.â
âEnzo,â he said.
âTaft,â said the other man. He was a couple of inches smaller but much bulkier.
âCan I join you for a quick dinner?â I might just as well try to get familiar with the people I would see every day in the next few years, maybe longer.
Both men agreed at once. Gaby, too, seemed excited about the prospect of my presence; only Zita had trouble hiding her disapproval. âAre you sure this is what you want?â She gestured at the spread of cheeses, the Parma ham and the lovely Italian bread.
âI wouldnât have asked if I wasnât,â I said as I took the seat beside Taft. He held up a bottle of wine. I nodded and took one of the rustic wine glasses from a tray at the end of the table. The wine was delicious and so was the food. I kept my eyes on Gaby, who thankfully wasnât drinking wine. Taft and Enzo didnât look at her in any way that would suggest they were interested in her, which calmed me further, but I couldnât forget the look of fear on her face when Luca had jumped to his feet. Of course he was a scary guy on the best of days, but there had been more. I had a feeling that Gaby had learned to fear men. I only needed to find out why. Taft and Enzo stopped after their second glass of wine; they still had guard duty until the morning and could hardly do their job drunk, but Zita and I emptied the bottle. With alcohol in her bloodstream, Zita seemed much nicer. Or maybe my own tipsiness made me blind to her rudeness. Either way, I enjoyed myself thoroughly. The men knew how to tell dirty jokes, and soon forgot that I was practically their boss.
After another particularly lewd joke that had Gaby hiding her face in her hands and me laughing like I hadnât laughed in a long time, the door to the kitchen opened and Dante stepped in. His eyes did a quick scan of the room until they settled on his men, then me. His jaw tensed as he glowered at Taft and Enzo. âShouldnât you be outside keeping guard?â Dante asked in a dangerously quiet voice.
Both men stood at once. They fled the kitchen without another word.
âGaby and I should head home too. Weâll clean the kitchen tomorrow,â Zita said as she grabbed her coat and put it on. âCome on, Gaby.â Gaby shot me an apologetic look, although sheâd done nothing wrong.
Two minutes later, Dante and I were alone in the kitchen. I had done nothing forbidden, so I had no intention of apologizing. I emptied my red wine, my eyes on Dante, who seemed to become perfectly still as he watched me. Preparing to pounce, it shot through my head. I rose from my chair. In a standing position, at least, I didnât have to tilt my head all the way back to look Dante in the eyes.
âWhy did you eat with Enzo and Taft?â
I almost laughed. âGaby and Zita were there too.â Was he jealous? Or did he think I was distracting the men from work?
âYou could have eaten in the dining room.â
âAlone?â I asked in a challenging tone.
Dante advanced on me, and despite my best intentions I froze. âI donât play games, Valentina. If thereâs something you donât like, then say it and donât try to provoke me.â
He stood so close, the spicy scent of his aftershave flooded my nose. I had to fight the urge to grab him by his lapels and pull him in for a kiss.
âI wasnât trying to provoke you,â I said matter-of-factly. âI was hungry and I didnât want to eat by myself, so I decided to eat in the kitchen.â
âYou should keep your distance to the guards. I donât want people to misconstrue your friendliness with something else.â
I took a step back. âAre you accusing me of flirting with your men?â
âNo,â he said simply. âWe would have a different kind of conversation if I thought you were flirting with them.â
I raised my chin, unwilling to let him intimidate me, no matter how intimidating he was. âI wonât eat alone.â
âWould you prefer we have dinner together every night?â
âOf course, I do,â I said exasperatedly. There were many things I wanted to do together with him at night. âWe are married. Isnât that what married people do?â
âDid you and Antonio eat together?â
âYes, unless he was away for work.â Or had a date with his lover Frank.
Dante nodded, as if he was filing away the information. Iâd heard someone once say that he had a photographic memory, which made him a difficult opponent to outsmart, but I wasnât sure if it was true.
I softened my voice. âWhat about you and your first wife? Did you eat together?â
I could practically see his defenses coming up. A veil of cold emotionlessness seemed to slide over his face. He pushed up his sleeve, revealing his gold watch. âItâs late. I have an early morning with meetings in our casinos.â
âOh, sure.â
âYou donât have to go to bed if youâre not tired.â
âNo, the wineâs making me sleepy.â We both walked out of the kitchen and headed upstairs. This time Dante disappeared in the bathroom first. I rummaged in my drawer for a skimpy satin camisole and matching panties that barely covered my butt. Maybe that would get Danteâs cold blood boiling.
I nervously paced the bedroom, wondering if tonight would be the night. Maybe yesterday had been a sort of grace period. The door of the bathroom opened and Dante stepped back into the bedroom. Like yesterday he was naked from the waist up. I allowed myself a few moments to admire his body. Even the scars didnât make him any less gorgeous. If possible they added to his sexiness. Dante paused and I quickly tore my eyes away and rushed into the bathroom.
I took a quick shower and brushed my teeth before I slipped into my lingerie. Showtime. I stepped out of the bathroom. Dante was already in bed, his iPad in hand and back propped up against the headboard. He looked up, eyes wandering the length of my body, lingering on all the right places. Anticipation mixed with nerves filled me as I slowly walked toward the bed, making sure Dante got a good look at me. He hadnât looked away yet, but he hadnât put down his iPad either. I stretched out beside him, my back against the headboard. I didnât bother pulling the covers up. I wanted Dante to see as much of me as possible.
I met his gaze. As usual his eyes were unreadable, but they werenât quite as cool as usual. He set the iPad down on his nightstand and I almost sighed with relief, but then he shifted and lay down. Confused, I did the same, but I rolled onto my side, facing his way. He hadnât turned the lights out yet. That had to be a good sign, and I knew he kept glancing toward my breasts. If I was more experienced, I would have initiated things, but I worried about revealing my inexperience to Dante if I risked it. If he made the first move, I could go along with him and would hopefully appear like the experienced woman I was supposed to be.
Dante tore his gaze away, closed his eyes and crossed his arms in front of his stomach. His jaw was locked tightly. Was he angry? He looked like he was on the verge of bursting. Maybe he didnât like that I was being so forward and practically shoving my breasts into his face. Maybe he preferred his women demure and scared of their own shadow.
Frustrated, I rolled onto my back as well. âWhat happened to Gaby?â If we didnât have sex, we might as well talk. Anything was better than the awkward silence.
Dante kept his eyes closed. âWhat do you mean?â
âShe said sheâs been working for you for three years, but sheâs only seventeen. Shouldnât she be going to school?â
Danteâs eyes peeled open, cool and blue, and firmly focused on the ceiling. âThree years ago we attacked two Russian clubs as retribution. Theyâre making the majority of their money with human trafficking. The women in their clubs are mostly sex slaves. Women and girls who were kidnapped and then forced into prostitution. When we took over the two clubs, we had to figure out what to do with the women. We couldnât let them run around Chicago after what theyâd witnessed.â
My stomach turned. âYou killed them?â
Dante didnât even twitch. âMost of them were illegals. We sent them back into the Ukraine or Russia. The others were relocated. Those who wanted to work in our clubs, we kept.â
âSo what about Gaby?â
âShe was a child. The younger girls we found were sent to families, where they could work as maids or cooks.â
âOr become mistresses,â I said, because I had no doubt that some Made Men couldnât let their hands off a helpless girl under their roof.
Dante frowned. âEven among Made Men, pedophilia isnât tolerated, Valentina.â
âI know, but Gaby doesnât exactly look like a child anymore, nor do the other girls you captured, I presume.â
Dante fixed me with a hard glare. âAre you suggesting I touched Gaby?â
âShe almost died from fear today when Luca moved. Maybe one of your menâ¦â
âNo,â Dante said firmly. âShe hasnât been abused in any way since she came into this house. Sheâs under my protection. My men know that.â
âOkay.â I believed him, and I also believed that none of his men dared to go against Danteâs direct orders. If Gaby was under his protection, she was safe. âI bet those girls would have made you a lot of money. Thereâs a reason why the Russians kidnap young girls. Why the qualms? Itâs not like the Outfit hasnât its own clubs with prostitutes, and itâs not like those women can just stop working for the mob whenever they want.â I was honestly curious. Dante was a killer after all.
âThe Outfit isnât in the business of sex slaves. The women in our clubs start working for us on their own free will and they know that theyâll be bound to us forever. We make enough money with our casinos and drugs, we donât need sex slaves or illegal racing like the Russians and the Familia in Las Vegas.â
âWhat about New York, do they deal in sex slaves?â
âNo. Thatâs really only the Vegas Familia. Iâm not saying that there arenât voices in the Outfit who would like to change that, but as long as Iâm Capo that wonât happen.â
âThatâs good,â I said.
Danteâs eyes softened for a moment but then he turned away and extinguished the lights.
âGood night,â I whispered. I was still disappointed that Dante didnât touch me, but at least heâd talked to me as if we were equals, not like I was a brainless woman who didnât need to know anything about the business.
âGood night, Valentina,â Dante said into the dark. There was something in his voice I couldnât identify and I was too tired to try.