Kieran takes one look at my face when I open the door and bursts into laughter.
I growl, âShut it. Iâm in no mood.â
âAs if I couldnât tell by that mug yer wearinâ.â He peers around my shoulder. âWhereâs the missus?â
âHeating her cauldron. Is that everything?â
âAye. Just the few bags. Sheâs a light packer.â
I mutter, âMustâve left all the spell books and potions at home.â
When Kieran makes a face at me, I sigh. âNever mind. Weâll meet you downstairs in twenty minutes.â
âDonât ye want to know how yer party went?â
âDeclan already told me.â
He purses his lips in dissatisfaction. âDid he tell ye I spent half the night flirtinâ with a Mafia lass and the other half dancinâ with her?â
âDo yourself a favor, lad. Stay away from the Italians. Theyâre murder on the nerves.â
Kieran and I bring Reynaâs bags in, along with a fresh suit for me that he picked up. Then he leaves to wait for us in the car. A few minutes later, a hotel employee arrives with the dresses I ordered up from the boutique. I tip her, wondering why her face is red, then realize Iâve still got nothing on but the towel.
When sheâs gone and Iâve dressed, I knock on the bathroom door.
âYour clothes are here.â
When Reyna doesnât answer when I knock again, a twinge of panic twists my stomach. I try the handle, but the door is locked.
âWoman, open this door.â
Nothing.
I rattle the handle. âYouâve got five seconds!â
Still nothing.
My brain presents me with a series of awful images, starting with a weeping Reyna sitting on the toilet with her head in her hands and accelerating directly to her lying naked in a pool of blood, her wrists slit, her skin blue, and her eyes wide open as they stare sightlessly at the ceiling.
My heart pounding and my breath coming fast, I rear back and give the door a hard kick.
It flies open and slams against the wall with a crash.
Wrapped in a towel, Reyna leans against the bathroom sink, filing her nails and smiling at me.
âI wondered how long that would take you. The silent treatment can be so annoying, canât it?â
Relieved, frustrated, and angry, I snap, âDonât do that again.â
She looks me up and down with an expression like I just staggered in off the street, covered in my own vomit.
I turn and grab her suitcases. I toss those into the bathroom, then go back for the wrapped packages from the boutique. I drop them onto the floor just inside the door.
âGet dressed. You have ten minutes.â
âWhere are we going?â
âOut!â
Half an hour later, she sashays out of the bathroom with her nose in the air like sheâs a socialite attending a fundraiser for her least favorite charity.
Iâd say something about that bitchy look on her face and how late she is, but I canât speak.
Sheâs wearing a sleeveless red dress. It appears to be at least one size too small, if not two. The neckline is plunging, from which her ample tits are spilling out. Her waist is cinched like sheâs got a corset on, her legs are bare, her stilettos are sky high, and all I can see are curves for days.
Gazing at me in cool silence, she raises her brows.
I have to pause for a rough throat clearing before I can talk. âWhy didnât you wear one of the white dresses?â
âI hate white.â
âItâs the color of new beginnings.â
âItâs the color of innocence.â Her smile is lethal. âI didnât want you to get the wrong idea.â
I growl, âNobody could ever mistake you for innocent, viper.â
âGood. By the way, what moron thought I wear a size small?â
âThis moron.â
Holding my gaze, her voice low and smooth, she says, âDear husband. You should know by now that thereâs nothing small about me.â
We stare at each other across the room. And of courseâbecause I clearly have a problemâmy dick starts to get hard.
She glances down at the growing bulge in my trousers, and her lethal smile grows wider.
I cross the room, take her by the arm, and head to the front door, guiding her along.
She pulls her arm from my grip and says acidly, âIâm able to walk without a rabid service animal, thank you.â
Opening the front door, I make a grand sweeping gesture, complete with a mocking bow.
She walks past me like a queen past smelly beggars.
Once weâre in the car, she decides her hatred of mankind doesnât extend to Kieran.
Sitting forward on the back seat of the SUV, she says to him, âSo tell me all about the reception. Did you have fun?â
âAch, did I! Met one of yer kin that I fancied. Wee lass named Aria?â
âThatâs Leoâs daughter! Oh, sheâs the prettiest thing, isnât she?â
âAye.â Kieran whistles, his cheeks turning pink. âWhat a wetser. With the sweetest little arse Iâve ever seen in myââ He cuts off abruptly, sending a horrified glance over his shoulder. âSorry, lass. Iâm an eejit. Just ask Spider.â
She waves a hand and laughs. âDonât be silly. I donât mind.â
I growl, âYou mind if I breathe in your general direction, but you donât mind about that?â
Ignoring me, she says, âHow did everyone get along? Were there any altercations?â
âAltercations? Nah, it was pure craic! Half the lads were ossified, the other half were fluthered! And the Bettys were bleedinâ deadly on both sides, so there was plenty of tonsil tennis goinâ on. If they werenât on the dance floor, they were in dark corners, wearinâ the face off each other.â
âSo translated that means everyone had fun?â
âYer bang on they did!â
She exhales a relieved breath and sits back against her seat. âThatâs good to hear. I was worried. You know how dangerous putting a bunch of oversized egos into one room can be.â
I say, âWas that jab about egos directed at me?â
âNot everything is about you, Prince of Arrogance.â
âThatâll be King of Arrogance, if you please.â
After shooting me a sharp glare, she turns her attention back to Kieran. âSo where are we going?â
He sounds confused. âSpider didnât tell ye?â
âWeâre not on speaking terms at the moment. You tell me.â
He sends me a look in the rearview mirror. âErâ¦forgive me, lass, but if itâs all right, Iâd rather stay out of a marital spat. I tried to intervene between my ma and da once and only got a savage slap about for the trouble.â
She folds her hands in her lap and crosses her legs. âThen I guess it will have to be a surprise.â
We drive through the city center to an industrial area near the docks. Itâs crammed with warehouses and shipping containers waiting to be filled and sent across the Atlantic. We pull up in front of one of them, a big white brick building with bars over the windows, and Kieran parks.
Looking out the window at the parking lot, Reyna appears bored.
The stubborn woman wonât ask me where we are.
But when I say, âYouâll want a gun for this,â she whips her head around and stares at me.
âFor what?â
âWeâre meeting with the heads of the other four Mafia families.â
Ah, that look of shock on her face is so bloody satisfying, heat rushes to my balls.
â
â
âDunno. They called the meet. You tell me.â
Obviously unsettled, she frowns. âThereâs supposed to be a vote for the new capo.â
âSo why isnât Gianni here?â
âHow do you know he isnât?â
âThey told us he wasnât invited.â
She ponders that in silence, then shakes her head. âThat doesnât make sense. Heâs the head of the family. And the vote was supposed to happen tomorrow, not today.â She glances out the window again, this time with a wary expression. âMamma said he didnât go to the reception. He never went back to the hotel last night, either.â
Declanâs already told me about the vote and that Gianni was missing from the reception, but the news about him not going back to the hotel is new.
In our world, when someone goes missing, it only means one of a few things.
None of them are good.
From the pocket on the back of the driverâs seat, I remove a handgun. I check to ensure thereâs a round in the barrel, then hold it out to Reyna. âYou know how to shoot a Glock?â
âIt canât be that hard. You know how to do it.â She takes the gun from my hand.
When I shrug out of my suit jacket, she says, âWhat are you doing now?â
âYouâre not walking into a room full of made men looking like that.â
She says coyly, âLike what?â
I give her a hard stare. âPut on the goddamn jacket.â
She thinks about arguing, but apparently decides better of it. She shrugs and slips the jacket on, rolling up the cuffs.
âButton it.â
She levels me with a look, but Iâm in no mood for sass.
âTo the top.â
âI want you to know the only reason Iâm wearing your jacket is because I donât have anywhere to stash the gun in this miniscule dress you bought me.â
âToo bad you forgot to bring your bag of skulls. You couldâve put it in there.â
She smiles sweetly at me. âItâs only got space for one more. I was saving it for yours.â She opens the door and gets out.
After sheâs gone, Kieran looks at me in the rear view mirror. âI really like her.â
âThatâs because youâve got the common sense of a carrot.â
âJust because ye donât know how to handle her doesnât mean I canât like her!â
âI know how to handle her perfectly bloody well!â
He smiles. âSure ye do. Let me get back to ye when my eardrums have healed, and weâll have a lovely chat all about it.â
Muttering, I exit the Escalade and walk around the back to where Reynaâs waiting. Iâm all ready to have a scuffle over her not buttoning my suit jacket, but to my great surprise, sheâs done it.
âReady?â
âIâm not sure going in there alone is a good idea.â
âWe wonât be alone. Everyone else is already here.â
She quirks an eyebrow at me. âWhoâs everyone?â
I canât help the smile that lifts my lips. âYouâre in the Mob now, darlin.â Youâll never be alone again.â
A flare of emotion warms her eyes. Or maybe Iâm imagining it. Either way, she looks away before I can decide.
I expect her to pull away when I take her hand, but she doesnât. She lets me lead her from the parking lot around the side of the building to a door at the top of a ramp. A big bald man in a black suit waits at the top, his hands folded over his crotch, his legs spread apart, and his face as blank as a brick wall.
âPatrick.â
He inclines his head respectfully, greeting me in Gaelic. He also inclines his head to Reyna, but doesnât look her in the eye. Heâs three hundred pounds of pure muscle, but he canât bring himself to gaze directly at her face.
Funny how everyone else can sense sheâs a swamp witch, too.
He opens the door for us. We go inside with Kieran following. It takes a moment for my eyes to adjust to the low light.
Standing in the middle of the shadowy, empty warehouse is a group of five men. All are in expensive dark suits. All exude an air of danger and power.
Declanâs the only one I recognize.
Standing several feet away from the group are more men in suits, but these are soldiers, not leaders. Though theyâre all Italian, and Iâve never met any of them, I can spot the difference a mile away.
Lining the walls of the warehouse are our lads.
I wonder how many of them are nursing nasty hangovers from last night.
Declan turns, sees us, and lifts his chin. Hand in hand, we slowly walk toward him.
Under her breath, Reyna says, âThe one with all the hair to the left of Declan is Massimo, head of the DeLuca family. Heâs clever, but he canât be trusted. Heâs only out for himself. To the right is Tomasi Berlasconi. Heâs as dumb as a rock. Next to him in the dark gray suit is Alessandro Ricci. Heâs a good man. Brilliant strategist. Enzo used to call him the General. In the pinstripe is Aldo LaRosa.â
The tense note that crept into her tone when she said that last name makes me look at her. âWhat about him?â
âIâll tell you later.â
âTell me now.â
She hesitates. âHe canât be trusted, either.â
Iâd press her for more details, but weâve crossed the warehouse and are now standing in front of the group. Kieran stands off to the side with our men.
Relaxed and smiling, Declan says, âMr. and Mrs. Quinn. Sorry to interrupt your morning.â
I expect Reyna to make a smart remark, but she maintains her composure and simply says, âGood morning, Declan.â Then she greets each of the Italians by name in turn.
She receives respectful murmurs in response.
Declan gestures to the group. âThese lads would like a word with you, Reyna.â
He strolls away, lighting a cigarette.
As if itâs the most natural thing in the world for her to be summoned to an abandoned warehouse on a Sunday morning in front of the leaders of the Mafia and dozens more armed men without a clue as to the reason why, she smiles and says calmly, âOf course. What can I do for you gentlemen?â
I feel a hot flash of pride and admiration for my wife. She might be a hell demon with a forked tongue and a knack for driving a man to the brink of insanity, but goddamn does the woman live up to the meaning of her name.
The one called Massimo with all the hair glances at me. Itâs not a friendly look.
âWe were hoping to speak to you in private.â
I bristle. Before I can say a word, however, Reyna squeezes my hand. Looking at Massimo with steel in her eyes, she says, âMy husband stays, or we both leave. The choice is yours.â
Watching us from behind the Italians, Declan smiles.
Massimo hides his anger with a practiced smile, but his eyes glitter with malice. âVery well. Then Iâll get right to it. We understand there was an incident at your home last week involving armed intruders.â
âThere was. What of it?â
âHas your brother discovered who they were?â
âNot to my knowledge.â
Itâs a smart answer. Sheâs not committing herself to a yes or a no, and sheâs also not betraying the head of her family by divulging any details.
Itâs a sidestep, and a clever one.
She adds, âThatâs a question for him.â
âWe would ask him, but we donât have confidence that he would tell us the truth.â
âAnd why is that?â
âLetâs just say weâve recently discovered some facts that have led us to believe your brother has been keeping secrets.â
It sounds like a threat. An insinuation that whatever Gianniâs been up to, sheâs been up to as well. From one second to the next, this has gone from a conversation to an interrogation.
But if she senses that, she shows no outward sign. Her expression is placid. Clasped in mine, her hand is cool and dry.
When Massimo doesnât say anything for a while and only stands there staring at her, trying to be intimidating, she asks politely, âIâm sorry, was there a question I missed?â
A hint of a smile curves Ricciâs mouth. Heâs the one Reyna said Enzo referred to as the General. The oldest of the group, heâs got gunmetal-gray hair, a slight paunch, and eyes like a hawkâs.
Right now, those sharp eyes are looking at Reyna with the same admiration Iâm feeling.
I decide I like him.
Massimo takes a different approach to see if he can rattle her. âWhen you killed your husband, the families looked the other way.â
Without missing a beat, she replies, âMy husband is alive and well, Massimo. Perhaps you missed the ceremony yesterday? I thought I saw you in the church, but weddings are always such a whirlwind.â
She turns and smiles at me. âAnyway, here he is. Iâm sorry for neglecting to introduce you, honey. Everyone, this is my husband, Mr. Quinn.â
Massimo looks like heâs trying not to swallow his tongue. Ricci looks like heâs trying not to start laughing. The other two Italians look like theyâd rather be at home in bed than standing in this dusty, echoing warehouse, watching a woman effortlessly run circles around them.
As for me, Iâm simply dazzled.
Looking at her, I say in a husky voice, âPleased to meet you, gents.â
Her smile could light up an ocean of darkness.
Through clenched teeth, Massimo hisses, âMy point is that you were granted a pass for murdering one of our own in cold blood. The least you can do in repayment is be honest with us.â
Reynaâs brilliant smile dies a quick death.
In its place blooms a look of such hot, incoherent rage, I almost drop her hand and start running.
She turns to Massimo and burns him to the ground with her eyes.
âI owe you nothing,â she says in an icy, even voice. âEspecially considering you knew exactly what Enzo put me through, and you always looked the other way. If anything, Massimo, you should count your blessings that youâre still here to insult me. Because we both know I could send you to burn in hell with your dead friend without even chipping my nail polish.â
Ricci passes a hand over his mouth to hide his smile.
Grinning, Declan tilts back his head and blows a series of perfect smoke rings into the air.
Everybody else just stands there, stunned.
Until one of the Italian soldiers says under his breath, âThat bitch needs to be put in her place.â
Scalding heat rushes up my neck and burns my ears. Every hair on my body bristles. I say loudly, âDid you just disrespect my wife?â
When he smirks at me, I pull out my gun and put a bullet in his head.