We eat. And by that, I mean Quinn feeds me small portions of carefully cut-up food, making sure to include all the veggies he can coax into my mouth as he drones on and on about the nutritional needs of infants.
After supper and the first of what I fear will be many forthcoming lectures about eating for two, he takes us into the shower, washes us down with the enthusiasm of a Labrador on its first outing at the doggie park, then heads right back to bed with me in his arms.
When heâs lying on top of me, searing my retinas with the brightness of his jubilant smile, I decide itâs time to make an adjustment to the situation.
âPardon me for interrupting your gloat-a-thon, but has it occurred to you that I might need a rest?â
He draws his brows together. âRest?â
âLet me put it to you this way: if I inserted an object the size of a bowling pin into your behind, do you suppose you could go right back to business as usual afterward? Would you be riding around the moors of Ireland on horseback, leaping over streams and galloping around full-speed while your poor, raw bottom took the brunt of all that jostling in the saddle?â
He looks appalled. âI knew I was hurting you!â Then, after a beat: âA bowling pin?â
When his grin returns, I give up. I close my eyes and sigh heavily.
âAll right, lass,â he says, his voice warm, his mouth close to my ear. âWeâll have a rest. Weâll get a good nightâs sleep. Youâll need it, because growing babies requires a lot of energy.â
âWill you stop talking before I throw myself out the window, please?â
He rolls over, drags me on top of him, and hides his face in my neck as he laughs.
I must be more exhausted than I realize, because I fall asleep on top of him almost immediately.
The dream begins with fire.
All over me, all around me, even underneath my skin. Iâm being burned alive from the inside out, and thereâs no escaping it.
Except itâs not really fire. It only feels like fire.
Because thatâs exactly what being repeatedly lashed with a leather whip is like.
Iâm naked, screaming, crawling away over a cold marble floor on my hands and knees, sobbing and pleading for mercy. My tormentor gives me none. Following closely behind as I scramble for safety, he cracks the whip over and over, separating my flesh. Blood splatters the marble. Itâs warm and slippery under the palms of my hands.
A vicious kick to the ribs sends me tumbling sideways. I lie on the cold hard floor on my back with my arms out, panting, desperately begging as he looms over me, a tall figure with a shadowed face and an arm raised to strike.
As it falls, the whip parts the air with a vicious hiss like a thousand snakes descending with their sharp fangs bared, prepared to bite.
I scream at the top of my lungs, knowing no one will hear me.
âReyna! Wake up, baby! Wake up!â
Quinn is shouting at me. Holding me in his arms and shouting.
Iâm blinded for a moment, seeing nothing but blackness and hearing only my pounding heartbeat and that terrible hiss that always came right before the pain exploded over me.
When I inhale a sharp breath, I come back to myself slowly. Inch by inch, the darkness withdraws. The warmth of the room and Quinnâs arms seep in, soothing me.
Iâm safe. In a hotel room in Boston, not at home in New York with Enzo.
Enzo is dead.
He can never hurt me again.
Except he can, because that sick son of a bitch lives on in my memory.
Sweating and trembling, I lower my head to Quinnâs chest.
âYouâre okay, love,â he says, sounding shaken as he rocks me in his arms. âYouâre okay. Iâve got you.â
The sheets are in tangles all around us. I mustâve been thrashing. I wonder how long it took him to wake me up.
He kisses my head, then takes my face in his hands. His eyes search mine.
âYou were having a nightmare.â
My voice raw, I say, âEnzo.â
He winces. âAh, fuck.â
He gathers me into his arms and holds me until my ragged breath has slowed to normal, and Iâm no longer quaking with dread.
âWhat can I do?â
âJust this. Iâll be okay in a minute.â
He exhales heavily, then pulls the blankets up, holding me with one arm. He settles us back against the pillows, tucking my head under his chin and wrapping his arms and legs around me so Iâm cocooned in his warmth.
We lie like that in the dark, breathing together, for a long time. It could be minutes or hours, I donât know.
Eventually, an odd feeling overtakes me. After examining it for a while, I realize itâs peace.
Iâve never felt peace before.
In all my thirty-three years, Iâve never known what itâs like to find shelter from the storms that always followed me. Iâve been lost at sea for so long, I thought thatâs what it meant to be living.
It isnât until now, with a glimpse of a golden-haired man waving at me from shore in the distance, that I realize the storms might be behind me. My sails are full, the seas are smooth, and the wind at my back is soft and easy.
I might finally be coming home.
In a low voice, I say, âEpinephrine.â
âWhat?â
I pull away from Quinn, rolling over and sitting up to swing my legs over the side of the bed. I put my head in my hands and exhale a breath Iâve been holding my whole life. It shudders out of me, heavier than gravity.
âI said epinephrine. Normally, itâs used in emergency treatment for allergic reactions. But in large enough doses, it will stop the heart. And because itâs a hormone that occurs naturally in the body, it doesnât automatically get flagged on the coronerâs report.â
Quinn lies perfectly still and silent, listening.
I lick my dry lips. âEnzo was diabetic. He had to inject himself with insulin before every meal.â
After a long moment, Quinn says softly, âYou replaced his insulin with epinephrine.â
I look out the windows at Boston sparkling like a jewel in the night and think I could already be pregnant. I could already have this manâs child growing inside me. I didnât insist he use protection. If Iâm honest with myself, I didnât even give it a second thought.
I wanted him from the start. Long before I could admit it to myself, I wanted everything he could possibly give me.
I say, âNo one else on earth knows that. The official cause of death was sudden cardiac arrest. Diabetes is a risk factor for it. He also had a fatty liver and elevated cholesterol levels, so the coroner didnât open an inquest. He was cremated, but the coronerâs office keeps biomarker tissue samples for five years. If they knew to look for elevated adrenal hormones, Iâd be in prison.â
I look at him over my shoulder. âSo youâve got two years left of excellent blackmail material.â
He gazes at me with a look of deep admiration.
Which is more proof of his insanity, considering I just confessed to murdering the prior man in his position.
He says, âAntivenom.â
âAm I supposed to know what that means?â
âI have a severe allergy to spider antivenom. I was bitten by a spider when I was ten years old. The bite was bad, painful and swollen. My mother took me to the hospital, and they gave me antivenom. I wouldâve survived the bite just fine, but the antivenom almost killed me. I went into anaphylactic shock.â
âWhy are you telling me that?â
âSo both of us know something about the other that no one else does. So that you donât feel like I have something to hold over you. And so you know I trust you with my life.â
His voice drops and his eyes shine. âNow ask me what the only thing was that saved me from dying of anaphylactic shock.â
My heart pounds painfully hard. I whisper, âEpinephrine.â
Holding my gaze, he nods.
I shut my eyes and bury my face in my hands.
Then his arms are around me, pulling me close. Into my ear, he says, âWe should name the first baby Epi.â
My laugh is part sob. âThatâs sick.â
He pretends to be serious. âYouâre right. How about Nephrine? Epine? Rin?â
âOh God. Weâre both going to hell.â
âFor sure. Weâll have front row seats.â His voice warms. âBut weâll be together.â
He drags me back to the center of the bed and holds me tightly, kissing me all over my face. I lie in his arms, enveloped by him and a huge sense of wonder at how strange the world is.
âSo is that what your tattoo and nickname are about?â
âAye. After I came home from the hospital, all the neighborhood kids started calling me Spider. It stuck. The tattoo is a reminder to let things be as they are. That sometimes struggling against what is can make things worse. And that the real danger is never what you think it is, so keep your eyes sharp and your mind open before you make a decision that could change your life. Because everything is connected, linked in a delicate chain, like the web of a spider.â
âOh no,â I say, my voice cracking. âIâll never be able to think your tattoo is dumb again.â
He chuckles. âMost people think it means Iâve spent time in prison, so having you only think itâs dumb is an upgrade.â
âI didnât know spiderweb tattoos were symbolic for prison.â
âTraditionally, aye. But they can be symbolic for lots of things. A struggle youâve had to overcome. Longing to break free from a trap. Time spent away from family.â
He adds sourly, âOr, in my case, a reminder that if I ever get bitten by a spider again, not to get the bloody antivenom.â
I start to laugh and canât stop. I lie in his arms and dissolve into helpless laughter until my sides ache and my face feels as if itâs stuck.
When Iâve finally calmed down and am sighing, Quinn kisses the top of my head.
âGo to sleep now, lass. And no more bad dreams, understood? You never have to be afraid of anything again. Youâve got me to watch over you now. Iâll never let anything hurt you.â
I fall asleep with the image of a huge golden spider rocking me gently in its web as it stands vigilant lookout in the dark, ready to give a deadly bite to anything that threatens me.
In the morning, Gianni calls in a rage, demanding to know what I said to the other family heads to get them to postpone the vote for capo.
When I tell him sweetly that heâs forgotten Iâm only a stupid, powerless woman, he hangs up on me.
Quinn shows remarkable restraint by not pouncing on me the moment I open my eyes. Instead, he suggests we go to his home so I can decide if Iâd like to live there or move to the other side of the world and live in a hut so he canât find me.
Heâs trying to be funny, but I can tell how nervous he is about it.
I still havenât committed to living with him. Or to signing a wedding license to make the church marriage legal.
The only thing weâre both on board about so far is the meeting of sperm and egg.
âYes, Iâd like to see your home. But first, Iâd like to see the marriage contract.â
He quirks his lips. âYouâre very interested in that contract, arenât you?â
âThere might be a few items Iâd like to renegotiate.â
âHmm.â
âWhat a safe response. Show me the contract, Quinn. Letâs get it over with.â
He pulls it up on his laptop.
Itâs twenty-seven pages long.
Scrolling through the document, I say faintly, âWhat the actual fuck?â
Pacing behind me with his arms folded over his chest, Quinn says, âDid you think the terms joining two international criminal empires would be scribbled on a napkin?â
âNo. I didnât think it would be the Magna Carta, either.â
âKeep reading.â
I do. It goes into remarkable detail about trade routes, payment terms, assigned territories, who reports to whom, how disputes are to be handled, termination triggers, jurisdictions and the hierarchy of said jurisdictionsâ managers. Among other things.
Itâs possibly the most complicated prenuptial agreement ever created.
âWhatâs this section about someone named Stavros? Itâs very ambiguous.â
Quinn peers over my shoulder to read. âItâs a condition Gianni agreed to fulfill as part of the bargain.â
âSo what is it?â
He straightens and looks down at me. âGianni has to kill Stavros. Personally. And show proof.â
âI see. And what did this Stavros do that Declan wanted it in the contract?â
âHeâs Sloaneâs ex.â
âWas he abusive?â
He snorts. âStavros couldnât manage to abuse a wasp that was repeatedly stinging him in the face.â
I furrow my brows. âSo why does Declan want him dead?â
âItâs a long story.â
I say firmly, âThen Iâll settle in as you tell it.â
Sighing, Quinn turns away and starts pacing again. âA man named Kazimir Portnov is in control of the Bratva here in the US. He goes by Kage.â
âYes, Iâve heard the name.â
âDeclan asked for Kageâs help when Riley was kidnapped and taken to Moscow. In return, Kage got a marker from Declan. He had to do Kage a favor, no matter what it was, no questions asked.â
âOkay. Iâm following.â
âKageâs marker was that Declan had to kill Stavros.â
âWhy did Kage want Stavros dead?â
âBecause heâs Russian. Theyâre crazy.â
âSays the crazy man. Not good enough. Keep talking.â
After an aggravated growl, Quinn says, âDeclan canât kill Stavros himself because he promised Sloane he never would. And Kage, being the psychopath that he is, thought it would be bloody great fun to make his marker something Declan had promised his wife heâd never do and see how heâd handle it.â
âOkay. But why did Kage want Stavros dead in the first place?â
âDisloyalty. At least thatâs what Declan told me. It could really be nothing more than Kage being Kage.â
âStavros is Russian?â
âAye.â
Mulling that over, I turn my attention back to the computer screen. âSo Sloane doesnât know about this marker?â
âNot what it was called in for.â
I donât like the sound of that. Even though weâre not close yet, Sloane is someone I could see being a good friend. And I know enough about her to know she wouldnât like this kind of back-door dealing at all.
âWhich also means she doesnât know that Declan put it in the marriage contract.â
He chuckles. âItâs not like heâd tell her, lass. If Sloane found out Declan had broken his promise, heâd be short two balls.â
Just as I thought. Itâs a brilliant piece of strategy on Declanâs part, but if Sloane found out about this clever chess move of his, sheâd rightly feel betrayed.
These men think theyâre so smart.
But if they were really intelligent, theyâd be much more afraid of their wives.
I move on to other items, asking Quinn to explain and elaborate. I get an education in the technicalities and logistics of how drugs and weapons are moved across borders, how money changes hands, how law enforcement is used to aid illegal activities or avoided where it canât be bribed.
By the end of it, I have a good sense of the terms of the contract.
And an even better sense of where it needs to be changed to the Mafiaâs benefit.
Closing the laptop, I say, âThank you. That was helpful. Letâs go see your home.â
âThatâs it?â
âAre you the man in charge of contract negotiations?â
Quinnâs expression darkens. âDeclan is.â
âThen thatâs it. Letâs go.â
He says firmly, âLass. The contract canât be changed. Itâs been signed already.â
I smile at him. âBut the marriage license hasnât. And without a legal marriage, the contract isnât binding. I saw that in section eighteen B.â
âGianni isnât going to ask for more concessions. Heâs already over the moon about what he got.â
I say, âWeâll see about that,â and head to the door.