Iâm sipping from my champagne flute when Quinn crashes through the front door, hollering my name.
Standing in the kitchen with Sloane and me, Declan smiles. âAh. The groom has arrived.â
Eyes wild, his color high, Quinn skids around the corner and makes a beeline for me.
Sloane says, âMan, heâs intense.â
âYou have no idea. Oh, hi, honey.â
Sloane removes the champagne flute from my hand an instant before Quinn grabs me in a bear hug and crushes me against his chest.
His heart pounds against mine. His big arms tighten around my ribs until I can barely breathe.
I laugh, hugging him back. âLong time no see, Dr. Jekyll. Or is it Mr. Hyde? I can never remember.â
Against my neck, he says gruffly, âViper.â
I whisper, âItâs Antonia Octavia Flavius to you, gladiator.â
A shudder runs through his chest. He hugs me tighter.
Declan clears his throat. âWeâll give you two a minute.â
When Quinn finally releases me from the bear hug, weâre alone in the kitchen. Leaning against him, I smile at the expression of adoration, hope, and dread on his face.
âYouâre an emotional wreck, dear husband.â
He swallows. He licks his lips. He says, âHusband,â as if heâs not sure he heard me correctly.
Stroking his beard, I say, âSo thereâs this part in all my romance books thatâs called the black moment. Heard of it? No, of course you havenât. Cavemen donât spend much time reading. The black moment is when all seems lost, like the couple can never work out their problems and itâs the end of the road for them. Are you paying attention? You seem to be spending a lot of time staring at my cleavage.â
âIâm listening,â he says in a thick voice while staring at my cleavage.
I sigh. âAnyway. In real life, people do this thing called communicating. Now, I know youâve heard of that, because youâve worn my ears out doing that exact thing. Except for some reason, you decide at a very important juncture in our relationship that youâd rather storm off and break things than talk to me.â
He thunders, âI didnât storm! And I didnât break anything!â
I pet his beard and smile at him, my insane Irish mobster with the beautiful hazel eyes.
âThereâs no need to rupture my eardrums, dear. As I was saying. The black moment. I donât want to have one, because this isnât a romance novel, itâs real life. So if there are any questions youâd like to ask about what happened in Declanâs office or thoughts youâd like to shareâin a normal volumeâplease do so.â
I go up on my toes and press a soft kiss to his lips. âBecause I have a date with a gladiator later, and I really hope he shows up.â
He exhales and folds himself around me again, burying his face in my hair.
âI take it thatâs a no,â I murmur, stroking my hands up his back. âBut just so weâre clear, Quinn, whatever happens next, I want you by my side. Marriage license or not, contract or not, head of the Cosa Nostra or not, I want you.â
I laugh softly. âYou and your superior gladiator seed with which Iâd like to make babies.â
He groans. He hugs me harder. Then he whispers into my ear, âFive of them.â
âYou ready for that?â
âIâve been ready since the first second I laid eyes on you.â
âGood answer. Time to kiss me now, Quinn.â
He pulls away, his eyes shining and his expression one of pure devotion. âAre you going to always be this bossy now that youâre in charge of the Cosa Nostra?â
My smile grows into a grin. âOh, Iâm going to be the .â
With a chuckle, Quinn lowers his head and kisses me.
Itâs soft, deep, and everything I could ever ask for. It feels like a promise made, a promise stronger than any signature on a legal document or vow spoken in front of four hundred witnesses in a church.
It feels like a field of flowers opening their buds to the sun after a long winter.
It feels like coming home.
That night, I meet with the four heads of the other families.
Aldo, Tomasi, and Alessandro greet me with respectful handshakes and smiles. Massimo greets me the same way, but his smile doesnât reach his eyes.
Iâll have to be careful with that one. Heâs just as selfish as Gianni, but far more clever.
We spend three hours discussing the past, present, and future of the Cosa Nostra in the States. In addition, Alessandro provides me with a digital file of all the evidence they collected about Gianniâs betrayals. Nobody apologizes for his death or offers me condolences on the loss of my brother.
I didnât expect such pleasantries. All made men know the price of disloyalty.
Made women know, too.
Blood in, blood out. Itâs been our way of life for centuries.
Thereâs a formal swearing-in ceremony. Iâm given a gold signet ring bearing the family crest to wear. Itâs too large for my pinky, so I wear it on the index finger of my right hand.
It still has Gianniâs blood on it.
I decide on the spot Iâll never clean it off.
At the end of the meeting, when the goodbyes have been said and the others are filing out of the back room of the restaurant, Massimo lingers behind. Twisting his pinky ring around with his thumb, he gazes at me in thoughtful silence.
âSpeak your mind, Massimo,â I say, standing on the opposite side of the table.
After a moment, he says, âEnzo and I were close. You know that.â
âI do. I also know you were aware of what he did to me.â
âWhatâs between a husband and wife is their business.â
âWhatâs your point?â
He removes his cashmere wool overcoat from the back of his chair and shrugs it on. He takes his time buttoning it. When thatâs done, he regards me with a calculating look.
âYouâre going to have to choose a side, Reyna. Us or them. The others might think your marriage is an asset to us, but I donât. I think itâs a weakness.â
âBecause?â
âBecause a house divided against itself cannot stand.â
A faint smile lifts my lips. âYouâre quoting Abraham Lincoln. Thatâs unexpected.â
âYou understand what Iâm saying.â
âI do. But thereâs no division.â
âNo? Youâll be able to keep all our secrets from your Irish husband?â
Holding his challenging stare, I say evenly, âIâve been keeping secrets my entire life. Including one about you, Massimo. A rather big one.â
His eyes sharpen to slits. âLike what?â
I smile at his sudden shift from merely unpleasant to downright hostile. âLike you did a favor for the head of an enemy family that would get you both killed if his men found out. People donât like snakes. Especially the Bratva. Theyâre real sticklers about revenge.â
Massimoâs pupils dilate, but he shows no other outward sign of emotion. âI donât know what youâre talking about.â
âThatâs fine, but you really shouldnât make important phone calls at cocktail parties. Especially on speakerphone. You never know who might be listening at the door.â
I see him working it out, trying to decide if Iâm bluffing, trying to recall what party we might have attended together where he made a call that should have been more discreet.
Just so weâre on the same page, Iâll give his memory a helpful jog.
âMurdering Maxim Mogdonovich in return for a marker from the man who took his place could be seen by both the Bratva and the Cosa Nostra as a little underhanded, donât you think? Feathers would definitely get ruffled on both sides. But Iâll admit, making it look like he died in a prison riot was a small stroke of genius. I couldnât have done it better myself. I bet Kazimir Portnov appreciated your creativity. Oh, excuse me. You called him Kage. I suppose when you kill someoneâs boss for him, you get a little friendly.â
We stare at each other across the table.
I see the exact moment he decides I have to die, and roll my eyes to the ceiling.
Men are so damn predictable.
I slip the lovely red silk wrap Quinn bought me off of the back of my chair and wind it around my shoulders. Then I lift my chin and stare Massimo down.
âIâve taken precautions. If anything happens to me, a file will be released to the families. To the members of the families, to be exact, not just the heads. That file contains everything Iâve seen and heard since I was a child. All the conversations no one thought were important to hide from me because I was female. All my memories and experiences. All the things Iâve witnessed. Everything has been written down and saved in duplicate. If I die for any reason other than advanced old age, those files go out.â
I cluck my tongue. âJust imagine the information I have, Massimo. Daughter of a Mafia don, wife of a Mafia captain, sister of the head of one of the Five Familiesâ¦Iâm a fucking of fun information.â
Massimoâs face turns red. A vein in his temple throbs. He snaps, âBullshit.â
My smile grows wider. âIs it? I guess time will tell. But thereâs one thing we both know for sure, and itâs that youâve always underestimated me.â
I hold his infuriated stare for a beat before I turn my back and walk away, leaving him alone at the table.