Spades waits in the car, with the engine running to keep the inside warm. He looks at me when Layla and I take the back seat. No words are needed. His expression paints the picture perfectlyâsomeoneâs dead.
The only thing he overlooked tonight is that Laylaâs not some half-brained bimbo sitting by my side who canât figure out how to put an armrest down, let alone notice that somethingâs wrong. This time, itâs Layla.
Intelligent and perceptive Layla.
âIs everything okay?â she asks, sensing the heavy, ominous atmosphere.
âWho?â I counter, praying itâs not one of my men.
Spades shakes his head, refusing to talk while Layla listens to our every word. Whatever happened is fucking bad.
She rolls her eyes, silently stewing. âIâll wait outside,â she clips, not passing on the chance to slam the door on her way out of the car.
âJackson called,â Spades says, forcing me to look away from my girl, who takes her phone out, pressing it to her ear. âLuca got a bit carried away. By I mean a whole fucking lot.â
âWhat did he do?â
âHe checked the security footage and found the guy who hit Layla. He split his skull open on the curb.â
If there was a wall in front of me right now, my knuckles would bleed. I know the scene Luca based his act upon. Since he first saw , he wanted to kill someone that way. At the beginning of the movie, thereâs one of the most brutal scenes in modern cinematography. Lucaâs a bit psycho, but I didnât expect him to ever take it that far.
âHe found him outside,â Spades continues. âThe guy stood with his friends, cleaning up his face. Jackson followed Luca but thought he was only trying to scare the guy. They argued for a moment before Luca rammed a baseball bat across his knees and made him bite the curb. Before Jackson realized he wasnât fucking around, Luca jumped on the guyâs head.â
I rub my face, trying to devise the most effective way out of this situation. I canât scold him for defending Layla, but he took it too fucking far. He executed a guy who hit her by accident She was in the wrong place at the wrong time, and this guy has paid the ultimate price.
âI didnât want to bother you because I know you want to take Layla home, but weâve got sixty witnesses. Itâs a matter of minutes before the cops raid the place.â
A long conversation with the chief of police is unavoidable. If charged, Luca will get a life sentence for murdering the guy in cold blood. Twenty-five years if I bribe relevant people. The problem is that Luca is one of my most trusted men. Given their bumpy start, itâs surprising he defended Layla to this extent, but I canât leave him alone in this shit.
I own the cops, but with sixty witnesses and the footage, thereâs no way of sweeping this under the carpet. The only light in the long, dark tunnel is Plan B.
Layla remains outside, talking over the phone, scraping her heel on the pavement. She makes her agitation known by sporting her signature calculated expression.
âI donât want Layla to see any of this,â I say, determined to keep her in the dark. âYouâll leave me on the corner of the street, and youâll take her back to my place.â
Spades nods, glancing at Layla through the side window. âThatâs why I didnât want her to hear the news. Sheâll lose her shit if she finds out that guy is dead.â
I open the door, bracing to feel her anger. âCome on, Star. Weâre leaving.â
She turns on her heel, says one more word to whoever sheâs talking to, and gets in, slamming the door again. Spades performs an unintentional burnout on hospital grounds while Layla stares out the window, a fierce look on her perfect face. God, sheâs so deep under my skin I feel her everywhere. Everything I do is with her on my mind. Tonightâs no exception. Covering up the murder and ensuring it never reaches her ears is my priority. She canât find out. Sheâd be devastated, and I canât fucking handle her tears.
I try taking her hand, but she jerks it away. âDonât get pissy with me. You canât hear or see it all.â
âI ? You donât make decisions for me. I already told you that you donât own me, Dante.â
Her attitude is the sexiest thing about her. Sheâs not scared and doesnât care how sheâll come across, whether sheâll vex me or anyone else. I love that she speaks her mind, but I want to strangle her right now.
âYou shouldnât,â I hiss, careful not to sound too demanding, or a shit storm will ensue. âIâve got to get back to Delta, but itâs no place for you to be right now. Spades will take you back to our house.â
She clicks her tongue, looking away, her chin high, arms crossed. âDonât rush. Adamâs picking me up from Delta. Iâm going home.â
I grit my teeth so hard they start to fucking crack. Adam informing Frank about the situation is the last thing I need. âCall him and tell him that you changed your mind.â
âI havenât. Heâs on his way now. Iâm going home.â
I fall into the trap of my own rage. The confined space, Laylaâs attitude, the problems awaiting in Delta, and Lucaâs stunt all bubble in my mind like the reaction of sodium bicarbonate with acid. I just want to protect her, keep her safe, calm, and happy, but she makes it fucking impossible.
I grab her by the chin, turning her head my way, so sheâll look me in the eye. âSpades will take you home. I donât want to see Adam outside the club, so either call him off or get the fuck out of the car. He can pick you up from here.â
âDante! Let her go, or Iâll make you!â Spades snaps. His voice is muffled, like heâs on the other side of a glass partition.
My gaze drops to my hand thatâs gripping Laylaâs face. I snap out of the haze, throwing myself back against the door. The look in her eyes makes my bones shiver⦠sheâs no longer angry, no longer determined to showcase her independence. Sheâs upset. Sheâs fucking .
I open my mouth, but she raises her hand to shut me up. Sheâs not saying a word, staring at me with unseeing eyes.
We stop at the traffic lights by Lincoln Park, and Spades turns around, glaring at me. âFront seat. Right now, Dante!â
No fucking way. I stay where I am, with my back flush against the door as I try to make sense of what just happened. In some twisted, deranged way, my protectiveness of Layla turned against her. I wait for her to speak because I canât utter a single word, mayhem ruling my mind. Ten hours. Just ten fucking hours passed since she told me she loves me, but now sheâs looking at me with nothing but hatred.
It takes twenty seconds before she reacts. When she does, her small hand lands on my face. âThatâs strike one.â Her voice is quiet but so powerful I feel her wrath as if itâs my own. âAnd one is all you get.â
âFuck, Layla, Iâm sorry, Iââ
She shoots out of the car, cutting me off midsentence.
Spades locks the doors the second I twitch to follow her. âWhat the fuck is wrong with you?â
âOpen the door.â I yank the handle. âOpen the door, or Iâll break the window.â
He glances to the right to check on Layla. Sheâs walking in the opposite direction, a phone to her ear, her long navy dress brushing the sidewalk.
âIâll break your hands if you touch her like that again.â
He shouldâve done it just now. This is the first and last time I will ever vent my rage on Layla. The simple fact that sheâs not scared tells me itâs not the first or even the tenth time sheâs been treated that way. Sheâs immune to this shit. I donât want to be another violent guy in her life. There are enough of those already. Iâm supposed to be the one sheâll feel safe with, the one sheâll trust.
Well, I fucked that up beautifully.
Layla rests by a streetlamp, pulling the coat tighter around her delicate frame as I approach.
âIâm sorry,â I say. âNothing justifies what I just did.â
âYouâre right. Nothing does. Iâm manhandled by Frank and his men all the time. Thereâs nothing I can do to stop that; to rid them of my life. But this,â she points between us. âThis is different. I rid you. I have to agree to this, and I â
The meaning of her words hits me like a tsunami. The wave consumes everything in its path, killing thousands of people. It leaves nothing but destruction behind. Laylaâs words, the mere thought of losing her, have the same effect on me. It strips me of everything I care about, leaving nothing but emptiness behind.
She pushes away from the post when a car stops by the curb. She walks past me, and I turn around to see Adam. Layla motions for him to get back inside, taking the passenger seat, eyes on me as she holds the door open. âIf you ever do that again, you can forget about me.â With that, she slams the door, and Adam drives away, the tires squealing on the road.
A rush of adrenaline ignites my nerve endings, and my heart picks up its rhythm. Sheâs livid, but sheâs still mine. Thatâs all I need to know, not to lose my goddamn mind, but my fist lands on the metal of the streetlamp regardless.
I donât fucking deserve that girl. Not by a long shot.
Spades gets out of the car. âShe dumped your sorry ass yet?â I shake my head. âShe shouldâve.â
âTell me something I donât know,â I say, getting back in the car. âCome on. Weâve got shit to do.â
Ten minutes later, a sea of red and blue lights greets us in front of the club. Six police cars are parked on the road, and two ambulances by the entrance. The only thing missing is the fucking SWAT team. I light a cigarette, walking up to the chief of police, Jeremy, who stands over a black bag. Weâre friends, for the lack of a better word. He charges a lot to make ninety-nine percent of my problems disappear, but one glance at his face is enough to know that the mess Luca created is not an easy fix.
âIf it isnât the boss.â He holds his hand out for me to shake, an ear-to-ear grin taking the width of his face as he bends down to unzip the body bag. âAwesome party!â
The guyâs face is split wide open; his jaw is unnaturally twisted. Heâs missing eight, maybe ten teeth and a big chunk of his tongue. The skin from the broken nose lies on his cheek. The dirt mixes with dried blood that mustâve oozed from every hole, including his bloodshot eyes.
I let out all the air from my lungs, looking away, back at Jeremy. âLetâs talk in my office.â
He instructs his men to get rid of the onlookers before he follows me inside the empty club. The sound of our shoes tapping on the floor echoes throughout the place. Spades stops by the bar to grab a bottle of the most expensive bourbon.
Jeremy sits on the sofa with a loud sigh, wiping the non-existent sweat off his forehead with a silk handkerchief. âWhat a night,â he chirps. âSo? Whatâs the story, Carrow? What happened?â
I rest against the desk. âNo idea.â Playing dumb is my part. Jeremy enjoys being in the know, and itâs my goal to keep him happy. âI was at the hospital.â
âWell then, Iâll tell you what happened. One of your men, and I know which one because Iâve got the footage, executed the guy in the black bag, Alex Flemming. The only thing I donât know is why he did it and why here front of so many witnesses. Youâre not usually this careless, gentlemen. What got into him?â
I offer Jeremy a Cuban cigar. âThatâll be one of the first questions Iâll ask him.â
âYou must know why Alex is dead. What did he do?â
âItâs complicated,â Spades interjects.
âOh, come on!â Jeremy throws his hands in the air. âItâs not like we just met. Iâll find out sooner or later. If you start talking, I might be able to help.â
I cross the room to sit in front of him. Heâs right. Thereâs no hiding the reason. âHe hit my girl.â
âLayla Harston, right?â He claps, overly excited as if watching an episode of his favorite show. âAm I to expect more bodies soon? Is the war coming to an end? You hooked up with Frankieâs daughter to get North under control?â
âLayla has nothing to do with whatâs going on between Frank and me.â Iâd give my right hand to make sure it stays that way.
Jeremy gestures for Spades to refill his glass. âThatâs not very exciting. Anyway, back to the murder mystery. You ordered your people to sort the guy out, right?â
âNo. Layla found herself in the wrong place at the wrong time.â I rest my back on the couch, taking a drag of the cigar. âShe got hit by accident. The guy aimed at someone else. A misunderstanding is all it was.â
Jeremy pouts, clearly unappeased. âSo what? Luca killed Alex out of his own will? Without your order?â
âThey donât follow my orders one hundred percent of the time. You should know, some arenât prone to do as theyâre told.â
He rubs his beard, resting his elbows on his knees. âThereâs not much I can do, Dante. Someone has to go down for murder. Weâve got a crowd of witnesses. To make matters worse, Lucaâs a very colorful character,â he says, referring to his tattoos.
âPlan B?â
Plan B came into existence three years ago in similar circumstances. One of my men, Hue, killed a news stand owner at the Water Tower Place in broad daylight. Hue was young, stupid, and hot-headed. Not unlike Luca, he snapped like a dry twig. Thatâs what happened that dayâthe poor man gave him different cigarettes than he asked for. A life sentence hung above his head when chief Jeremy Smith made an entrance. Aware of my dealings with four ambitious daughters, he was keen to help.
We couldnât pin it as an accident or an unfortunate event, but Jeremy came up with the idea of a look-alike doing time. He gave us a few hours to find the most suitable guy. A seemingly crazy idea, but Spades remembered about someone we met a few months earlier, Barry Baker. A miracle worker. He ran an institution for the worst kind of drug addicts, using them to do the dirty work for mafia bosses all over the US.
Hue had his whole life ahead of him. I couldnât just sentence him to rot in jail, so we made the call. Not long later, Barry entered Delta with Mick, a twenty-year-old junkie addicted to the heaviest drugs. Rehab wasnât helping. He battered his pregnant girlfriend and knew damn well heâd overdose or end up in jail. He chose option number twoâvoluntarilyâfor a high price. Including all the bribes, cuts, and money spent on lawyers, the total came close to two million dollars. A high price for one manâs life. Especially for the life of a man who hung himself six months later when his girlfriend left him. I couldâve saved two million, but thereâs no foreseeing shit like that.
Jeremy clears his throat, rubbing his beard once more. âYouâve got three hours, Carrow. I want him at the station at six a.m.â
Spades waits until the door closes behind Jeremy before he calls Barry to explain the situation and send him Lucaâs picture. The tattoos pose an issue, but Iâll worry if Barry finds the right guy.
I take my phone out to call the idiot. âGet your ass down here now.â I let my anger show, hurling a crystal ashtray across the room. It flies an inch from Spades, earning me a kind of look.
âIâll be there in twenty,â Luca says, his tone like that of a child who broke grandmaâs tea set while playing soccer in the living room.
Spades finishes the last of his drink, refiling the glass. âWhat will you do with him?â
âI have no idea.â I rest my head on the desk. âIâm tired, pissed off, and something just doesnât fucking fit.â
âYou mean that Luca argued with Layla every chance he got, but now he killed the guy who hit her?â
I nod, massaging my temples. âIâm missing something.â
We sit in silence, buried in our thoughts, waiting for Luca to arrive. Iâm also waiting for any sign from Layla. After my fuckup, itâs in my best interest to call her, but it has to wait until the morning.
Luca arrives fifteen minutes later, looking like he fled the set of a lame horror movie. Blood covers his shirt, trousers, and shoes. âYou want me at the police station?â
âSit,â I snap. âWhat the fuck happened?â
âI donât know. I watched the footage⦠I saw Layla trying to escape the brawl.â He tugs at his hair. âThe guy hit her so fucking hard her head turned.â The torment in his eyes makes no fucking sense. Heâs protective, almost fucking possessive. âSomething snapped inside me,â he continues, glancing at the floor. âMy mind switched off. I was on some kind of autopilot. I wasnât thinking straight.â
âDamn right you werenât,â Spades clips.
â
witnesses!â I boom, and Luca, whoâs not easily scared, flinches in his seat. âCCTV, a crowd of people, and you on his head!â I rest my hands on the side table by the sofa, looking him in the eyes, searching for any emotions; anything thatâd prove Lucaâs still there, that heâs not a psychopath. âYou know itâs a life for this, right?â
He draws his gun, toying with it and looking into the barrel. âI wonât rot in jail. Iâd rather pull the trigger.â
âPut it away. Weâre waiting for Barry to call.â
âPlan B?â Luca meets my eyes.
âYes, but before I sentence another innocent person, explain why Two weeks ago, you claimed she was Frankieâs spy, but today you risked your freedom for a girl you fucking hate. Two plus two equals five here. Explain because I donât get it!â I say as I stand up.
He hides his face in his hands, motionless for a moment as if heâs trying to make sense of it himself. âI donât know why. I canât explain it.â He jumps to his feet, pacing the room. âI donât trust her, but it didnât mean shit when I saw that guy hit her. You know my past, Dante.â
I move the weight of my body from one foot to the other, lighting a cigarette. I found Luca on the street when he was fourteen. His father beat his mother to death a few days earlier and was sent away, leaving Luca alone. He had nothing; no one to turn to, no house, no money, no hope.
âI used to be passive,â Luca says, filling the glass Jeremy used with bourbon. âI couldnât protect my mom, but things are different now. Watching the footage, I remembered all of my motherâs bruises.â
âThat doesnât explain why you took it upon yourself to protect the girl you hate.â
He downs the drink, looking at his shoes. It takes a minute before he works up the courage to look at me again. Itâs unusual for him to cower, but tonight his hesitation is natural. âI didnât stop to think. I saw a woman being hurt, and I snapped. I donât hate her, Boss. I just donât trust her.â
A phone halts our conversation.
Barry has found a guy.