Be With Me: Chapter 22
Be With Me: A Forbidden Love Mafia Romance (House of Ferraro Book 1)
It was just yesterday that I first heard about the update to the guest list. The president of the club, in his infinite wisdom, had decided to invite the two frontrunners for the mayoral race to this damn dinner.
Of course, Mayor Wilson couldnât make itâuseless bastard. He was down with pneumonia. As if Morales needed any more luck with his campaign. Then the president found out Morales was also unavailable, but naturally, his daughter was coming in his place.
She hadnât even arrived, and I was already on edge.
Well, we were all adults. We could survive an evening together in the same room.
Cosimo signaled for another whiskey, his eyes flicking over the attendees in their ridiculous outfits. âI donât know how you do it,â he muttered.
I propped my elbows behind me on the bar. Above us, blown-glass planets and stars were suspended from the high ceiling. On each of the high-top tables scattered around the room were towers of merengues. âDo what?â
âPretend like youâre one of them.â
I huffed, swirling the amber liquid in my own glass. âI donât have to pretend to be one of them. In fact, the reason they canât resist me is because Iâm not. Iâm like a rare fucking peacock parading around, luring them in.â
Cosimo scoffed. âA peacock with poisonous claws.â He took a slow sip of his drink, and then his posture shifted. âLook. Itâs her.â
I took my time before turning toward the entrance. I already knew exactly who he meant.
Cosimo, along with the rest of the family, thought I was still working Mia. I hadnât let him in on the truth, and I wasnât planning to. I had no idea how to explain what had occurred between us.
How could I explain something I didnât understand?
My gaze finally landed on its target, and my fists clenched.
She was in a sleek, shimmering dress. The fabric caught the light like stardust. It was pink and silverâprobably some cosmic connection to Venus or whatever the hell her horoscope said. I still didnât fully understand what the fuck a moon sign was.
She paused at the threshold, scanning the room.
She was alone.
I waited until her eyes found me.
When they did, I felt an electric jolt. Her shoulder lifted slightly, and then she looked away. It was like I was nothing. Like I was a stranger.
Like I was a ghost.
My jaw tightened.
The president of the club approached her with his hand outstretched. She met him with a radiant smileâone I wished was directed at meâand shook his hand.
Then his palm landed on the small of her back.
A little too fucking low.
I glowered as he guided her toward a passing waiter with a tray of champagne flutes. She took one, her head tilting back as she laughed at something the old man said. She was animated, engaged.
What the hell did they have in common?
That guy was a million years old and looked like he needed a nap halfway through his own sentence.
And yet she gave him her attention.
Her smiles.
âWow,â Cosimo drawled, swirling the whiskey in his glass as he watched Mia. âYou really are her dirty little secret, arenât you? She barely spared you a glance.â
I dragged my teeth over my bottom lip, tamping down the flicker of irritation curling through my chest. âI shouldâve known better than to bring you as my plus-one.â
âCome on.â He chuckled. âYouâve given me enough shit about Fabiana. Now itâs my turn to give you shit about her.â
I glanced at him. He was still staring at Mia, his gaze cold and assessing.
âStop staring at her fucking ass,â I muttered.
âWasnât. But now I am.â
My grip on my glass tightened. He was just trying to rile me up, and I hated that it was working.
âSo are you getting any or what? Mom made it sound like you were still trying to convince her youâre worth the time of day.â
I exhaled through my nose. âJesus. Is that what you and Mother talk about? My sex life?â
Across the room, my attention snagged on Andrei fucking Baranov. The son of a bitch had slithered up to Mia and the president. He was wearing the same smug, entitled expression he always did, like the entire world was an amusement park built for his entertainment. The son of a Belarusian construction magnate, heâd been raised on wealth, power, and the belief that everything was his for the taking.
And right now, he was looking at Mia.
Like she was free for his taking, too.
âNot really. I mostly talk with her about business,â Cos said, pulling me back. âBut she tells me when sheâs annoyed with you. Probably because she thinks if I apply pressure, youâll work harder.â
âAnd do you?â I asked, barely listening. Andrei was shaking Miaâs hand now, his filthy paw lingering too long. She smiled at himâsweet, innocent, obliviousâand it made my blood boil.
âI let her think I do. We both know thatâs not true. But if nodding and pretending Iâll handle it gets her to ease up on you, Iâm happy to play along.â
âDidnât know you had my back like that with her,â I muttered. Baranov laughed at something Mia said, his hand brushing her arm. If he kept that up, I was going to break his wrist.
Cosimo sniffed. âYeah, well. Making up for the times I didnât.â
That got me to glance at him. âThe fuck are you talking about?â
âThe year after Les and I moved out.â He rolled his glass between his palms, suddenly looking thoughtful. âYou changed that year.â
A muscle ticked in my jaw. âOf course I did. That was the year I got fucking made.â
âIt was before that too.â
I went still.
This was a conversation I wasnât about to have. Not here. Not now. Not fucking ever, if I could help it.
Baranov pulled out his phone and stepped away from Mia to take a call.
I slammed my tumbler onto the bar. âGo make some friends, Cos. Iâm bored of this conversation.â
I stalked after Baranov into the hallway. He was pacing away from the party, muttering something into his cell.
He didnât see me until he hung up and turned, his brows lifting in surprise. âRom. How are you?â
âFucking fantastic. You?â
His gaze flicked over my suit. âYou look great. Hell of a suit. Whereâd you get it?â
âSomeone with taste styled me. Someone good.â
âOh yeah? Can I get their card?â
âI donât think so. Then weâd have something in common, and Iâd rather eat shit and die.â
Baranovâs eyes narrowed. âWhatâs your problem?â
âMontenegro is a nice spot.â
âWhat?â
âDoes Gracie know about your little secret family parked in that villa by the sea?â
His face turned ashen. Gracie was his fiancée, and his weak spot.
âHow do youâ ââ
âI just do.â I knew every piece of dirt on everyone here. âShould I tell her?â
His nostrils flared. âWhat do you want?â
âLeave.â
âThe party?â
âAnd the club. Cancel your membership. Unsubscribe from the damn newsletter. I donât ever want to see your face around here again.â
He bristled, fists clenching like heâd take a swing, but he wasnât that stupid. His daddy had power in Belarus, but here, he was defenseless from someone like me.
âOh, and Andrei?â I took a step, forcing him to take one back. âDonât ever talk to the Morales girl again.â
Confusion bled into his expression. âWhy?â
âI donât owe you an explanation.â
He hesitated and then smoothed his tie, forcing calm. âFine.â
I watched him slink to the elevator, waited until the doors swallowed him whole, and then I strode back into the room.
Mia was gone, but Cosimo was still by the bar. He smirked at me and tipped his head in the direction of the dining room.
I found her in there by the salad bar, alone. The moment she noticed me, she stiffened.
âWhat are you doing?â she said out of the corner of her mouth.
âRumor is, he had a nasty bout of chlamydia last year. Thought youâd appreciate the heads-up.â
âWho?â
âThe guy you were speaking to earlier.â
She let out a sharp breath and glared at me. âForgive me for thinking youâre full of shit.â
I grinned. I liked her sweetness, but I liked her fire even more.
âYouâre swearing. Is that a new thing?â
âIâve had to expand my vocabulary when it comes to you.â She grabbed a plate at the salad bar and started piling on romaine.
I also grabbed a plate and opened my hand for her to pass me the tongs.
âRomolo, weâre in public. Please leave me alone.â
âCanât I also get some food? You want me to starve just because youâre here?â
Her lips pressed together. âFine.â
I started filling my plate. âHow have things been the last few days?â
âBusy.â She didnât look at me.
âYouâre not going to ask how my day has been?â
âNo. You do realize I had no choice but to show up at this dinner, right?â
âAre you implying I could have bowed out?â I asked. âAnd miss the opportunity to wear this masterpiece you made for me?â
âA masterpiece? The only thing you said after I gave it to you was, âItâll do.ââ A bitter note slipped into her voice.
Ah. That explained the hostility.
Yeah. Iâd fucked that up.
âMia, itâs brilliant. But you know that. You donât need my validation.â
Her hand stilled over the tomatoes, the serving spoon hovering midair. A flicker of surprise crossed her face before she buried it beneath that cool, composed exterior. âYouâre right. I donât. Just like I donât need you issuing me warnings about anyone.â
Oh, but she did. She was too trusting. Too naïve. And I didnât know why I cared.
Iâd already done the heroicâblergâdeed of protecting her from my family. Now I wanted to protect her from others?
Maybe I was having a quarter-life crisis?
âDamn it,â I muttered.
She drizzled some dressing onto her salad. âWhat now?â
âNothing. By the way, Iâm talking to my cousin Caterina this week. Youâll be compensated generously for your work.â
âUh-huh,â she said, sounding skeptical. She didnât believe me. But Iâd prove her wrong. Even sooner than she expected it.
She picked up the next pair of tongs and reached for a bread roll. Some genius decided to stack them in a precarious tower that wobbled when Mia picked one up.
Her mouth popped open. âOh no. Oh shoot.â
Oh shoot. Why was it so fucking cute when she said that?
She frantically tried to stabilize the rolls with her tongs, but they tilted even more, so I grabbed another pair and helped her.
She blew out a breath. âThanks.â Then she glanced at me, her gaze dipping to my mouth. âWhy are you smiling?â
I sighed. âIt happens when I look at you. Canât explain it. Maybe you have a theory?â I didnât mention the weird warmth in my chest that she also brought on since the night of the storm.
Actually, I did have a theory. That night, sheâd taken care of me, held me, helped me. No woman had ever done that for me before. Sheâd rewired something fundamental inside me, some critical connection in my brain.
The long-term effects were still unclear.
Her throat moved as she swallowed. She stared at her plate, brows pulling together, teeth grazing her lip like she suddenly had a lot on her mind. Then, after a beat, she straightened.
âWe said goodbye to each other on Tuesday,â she said quietly. There was no anger left in her tone, just resignation. âWe both agreed that we shouldnât be in contact. Nothing has changed, except for this unfortunate coincidence with the invite. Letâs just get through tonight and move on.â
My mood sobered. She was right. Nothing had changed.
She was still Moralesâs daughter. I was still a Ferraro. If I wasnât going to use her for information, then I had no business left with her.
I cleared my throat, feigning indifference. âFine by me.â
She grabbed a small glass of chilled soup, struggling to balance it in her hands along with her plate and her purse.
I thought about the object in my pocket, the one Iâd planned to give to her today. âIâll help you. Give me your purse.â
âNo, Româ ââ
âIâll walk you to your table, and then Iâll leave you alone for the rest of the night.â
âAll right,â she muttered. âThank you.â
I took her purse and followed behind her. As we passed my table, I dropped off my plate, freeing one hand.
Discreetly, I reached into my pocket and slipped the damned thing into the small side pocket of her bag.
A moment later, we reached her table. She placed her plate down by the name tag spelling out Mia Morales in elegant cursive, then turned back, hand outstretched for her purse.
Our fingers brushed as I passed it back.
âThank you again,â she said, meeting my gaze.
I nodded. âMy pleasure.â
The other people at her table were watching us curiously. They all knew who I was. Who she was.
They were probably wondering what the hell weâd been talking about.
Mia, the picture of composure, gave me a polite smile. âEnjoy your evening.â
I returned the expression. âYou too.â Then I walked back to my seat and sat down.
We didnât speak for the rest of the evening.
But I spent the entire goddamn night watching her.