Sold to the Italian Mafia Boss: Chapter 16
Sold to the Italian Mafia Boss: A Dark Mafia Arranged Romance (Possessive Mafia Kings Book 6)
Pyotrâs men surrender at once.
Liamâs do not. And within fifteen minutes, the halls of the compound are littered with Irish corpses. The Russians Liam bought leave the minute theyâre permitted, and my men see them out to their fleet of cars, picking off stray Irish guards where they appear out of the woodwork. Lucky, I think, more than once, as I pick my way over the bodies, rifle leveled, eyes narrowed for enemies. Lucky, those Russians didnât decide to hold up to that cheap loyalty, or weâd be outnumbered and truly, seriously fucked.
We could tell even from the road what had happened. At once, the Russians and the Irish lowered their rifles. Their demeanors changed, and they began to interact more cordially. The way they all left the compound at once, too, didnât escape my noticeâthey were dismissed.
And Ariana was not among them.
Clearly, Liam had bought them out. Itâs a win-win for everyone involved. That is, except for Ari. Will Liam kill her, I wonder, as I stalk through the halls. An Irish guard marches into sight, and I snipe her easily before sheâs even swung up her own rifle. Her head jerks back, and she crumples, soundless, motionless, on the blood-streaked tile. Will Liam McNamara torture her? Will he make an example of her, I wonder?
Some part of me grieves. Ari is a lost soul. In another life, I am her. I suppose, in some ways, we really arenât so different, after all. But unlike her, my men have stormed this compound. We have won already. There is just one formality left to handle.
Liam himself. The Russians told me where to go. I left Gio to man the front while I sought him out.
I insisted I go alone.
And now here I am, alone. Gliding like a shadow through the dark halls, my heart beating faster than Iâd care to admit. Because somewhere in this building is Kate.
And this is the last time I will ever see her.
There are bargains we strike with ourselves in life. There are bargains we make with the universe. This one is mine: I will kill Liam McNamara. For my father. For my men. For my organization and my legacy, and everything the Romano name has ever stood for. I have no choice; I must kill him.
But I will not take Kate back with me to Italy. I will leave her here and appoint her as head of her late fatherâs organization. I know now just how handily she can deal in empires. I know what sheâs made of, and she is a formidable enemy. She will make a brilliant ally. Granted, one that will always loathe me. Itâs an exchange, nothing more. Her fatherâs life for hers. Everyone wins.
Do we, though? Does she? Do I?
Because, in truth, if it were up to me, all of this would go a different way. If it were up to me, Kate McNamara would be leaving this compound, this country, with me today. No matter the cost, no matter her feelings, no matter the grudges she would hold over me. I would take her. Force her.
Because I am not ready to let her go. Too late. There is honor among thieves, the good ones. This is the best that I can give her, and I know itâs not enough. But itâs better than nothing. Her freedom she can keep. She will never again have to sleep in the same bed as her fatherâs murderer. She will be set free of me, and my debt to my father will be paid.
I reach the office, and the doors are closed, the Russians having already left their posts. I hang back a hallway away, pull a silencer from my pocket, and screw it on. Discreetly, I release two rounds, taking out the only two guards at the door. They fall into twin piles on the floor, silent, dead, blood rapidly pooling beneath them. I feel nothing looking at them. I am vacant and cold. Dead inside.
Knowing that this is the beginning of the end for Kate and me.
I take a breath. I know whatever happens next will happen quickly. And I know, if I am not careful and exceedingly luckyâwhatever happens might also end in my dying. I should have brought backup. But itâs not the first time Iâve let my pride endanger me. And if I survive today, Iâm sure it wonât be the last.
Itâs time.
I kick open the door.
The sight that greets me is certainly unexpected. Liam McNamara, looking horribly pale and ill, stands at the head of a huge conference table. Heâs flanked by a handful of armed guards, none of whom seem concerned with what is before themâbefore me.
Kate. Kate. When I see her, the cold falseness of my reality melts away. Everything brightens. The colors of the room, the lights. I see her with a sudden and astounding clarity: her sweet, tired eyes; her dark honey hair; the surprise on her face at seeing me. The relief. Bare, evident, shameless. Sheâs happy to see me. Me. After everything. Knowing why Iâm hereâshe is still pleased to see me.
Is that love?
âLuca,â she whispers, and her eyes are bright with tears.
Itâs then I register Ari. She stands at Kateâs side, rifle hanging limp in her handâwhy? I notice immediately that her finger is on the trigger. Yet sheâs not firing. The rifle has an empty magazine.
And it all makes sense, then. Liam orchestrated this. Every bit of it. He had Ariana armed with an unloaded gun by her men, which the men bought out. Brilliant, really, I think, with resentment. But, of course, he did. How the hell else could he let her in here, armed, with Kate under her control? He would never do that. He is an orchestrator. He is a puppet master.
And for everything he has done, he has to die.
But in an instant, I go to raise my pistolâAriana runs.
She takes Kate by both shoulders and hurls her forward, slamming her into the table so hard I hear Kate cry out. Itâs distraction and obstruction enoughâthe minute sheâs done it, Ari is blasting out of that room like a cat on fucking fire. And itâs not my job. Not my duty. I am here to kill Liam McNamara. I must kill himâ¦
That woman just had a rifle aimed at Kate. Her finger was on the trigger. Kate looks at me over her shoulder, her face pale and full of terror. She has one hand clutching her stomach, and I donât know how I know it, but I do.
At that moment, I feel it. I feel her. Kate. The Kate I stupidly, stupidly, blindly fell in love with. The Kate I admire and respect.
The Kate I cannot let go. Is she? Could she be? Is she carrying my child?
Does this change everything?
No. It doesnât change one thing. Ariâmy ally, the woman I brought into Kateâs lifeâjust attempted to kill my wife.
And for that, she dies.
I wish I could take Kate in my arms. Hold her. Ask her for forgiveness. I wish I could clutch her close and apologize: for it all. Taking her, demanding of her, marrying her. Falling for her. Endangering her. Abandoning her. Would she believe me? I know she would. Would she forgive me? Yesâitâs in her nature. She loves me. And thatâs how I know I will have a chance to come back to her.
But I may never have a chance to stop Ariana again. So I run after her. Sheâs a split second ahead of me, moving faster than I thought her capable of. Her boots pound the tile, and she rounds a corner, bent forward, running hard as an Olympic athlete. Does she know where sheâs going? I donât. But I follow blindly. Because this is my mess. My mistake. And Iâll be damned if I expect someone else to clean up after me.
Ari hits a long hall with no turns and no shelter. I swing my rifle up and fire. But running, I miss badly, speckling the ceiling with bullet holes. Plaster falls in a dusty white rain, and before I can aim again, Ari busts through a steel door and out into the rain.
Iâm on her heels, running so hard that all I can hear is the quiet, contained thunder of my own pulse. The door leads to a steep kind of lot, asphalt black and slick with rain. Ari is already down it by the time I break through the door, and sheâs already ducking into some kind of hangar-like building. Rain crashes hard angrily on the corrugated steel roof. I aim, peeling off a few more rounds.
This time, one hits. Ari staggers, slamming into the door to the hangar, gripping her shoulder. Even from a distance, I see blood pouring between her fingers. But by then, sheâs already through the door.
âFuck,â I bite out, racing down the steep incline. Her blood is on the door handle. I yank it open and rush inside, only to be greeted by gunfire. âFuck!â
I dive behind a parked vehicle hidden under a tarp. There are dozens, some sleek and low, some huge and hulking. And as soon as the gunfireâAriâs, ostensiblyâgoes silent, so does everything else. Iâm breathing hard on the concrete floor with my back against the tarp-covered car. I listen, straining to hear footsteps. Nothing. Wherever she is, sheâs hiding. And she has the advantage of knowing where I am.
Fuck. This was a bad call. This was a mistake. I swallow, wiping rain from my eyes, shoving my hair back from my forehead impatiently. âAri,â I call out after a moment. âHavenât you had enough of this, hm? Arenât you tired?â
She ignores me, or else has vanished. I turn, debating, then decide to risk itâand stand. Pop, pop, pop! Bullets shred through the tarp, and I drop like a rock. Got you, I think, smiling. I know what direction the fire came from. Itâs unlikely Iâll be able to pick her off with so little to go off, though. This is going to be risky; however, the fuck it goes down.
âGive up,â I call, knowing I can rile her. âYou didnât really think this was going to work, did you? Think about it. Every move youâve ever made, youâve been too slowâsomeone is always a step ahead of you.â I wait for answering shots, but they donât come. âLook how close you got today. Admit it. Itâs the closest you will ever get, and it wasnât enough. You will never be enough.â
No gunfire. But I can practically feel her rage, taut, twisted up tight. A coiled snake snapping its tongue, hungry to strike.
âYou were right, by the way,â I add, creeping in a crouch to the back of the car. I peer out, just over the edge: and there, spot her. Sheâs arranged on a metal staircase around a corner and some distance away. The rifle is raised in trembling hands, picked, no doubt, off one of the Irish bodies abundant in the hallways we fled through. She turns the nose of the rifle in a slow, searching half-circle. She doesnât know where I am. âI am in love with Kate.â
The tendon in her neck stands out in anger. But she says nothing, only presses her eye to the scope and waits patiently. And some part of me aches, then. I see Kate in her, too. We are similar, the three of us. Weâre not our fathers.
And this war is over. I realize then: I cannot kill Liam. Why the hell did I think I could? My men will not walk away from me. My men respect me. Iâll make them respect me. Because I canât lose Kate. I donât care if our marriage began as a sham. An arrangement. A contract. I donât care about the war of our fathers; mine would be far more shamed to think of his empire falling. Not like this.
I meant what I said. I do love Kate. And if my hunch is right, if sheâs pregnantâthereâs no way in hell that I can walk away from her. And I thinkâI hopeâthat she feels the same.
Crack! I turn the slightest pivot and thank God I do. The bullet catches me straight in the collarbone, so hard I fall back against the car. Pain explodes through me, blinding, vibrant. Painting my vision full-red as blood pours over my chest. I slide to my knees, grasping my collarbone, alarm bells clamoring violently in my skull. Get up, get up, get up. But when I grasp the rifle, my fingers are slippery with blood, and I miss the trigger, and I canât hardly aimâ
I lock eyes with Ari. Sheâs standing on the stairs, gazing down at me. Regal. Lethal. A force to be reckoned with, and yet this is her reckoning. Even if she succeeds in killing me now, like thisâshe doesnât make it out of this compound alive.
Fuck. Kate. Protect yourself. Take care of yourself. Raise our childâ¦No. I canât just leave her. I canât just resign myself to death. I didnât take care of anything for her. I didnât write her into my will and estate. I didnât know to create something for a future childâ¦
But my limbs are so heavy. My body is already so beaten, so bruised, so bone-deep exhausted. Ari is walking toward me, curt confident steps that rattle the metal staircase until she reaches the concrete floor. My heartbeat rages. I fumble with the rifle again, but Iâm useless, losing blood so fast I canât see straight. She missed on purpose. For an instant there, she had a clear shot. Itâs the second time that Ariana has shown me mercy, and for the same reasons, I think that I have shown her mercy.
When I raise my eyes and meet hers, she has the rifle back up to her nose, and her finger is on the trigger. Neatly, coldly, she kicks the rifle straight out of my hands and lets it clatter to the concrete.
âLast words,â she says sharply. There is something forlorn in her tone. âWe die together today, Luca. At least there is some poetry in that.â
âYou could have been great,â I say, after a moment, looking up into her one dark, visible eye, looking into the barrel of her rifle. Looking at death. âYou could have been something.â
Pop! Blood rockets from her temple, and like a light switched off, her gaze goes instantly blank. She wobbles slightly, then crashes onto her side, dead, looking emptily into the distance.
I turn. Kate stands in the doorway of the hangar, pistol still raised, clasped in both hands, one eye squeezed shut. A faint, almost imperceptible wisp of smoke trailing from the barrel. Her eyes meet mine, and then sheâs marching to my side.
Itâs when she reaches me that the last of my strength and will deserts me. I tip forward, more grateful than I could ever express, when she catches me, falling to her knees and pulling me against her.
âTheyâre coming,â she says, cradling my head, looking brightly down into my eyes. âLook at me, Luca. Look at me.â
I do, but itâs almost impossible. Sheâs haloed in light, somehow, and blurring at all of her edges. She brushes her hand over my face and moves my hair out of my eyes. âYou got her,â I say, my voice rough and far away. âGood shot.â
âBetter than you.â She smiles, but her eyes are wide and brimming with tears. One falls hot onto my jaw. âHelp is coming. The doctors are coming right now. Youâre going to be OK.â
Red creeps in at the edges of my vision. âHow do you know?â
âBecause youâre the most stubborn man Iâve ever met in my life.â She bends down and presses her lips to mine, and a weight releases at once from my chest. âLuca.â Her breath stirs so softly against my lips, my face. I forget where we are. We could be in bed in the villa, snow dancing at the window. We could be entwined, naked, our tongues entangled. We could be happy and safe, together. All bets off. All expectations burned away. Alone, us, together. âI know that you know.â
âHm,â I say. Itâs all I can muster. The pain has already blown away, and Iâm relaxed now, and in my mind, I know that canât be, that shouldnât be, that means this is serious, something is wrong. Ari was a good shot, too. Did she nick an artery? Splinter a bone into an organ? Did she know I would die slowly, or would she have done it? Would she have put a bullet straight in my skull if Kate hadnât appeared to save me? âWhat do I know?â
But I do know. Deep, deep in my mind. And when she says it, everything in me wakes up. She bends close, her hair a soft golden curtain. Her lips are against my ear, her breath. I feel flawless there. I feel safe like sheâs got me.
Itâs how Iâve felt, I realize, since I met her.
âIâm pregnant,â she whispers and lets the words hang there between us like fragrance, like spring wind. A child. A legacy. A life. And itâs ours. Going to be ours. Our first step together as a real couple. âYouâre going to be a father, Luca. You have to hang on. Promise me. I know youâre a fighter.â
âSo are you,â I tell her, finding the strength to raise my hand, bloody, and slide it gently into her hair. When she sits back, our eyes meet, and my body fills with warmth. âI wasnât going to do it.â
Tears spill down her cheeks. âLucaâ¦â
âI changed my mind,â I say, and I mean it, and I want her to know because if I die, I canât have her think I would have seen it through. Not after I realized how I truly felt about her. Not after I realized that what we had was real, that it could be real enough to bring a baby into this world. âI promise you that I did.â
âI believe you,â she says, and by the heartbreak in her voice, I know that she does. âYou donât have to promise that, Luca. Just promise youâll stay alive. Promise youâll fight as hard as you can. Please. Please.â She brings my hand to her lips. Her tears fall on my fingers. âPlease, Luca.â
I can hear something somewhere: a clamor and footsteps, shouts. Kate clings to me, even when they try to move her.
Determinedly, stubbornly as ever, she stays at my side. Even as the darkness comes swirling in, even as my eyes grow too heavy to keep open even a second longer, sheâs there.
Sheâs there, and it means more to me than I could ever say.