Dance of Deception: Chapter 10
Dance of Deception: A Dark Forced Marriage Mafia Romance
Pop looks good.
Too good for a man who just had a fucking heart attack.
Heâs kicked back in one of the heavy leather chairs in the study, legs stretched out, glass of whiskey in handâbecause of course he does.
The flickering fire highlights the deep lines on his face, but his eyes are still sharp and bright, full of that devil-may-care energy thatâs kept him alive for decades.
Not even his own body betraying him has slowed him down.
âJesus, Pop,â I mutter, shaking my head. âYouâre really sitting there like nothing happened?â
Vito half shrugs. âSomething did happen, and then it stopped happening. So now Iâm going to enjoy my fucking whiskey, thank you very much.â
I exhale a long sigh as Sinatra croons in the background.
âYou had a heart attackâ ââ
âWhich I survived,â he interrupts, grinning.
I scowl. âYouâre not immortal, old man.â
âCouldâve fooled me,â he smirks, lifting his glass in a mock toast before taking a sip.
I exhale slowly.
Vito has always been like thisâloud, cocky, refusing to let anything get to him. Tonight, I canât decide if itâs comforting, charming, or fucking infuriating.
âYou shouldnât be drinking,â I mutter.
âAnd you shouldnât be such a pain in my ass,â he fires back, peering at me over the rim of his glass. âYou know, son, I did just have a heart attack.â
I roll my eyes.
Dad smacks his lips, savoring the whiskey extra hard to piss me off.
I exhale slowly, rolling my neck. Vito watches me for a long moment, then his expression softens a little.
âLet me tell you something, kid,â he says, shifting slightly in his chair. âIâve spent my whole life watching people get eaten alive in this world. But me?â He smirks, tapping his chest. âI made this world mine. Itâs gonna take more than a little myocardial whatever-it-is to knock me down.â
He leans back, watching me carefully.
âYou think this rattled me,â he mutters. âIt didnât. Not really.â
âNo?â I challenge, crossing my arms.
He takes another sip before setting his glass aside. âNo. You know what I was thinking about when I was in that hospital?â
I arch a brow.
âThe girls at Lickety Splits,â he says dreamily.
I bark out a laugh. âJesus Christ. Near-death experience, and youâre thinking about titties?â
âKid, if titties canât pull you out of it when youâre staring down death, youâre fucked. Remember that,â he grins, lifting his glass again in salute.
I chuckle and shake my head, bringing mine to my lips.
Vito grins, stretching his arms behind his head. âSeriously, though. I was thinking about the club.â
Lickety Splits was a strip club Pop managed when we were all kids, when our great-uncle Vincenzo was still alive and don of the Barone family. Even as he grew into bigger things, Dad kept that office above the club.
Hell, heâs still got it.
The first two floors arenât mirrored VIP champagne rooms and stripper poles anymore. Thereâs a Michelin two-star French restaurant on the first floor, and a tech startup above it. But Vitoâs office on the third floor still looks exactly the same.
I spent way too much of my childhood running around backstage, listening to the dancers gossip while they did their makeup. But what I remember most isnât the excitement of maybe getting a peek of something I wasnât supposed to. It was how protective of them Pop always was.
âYou remember what I used to tell you and your brothers?â he asks, watching me carefully.
I nod, smirking, wanting to get it just right.
âJust because a woman takes her clothes off for money doesnât mean she deserves any less respect than the asshole handing her the cash.â
Vito points at me, nodding. âDamn right. Those girls worked harder than half the men in this city. They sure as hell didnât need some punk thinking they could be bought.â
His eyes sharpen slightly. âAnyway, thatâs what I was thinking about. That, and you.â
I smile, watching him carefully.
âWhat about me?â
Vito sighs, rolling his shoulders. âYouâre stepping into something big, Carmy.â
I exhale slowly. âWell, luckily it isnât permanent.â
The study goes quiet. When the silence really hits me, I drag my gaze back to Pop, who fixes me with a heavy look.
âYeah, it is,â he says quietly. He holds my gaze. âIâm done, kid. And Iâm happy to be done. This game has gotten too complex for a simple guy like me.â
Holy shit.
The man who built this empire, who fought for it, bled for it, held onto it with an iron grip, is letting go.
âIâm looking forward to retirement,â he mutters, rubbing his jaw. âThatâs mostly because I trust you to lead.â
I drag a hand through my hair, exhaling. âAnd if youâre wrong on that trust?â
Vito snorts. âJeez, you always this whiny?â
âYou always this full of shit?â
He grins, shaking his head. âYouâll be fine, Carmine. Hell, youâre my son, of course youâll be fine.â
I donât know about that.
âSo.â He folds his hands over his stomach. âWe gonna talk about it?â
âAbout whatâyou quitting on me?â
He chuckles. âNo, knucklehead. Lyra Ostrova.â
I exhale slowly, stretching my legs out. âYou gonna ask me why I picked her over everyone else?â
âNope.â
I frown. âWhat?â
He shrugs. âI wonât presume to understand you. And I definitely wonât presume to second-guess your decisions, especially when it comes to women.â He lifts a hand, gesturing vaguely. âTheyâre your decisions. Good or bad. Soâlearn to live with them.â
I smirk. âThat supposed to be wisdom?â
He chuckles. âIâll let you in on a little secret. When you get older, you can just mouth off any shit, and because your hair is gray and youâve got lines on your face, everyone takes it as wisdom.â
I scowl. âThatâsâ¦not exactly comforting.â
Pop grins. âOkay, then. Why did you pick her?â
I sigh, my brows furrowing deeply. âShe forced my hand.â
Pop hoots another laugh, shaking his head before pouring himself another drink, ignoring my glare. âWelcome to married life, kid. âDare I ask what she did to force it?â
âItâd be best if you didnât.â
He snickers. âSo, the girl has your balls in a vice already. I think I like her.â
âTrust me, when you meet her, youâll see what I mean.â
He sighs. âWhatâs so wrong with her?â
I let out a breath, letting my head flop back against the couch. âFucking everything.â
Vito laughs, loud and unfiltered. âAnd yet, you picked her.â
âI told you, she forced my hand.â
He shakes his head. âYouâre about to be the don of an empire, kid,â he grunts. âNot to sound like a heartless ass, but if you truly didnât want anything to do with her, Iâm sureâ¦.â He shrugs. âArrangements could have been made resulting in her not having this leverage over you, whatever it is.â
Heâs not wrong. And itâs not as though I havenât thought about it several times since that night.
Lyra saw more than she should have. What should have happened next was either scaring the shit out of her and making damn sure she never spoke about it, or else truly making sure she never spoke about it.
In an extremely permanent way.
Obviously, I didnât do that. And itâs not because Iâve got some sort of warm fuzzy heart beating inside my chest that âjust couldnât takeâ the thought of killing her.
An overabundance of conscience has never been my issue.
Trying to find any semblance of it has usually been more the issue. Or trying to fake it for the sake of those around me.
But I digress. Itâs not that I didnât kill Lyra because I couldnât bring myself to.
Itâs because I didnât want to.
And therein lies the problem, and the confusing part in all of this.
Why didnât I want to? Making her disappear would have been the simplest, cleanest solution to my problem by far. Her having seen inside the Court isnât good, obviously, but itâs not like she saw the inner sanctum, or our faces. And we do, after all, proactively invite guests to dine, drink, and fuck during our very deliberately Roman-orgy-esque sessions.
But she went further than that.
She placed me as The Hound.
And it actually gets worse, and thatâs the very reason I picked her for this charade.
She caught the attention of my darkness.
Irrevocably. Irrationally.
And now, may God have mercy on her soul. Because if she thinks Iâm intense, she has no idea whatâs in store for her with him.