Dance of Deception: Chapter 16
Dance of Deception: A Dark Forced Marriage Mafia Romance
The old stone cathedral walls drink in the candlelight, casting flickering shadows across the vaulted ceiling.
I move soundlessly through the labyrinthine halls, my footsteps swallowed by the hush of the underground. At this point, the mask Iâm currently wearing feels like a second skin. It should, given that Iâve worn it for almost a decade now.
Hereâin Courtâthis is who I am.
The Hound, one of the five Shadow Kings, sitting as judge, jury, and if necessary, executioner of the accused.
In here, Iâm not Carmine Barone. Not the mafia prince whoâs about to marry a woman who makes his veins burn every time she opens her mouth.
Itâs only in the last few years that weâve become bolder and more active in our Black Court operations, but this all started ten years ago.
At Knightsblood University.
Back then, the five of us were simply various mafia heirs attending the prestigious, shadowy Ivy League college built for the sons and daughters of the underworld. We came from different families and different empires, but the five us all found ourselves as members of Para Bellum, one of the four elite clubs that have almost as long a history as Knightsblood itself.
Thereâs the Ouroboros Society, for the information brokers. The Order, which seeks out the spies and assassins. The Reckless, calling toâwell, thatâs fairly self-descriptive. Theyâre the warriors.
And then thereâs Para Bellum: the strategists. The generals. The leaders.
Thatâs where the Black Court was born: on a dark night seeped in mayhem and vengeance. That was the first time we wore our masks. And after that first baptism in blood, we all knew this wasnât going to be a one-time thing.
Itâs not that any of us thought our fathers or our families or our institutions were weak. But the system itself was becoming complacent. Rot was creeping in around the edges.
And if thereâs one thing Iâve always known on a visceral level, itâs that power without control is worthless.
So we built The Black Court: a system that would keep the chaos in check. Because criminals without a code of conduct are just animals.
And animals cannot rule.
In here, we arenât who we are out there, bound by mafia politics, or opportunity, or family. In here, itâs all about choices. The choice to be right or to be wrong.
Innocent or guilty.
Fight or flight.
I pause by the carved, heavy wooden door to the inner sanctum. Then I roll my neck, take a breath and step inside. The chamber is steeped in shadows and flickering torchlight that casts jagged silhouettes against the stone walls.
Conversation pauses as I enter. The four other Shadow KingsâThe Wolf, The Bull, The Raven and The Stagâare already seated around the ancient stone table, its surface carved with the same intricate runes that are on the walls of this underground cathedral.
Their black masks, each molded into the beast it represents, glint in the dim light.
Iâm a little late, and itâs clear theyâve already been talking about this eveningâs subject at hand. The Raven glances at me, dipping his head. I clap a hand on The Bullâs firm, muscled shoulder before I take my seat at the table next to him.
The Wolf glances at me, then clears his throat and leans back in his chair.
âSo glad you could fit us in, Hound.â
I roll my eyes under my mask.
âI had something to deal with.â
âWe all have shit to deal with,â The Wolf mutters. âBut when we agree toâ ââ
âEnough.â
The Stag lifts his mask just enough to be able to slip a cigarette between his lips. The Zippo flickers and catches, then he leans in and lights the tip.
âMind if I fucking continue?â The Wolf mutters with barely concealed annoyance, which is pretty much his default setting regarding the rest of the world.
âBy all means,â The Stag growls quietly.
Beside me, The Bull chuckles to himself, shaking his head.
âAs I was saying,â The Wolf grunts. âThis isnât about paranoia, itâs about being thorough and making sure there are no loose ends.â
The Raven exhales slowly, his fingers tapping the table with slow, deliberate movements.
âThat depends,â he murmurs, âon what she knows. Or, worse, what he told her, if anything.â
The crackling of the fire is the only sound in the cavernous space.
I keep my expression blank behind the mask, my voice a controlled growl.
âI told you before,â I say. âThereâs no evidence she knows anything. If she did, Iâd know by now.â
The Bull shifts slightly, his mask turning toward me. âShe showed up at one of our sessions, Hound. That alone isâ¦suspicious.â
I exhale slowly, my fingers tapping the ancient carvings in the tableâs surface.
I know what theyâre dancing around.
Arkadi.
His secrets.
Concerning us.
I roll my shoulders, settling deeper into my chair. âWe know Arkadi was dangerous. We know he was greedy. But what weâve never learned is what he actually had on us.â
The Wolf watches me carefully. âYeah, which is exactly the fucking problem.â He sighs, rapping the table with his knuckles, like he just needs some way to get rid of the energy that hums through him.
âYou met with him,â he says. âBefore it all fell apart.â
I nod. âI did.â
The room is silent. They already know the story.
Arkadi Ostrov had a recording, he claimed, that he could use to blackmail The Black Court and all of us.
He didnât say what he had, where he kept it, or how much he knew. Just that he wanted a fuckton of money for it.
I met with him, gauged the threat, and we agreed to talk again.
But that never happened because two days later, his fourteen-year-old daughter ran from their house, screaming to the neighbors there were girls locked in the basement.
The FBI descended, Arkadi was arrested, and we never found the recording.
I exhale, dragging a hand over the back of my neck.
âIf he had something, the Feds didnât find it,â I say.
The Ravenâs mask glints in the firelight as he tips his head. âNot that we know of.â
Thereâs a stretch of silence. Then, The Stag speaks again. âAnd now, his daughter is back in our world.â
I feel something hot suddenly coil inside me. âSheâs not involved with this,â I say sharply.
The Wolfâs gaze flicks to me. âSheâs about to marry you. That makes her involved.â
I press my hands against the stone table, exhaling slowly. I donât like where this is going. And I donât like the way theyâre talking about her. Like sheâs just another loose end to tie up.
The Raven leans forward slightly. âNo oneâs trying to piss you off, Hound. Weâre justâ ââ
âSucceeding,â I snarl.
The Raven is silent for a moment before he replies.
âYou really believe she doesnât know anything?â
âYes,â I say flatly.
âBut you canât prove it,â The Wolf grunts.
My head snaps in his direction. âExactly how would you like me to prove a negative, motherfucker.â
I can feel his eyes narrowing behind his mask.
âWatch your fucking tone,â he grunts back.
âWhy donât we take it down a notch,â The Raven says, his voice rising along with his hands. âEverybody just take a step back.â
The Bull exhales noisily behind his mask. âLook, we trust you, Hound. We just donât trust her.â
Possessiveness flares inside meâhot, unexpected.
I should stamp it down and bury it deep, but I donât.
Instead, I whirl on him. And before any of them can react, Iâve stood abruptly and grabbed The Bull by the collar, yanking him into me, looming over him.
âYouâre talking about the woman who is going to be my wife,â I snarl viciously.
For a moment, no one speaks.
Then I feel a hand on my shoulder. I glance back, seeing The Raven standing and slowly shaking his head, telling me wordlessly to calm the fuck down.
The Stag exhales smoke through his nose, shifting slightly in his chair.
âNo one needs to prove a negative. We just need to know for certain if she knows anything, or if she knows what her father had on this Court.â
âAnd again,â I mutter, letting go of The Bullâs collar. âIâm on top of it.â
âI suppose that means youâre going through with the wedding?â The Bull grunts sarcastically.
I donât answer.
âWell,â The Wolf shrugs, leaning back in his chair, âletâs hope you donât regret it.â
I push back from the table quietly.
âI think weâre all quite aware that Iâm not overly burdened with the concept,â I murmur. I button my jacket before I let my eyes drag over the rest of the group. âIâll handle it. Like we always handle it.â
I push open the doors and step into the darkness, then let them close behind me with a resounding thud.