Savage Hearts: Chapter 47
Savage Hearts (Queens & Monsters Book 3)
I spend the rest of that day in a haze. I go to bed, pull the covers over my head, and try to think clearly about what I should do next.
Itâs useless. My brain is broken.
To match the other broken organ inside my chest.
Now, Mal will have another reason to want to keep me away. An even more powerful reason. It isnât only my safety at stake.
Iâve got a baby gangster on board.
And if Mal is so protective that heâd keep me at armâs length for my own safety, I can imagine exactly what a nutcase heâd be if he discovered Iâm pregnant.
Heâd probably move to another planet. Heâd set up shop on Mercury and run the Russian Bratva from there.
I donât sleep at all that night. By the next morning, Iâve decided I just need to put one foot in front of the other and deal with the most obvious thing first.
I have to tell my sister that Iâm pregnant with the child of the assassin who swore vengeance on the man she loves for the murder of his brother.
Jesus on a cracker. How does that conversation start?
As it turns out, it doesnât, because Sloane has her own important news to share.
She knocks on my door, poking her head in when I donât answer.
âYou awake?â
From under the covers, I exhale a leaden breath. âBright-eyed and bushy-tailed. Come on in.â
The mattress dips with her weight. The covers slide down over my face, because sheâs pulling at them.
âGood morning, Little Miss Sunshine.â
âEw. Donât smile like that. People will think youâre a cult leader.â
âDonât be crabby. I need to tell you something, and I want you to be happy about it.â
âWait, let me guess.â I inspect her disturbing megawatt smile. âThereâs a huge sale at Bergdorfâs.â
Instead of answering, she lifts her left hand. On her ring finger sparkles a piece of ice that could double as a childrenâs skating rink.
I gasp, sitting up on my elbows. âItâs a ring!â
âIt is!â
âYou finally said yes!â
âI did!â
âYouâre officially engaged!â
âI know! Isnât it amazing?â
My voice choked and my eyes watering, I nod enthusiastically.
âOh, shit,â she says, her eyes wide. âIâm such an idiot.â
âNo, youâre not. Iâm so h-happy for you!â Then I start to cry, because itâs my new default setting.
Iâm blaming it on the hormones.
She grabs me and hugs me so hard, it leaves me breathless.
âGod, my timing. Iâve always had terrible timing! You can punch me in the face if it will make you feel better.â
I consider it for a moment but toss the idea aside. I canât be throwing swings at my kidâs auntie. Between all the warring mafia factions, weâll have enough family strife.
âNo, Iâm glad you told me.â I pull away, wiping my eyes. âIâm very, very happy for you guys. Did you set a date yet?â
âThe day after tomorrow.â
That makes me blink in surprise. âOh. Wow. Carpe diem.â
âExactly. While you were gone, I realized that life is short and full of random assholery. You have to seize the good while itâs there for the seizing.â
âWait, you know carpe diem means seize the day right?â
âNo, itâs seize the good. I know a guy who has it tattooed on his forearm. He explained it to me.â
âUh-huh. And did this PhD have any idea he had a Latin phrase derived from Horaceâs eleventh ode inked on his skin, or did he just think it was a cool Instagram meme?â
She sighs. âYou could give a person a stroke.â
âNo wonder people keep telling me weâre so much alike. Back to this wedding of yours. Where will it be happening?â
âThe Old North Church. Itâs Declanâs home parish.â
I find it interesting that the head of the Irish Mob goes to church, but I guess he probably has lots of confessing to do. âIs Dad coming?â
A cloud passes over her face. âI didnât invite him. And before you ask why, thereâs a story I need to tell you, but Iâm in too good a mood to discuss it now.â
I know they havenât been close since she was a teenager and that she and our stepmother never got along, but it sounds like things are worse than that.
Best to leave it alone until she feels like talking about it.
âOkay, next question. Nat?â
âSheâll be there.â
âWith whatâs-his-face?â
Sloane smiles. âAs if heâd let her out of his sight.â
âI feel like Iâm missing some behind-the-scenes logistics.â
âI told Declan Iâm not getting married without my best friend in attendance. And Nat told Kage she would consider not castrating him for giving Mal information about Declan if he showed up to the wedding to apologize.â
She squeezes my hand. âSorry, sweetie. I donât mean to make it sound like Mal is the bad guy.â
I wave it off, too interested in the developing drama to care about that. âSo Nat and Kage are coming to the wedding?â
âYep.â
âAnd Declan is okay with Kage being there?â
She laughs. âNot even a little bit. But those are the rules the boys are working with. And itâs not like theyâve never been in a room together before.â She pauses to think. âAlthough, Iâm pretty sure every time thatâs happened, somebodyâs gotten shot.â
âWow. Should be a fun wedding.â
She seems unconcerned about the possibility of a massacre breaking out during her nuptials, saying airily, âThereâll be security up the yin-yang. Everybody will be searched and their weapons removed before going into the church. Iâm sure they can manage to play nice for thirty minutes.â
Iâm not sure about that at all, but I admire her confidence.
âWhat am I wearing? I canât borrow another one of your outfits to wear to your wedding. That seems like it would be bad luck. The bride is supposed to wear something borrowed, not the guests.â
âIâve got a dress ordered for you. The seamstress will be here to fit it tomorrow morning.â
That surprises me, but not too much, considering my gift from Pakhan. âItâs amazing how you mobster folk can just order up custom gowns on a momentâs notice.â
âI canât have my maid of honor walking down the aisle in a pair of camouflage hunting pants, now can I?â
Now Iâm not only surprised, Iâm flabbergasted. âMaidâ¦maid of honor? Me?â
âYou and Nat both.â
My voice is strangled with emotion. âYouâre having two maids of honor?â
Her eyes shining, she says softly, âYouâre my sister, dumbass. Of course Iâm having you as one of my maids of honor.â
When she sees the tears gathering in my eyes, she takes pity on me. She sits up straighter and says haughtily, âEveryone would think Iâm a dick if I didnât.â
Trying to hide how overwhelmed I am, I say, âEveryone already does think youâre a dick.â
Her smile is self-indulgent. âDonât be ridiculous. Everybody loves me.â
I fall flat onto the mattress and pull the covers over my face again. Only this time, Iâm laughing.
I keep forgetting that this is Sloaneâs world. The rest of us mere mortals are just living in it.
I get fitted for the dress. Itâs long, silk, sleeveless, and hugs my body like a glove.
Itâs also black, so it can double as funeral attire when the wedding with warring Irish and Russian gangsters in attendance hits the inevitable bumps, and the bullets start flying.
Iâm trying to be optimistic, but seriously. This seems like a bigger mistake than the twelve publishing houses made that turned down JK Rowling before Harry Potter was finally published.
The day of the wedding, what seems like five hundred Irish gangsters in tuxedos show up at the house.
Spiderâs there, too. He looks great in a tux. He also wonât look at me, which hurts but might be for the best.
I help Sloane into her dress, an insanely gorgeous floor-length chiffon gown with a plunging neckline that shows off her cleavage. It also has a split in the front of the billowing skirt that shows off her legs when she walks.
Itâs not white, because this is my sister weâre talking about. Every bride wears white.
Sloaneâs dress is vivid, bold, blood red.
Dripping in diamonds, with her hair cascading down her back and a real freaking tiara on her head, she looks like a goddess. Iâve never seen anything so beautiful in my life.
When I tell her that, she smiles. âRight? Declan is so lucky. He doesnât deserve me.â
I say drily, âIf zombies ever take over, youâll be safe.â
âWhat do you mean?â
âThey only eat brains.â
We ride together in a limo to the church. Weâre surrounded front, back, and sides by black Escalades filled with heavily armed gangsters in tuxedos, who Sloane keeps waving at like sheâs the queen of England in a Christmas parade.
When we get to the beautiful old stone church, Iâm shocked to see the front steps swarming with people.
Looking out the window of the limo as we drive into the parking lot, I say, âUm. Sloane?â
âYeah, babe?â
âWhy are there four thousand people here?â
âBecause this is Boston, and the head of the Irish Mob is getting married. Itâs an important event. People are here from all over the country, plus overseas.â
I turn to her, goggle-eyed. âI thought you said you were planning a small ceremony?â
âI was.â She gestures smugly to her diamonds and dress. âBut then all this glory wouldâve been wasted.â
âDo you know all those people?â
âNo. Theyâre mostly Declanâs work friends.â
âHis work friends? You mean those are all gangsters?â
âAnd the affiliates, yes. Oh, donât look at me like that. Itâll be fine.â
âHair is fine. A Catholic church stuffed with armed mafioso is a True Crime docuseries about to happen!â
She pats my hand reassuringly. âListen. Declan is handling it. The security is top-notch. There are even snipers. All we have to do is look stunning and enjoy the attention. And if anything happensâwhich it wonâtâjust duck.â
I stare at her. âDuck? Thatâs your survival advice?â
She shrugs. âAlways works for me.â
Dear god. Sheâs actually serious.
I blow out a shaky breath, wondering if I can steal a gun off one of the goodfellas milling around in front of the church before theyâre confiscated by security.
Weâre hustled from the limo into the church by a circle of bodyguards three deep. I keep expecting a bomb to go off, but we make it inside without incident and settle into a room in the back reserved for the brideâs quarters.
Our bouquets are waiting there, nestled in white boxes with tissue paper and cotton. Mine is a perfect sphere of pearl-dotted Stephanotis. It smells heavenly.
Sloaneâs bouquet is a dramatic cascade of hot pink orchids studded with Swarovski crystals. Itâs glamorous and over-the-top, just like her.
Two minutes after we arrive, so does Nat.
The moment she comes through the door and spots Sloane in her dress, her face crumples, and she starts crying. âYou look like a princess.â
Sloane smiles. âBitch, Iâm a queen. Get your butt over here.â
She opens her arms. Nat runs to her. The two of them stand hugging in the middle of the room for so long, I wonder if the wedding will have to be delayed.
Then Nat turns to me. Her watering eyes widen as she looks me up and down. âRiley? Little Riley? Holy cow.â
I smile. âIâll take that as a compliment.â
She comes over and gives me a big hug, too. I havenât seen her in so long, Iâd almost forgotten what she looks like. Black hair, blue-gray eyes, scarlet lipsâ¦sheâs gorgeous.
She whispers, âAre you okay?â
âUgh. Yes and no. Weâll talk about it later. Thereâs way too much to go over right now.â
âOkay, sweetie. Iâm glad to see you.â
âYou, too.â
Sloane says warmly, âLook at my girls. This church will be full of boners. Even that sad statue we passed on the way in will be sprouting wood.â
I say over Natâs shoulder, âThat was a statue of the Virgin Mary.â
âSo sheâll get a lady boner.â
âYouâre going to hell.â
âHa! They wish.â
Nat pulls away and smiles at me. âThe queen is proud of her handmaidens.â
âWe do look pretty good, though. And youâre glowing.â
Sloane says, âThatâs because sheâs getting the big Bratva bratwurst on the regular.â
Natâs cheeks turn faintly pink. âShe really has a way with words, doesnât she?â
âShe missed her true calling writing love songs.â
Sloane chuckles. âNat, your gown is hanging on the back of the bathroom door. Weâve got about ten minutes before the coordinator will come get us and we start down the aisle.â
As Nat goes into the bathroom to change, I say, âWhich reminds me. Are there groomsmen weâll be walking with?â
âNo. Kieran and Spider will be waiting at the altar with Declan.â
âOh. So whatâs the order?â
âThe order of what?â
âLike does Nat go in front of me, then I go, then you go?â
Sloane walks over to me and rests her hand on my cheek. âNo, silly,â she says, smiling. âThe bride is supposed to walk down the aisle with the most important people in her life. So the three of us are walking down together, arm in arm.â
My chin quivers. My eyes well. I have to swallow around the rock in my throat. âIf you make me cry, Iâll rip that tiara right off your head.â
âFor a girl who showed up at my house looking like something out of the Backwoods Survival Guide, youâre a big softie.â
âI wouldâve thought youâd think it was an improvement over all the gray fleece.â
âHoney, you went from sweatpants sloth to G.I. Jane. It was a lateral move, not an upward one.â
Looking stunning, Nat emerges from the restroom in her dress. We make a few last-minute adjustments to our hair and makeup, pick up our bouquets, and head out when the coordinator knocks.
And believe it or not, the ceremony goes off without a hitch.
Declan is glorious in his tux. Sloane is a fairy tale. They exchange vows and kiss to thundering applause.
Wisely, they omit the part of the vows where the priest asks if anyone objects.
Thereâs a small moment of awkwardness during the photographs afterward, when Spider does nothing but stare at me with such searing intensity, my ears burn. But itâs a momentary hiccup in an otherwise perfect event.
It isnât until the reception that everything falls apart.