Silent Vows (Bonds of Betrayal): Chapter 16
Silent Vows: A Dark, Mafia Romance (Bonds of Betrayal)
Military jets flank us on both sides, close enough that I can see the pilotsâ faces through their cockpit glass. Too close. Dangerously close. Bella remains in my lap, her fingers digging into my shoulders as our pilot executes another evasive maneuver. The wound in my arm throbs with each movement, blood seeping through the fresh bandage, but I barely notice. All my focus is on getting my wife out of this alive.
The morning sun catches on the jetsâ wings, creating deadly metal angels bracketing our flight path. Theyâre herding us, I realize. Like wolves circling prey, waiting for the kill order. âTheyâre boxing us in,â I manage to say. âForcing us towards Kennedy.â
âSir,â the pilotâs voice crackles through the intercom, tension evident even through the static. âTheyâre threatening to shoot us down if we donât comply.â
âTheyâre bluffing,â I respond, though Iâm not entirely sure. The fact that Carmine has military backing suggests his reach extends far beyond what Iâd anticipated. My uncle-in-law has apparently been planning this coup longer than any of us realized. âKeep on course for the private strip in Montreal.â
âThe fuel lineâs been hit,â the pilot reports grimly. Through the window, I catch sight of liquid trailing from our wing like a dark ribbon against the sky. âWe wonât make it to Montreal.â
Bella stiffens in my arms, but her voice remains steady when she asks, âOptions?â
I almost smile despite our dire situation. My wife, already thinking like a strategist. Giovanni would be proud. âAntonio,â I speak into my phone, calculating distances and possibilities, âhow close are we to the backup location?â
âTwenty minutes out, Boss. But thereâs a problem.â Antonioâs voice is tight in a way that makes my blood run cold. âBiancaâs missing.â
The words hit me like a physical blow, worse than any bullet. âWhat do you mean, missing?â
My heart pounds against my ribs as scenarios flash through my mindâeach one worse than the last. Bianca, my daughter, my greatest vulnerability. The one person Iâve spent seventeen years protecting from the truth about her parentage, about what my father did, about why Sophia really had to die.
âShe never made it to the safe house.â Antonioâs voice carries notes Iâve never heard from him beforeâconcern, fear, guilt. âHer security detail was found dead ten minutes ago.â
Beside me, Bella inhales sharply. Sheâs close enough to hear both sides of the conversation, close enough to feel how my body has gone rigid with tension. The military jets edge closer, but theyâre suddenly the least of my concerns.
âJohnny or Carmine?â she asks quietly, her mind already connecting dots. Her hand finds mine, squeezing gently. The gesture grounds me, helps me think past the panic trying to cloud my judgment.
âNeither.â The pieces click into place with sickening clarity. âShe went willingly. Didnât she, Antonio?â
âSecurity footage shows her meeting someone at a private airstrip three hours ago.â Antonio pauses, and I already know what heâs going to say. Know it in my bones. âIt was Father Romano.â
âThe priest from our wedding?â Bellaâs brow furrows, but I see the moment understanding dawns in her eyes. Because of courseâwho better to manipulate a teenage girl than the priest whoâs known her since birth? The man who heard her confessions, dried her tears, became the father figure she thought I failed to be.
My jaw clenches so hard I taste copper. âHeâs been close to our family for years. Close to Bianca.â Too close. The priest had known Giuseppe, had heard his confessions, knew exactly what those medical records would prove. What they would do to Bianca if she ever learned the truth.
âKeep your friends close but your enemies closer.â Rage burns hot in my veins as pieces of a decade-old puzzle finally align. âFather Romano was my fatherâs confessor. He knows things ⦠about my father, about Sophia â¦â
The knowledge sits like acid in my stomach. All these years, I thought I was protecting Bianca by keeping her close. Instead, I left her vulnerable to the one man who knew every dark secret our family possessed.
âNow theyâll use her against you,â Bella finishes, her analytical mind cutting straight to the heart of it. Something dark crosses her face, and I know sheâs thinking of the video, of Sophiaâs final moments. But what she doesnât understand yet is that the video isnât just about Sophiaâs deathâitâs about why she had to die, about what my father did, about secrets that could destroy not just me, but everything Iâve built to protect Bianca.
The plane lurches suddenly, dropping altitude so fast my stomach rises to my throat.
âSir,â the pilotâs voice cuts in again, tight with barely controlled panic. âWeâre losing altitude. We need to land. Now.â
My mind races through scenarios, each worse than the last. If we land at a proper airport, Carmineâs people will be waiting. If we crash ⦠My arms tighten around Bella instinctively. Iâve already lost my daughter to this mess; I wonât lose my wife too.
âThe lake,â Bella says suddenly. âThere.â She points out the window where a large body of water glints in the sun like a silver promise. âCan we land on water?â
The pilotâs response is immediate: âItâs risky, but possible. Better than crashing in the forest.â
âDo it,â I order, already reaching for the emergency kit under my seat. Years of paranoiaâof planning for every contingencyâmight just save our lives. Inside the waterproof bag are weapons, cash, and documents. Everything we need to disappear, to become ghosts until we can find Bianca.
âYouâve done this before,â Bella observes as she helps me prepare. Her hands are steady despite the fear I see in her eyes. Fear sheâs trying to hide from me, just like Iâm trying to hide my terror about Bianca.
I check my spare gun, then hand her a smaller one. The weight of it looks wrong in her artistâs hands, hands meant for creating beauty, not dealing death. âYou know how to use this?â
âMy father taught me.â She handles the weapon with surprising confidence, checking the magazine like sheâs done it a thousand times. Another secret Gio keptâpreparing his daughter for this world while pretending to keep her from it. âThough he probably never imagined Iâd need those skills on my honeymoon.â
Despite everythingâthe military jets on our tail, my missing daughter, the fuel hemorrhaging from our wingâI feel my lips twitch. âNot the romantic getaway you imagined?â
âPlease.â She manages a smirk even as the plane descends sharply, making everything not bolted down slide toward the nose. âMost women get roses and champagne. I get gunfights and water landings.â
âWhen this is over,â I promise, cupping her face with my free hand, memorizing every detail in case itâs our last moment, âIâll give you any honeymoon you want.â
âI just want us both alive.â She leans into my touch, and fuck, the trust in her eyes undoes me. âAnd Bianca safe.â
The fact that she includes my daughterâafter everything sheâs learned about Biancaâs parentage, about the lies Iâve toldâdoes something to my chest that I canât afford to examine right now. Not with our death spiraling closer with every passing second.
âBrace for impact!â the pilot shouts.
I pull Bella tight against me, shielding her with my body as the jet hits the water. The impact is brutal, like hitting concrete at speed. The noise is deafeningâscreaming metal, shattering glass, the roar of water rushing in through the damaged fuselage. My injured arm screams in protest as I hold Bella steady, but I barely feel it through the adrenaline.
âMove!â I order, helping her out of her seat as icy water starts flooding the cabin. The sun streaming through the broken windows turns the rising water pink, like weâre drowning in blood. âThrough the emergency exit. Now!â
She doesnât argue, doesnât hesitate. We splash through the rising water toward the exit, my body between her and the military jets still circling overhead like vultures. The water is shocking cold as we emerge onto the wing, the metal groaning beneath our feet as the jet starts to sink.
âWe need to get clear before it sinks,â I shout over the wind and the sound of military engines overhead. Water sprays around us as the jets make another pass. âCan you swim?â
âBetter than I can shoot,â she returns, already slipping into the water. The sight of herâmy bride of less than forty-eight hoursâdiving into a freezing lake while being shot at makes me want to kill everyone responsible for bringing us to this point.
We strike out for the shore, staying low in the water to avoid being spotted from above. The lake is larger than it looked from the air, each stroke a battle against the cold and our waterlogged clothes. My injured arm feels like itâs being torn apart with every movement, but the pain helps me focus. On surviving. On getting Bella to safety. On finding Bianca before itâs too late.
Finally, we drag ourselves onto a rocky beach, both gasping for air. In the distance, our jet makes its final descent, slipping beneath the surface like a dying beast. The evidence of our passage disappears with itâexactly as planned.
At least somethingâs going right.
âThe pilot and flight attendant?â Bella asks between breaths, water streaming from her hair. Even half drowned and shivering, she thinks of others. It makes me want to kiss her and shake her in equal measure.
âHave their own escape routes.â I help her to her feet, noting how she tries to hide her trembling. âTheyâll meet us at the rendezvous point.â
âWhich is where?â
Headlights suddenly appear on the road above the beach. I pull Bella behind a large boulder, pressing her between my body and the cold stone. Her heart hammers against my chest, matching my own rapid rhythm as voices carry down to us.
âFind them,â Carmineâs distinctive voice slices through the morning air. My uncle-in-law sounds different nowâgone is the oily charm, replaced by something colder, more calculating. âI want confirmation theyâre dead before nightfall.â
âAnd if theyâre not?â Another voice that makes my blood boilâFather Romano. The man who blessed my marriage to Bella less than two days ago, whoâs heard every confession Iâve made since I was fourteen, whoâs been playing us all for fools.
âThen we move to plan B.â Carmineâs footsteps crunch on the rocky beach. âHowâs our insurance policy?â
âSedated, but safe.â The priestâs response makes my muscles lock with rage. âBiancaâs quite upset about her fatherâs ⦠unfortunate accident.â
Bellaâs hand finds mine, squeezing hard enough to ground me before I do something stupidâlike emerge from cover and tear Romanoâs throat out with my bare hands. They have my daughter. Theyâre drugging my daughter.
And theyâre going to use her to destroy everything.
âCheck the shoreline,â Carmine orders. âThey had to have made it to land somewhere.â
We press tighter against the boulder, hardly daring to breathe. Bellaâs soaking wet body trembles against mine, though whether from cold or fear, Iâm not sure. Probably both. Water drips from her hair onto my neck as footsteps crunch closer to our position. One beam of light passes inches from us, and I feel her hold her breath.
My mind races through options, each worse than the last. Weâre trapped between armed men and deep water, with my injured arm making swimming back out nearly impossible. The guns I managed to keep dry during our swim are professional grade, but weâre outnumbered at least five to one based on the footsteps Iâm counting.
But itâs not the odds that make my blood run coldâitâs Carmineâs casual mention of Bianca being sedated. My daughter, whoâs already lost one parent to violence, who doesnât know the truth about her parentage, about why Sophia really died. Now sheâs drugged and being used as a pawn in Carmineâs power play.
The rage that builds in my chest is almost overwhelming. I want to step out from behind this rock and empty both clips into Carmine and Romano. Want to make them suffer for touching my daughter, for threatening my wife, for thinking they could take whatâs mine.
Bella must sense my tension because she turns her face into my neck, her lips brushing my skin as she mouths silently: âTogether?â
I meet her eyes, seeing trust there despite everything sheâs learned about me, everything sheâs lost because of me. My free hand cups the back of her neck as I nod once, drawing both guns.
Whatever comes next, we face it as one. Because Carmine and Romano have forgotten something crucialâa wounded animal is most dangerous when protecting its family.
And theyâve threatened both my wife and my daughter.
God help them all.