Silent Vows (Bonds of Betrayal): Chapter 22
Silent Vows: A Dark, Mafia Romance (Bonds of Betrayal)
âDad!â Biancaâs scream echoes off the stone walls as Matteo crumples to the ground. Iâm moving before conscious thought kicks in, muscle memory from years of first aid training taking over as I drop to my knees beside my husband. The labâs harsh fluorescent lights turn his blood almost black against his white shirt, but his eyes are clear and focused as they lock onto mine.
âIâm fine,â he growls, though the pallor of his skin betrays him. âCheck Romano.â
âHeâs dead.â Biancaâs voice trembles as she kneels on Matteoâs other side. Even in the harsh lighting, I see how she unconsciously mirrors his mannerisms, that DeLuca grace present in every movement. âYour shot ⦠right through the heart.â
âExcellent.â Matteo tries to sit up, a hiss of pain escaping through clenched teeth. âYouâre getting good at saving my life, piccola.â
My hands shake as I tear open his shirt, finding the wound high in his shoulder. The sight of his blood makes something primal rise in my chestârage and fear warring for control. âStop talking. Youâre luckyâthrough and through, missed anything vital.â I snatch gauze from the labâs first aid kit, pressing it against both entry and exit wounds. âBianca, find me something to bind this with.â
She moves with that innate DeLuca grace, returning moments later with strips torn from Romanoâs expensive suit jacket. Together, we work to stabilize the bleeding, our shared concern for Matteo temporarily erasing any tension between us. Her hands are steady as she helps me bind the wounds, and I see steel beneath her teenage facadeâthe same steel Iâve come to recognize in her father.
âSecurity teamâs sweeping the building,â Matteo reports, his free hand covering mine where it presses against his wound. The heat of his skin grounds me, reminds me heâs alive despite the blood staining my hands. âBut we need to move. The Calabrese family wonât be far behind.â
âYou need a hospital,â I argue, though I already know itâs futile.
âWhat I need is to get my family somewhere safe.â His eyes move between Bianca and me, carrying that intensity that still makes my breath catch. âBoth of you.â
The word âfamilyâ catches us all off guard. After everything thatâs been revealed about parentage and succession, it should feel hollow. Instead, it feels more real than everâlike steel forged in fire, stronger for the tempering.
âBoth of us?â Biancaâs voice sounds younger than her seventeen years, vulnerability bleeding through her usual ice princess facade. âEven though Iâm not â¦â
âYou are my daughter.â Matteoâs voice carries that tone that makes hardened killers obey without question. âSome bonds matter more than blood. Some choices define us more than the ones made for us.â
Tears spill down Biancaâs cheeks as she throws herself into his arms, uncaring of the blood. He holds her with his good arm, pressing a kiss to her dark hair. The gesture is so tender, so paternal, it makes my chest ache. For a moment, her profile against the fluorescent lights is pure DeLucaâthe same commanding presence he has in that turned-away photo frame in his office.
The moment shatters as footsteps approach. Antonio appears in the doorway, gun ready. âBuildingâs secure, Boss. But weâve got incomingâmultiple vehicles approaching from the south.â
âTime to go.â Matteo starts to stand, but his legs buckle. Blood loss is taking its toll, though heâd never admit it.
I catch him before he can fall, pulling his good arm across my shoulders. To my surprise, Bianca mirrors me on his other side, careful of his injury. The trust in the gestureâboth of them letting me help, letting me inâmakes something warm unfurl in my chest.
âTogether,â I say firmly, meeting both their eyes. âWe move together.â
Before we leave, I pause by Romanoâs body. His dead eyes stare at nothing, expensive suit now ruined with blood. The gun in his manicured hand still looks wrong, but I take it anyway.
In our world, you never know when you might need another weapon.
We make our way through the monasteryâs winding corridors, Antonioâs team providing cover. The sound of gunfire erupts outsideâstaccato bursts that echo off ancient stone, announcing the Calabrese familyâs arrival in bullets and blood. Each shot makes me flinch, memories of my fatherâs death still too fresh.
âExit route?â I ask as we reach the ground floor, adjusting my grip on Matteo. His skin burns with fever against mine, though heâd never admit weakness.
âUnderground tunnel system,â he manages through gritted teeth. Sweat beads on his forehead, and I can feel tremors running through his body. âConnects to the old wine cellars. Transportation waiting on the other side.â
âOf course there are secret tunnels,â Bianca mutters, but her grip on her father remains steady. Her hospital gown is spattered with his blood now, making her look even younger, more vulnerable. âWhat else donât I know about this place?â
âLater,â I cut in as more gunfire sounds closer, close enough to shower us with stone dust from the ancient walls. âStories later, survival now.â
We find the tunnel entrance hidden behind a false wall in the chapelâs confessionalâbecause of course the Catholic Church would have escape routes built into their houses of worship. The passage is narrow, medieval stone giving way to packed earth. Emergency strips along the floor cast everything in sickly green light that makes Matteoâs pallor look worse.
Our progress is slow with his injury, but no one suggests splitting up. Weâve all learned the hard way what happens when family separates. The tunnel air is thick with centuries of secrets, heavy with the weight of earth above us. Water drips somewhere in the darkness beyond the emergency lights, a steady rhythm like a dying manâs heartbeat.
âWait.â Bianca stops suddenly, her body tensing. âListen.â
Footsteps echo behind us, followed by voicesâJohnny Calabreseâs distinct tone carrying through the tunnel like poisoned honey. The sound makes my skin crawl, remembering how he looked at me through my studio window, like I was something to be broken.
âKeep moving,â Matteo orders, though his voice is weaker now. âAntonioâs team will hold themâ ââ
âNo.â I help him lean against the rough wall, my decision already made. âTheyâll follow us straight to the exit.â I pull out Romanoâs gun, checking the magazine. Six shots left. Itâll have to be enough. âBianca, get your father to the cars. Iâll delay them.â
âBella, donâtââ Matteo reaches for me with his good hand, blood seeping through his makeshift bandages. The sight steels my resolve.
âTrust me,â I whisper, echoing his words from our wedding night, from every moment heâs asked me to believe in him. âLike I trusted you.â
Before he can argue, I kiss him hard and fast, pouring everything I canât say into itâhow quickly Iâve come to need him, how afraid I am of losing him, how much I might just love him despite everything. When I pull away, I find Bianca watching us with an unreadable expression.
âTake care of him,â I tell my stepdaughter, this girl whoâs become family in the strangest way.
To my surprise, she nods, something like respect flickering in those DeLuca eyes. âTake care of them.â She presses something into my handâa small explosive device, clearly lifted from one of Antonioâs men. A smile curves her lips, and for a moment I see the woman sheâll become. âMake it count.â
The footsteps grow closer as Bianca helps Matteo deeper into the tunnel. I wait until they turn a corner, then set the charge where the passage narrows. The timer gives me two minutesâmore than enough time to create a distraction that will either save my family or get me killed.
âI can smell your perfume, little artist,â Johnnyâs voice echoes off stone walls, turning my blood to ice. âJasmine, isnât it? Like Sophia used to wear. Like all DeLuca women wear before they die.â
I back away from the charge, deliberately letting my footsteps be heard. My heart pounds so hard Iâm sure it must echo off the walls, but my hands are steady on Romanoâs gun. âCome find out.â
I make it thirty feet before they appearâJohnny and three of his men, their shadows stretching grotesque and massive in the emergency lighting. His smile reminds me of a shark scenting blood, all teeth and soulless eyes. The sight makes my finger tighten on the trigger, but I force myself to wait. Timing is everything.
He emerges from the shadows like a nightmare given form, three of his men flanking him. The emergency lighting casts his features in sickly green, highlighting the cruelty in his perfect smile. He moves with a predatorâs grace, every step measured and deliberate.
âThe artist princess,â he mocks, spreading his arms wide. âGiovanniâs precious daughter, who thought she could escape her birthright by hiding behind easels and paint.â His laugh echoes off the stone walls. âHowâs that working out for you, sweetheart?â
My finger tightens on the trigger. âBetter than being your puppet, Johnny. Howâs it feel, being Carmineâs attack dog?â
Something ugly flashes across his handsome features. âYou think you know so much, little girl. But you donât even know how your father died, do you?â
The words are like a knife through me, but I force myself to stay focused. Keep him talking. Buy time. âWhy donât you tell me?â
âHe begged at the end.â Johnnyâs voice drops lower, silkier. âNot for his lifeâno, Giovanni was too proud for that. He begged for yours.â He takes another step closer, and I have to fight the urge to back away. âWant to know what his last words were?â
Forty seconds. My blood roars in my ears, but I make myself stand my ground. âYouâre lying.â
ââNot my bella mia,ââ Johnny mimics my fatherâs accent perfectly, twisting the endearment into something obscene. ââNot my little artist.â Such a disappointment you must have been to himâthe heir to his empire, running away to play with paintbrushes.â
âShut up.â The words tear from my throat before I can stop them. Thirty seconds.
âHe died thinking heâd failed you.â Johnnyâs smile widens, showing too many teeth. âThinking his only child was too weak to carry on his legacy. And he was right, wasnât he? Look at you nowâMatteoâs pet artist, playing at being donna when we both know youâre just a scared little girl with paint under her nails.â
I think of my fatherâs proud smile at my first art show. Of his hands steady on mine as he taught me to shoot. Of all the lessons he gave me that I never understood until now.
âYou want to know what my father really taught me, Johnny?â My voice comes out steady, cold. Fifteen seconds. âHe taught me to see the whole canvas. To look for weaknesses. To understand that sometimes the most dangerous player is the one you underestimate.â
Johnny laughs loudly at that. âAnd you think thatâs you?â
Thirteen seconds.
âTrying to delay us while they escape?â He tsks, the sound obscene in the ancient tunnel as he notices me checking my watch. âBrave, but ultimately pointless. Thereâs only one exit, and my men are already there.â
I check my watch. Ten seconds. âSure about that?â Adrenaline makes everything sharper, clearer. I catalog details like I would for a paintingâthe way his suit is perfectly pressed even now, how his signet ring catches the dim light, the slight tremor in his gun hand that betrays his cocaine habit. âYou people never learn, do you? Always underestimating what weâll do to protect our family.â
âFamily?â Johnny laughs, the sound bouncing off stone walls like broken glass. âYouâve been married two days. What do you know about family?â
âI know that real family chooses each other.â Five seconds. I shift my weight, preparing to move. âBlood is just genetics. Love? Thatâs a choice.â
Understanding dawns on Johnnyâs face just as the timer hits zero. I dive around the corner as the explosion rocks the tunnel, the concussion stealing my breath even as I roll away from falling debris. Centuries-old stone and earth cascade down, cutting off half of Johnnyâs scream.
Through the settling dust, I hear him coughing, raging. âYou fucking bitch! Iâll find you! Iâll make you watch while I kill them bothâyour precious husband and his bastard daughter!â
âNo.â My voice carries over the sound of shifting rubble. âYou wonât. Because my father taught me one more thing, Johnny.â I pause, thinking of Papaâs last lessonâthe one he taught me without words. âHe taught me that real power isnât about violence or territory or blood. Itâs about love. About family. About what weâll do to protect the people who choose us.â
His answer is lost in another crash of falling stone, but Iâm already running, following the emergency lights toward the exit. My lungs burn with every breath, stone dust coating my throat, but I donât slow down. Not with Matteo bleeding, not with Bianca still weak from drugs, not with everything weâve fought for hanging by a thread.
I emerge into predawn darkness to find Matteoâs security team waiting, guns trained on bodies that used to be Calabreseâs men. The sight should horrify meâthese men Iâd probably served drinks to at my wedding, now cooling in the dirt. Instead, I feel nothing but relief.
âMrs. DeLuca.â Antonio helps me into the waiting SUV where Matteo and Bianca occupy the back seat. âAll clear?â
âJohnnyâs trapped on the other side of about ten tons of rock.â I slide in beside my husband, immediately checking his bandages. âHeâll dig out eventually, but â¦â
âBut weâll be long gone.â Matteo pulls me close with his good arm, pressing his lips to my temple. His skin still burns with fever, but his eyes are clear as they meet mine. âYou impossible, brilliant woman.â
âI learned from the best.â My voice falters as the events of the night catch up with me. The monastery, Romanoâs death, Johnnyâs trap, Matteoâs blood still staining my hands. âBoth of you.â
From her place on Matteoâs other side, Bianca reaches across to squeeze my hand. No words are neededâweâve forged something stronger than blood in that tunnel, something that canât be broken by secrets or lies or DNA tests.
âWhere to?â Antonio asks from the front seat as we speed into the lightening sky.
Matteoâs good hand finds mine, his wedding ring pressing against my palm like a promise. âHome,â he says simply. âTake us home.â
As dawn light paints the sky in shades of gold and crimson, I think about how many meanings that word can have. Home isnât just a placeâitâs people, itâs trust, itâs love despite darkness. Or maybe because of it.
The SUV speeds toward safety as the sun rises behind us, turning the monastery into a dark silhouette against the morning sky. We may have escaped its ancient walls, but I know the secrets buried there will follow us. Some truths refuse to stay buried, no matter how much stone you pile on top of them.
But thatâs tomorrowâs battle. For now, I have my husbandâs blood on my hands, my stepdaughterâs trust in my heart, and a future thatâs terrifying and beautiful and ours.
For now, thatâs enough.