Silent Vows (Bonds of Betrayal): Chapter 33
Silent Vows: A Dark, Mafia Romance (Bonds of Betrayal)
Dawn breaks over Manhattan like spilled blood, painting the skyline in shades of crimson and gold. From my study window, I watch the city awakenâdelivery trucks rumbling down empty streets, early commuters hurrying with coffee cups clutched like lifelines, the steady pulse of a world unaware that power shifted last night. Every shadow seems deeper this morning, every light somehow harsher.
Or maybe thatâs just what happens when you exile your brother. Again.
The Irish have already sent confirmation of Marioâs arrival in Boston, their message carrying thinly veiled threats about consequences and broken alliances. The words sit heavy in my inbox: Your brotherâs reception will match the hospitality he was shown in New York.
The photo they attached shows Mario being escorted into OâConnorâs compound, his shoulder bandaged but his spine straight. Even wounded, even defeated, he carries himself like a DeLuca.
Let them fucking threaten. Right now, my focus is entirely on the sleeping woman in our bed upstairs.
My wife. My miracle. My match in every way that matters. Bellaâs aim last night was perfectâprecise enough to stop Mario without killing him. Just like her heart is strong enough to love me without fearing me.
Memories of last night assault meâMarioâs blood blooming across his suit, Bellaâs steady hand with the rifle, the way Elena looked at my brother like he was something fascinating rather than lethal. The same way Sophia once looked at him, before everything went to hell. Before choices were made that still echo through generations.
I touch the turned-away photo on my desk, Giuseppeâs face hidden but his presence still haunting every decision. Like father, like sonsâalways choosing who to cast out, who to protect, who to love.
âThe Families are waiting for your statement,â Antonio says from the doorway. His weathered face shows the strain of a sleepless night, his usually pristine suit slightly rumpled. Dark circles rim his eyesâheâs been up all night coordinating with our Boston contacts, monitoring Marioâs transport. âThey want assurance that the threat is contained.â
âThe threat is never contained,â I respond, turning from the window. The taste of copper lingers in my mouth, though I havenât eaten since yesterday. âWe just change how we fight it.â
âAnd how do we fight this one?â Antonioâs voice carries a note of caution Iâve rarely heard from him. After thirty years of service, very little rattles my consigliere. But Mario has always been differentâa snake we canât quite kill, a threat we canât fully eliminate. A brother I canât quite bring myself to destroy.
âBy being stronger than they expect.â I move to my desk, pulling up property records on multiple screens. Maps of Brooklyn glow blue in the dim morning light, each marker representing a piece of Marioâs old territory. âI want it completely restructured. New businesses, new management, new everything. Leave the Irish nothing to work with.â
âAlready in progress.â Antonioâs tablet lights up with plans, his fingers moving swiftly across the surface. He pauses, something like concern flickering across his features. âBut Boss ⦠thereâs something else. Elenaâs been asking questions. About Mario.â
My jaw clenches as I remember the way my brother looked at Bellaâs best friend yesterday, that calculating interest I recognized too well. Iâd once looked at Bella the same wayâlike a fascinating puzzle to solve, a weakness to exploit. But where my interest grew into love, Mario only knows how to destroy what he desires.
The anger in Elenaâs eyes when I ordered her away concerns me more than her fascination. That kind of defiance in our world usually ends one of two waysâsubmission or destruction. And Elena has never been one to submit.
Sheâs like Bella in that wayâdanger hidden behind beauty.
âIncrease her security detail,â I order. âQuietly. And get me everything on her contact with the Calabrese family. Especially Anthony.â His interest in Elena takes on new significance now. One more thread in this web of alliances and betrayals weâre all tangled in.
âYou think theyâre connected?â Surprise colors Antonioâs tone.
âI think nothing in our world happens by coincidence.â Marioâs words echo in my headâabout Bella being âmore interestingâ than Sophia. The comparison makes something dark curl in my gut. Sophia was a pawn, a means to an end. But Bella? Sheâs a queen on this chessboard, powerful in her own right. If Mario sees similar potential in Elena ⦠âAnd I think my brotherâs already planning his next move.â
A soft knock interrupts us. Bianca enters, already dressed in leggings and an oversized NYU sweatshirt that makes her look more college student than high school student. I hate it.
But thereâs tension in her shoulders, worry in her eyes that makes my pulse spike.
âDad? Bellaâs asking for you. Sheâs â¦â My daughter hesitates, and that small pause sends ice through my veins. Bianca never hesitates. Not unless somethingâs truly wrong. âSheâs not feeling well.â
Iâm moving before she finishes speaking, taking the stairs two at a time. Every worst-case scenario plays through my mindâcomplications from the pregnancy, delayed reaction to last nightâs stress, Marioâs final act of revenge. My security training catalogs the minutes until my private doctor can arrive, the distance to the nearest hospital, the safest routes through morning traffic.
Each step feels too slow, memories of other losses threatening to overwhelm me. Not again. I canât lose the woman I love. Canât watch another family shatter like glass.
I find Bella in our bathroom, huddled over the toilet. Her dark hair spills around her shoulders, and her skin has taken on a sickly pallor that makes my heart clench. One of my shirts drowns her small frame.
âIâm fine,â she manages between waves of nausea, but I see the shadows under her eyes, the slight tremor in her hands. Yesterday took more from her than sheâll admitâthe weight of the sniper rifle, the burden of choice, the constant strain of protecting our family. Our child.
âCome here, piccola.â I sit on the bathroom floor, pulling her between my legs so her back rests against my chest as relief pours through me. The marble is cold beneath us, but her body burns hot against mine. One hand splays protectively over her stomach while the other holds back her hair. Every breath she takes helps calm my racing heart. Sheâs here. Sheâs safe. They both are.
âSome donna I am,â she mutters, leaning back into me. Her body trembles slightly, though whether from sickness or exhaustion, Iâm not sure. âCanât even keep breakfast down.â
âYouâre exactly the donna I need.â I press my lips to her temple, tasting salt on her skin. My heart still hasnât quite settled from the panic of moments ago. The fear of losing herâof losing them bothâsits like ice in my chest. âStrong enough to wound my brother, wise enough not to kill him, brave enough to carry our child in this dangerous world.â
She relaxes slightly against me, her body molding to mine like she was made to fit there. The persistent shaking begins to ease as I run my hand up and down her arm. But even through her exhaustion, her mind never stops working. Never stops protecting.
âSpeaking of dangerous ⦠I canât stop thinking about Elenaâs face when she watched Mario leave. The way she looked at him â¦â
âI know.â My arms tighten around her instinctively. The memory of Elenaâs fascinated expression, so like Sophiaâs once was, makes something cold settle in my chest. How many times will I watch this pattern repeat? How many women will my brother destroy before heâs satisfied? âAntonioâs handling it.â
âLike you handled me?â Thereâs a smile in her voice despite her discomfort. âWatching from afar, protecting without revealing yourself?â
âThat was different.â How can she compare us?
âWas it?â She turns in my embrace, and even pale and shaking, she takes my breath away. Those artistâs eyes see too much, understand too well. âOr did you recognize something in me that you needed? Like Elena might see something in Mario?â
The parallel makes my blood run cold. Because sheâs rightâIâd watched her for years, drawn to her strength and artistry, her ability to straddle both worlds even as she tried her best to reject this world. If Mario sees similar qualities in Elena â¦
âHeâs dangerous,â I say finally, the words tasting like ash. âMore dangerous than I ever was.â
âBecause he has nothing left to lose?â Her fingers trace my jaw with an artistâs precision. âOr because he finally sees something worth fighting for?â
Before I can respond, her body jerks as another wave of nausea hits. She pushes away from me, turning back to the toilet. I hold her through it, murmuring soft Italian endearments against her hair. Each heave feels like a knife in my chestâthis fierce woman reduced to vulnerability because she carries our child.
When it passes, she says quietly, âWe canât control who they choose to love. Elena or Bianca or this little one.â Her hand covers mine over our child. âWe can only be there when they need us. Like my father was for me.â
âYour father led you straight to me,â I remind her with a slight smile.
âNo.â She kisses me softly, and I taste the truth in her words. âHe just made sure I was strong enough to choose my own path. And it led me here anyway.â
The bathroom door creaks open to reveal Bianca with a cup of peppermint tea. The sharp, clean scent cuts through the sour air of sickness. She takes in our position on the floor without comment, simply sliding down to sit beside us. In this moment, she looks so much like me it hurtsâthat same protective instinct, that same ability to mask emotion.
âThe Families are demanding a meeting,â Bianca reports, handing Bella the tea. Steam curls up between them, fragrant and soothing. âThey want to know what happens next.â
I study my unlikely familyâmy daughter who carries my heart, my brave wife growing our child beneath her heart, both of them stronger than anyone could have predicted. Both of them worth everything Iâve sacrificed, everything Iâll still have to sacrifice.
âWhat happens next,â I say softly, âis we protect what matters. Everything else is just details.â
Bellaâs hand finds mine as Bianca leans against us both. The weight of both my girls grounds me, reminds me what Iâm fighting for. Outside, the city awakens to a new realityâone where the DeLuca family is stronger than ever, bound by choice rather than blood.
But in the back of my mind, Marioâs words echo like a warning: âFamily is such a fragile thing, isnât it? So easily ⦠broken.â The way he looked at Elena, the secrets still buried in our past, the baby growing beneath my handâso many vulnerabilities, so many ways this happiness could shatter.
The Irish will move against us eventually. Elenaâs fascination with Mario could lead to complications. And somewhere in Boston, my brother plans his next move, patient as a snake waiting to strike.
I press a kiss to Bellaâs temple, breathing in her jasmine scent beneath the lingering traces of sickness. âYou should rest today. Both of you.â My hand spreads wider over where our child grows, still amazed that something so precious could come from my darkness.
âWeâre fine,â Bella insists, rolling her eyes, but she doesnât resist when I help her stand. âJust normal pregnancy stuff.â
âNothing about this pregnancy will be normal,â Bianca says, her voice carrying that DeLuca steel. âNot with the Irish making threats, Elena asking dangerous questions, and Mario â¦â She trails off, but we all hear the unspoken concerns.
âWhich is why we adapt,â I say, guiding Bella back to our bed. âWe strengthen our defenses, watch our vulnerabilities, protect what matters most.â
âAnd Elena?â Bella asks as I tuck her under the covers. âShe wonât just let this go, Matteo. I know her.â
âThen we make sure she understands the stakes.â But even as I say it, I remember how fascination can override self-preservation. How loveâor what we think is loveâcan blind us to danger. âLike I said, Antonioâs increasing her security. Beyond that â¦â
âBeyond that, she makes her own choices,â Bella finishes. âLike I did.â
âAnd look how well that turned out,â Bianca quips, but thereâs real affection in her voice now when she looks at her stepmother.
A different kind of family, built from broken pieces and careful choices. Not what Giuseppe would have wanted, but stronger for it. Better.
Let the Irish plot. Let Elena chase dangerous fascinations. Let the Families demand their answers.
Right now, I almost believe weâre invincible. That love really can conquer blood feuds and old wounds. That choice matters more than genetics.
But Marioâs last words echo in my mind, a shadow across the morning light: âFamily is such a fragile thing, isnât it? So easily ⦠broken.â