Not Mine to Keep: Chapter 39
Not Mine to Keep (The Costa Family)
Oyster Bay, Long Island
My aunt was safe. Hudson and his team were fine. And the corrupt AISE agent had been arrested.
But nothing from my husband.
Not a word.
Holding my phone while waiting for him to call, I continued to pace the living room alone, unsure where everyone else was, but I knew no one was asleep. It was after midnight here but daylight now in Romania.
âCome on.â I checked my phone again. His last message to me had been three hours ago. Three freaking hours. Heâd said heâd be on a plane within two.
When I looked up, catching sight of Izzy and her mother standing at the edge of the room with tears in their eyes and pale faces, my phone slipped from my hand.
âWhat happened?â I asked as Enzo and his father joined us.
âWe finally spoke to The League,â Enzo said, his voice strained, and when he came farther into the room, his bloodshot eyes had me taking two steps back.
âWhat?â The word rattled free between my clenched teeth, and my hands knotted at my sides.
âConstantine and Alessandro were still inside the compound when a missile took out . . . took out the . . .â Enzo slammed his hand over his mouth, unable to finish, and I couldnât connect the dots that were left hanging in the air.
âNo.â I whipped my hands up and pushed the words away instead. Jediâd them right to hell.
When my mother-in-law turned to Izzy and began sobbing, Izzy hugged her, and that officially destroyed me. Cut my legs from under me, and I fell to my knees, then to all fours. Searching for air. For life. For a reason to want to keep breathing.
âWe donât know anything for certain,â Mr. Costa snapped out.
I lifted my chin to see Enzoâs long jeaned legs before me. âWhat do we know?â
âSebastian and his people are searching for them, even though itâs still . . . Well, the fires arenât all out yet. Before the missile struck, Alessandro had said he was working on finding a way out, but Sebastian doesnât think he found one.â Enzo crouched closer to eye level. âHe believes whoever hired the Barones to start up a new conflict in the Middle East was alerted to the compound breach, and they had eyes on the place and a contingency plan: take out the compound to destroy the evidence.â I had no clue how he was remaining so steady. So focused on my eyes without crying himself as he got through answering me.
âBut maybe he did make it out but couldnât tell him?â I blinked back tears of denial.
Enzo reached for my shoulder and bowed his head, and his chest broke forward with movement as if he were about to lose it. He brought his other fist over his mouth while closing his eyes. âThey were definitely inside. Their teammates had eyes on the property just before the missile strike. They didnât make it out. At least not aboveground.â At that, he let go of me and pushed upright.
I forced myself to sit, falling back on my heels. My eyes fell to the rings on my finger. âAlessandro said the Barones were always ahead of . . .â Where was I going with this? I looked up at their father, who was still standing like a statue of shock. âThe Barones would have an escape plan, wouldnât they? Somehow The League must not have known about it.â My hand went to my stomach, and now wasnât the time to throw up, dammit.
âI want to think that,â Enzo said, facing me again while thumbing away tears. He looked over at his mom and sister still crying. âItâs the one time I want to believe they were one step ahead of us . . . but why hasnât anyone reached out?â
âUnless the research I sent them was right? What if . . . ?â I thought back to my research. âConstanÈa is one of their oldest seaports, and, um, during the Romanian War of Independence, to break from the Ottomans, there were elaborate tunnels built all over the city, leading to the sea to help bring troops and supplies.â
Mr. Costa finally budged from his fixed position, coming over to offer his hand. I allowed him to help me rise. I wasnât sure if Alessandro had filled them in on my research, or just his team back in Romaniaâbut considering how Enzo was looking at me like Iâd lost it, I doubted they knew.
âDuring World War One, the tunnels were used again,â I continued, refusing to believe I was grasping at straws. No, Alessandro and his brother had made it out; there had to be tunnels. No other option was acceptable. âWhat if the Barones chose that location for a reason?â
âThe League had the architectural blueprints. Nothing listed there about tunnels in any of their research. They had eyes on them the whole time. If that were the case, Claudio Barone wouldâve gone underground instead of risking heading toward the sea, where a team was waiting to intercept him,â Enzo said, nearly shooting down my hope.
âBut itâs possible,â I whispered.
Enzo frowned, but then looked at his father for direction on what to say. To do.
âAlessandroâs stubborn. So is Constantine.â Mr. Costa turned his attention on me. âNo way will some missile strike be what takes them out.â
âDad,â Izzy began, her tone somber, as if worried he was getting ahead of himself, âtheyâre not indestructible. I know you like to think that, butââ
âThey are,â he hissed back at her, and that one tear gliding down his cheek had me falling to the floor again.
Six Hours Later
Constantineâs face filled the iPad screen his mother held, and he demanded, âWhereâs Alessandro?â
Constantine was okay, but . . .
Chills scattered across my skin as Constantine tugged at the wires connected to his body, trying to remove the IV. Two nurses rushed to his side, speaking in another languageâpresumably Romanianâbegging him to stop.
âWhere. Is. He?â he hissed, one eye swollen shut. His head was wrapped as if heâd taken a blow there. One arm bandaged up, too.
âYou were in surgery, sir. You need to calm down,â the nurse said, switching to English.
Enzo was already gone. The second heâd learned Alessandro was missing, he took off for the airport.
âJust tell me where my brother is,â Constantine barked out, setting his focus once again on the screen. When he visibly relaxed, I had to assume someone had upped his morphine drip to calm him down. His head rolled back, hitting the pillow. âWhere is he?â he asked, groggily that time. âI was fighting Rocco . . . and then the fucker jabbed something in my neck. Next thing I know, Iâm here. So what the hell happened after that?â He didnât peer around the room for answers, only looked at us over the screen, so I had to assume none of his other teammates were there.
No, theyâd be trying to track down Alessandro.
âWe think Rocco has him,â Izzy whispered, the first to break the quiet on our side. âSebastian found you, unconscious, just inside an entrance to an old underground tunnel network.â
âThere was a missile strike,â Mr. Costa added, his throat thick with emotion. âThe League believes the Russiansâwell, an oligarchâhired the Barones to start the war, and they had an armed drone on standby in case of . . .â He let Constantine fill in the blanks.
At this point, Iâd cried so much, I was dehydrated and was pretty sure Iâd temporarily lost the ability to produce tears.
âAlessandro was with you before you were drugged,â Mr. Costa continued, clearly doing his best to keep it together. One of us had to, I supposed.
âWhat do you mean?â Constantine sputtered. âCallieâs research was right?â
Yeah, it was. But from the looks of it, the tunnels arenât exactly usable anymore. Probably not used in a hundred years. I couldnât get those words out, though. Because I couldnât tell him what he wanted to hearâwhat I needed to hear, too. That Alessandro was safe.
âThe League said the tunnels are a mess. Parts appear to have collapsed and caved in decades ago,â Izzy shared in a timid tone. âThey could still be down there, though. Thereâs a search underway.â
Constantineâs red eyes became glossy as he put it together, and his free hand curled into a fist atop his chest. âWhat youâre saying is you have no clue where Alessandro is?â
âThere were signs a body was dragged away from where Sebastian found you.â Izzy revealed more details that Sebastian had shared with us. âThe trail stopped after about a hundred feet. But theyâre looking. They wonât give up. Theyâll find him.â
âThat means . . .â Constantine closed his eyes. âRocco has my brother. He took him instead of me. Mustâve drugged him, too, and you know how Alessandro reacts to drugs.â A few tears slid down his cheeks.
âIâm relieved youâre okay,â Izzy said, her voice hitching, âbut that surprised me, too, given your history together.â
âHe did it to torture me. Because losing my brother hurts more than whatever physical pain he could put me through.â Constantine opened his eyes. âIâm sorry, Callie.â He searched me out on screen. âI couldnât protect him. I failed . . . again.â
âDonât say that,â Mrs. Costa cried, setting her hand on the screen as if she could physically comfort her son. âYou didnât fail, and weâll find him.â
âIf Rocco gets him out of that tunnel, heâll go off the grid,â Constantine rasped. âTell me they kept someone alive from the compound to torture for information. Claudio?â
âClaudio didnât survive. Died being medevaced to the hospital.â Izzy gave him the bad news. âAnd only one man from his team made it, and heâs a foot soldier. Doesnât know anything.â
âWhat about the op in Oslo? Successful?â Constantine asked, a touch of optimism there. âAnyone there know where Rocco may try and take Alessandro?â
âMission success, but Roccoâs men died. No one there to help us,â Izzy told him.
âI need to get out of this bed. Help search for him. I know how that fucker thinks.â Constantine tried once again to detach himself from wires, but it didnât take much effort for the nurses to pin him back down.
âSon, every intelligence agency on that side of the hemisphere has Rocco on their radar now. The second they make it out of the tunnel, if they havenât already, and Rocco shows his face on any CCTV footage, theyâll lock on to him and follow the trail,â Mr. Costa said, and I wanted to immerse myself in the same kind of optimism, but . . . âKeeping Alessandro alive is Roccoâs insurance policy. Heâs his hostage.â
âTheyâll find him.â Izzyâs turn to be the confident one. âEnzoâs already on a plane, heading there to help.â
âTell Enzo to pick me up the second he arrives.â Constantine lifted his hands and pushed at the air. âDonât argue with me. I can walk out of here now. Iâm fine.â
âBut The Leagueââ
âDoesnât know Rocco like I do,â Constantine cut off Izzy. âIâm not losing more family. Are we clear?â
I stepped back from the screen, hating how helpless I felt. Iâd begged Enzo to take me with him, but Iâd been shot down. Same for Izzy.
Constantine shifted his attention to his father. âThereâs something else youâre not telling me. What is it?â
I exchanged a look with Izzy, and she focused back on the screen and told him, âArmani heard Alessandro is missing and possiblyââIzzy pausedââdead or in Roccoâs custody. Heâs already en route to New York with Marcello. Heâs coming for Callie to take her home.â
âWeâre not letting him take her,â Mr. Costa said before Constantine could object. âGabriel wanted to help search for Alessandro, but at this news, heâs escorting Callieâs aunt to New York, and so he can deal with the Armani situation.â
Iâd spoken to my aunt briefly, murmured a few apologies, but Iâd been too much of a mess to carry on any real conversation. Until Alessandro was okay, I couldnât think about anything else. âIâm not your problem. All I care about is that you find Alessandro.â Unsure if I could handle staying in the room any longer without another breakdown, I started for the hall, but Mr. Costa blocked the door.
âYouâre family. My daughter.â He reached for my arm. âMy sonâs wife. That means Iâll protect you with my own life.â
âListen to him,â Constantine said. I jolted at his deep voice and slowly turned toward the room. Heâd sounded just like Alessandro then. âIf Armani tries to take her, kill him, Dad. Fuck the plan to pin his death on someone else.â
My eyes went wide at his order. âNo, his people will come after you for revenge. And you donât need that, especially not now. Please, donât do this. Not for me.â Before I could plead some more not to make any sacrifices for me, my phone chimed from a new message.
I grabbed it from the pocket of my sweatpants, prepared to ignore whoever it was.
Unknown number: *Video*
âWhat is it?â my father-in-law asked, and I supposed it was okay to think of him as Dad, because I refused to believe Alessandro was gone. Heâd be back. So yeah, Dad it is. âOpen it,â he prompted.
The blood drained from my face at the image visible behind the play button of the video.
No talking. No sound at all in the clip. Only Alessandro on the groundâbut he was alive. Out of the tunnel, because he was on a bed of leaves, surrounded by trees. Still in his military clothes, but his face . . . he was lying there, banged up. Wrists and ankles bound. Mouth gagged.
He had to have given Rocco my number, but I knew he wouldnât want me to see him like this, so the asshole mustâve forced him to do it.
âWhat is it?â Constantine asked.
âA video of Alessandro tied up, but heâs alive and theyâre not in the tunnel anymore,â I said, surprised my voice worked. When I looked at my father-in-law, he appeared to be . . . Well, this broke him. This was what broke him.
âHeâs doing this to fuck with me,â Constantine hissed. âScrew with us all. Let us know Alessandroâs alive but that heâs in control.â
âCall Sebastian,â their dad ordered, probably to Izzy. âTell him theyâre out and in the forest.â
I shivered, my eyes shooting back to my phone. I was about to replay the short clip, but my father-in-law took the phone from my hand.
âLocation and timestamp are turned off on the video details, but weâll try and trace this anyway,â he said a moment later.
âI want to see him again.â I held open my palm. He nodded and handed back the phone, and I pressed play.
All I could focus on were Alessandroâs eyes.
âIs he signaling something to us?â my father-in-law asked.
I zoomed in to see Alessandro subtly lifting his bound wrists near his heart, and with his finger he was tracing something there.
âI think so,â I whispered as I put it together. Then choked out, âX squared.â