Sinners Anonymous : Chapter 6
Sinners Anonymous : A Forbidden Love Dark Mafia Romance
THE RUSTY ANCHOR BAR and Grill. Whatever. I have more important things to do than spy on my uncleâs whore.
The sign slapped above the door is missing most of its vowels, and Iâd bet my Bugatti the inside is just as neglected. Ever since I was a kid, itâs always been the type of joint that makes you want to wipe your feet on the way out.
Thatâs the thing about Devilâs Dip. The places, the people. The fucking weather. Nothing about this shit-hole town ever changes. Stepping out of the storm and into the shipping container, Iâm immediately proven right. The same splinter-laden bar made from washed-up wood; same old-timers propping it up. Even the bullet hole in the roof is still there from where my father shot his pistol into the air to restore law and order among disgruntled port workers.
And the bloodstain on the rug from when one of the stupid bastards didnât take his threat seriously.
I stare at the rainwater sloshing into the bucket in disgust. Dante must have slipped something into my whiskey last night, because I canât see any other logical reason why I agreed to meet him here.
Or why I would have agreed to meet him at all.
The armchair by the fireplace grunts as I sink into it. Twisting my head toward the bar, I signal to the girl behind it to come over. She startles, points to her chest and mouths, me?
Yeah, I guess table service isnât the done thing in bars made from abandoned shipping containers.
By the time Iâve dusted the rain from my coat and raked a hand through my wet hair, sheâs hovering over me, wringing her hands. âY-yes?â
âSmugglers Club on the rocks.â
Thereâs a hiss from the other side of the room. Looking up, I lock eyes with an old man hunched over a table made from a crate. I know his type. Too old to still be slinging cargo on the docks, but he comes here every day to drown his sorrows with cheap beer, watching the port run fine without him through the rain-streaked window. Around here, men like him donât have anything else to do.
The girl flashes me an apologetic smile. Sheâs blond, all sunny smiles and nervous energy. âSorry about that. Uh, the Smugglers Club factory is in the town over, and the people around here arenât too fond of the family who owns it.â
I ignore her in favor of holding the manâs gaze. I rake my teeth over my bottom lip. Crack my knuckles. Itâd be so easy to take the two strides over to him, wrap my hand around his throat and make sure heâs unable to ever fucking hiss again.
I break my blistering glare and turn back to sunny smile girl. âHeâll have one too. And make it a double.â
Guess Iâm not that loyal to the Visconti name.
She shifts her weight from foot to foot, then scurries away. She disappears into a back room, the sound of rummaging and clinking even louder than the rain hammering on the tin roof. I wonder what her story is. Girls with the biggest smiles harvest the darkest secrets. And besides, you must be repenting for something if youâre working in this joint.
âYou.â
My eyes flick lazily to my left. Another old man, regarding me with fascination rather than a scowl.
âIs it really you? One of the Angels of Devilâs Dip? I havenât seen you in years, kid.â
Yeah, and I havenât heard that nickname in years. I huff out a laugh, one that tastes like bitter nostalgia, and turn my attention back to the pathetic excuse for a fire.
The Angels of Devilâs Dip. Thatâs what the locals used to call me and my brothers growing up, because we were the deaconâs sons. That and the fact we were pale, blond, and angelic-looking. Back then, we didnât look like we had an ounce of Sicilian blood running through our veins, but as we grew upward and outward, our hair got darker and our skin more tanned, despite living in a town that saw about thirty minutes of sunshine a year.
âItâs an honor to see you back in town, kid,â the man says, tugging the beanie hat off his head and clutching it to his chest. âYour father was a great man.â
Kid. I could tell him in not a fucking kid anymore. Iâm a thirty-six-year old man, founder and CEO of a multi-billion-dollar investment firm.
I could also tell him my father was not a great man.
But I donât. I canât be fucked. Getting into scraps with the locals was always beneath me and it isnât the reason for my visit.
The bar girl brings over a dusty bottle dug out from the depths of the storage room, sloshes the brown liquid into a glass and sets it down on the three-legged table in front of me.
She glances at my Rolex. âIf youâre looking for Devilâs Cove, you got off the interstate two junctions too early.â
âWren,â the beanie-wearing man hisses, âthatâs Alonso Viscontiâs son.â
I donât tear my gaze away from the fire. I donât need to, because I can hear the cogs whirring in her brain. She mutters a curse word, followed by a mumbled apology, then scurries back to the safety of the bar.
I turn back to the man who hissed. Thereâs now a large glass of Visconti-produced whiskey next to his half-drunk beer. With a nasty grin spread across my face, I lift my glass to him, then take a large gulp.
He isnât scowling anymore.
Both he and the doe-eyed bastard whoâs up my fatherâs ass. They represent the entire population of Devilâs Dip. You either loved or hated my father, and in the rare event you were impartial, you still sure as hell knew who he was.
He and his two brothers were the first generation of the Sicilian Cosa Nostra to cross the Atlantic. New York was overcrowded and Boston was dominated by the Irish, so they traveled up and west until they found the isolated Devilâs Coast. It had nothing but three shitty towns running along the length of it. They drew straws to decide who got what turf, and my father got Devilâs Dip, seemingly the worst of a bad bunch. The waters were choppier, the cliffs were rockier, and the people were moreâ¦simple than they were further up the coast. But the port? It was perfect for black market cargo.
Nobody docks in Devilâs Dip unless they have to. The waves are relentless, and the cliff curves around to hug the dock, making it invisible to incoming ships that have no business being there. Itâs small, nondescript, and draws no attention from local authorities. Plus, itâs got easy trade routes along the West Coast, as well as Canada and even Russia.
The smallest towns have the biggest secrets, Angelo. Thatâs what my father would always say when I was growing up. When Iâd look at the bright lights of Devilâs Cove or see my cousins in Devilâs Hollow sealing seven-figure deals in business meetings with investors from New York, and ask him why heâs still here.
And the bigger the secrets, the more power we have.
Over the rim of my glass, I study the two men. One shiny-eyed with nostalgia, the other growling into the bottom of his beer. No doubt one benefited from my fatherâs reign, while the other lived in fear of it.
In other words, one had a bigger secret than the other.
Behind me, the door flies open and Danteâs voice carries in with the blistering chill. Both snake down the back of my lapel in the most uncomfortable of ways.
âYouâre early, Vicious.â
I roll my eyes at the nickname, slam my drink, and wave in the direction of the bar for another. Iâm going to need it. But then, another voice takes the edge off my mood.
âIâve found it.â
âFound what?â Dante grunts.
âThe most depressing place on earth. I bet even the cockroaches have fucked off.â
My lips curve at the sound of Torâs cocky voice. I turn to see him approach the bar and slam his fist against it. âBastardo,â he mutters, bringing his hand up to examine it. âI got a fucking splinter.â
The bar girl appears from the back room, clutching the Smugglers Club bottle, the frozen smile on her face not doing a good job of hiding the panic in her eyes. She might not have known me, but she sure as hell will know Tor and Dante.
âOh look, itâs the Good Samaritan.â
âI have a name, you know.â
âYeah, yeah, just give us that.â Tor grunts, lunging over and grabbing the bottle from her.
âUh, okay. Um, anything else?â
âYeah, a tetanus shot.â
I shake my head, mildly amused.
âCanât bring him anywhere.â
I hadnât noticed Dante sink into the armchair opposite. He leans back, regarding me. As always, his tight smile doesnât reach his eyes.
Just like his father, he represents everything I hate about being tied to the Visconti name. The Cosa Nostra runs through his veins like a nasty virus, and he dresses like heâs just wandered off the set of a Marlon Brando film.
Tor saunters over and slams the bottle on the table between us. âGood to see you, cugino. You usually only grace the Coast for Christmas and funerals, so I was surprised to see you turn up to dinner last night. You here for your parentsâ memorial service? âCause thatâs over two weeks away.â
âNo,â Dante says quietly. âHe wants to come home.â
Behind the rim of my glass, I bite back a smirk. So thatâs why he was so insistent last night on meeting me today. When everyone was asking me why I was in town, my answer of âjust visitingâ wasnât convincing enough for him.
Heâs wrong. Iâd rather shit in my hands and clap than move back to Devilâs Dip and take my rightful place as capo, but the way his beady gaze shifts around my features, the way he white-knuckles his glass, it makes me realize heâs nervous. So, Iâll let him sweat it out a little longer.
Tor whistles. âIs it finally the return of Vicious Visconti?â
My jaw works. Just like Angels of Devilâs Dip, Vicious Visconti is a nickname from a different lifetime. For the last nine years, thereâs been nothing vicious about me. But I canât deny itâhearing Tor call me that sends a zap of adrenaline down my spine.
It felt good to be vicious.
âIâm not moving back. Like I said last night, Iâm just visiting.â
Lie. Youâd have to be lobotomized to visit Devilâs Dip without an agenda. Torâs rightâI fly back for Christmas and funerals and very little in between. I stay just long enough to shake hands with my uncles and fist-bump my cousins. To kiss aunts on the cheek and to let them pinch mine as they tell me how big Iâve grown. Being in this town for too long makes me feel like Iâm losing brain cells. Plus, thereâs only so many times I can hear the question: When are you coming back?
Everyone always wants to know when Iâm fucking coming back.
I donât like Dante even nearly enough to tell him that Iâm here because of a goddamn fortune cookie.
Relief flickers in his eyes, and I have the immediate urge to distinguish it.
âBut when I do decide to take over Devilâs Dip again, youâll be the first to know,â I add. âThanks for keeping it warm for me.â
He damn near chokes on his whiskey. Smoothing down his shirtâItalian, no doubtâhe sets down his glass and glowers up at me. âWarm? Iâve completely transformed it. Iâve overhauled the infrastructure, bought a whole fleet of private-use vessels. Hired round-the-clock security to patrol the town. Hell, I have the port officials wrapped around my little finger and Iâve secured new trade routes to Mexico and the Middle East.â His nostrils flare. âIâve done more than keep it warm,â he growls.
His outburst lingers in the air like a bad smell. Basking in the heat of his glower, I slowly roll my wrist, swirling the brown liquid around my glass. I let him sweat. Then, when the tension is deliciously thick, I meet his glare with one of my own.
âSo, when I decide to return, youâll show me how itâs done.â
âReturn? It must be nice, having the luxury to come and go as you please while I hold down your territory for you.â
And there it isâone of the many reasons why Dante despises me. The sneers and the loaded comments, theyâve been a wedge between us for as long as I can remember, and being a whole continent apart for almost a decade hasnât changed a thing. It started when we were just kids; he always thought my brothers and I were childish because of the special game weâd play. And then that disdain turned into jealousy when our game meant we killed a man long before he was even allowed to pick up a gun.
Oh, and then I fucked his prom date. Canât remember why, though.
Now, the moment I step foot on the Coast, I feel his hostility. He hates that I went against his beloved tradition, and he hates that itâs the same tradition stopping him from taking over Devilâs Dip entirely and having full, unprecedented access to the port.
I raise my glass and wink. âThatâs what family is for, right?â
The silence blisters hotter than the fire. His jaw ticks and his throat bobs as he swallows the bitter retort he was about to spit out.
We glare at each other, and I can feel that familiar darkness swirling in the pit of my stomach. The adrenaline buzzing around the edges of my brain. I lick my lips, ignoring the rattling sound of Vicious Visconti trying to escape his cage. Since going straight, Iâve tried to chase the high with fast cars and whores that donât have the word ânoâ in their vocabulary, but nothing comes close to the feeling of being a cruel fucker.
I swapped this life for a penthouse office and boardrooms and fucking spreadsheets. But it hasnât been easy. At least I get to indulge in my dark side once a month. Thatâs probably the only reason Iâm not stuffing my fist through his face.
Tor clears his throat and rises to his feet. âIâm going for a smoke. Come on, perhaps standing in the pissing rain with me will cool you two dogs down.â
Without a word, Dante and I follow Tor through the bar and to the patio at the back. The porch is nothing but four slats of timber wood tied together with fishermanâs rope, and the only things shielding us from the storm are a couple of crates that form a makeshift roof. Tor casts his eyes upwards, mutters something about OSHA under his breath, and lights his cigarette.
Wedged a few yards up the side of the cliff, the patio of the Rusty Anchor offers an uninterrupted view of the port. Despite my disdain for it, I canât deny that itâs glossier than when I was a kid. The harbor is twice the size, the gangways and the ramps have been fully restored. Hell, even the harbormasterâs office has been renovatedâit used to be nothing but a creaky old hut thatâd groan in the wind, and now, itâs made from bricks and even has windows.
Tor offers his cigarette pack to me but I shake my head.
âWhat are you guys running through here now?â
âStill what you agreed to. Ammo goes out. Coke and party pills come in. Along with the usual restaurant and hotel supplies for Cove, of course.â He blows out smoke into the rain and grins at me sideways. âDonât worry, if we decide to start trafficking Russian whores, weâll make sure to run it by you first.â
âSounds lucrative.â
âSounds like you want a cut,â Dante growls. I glance over to see him leaning against the corrugated iron walls of the shipping container, hands stuffed into his pockets. âWhat were you talking to our father about last night?â
I donât bite. Instead, I turn my back to the stormy sea and look left, taking in the glittery lights of Devilâs Cove in the distance. In front of it, Devilâs Hollow looms like a dark shadow, and our old school, the Devilâs Coast Academy sits on top of it like a poisonous cherry on top of a cake. I crane my neck directly upward, eyes landing on my fatherâs church. Then focus on the headland in front of it, where, Wednesday morning, I came across my uncleâs latest whore standing too close to the edge. Iâd barely gotten a glimpse of her, just a shock of blond hair peeking out from under her hoodie and a brief glance at her face as Iâd turned to leave. Usually, it wouldnât be enough to recognize her from across the dining table like I did last night. But then when she glared at me from the other side of the room, I knew those eyes instantly. They are the color of warm whiskey.
I stuff my hands into my coat pockets, bracing my back against the howling wind. Fair play to the old bastardâsheâs a smoke show for sure. That fucking red dress sheâd poured herself into; Jesus, any man with a pulse would get a hard-on at that visual.
âSpeaking of your father, I see he has another gold-digging whore already,â I drawl, lazily dragging my gaze back down the rocks to Tor. âThey get younger every year.â
He huffs out a laugh. âYeah, younger and hotter. Fuck knows where he picked her up.â
âMeaning?â
âUsually Big Alâs girls are club rats. You know, lingering around the VIP area in my clubs trying to find a meal ticket. But Aurora? Iâd never seen her before.â He flicks the butt of his cigarette into the rain and tucks his chin into his jacket. âTrust me, Iâd have spotted that hot piece of ass a mile away,â he mutters.
I chew on this nugget of information for a moment. Interesting. Sure, she has all the same components as the others that came before herâblond hair, big tits, and legs as long as a Mondayâbut sheâs definitely different. A smarter mouth. A smirk prickles my lips as I remember pulling Viviâs pearl necklace out of her ample cleavage. And a dirty little thief.
I glance back up at the cliff edge and an uninvited thought seeps into my brain. Why did she want to jump? But I shake it off as quickly as it arrives. I truly donât give a flying fuck about my uncleâs latest leech. And besides, Iâd kill myself too if my only way out of Devilâs Dip was to hand my virginity over to a seventy-year-old sleazeball.
Torâs cell buzzes in his pocket. He pulls it out, looks at the screen and groans. âWork,â he grumbles, before dipping back inside. Now, itâs just me and Dante, and I realize heâs been awfully quiet over the last few minutes.
We lock eyes and his glare darkens. âWhy are you really here, Angelo?â
Turning my attention back to the sea, I drag a knuckle through my beard and steel my jaw.
âDante?â
âYeah?â
âMind your own fucking business.â
Without looking back, I shove past him, head into the bar and stroll toward the door. As I pass, Tor grabs my arm, pulls his cell away from his ear and mouths, where are you going?
I pull out a stack of cards from my breast pocket and toss them in the tip bowl. âMeeting the Hollow clan for lunch.â
âTell Benny he owes me forty-grand from last weekâs poker game, yeah?â
I nod, then keep walking.
âYou coming round for Sunday lunch tomorrow?â he calls after me.
A groan rumbles in my chest. The Cove clan loves a fucking get-together. Iâd rather stick my dick in a car door, but instead of telling him that, I lift my hand up in a half-wave and crash out into the parking lot.
Slipping into the car, I let out a hiss of breath. The rain falls in sheets against the windshield, and the wind threatens to rip off the side mirrors. Man, this weather. I start the car and slice through the storm, snaking along the road cut into the cliff face, which Iâll take until Iâm at the highest point of Devilâs Dip. To get to Devilâs Hollow, you have to come up to the top of the cliffs and cut across them, before taking the narrow, winding lane that leads down to the town below. Locals call it Grim Reaper road, because the slightest oversteer will have the man himself looming over your shoulder.
This should be a fun drive.
The engine groans up the incline, and the radio crackles as it struggles to find a signal. I strum my fingers against the steering wheel and try to remember the last time I saw the Hollow ViscontisâI donât see them nearly as much as my brother Rafe does. Seems like heâs partying with them every other week.
Ah, yes, it was a few months ago. Castielâs engagement party. Heâs marrying a sour-faced Russian who hates him as much as he hates her. Sheâs the heir to the Nostrova Vodka company, so, another business arrangement. No surprises thereâthe only people in this family dumb enough to marry for love are Donatello and Amelia.
And my mother.
On the top of the cliff, a familiar building looms in the distance, getting closer with every swish of the wipers. A groan escapes my lips. Of course. Iâd forgotten I have to pass my fatherâs church on the way to Hollow, and I canât be fucked to deal with all the memories it drags up right now. When I arrived on the coast on Wednesday, I decided to do what I always do: head straight to the church even before dumping off my bags at the Visconti Grand hotel. Get all the anger and the bitter nostalgia out of my system before I dive into the family gatherings and the air kisses and the small talk. But then a certain somebody was already in my usual spot, and she proved to be quite the distraction.
As I round the graveyard, I notice a car parked at the entrance. Strange. The only people buried here within the last century are Viscontis, and the only reason a local would visit a Visconti grave is to piss on it. Maybe itâs the territorial instinct in me, left over from when I actually gave a shit about this place, but I slow down, then come to a complete stop under the willow tree. Upping the speed of the wipers, I squint through the windshield and the low-hanging branches, trying to figure out whoâs in the car. The headlights are on high-beam, casting a yellow glow over lop-sided headstones that are sinking into the mud, and a small trail of smoke escapes the gap in the driverâs side window. A manâs hand pokes out, flicking cigarette ash onto the gravel.
Gripping the steering wheel, I frown and lean closer, trying to get a better look at whoâs in the car, and realize their head is turned, as if they are looking to the right. I follow their gaze across the road. The bus stop is empty, but the phone booth next to it is not.
My frown deepens. Jesus, who the fuck uses a phone booth these days? The flickering bulb built into the roof of it illuminates a silhouette. A female with long blond hair and a willowy figure.
Letting out a huff of air, I slump back into the seat and mutter under my breath. Youâve gotta be shitting me. Itâs Albertoâs girl, Aurora. Sure, her hair is differentâwild curls instead of poker-straight strandsâand sheâs in sweats and sneakers instead of that sexy red dress, but itâs definitely her. I turn down the crackling radio, as if itâll magically help me hear what sheâs saying, and watch her for a moment. She twirls the phone cord around her fingers and talks animatedly into the mouthpiece. Whoever is on the other side of the line clearly doesnât have much to say, as sheâs doing all the talking.
What the fuck are you doing here, girl? And who are you talking to?
Shaking my head, my fingers graze the key in the ignition. I donât give a flying fuck who sheâs talking to. Itâs clearly someone she doesnât want my uncle to know about, otherwise sheâd use her cell. Whatever. Albertoâs sugar baby is none of my business, and I couldnât care less what she gets up to behind his back.
Iâm just about to start the engine when she abruptly hangs up, turns to the car, and knocks on the glass door of the phone booth. The car lights switch off, and the figure gets out the driverâs side, holding an umbrella. He hustles across the road, opens the door, and holds the umbrella above her head with one hand, then snakes the other around her waist. As he guides her across the road, I get a good look at him.
Itâs that kid, the lackey. Max, or whatever his name is; he must be her escort. My knuckles whiten over the steering wheel and annoyance prickles my skin. Heâs holding her close, really fucking close, and by the way heâs gazing at her under the streetlights, I can tell itâs not just because heâs trying to keep her dry.
None of my business. This is not why Iâm here.
But I canât shake the irritation that itches under my collar like a rash. It must be another instinctual thing, just like being territorial over my fatherâs church. I might not be the biggest fan of Alberto or his sleazy love life, but heâs still family.
Iâll wait. Just for a minute.
They reach the car, and to my surprise, Aurora doesnât get in. Instead, they have a short conversation, Max hands her the umbrellaâfingers brushing against hersâthen he gets in the car and drives off.
A low whistle slips through my lips. Leaving the Donâs fiancee on the side of the road alone? In a shit hole like Devilâs Dip? That kidâs asking for a bullet in his head.
If I were a better man, Iâd kick this car into gear and take her home.
Too bad Iâm not.
Instead, I watch as she stands there, eyes following the car until the lights disappear into the fog, before she turns her attention to the graveyard.
I freeze, and an icy thought trickles into my brain, slower than syrup.
The cliff edge. Is she going to finish what I interrupted?
Thereâs a lump in my throat and Iâm not sure how it got there. Or how my hand moved from the steering wheel to the door handle. Iâve seen people kill themselves dozens of times. Hell, I forced some of them to write their suicide notes.
My fingers drop off the handle and into my lap. Not my problemâI have enough of those. Iâm not getting out the car.
She takes a step forward, toward the path that cuts through the graveyard and to the cliff headland.
Fuck it, Iâm getting out the car.
Just as I yank on the handle, she comes to an abrupt stop, then turns. Walks down the road.
âFucking hell, girl. Make up your mind,â I grumble to myself. Before I can talk myself out of it, I start the vehicle, flick my lights off, and crawl down the street behind her.
Iâm not a patient man, never have been. And as the owner of the largest supercar collection in Europe, Iâm not used to driving at this speed. Nor am I used to following young women down empty roads without their knowledge. Not really my bag.
After what feels like forever, she turns off, and I realize sheâs heading into the Preserve. First the phone booth, then the forest. What the fuck is this girl up to?
I donât mean to wait. I tell myself just a couple more minutes, but an hour ticks by, and I still havenât moved.
And then I see her. She steps out from behind the trees, then Maxâs car crawls back down the street to greet her. He gets out, plants a kiss on her neck, and guides her back to the car.
As they drive off, I realize Iâm grinding my jaw. Thereâs something bitter on my tongue, a taste I donât recognize. Steeling my spine, I start my car and spin my wheel into full lock to head in the direction I just came, all stealthiness out the window.
So, sheâs a gold-digger and a thief.
She represents everything I hate about this life. To my uncle, sheâs nothing but a piece of pretty pussy and something to brag about over a poker game. To her, my uncle is a walking, talking Amex, with a spend limit worth spreading her legs for.