King of Greed: Chapter 37
King of Greed (Kings of Sin, 3)
Alessandra and I spent the entire weekend at her apartment. Eating, talking, having sex. We came up for air once, when her crotchety neighbor banged on the door and yelled at us for being âtoo loud and vulgar,â but other than that, the days passed in a blissful haze.
We were back together. We werenât married again, but weâd slept in the same bed and sheâd invited me to her grand opening. It was a giant leap compared to our previous baby steps, and the high lasted well into Monday, when I arrived at the office an hour later than I usually did because Iâd made us breakfast.
I whistled my way down the hall, ignoring my teamâs wide-eyed stares.
Caroline intercepted me by the elevators and followed me to my office, where she crossed her arms and eyed me the way one would an escaped tiger. âAre you sick? Do you need me to call a doctor?â
âIâm fine.â I turned on my computer and pulled up the latest numbers.
âWhy? Do I look sick?â
âNo. Youâre justâ¦smiling so much.â She tapped her fingers against her arm. âMaybe I should call Dr. Stanley just in case. You have several important client meetingsââ
âCaroline.â I interrupted her. âI said Iâm fine. Now, do you have work updates for me, or would you rather switch to a medical career?â
She instantly snapped back to chief of staff mode. âThere are rumors something big is coming out this week re: a bank,â she said. âI canât confirm anything yet, but people are nervous. Whatever it isâ¦itâs supposed to be seismic.â
Iâd heard the same rumors. Wall Street was rife with leaks and whispers.
Half the time, they amounted to nothing, but I kept my ears to the ground anyway. âKeep digging,â I said. âI donât want any surprises.â
âUnderstood.â
The rest of the workday passed uneventfully. I left the office precisely at five, which garnered me a fresh wave of jaw drops and bug eyes. No one in finance ever left work on time, but there was a first time for everything.
âDonât stay too late,â I told one of the junior associates on my way out.
âMeet your girlfriend for dinner. Enjoy your night.â
I assumed he had a girlfriend. Otherwise, the desk photo of him with his arm around a smiling blonde was fucking weird.
He gaped at me with an odd mix of shock, terror, and reverence. âY-yes, sir.â
I stopped by my usual floral shop on the way to Floria Designs and picked up a golden rose. They didnât sell them normally, but I made it worth their while to fly in fresh blooms daily.
âHey. Howâs everything going?â I greeted Alessandra with a kiss.
âGood.â She looked a little frazzled, but she smiled when I handed her the rose and note. #21 out of a thousand. âIâm running around like a headless chicken, but other than that, Iâm okay.â
âAnything I can do to help?â Floria Designsâ grand opening was this weekend. The shop looked great, but Alessandra wouldnât relax until it was over. She was a perfectionist when it came to events.
âCan you clone me or add more hours to the day?â She blew a strand of hair out of her eye.
âI can have my people look into it, but I canât guarantee you an answer youâll like before Saturday.â I placed a hand on the small of her back and steered her toward the exit. âIn the meantime, letâs eat.â
âI canât eat. I have to answer a thousand emails, I havenât picked out a dress for the party yet, and Iââ
âÃle.â We stopped by the door. âBreathe. Itâll all get done. Tracy is arriving tomorrow, right?â
Tracy was one of her virtual assistants. She was flying in to help with prep and attend the opening. Alessandraâs other assistant just gave birth, so she couldnât make it.
âYes, butââ
âItâll all get done,â I repeated. âWhen did you last eat? If it was before noon, dinner is nonnegotiable.â
âFine,â she relented. A cab whooshed by when we stepped outside, blanketing us with car fumes as it nearly ran over a bike messenger. The bike messenger screamed something obscene; the cab driver rolled down his window and flipped him off. âItâs ironic youâre telling me to eat when youâre the one who always skips lunch.â
âNot always.â I kept my hand on her lower back and gently moved her so I walked on the outside of the sidewalk. âI had a black coffee and half a sandwich today.â A grin flashed at her half-amused, half-exasperated stare.
She still had work to do after dinner, so I took her to the gourmet burger shop down the street from Floria Designs. Weâd just placed our orders when my phone lit up with a new message.
âIs that your brother?â Alessandra accurately read the pinch in my brow.
There was only one person in the world who drew that kind of reaction from me.
âYes. He wants to meet for drinks.â I didnât want to blow him off after his first normal outreach (breaking and entering my apartment didnât count), but I sure as hell wasnât leaving Alessandra either.
âTell him to meet us here. Iâm serious,â she said when I slid her a look laced with disbelief. âYou talk about him so much, and we have to meet eventually.â
âIâm not sure heâs a burger-and-fries type of guy.â
âAsk anyway.â Alessandra reached for her soda. âIt canât hurt.â
ALESSANDRA
I regretted asking Dominic to invite his brother the minute he showed up.
Roman was both as handsome and unsettling as I remembered. He greeted me with a cool smile and was polite enough, but there was something about him that set off level-five alarms. Maybe it was the way he moved like a predator stalking the night, or maybe it was the ice anchoring that cold, green gaze. Dominic was ruthless but very much human; there was no humanity behind his brotherâs eyes.
âDom says youâre in town for work.â I attempted to make conversation after our previous discussion about the latest Nate Reynolds film petered out. âWhat do you do?â
He cut his burger with surgical precision. âIâm in resolutions.â
âWhat does that mean?â
âI fix problems other people canât solve.â Roman offered nothing else.
I glanced at Dominic, who met my eyes with a small shake of his head.
He was used to his brotherâs reticence, but part of the reason Iâd asked him to invite Roman was so we could get to know each other better.
âI see.â I filled the ensuing silence with another stab at drawing Roman out of his shell. There had to be some topic he could expand on. âI guess you travel a lot then. Where were you before you came to New York?â
âHere and there.â Another clean slice of meat and bread. âI canât talk much about work. Itâs confidential. You understand.â
âLet me guess. If you told me, youâd have to kill me?â I joked.
Romanâs smile didnât reach his eyes. âSomething like that.â
A chill drew goose bumps out of hiding. Quiet mushroomed again, interrupted by the occasional clink of silverware and chatter from nearby tables.
âYouâve been watching too many action movies, Rome,â Dominic said just as the silence was getting unbearable. âCome up with something more original next time.â
Roman let out a small laugh. The tension dissipated, replaced by a debate over whether Keanu Reevesâ John Wick or Nate Reynoldsâ Jason Rath was the better character.
I guess Roman didnât mind talking about movies if his brother was the one who brought it up.
Dominicâs hand found mine under the table and squeezed. I squeezed back even as unease leaked into my blood. I loved that he was reconnecting with his brother, but I worried that his lingering guilt over what happened in Ohio was clouding his judgment.
How much did he really know about Romanâs life since they were teens?
âWhat about you, Alessandra?â Romanâs gaze settled on my face again.
âJohn or Jason?â
âNeither, unfortunately. Iâm not big on assassin movies.â
Another laugh, this one containing a hint of something I couldnât quite pinpoint. âToo bad. Youâre missing out.â
âI doubt it,â I said lightly. I wasnât big on blood and violence.
Explosions and car chases, yes. Torture, no.
Mocking amusement flashed in Romanâs eyes, and another rash of goose bumps pebbled my skin. There was something about himâ¦
I tried not to judge people by their cover, but gut instinct told me he was someone that would eliminate any obstacles that stood in his way by any means necessary.
And my gut was rarely wrong.