Shattered Vows: Chapter 16
Shattered Vows: An Arranged Marriage Standalone Romance (Tarnished Empire)
âWhat the fuck do you mean youâre on the way to my new place?â Why did I yell questions at my brother every time he was on the phone?
âI want to do a security sweep of the place and make sure the cameras are all doing what I need them to.â
âYou canât do that from Chicago?â I pointed to my driver and mouthed home. He was quick to steer in that direction. I probably would have gotten a smart comment from Dante but heâd gone to handle a job across the country.
âWell, no.â There was a pause. âPlus, we used a little bit of muscle for this Morina girl. Iâm coming to meet her and, well, Iâm babysitting.â
âYouâre what?â
âI have our niece with me.â He grumbled, like he knew that omission would send me into a rage.
âDonât tell me you have my niece on the jet right now.â I ground out. âHer parents will kill you. Please tell me you called Katie.â
âWell, no. They left me with her for half the day. What did they expect?â
âYouâre fucking asking to die. I swear to you, Katie is a damn bratva queen.â I lowered my voice, used to talking in secret when it came to how our family used to operate. âSheâs married to our enforcer. Do you understand the concept of babysitting for them?â
Rome and Katie had met when we were all just kids. As weâd taken our rightful places in powerful positions, their love had grown enough that theyâd brought a child into the world. That four-year-old was our pride and joy, but also the thing we were most protective of.
âIvy asked to go to an amusement park. They have one down there with characters and shit. Weâll go for a few hours.â
âYou have to plan for a trip there, Cade. They book the damn park out!â I fisted my hand, trying to wrangle the fury I had with my brotherâs flippant behavior. He was the youngest. He didnât know responsibility like I did and he had a knack for doing things before he thought about them.
âWell, I hacked part of the system while we were flying.â
âOf course you did.â I sighed. âYou canât go today. Ivy is going to be too tired. And you better have my nieceâs seat belt on.â
âTechnically, sheâs not your niece. Romeâs our cousin, you know.â
âOf course sheâs our niece. Weâre Armanellis. Sheâs famiglia, you idiot. Did you say that shit in front of her?â
âNo. Sheâs squealing to go to the bathroom. Iâm just trying to piss you off more, see if youâll explode before I get there.â
He was making me go back to that damn penthouse and under these conditions. An explosion was warranted. âWhenâs the plane landing?â
âAbout 30 minutes. I intend to be there in an hour and weâre going to be hungry.â
âIâm not within an hourâs distance. Go eat somewhere first. I got Morina there and I havenâtâ¦â
âYou havenât what?â
âIâm not really there.â I pinched the bridge of my nose. I didnât need Cade questioning how I was handling this situation.
âYou serious? You gotta play hubby and wifey and you arenât even getting to know her? Thatâs not like you.â
âWhatâs that supposed to mean?â
âIt means normally you can find common ground. You have a knack for making alliances, obviously. Is she that bad?â
âSheâs not bad at all.â I defended her immediately and then tried to backtrack on that statement: âSheâs just in my space.â
âKind of what a wife does.â
âYou know this is a legal marriage, thatâs it, right?â
âWell, sort of. You have to fake it enough for it to look real. If someone believes sheâs not an untouchable, that puts her in harmâs way again, right?â
I punched the backseat of the Rolls Royce. The pressure of this damn will shouldnât have been on me. âIâm so sick of carrying Marioâs shit on my back.â
âDad was great at building shitty partnerships.â
I cleared my throat. âMorina doesnât know he was importing illegal shipments, okay? I need that kept out of the equation. Iâm working on showing her that weâre here to shift Tropical Oil to clean energy and that it will help her city thrive. Weâll clean up the other shit quietly. Got it?â
âWhy not? We ended the drug imports years ago when dad died. She should be thankful.â
âMaribel didnât trust us enough to sell those stocks to me for that very reason. You think her granddaughter is going to want to sell them to me if she knows our father lied to her grandmother?â
âRight.â Cade sighed. âIâll wipe it from as many places as I can. The dark web might have some mention of the drugs that were coming in.â
âSee that you do. I donât want any more complications. This marriage is a big enough blip on our radar.â
âItâs for damn sure not something I was expecting.â After a beat, Cade cracked up. âI never would have thought you would be the one getting married now.â
âWhy?â
âMan. I donât know. Youâre the head of our family. Itâs enough work as it is. You have to right all dadâs wrongs and you take it way more seriously than you should.â There was rustling. âIvyâs back. Weâre going to eat a snack. A little advice, bro. Iâd start letting your fiancé know a bit more about whatâs coming up. You have a damn charity gala to attend for the oil ports in a week. Does she know?â
âThereâs nothing to know. Sheâll get dressed and go. We can announce our engagement publicly and put together a small ceremony a week later.â
âYouâre planning all this without your bride like itâs going to go over so well.â He chuckled into the phone. âIâm excited to see how it all crumbles.â
âYouâre a sick fuck most days, Cade.â
âProud of it too.â He mumbled something to Ivy and then said to me, âBe a pal and let Katie know weâre safe and sound if she calls you.â
Then he hung up.
Not twenty minutes later, Katieâs number popped up on my screen.
There was a time way back when I thought she and I could be more than what we were. She was this powerful girl who didnât bend to anyone. We found out she had ties to the bratva and slowly she chipped away at all their businesses and ours. Sheâd become one of the most powerful people in the world and I loved that we had a great relationship, the type between colleagues, but also like a family. We all worked together to make sure our businesses ran smoothly, that our families stepped in line.
âYes, Katie?â I answered on the fifth ring and eyed the tall building that my penthouse was located in. We still had another 30 minutes of traffic to navigate before I arrived.
âSo, your brother says his fucking flight just landed with my child.â Her voice was filled with venom.
âI had nothing to do with this.â
âI donât know if I believe that. Except that youâre probably hiding from your soon to be fiancé and so that may just be the case. Either way, you now have everything to do with it. Ivy canât stay up all night flying back on a plane. So, sheâs staying with you and Morina. Take her to the park, feed her well, and watch her like a hawk. Those parks have got to be crowded. Cade needs to get a team together if itâs to be safe.â She paused. âI canât get there fast enough, Bastian.â
The concern at the end of her commands put out all the fight in me. âI got her, Katie. Sheâs fine. Weâll have fun, huh?â
âOh, you wonât have fun. Itâs going to be absolute hell. If she comes back unhappy, though, Iâll break all the bones in your body before I skin Cade alive.â
She was the second person to hang up on me that day.
I didnât flinch at her words. Iâd been threatened enough times. I knew she meant what she said. I also knew that I would die before anything happened to the little monster that was about to tornado through my penthouse.
I told the driver to speed the rest of the way, but we still didnât get there in time to intercept my family. Instead, Iâd have to face the woman Iâd been avoiding for days with my brother and niece there to witness the awkwardness.
As the elevator ascended to my door, I swear I could smell her scent already. She wore something spicy enough that it had lingered in my jet for days. Iâd thought Iâd be happy when it started to fade but instead I remember contemplating asking someone what the smell was.
Now, Iâd get to smell it for six months.
That had to be some sort of rude karma that she probably believed in.
I shut my eyes, frustrated with myself for being irritated with her. Her grandmotherâs will wasnât her fault. The fact weâd slept together and I couldnât stop thinking about her bent over naked as fuck wasnât her fault either.
I didnât dislike the girlâs company. I just thought Iâd never have to see her again. She was young and shot off at the mouth and wasnât at all what I needed for this venture. It was my last one. The last loose tie my father had left for me. And heâd left a lot over the years.
This was the one thing I needed to right to give the family a new, fresh slate. It meant I was doing this clean as hell. No hiccups.
No loopholes.
If Maribel had willed that she wanted a marriage for me to prove I was going to make this company thrive, thatâs what she would get. Morina would see I meant business.
And no pleasure, even if Iâd watched her hand drag across that mosaic tile and wanted it to be my dick instead. The way her bracelets jangled as she did it and her clean nails grazed each piece with a delicate touch, she was enticing.
And infuriating. I didnât need the complication of wanting her. So I stayed away.
Now, my brother was forcing a damn intervention even if he didnât know it.
When I exited the elevators, Ivy was running around my waterfall island with all the near dead plants directly in the middle. They were a complete eyesore. And the salt lamp was on as if it provided some sort of natural element to the space.
It didnât.
Morina believed in hocus pocus. None of it made sense to me, but instead of being completely fine with her bringing it into the penthouse, Iâd lashed out immediately.
That wasnât my nature, but with her, it was. Normally I would have agreed, set on us getting along.
She stirred some emotion in me that I couldnât control and that only infuriated me more.
Cade winked at me when Ivy came running, her long curls everywhere. I was ready to catch her when she jumped right at me.
I might not have been a great person for Morina to live with but I was a good ass uncle. I caught Ivy before she was even halfway in the air. âMy little poison Ivy. How did you get here?â
She squished my cheeks together and giggled. âOn a plane, Uncle Bastian. Youâre so silly.â
âSilly?â I lifted a brow in mock terror. âIâm not silly. Iâm your very serious uncle.â
She thought about it for a second, looked back at Cade who wiggled his tattooed fingers at her, and then pulled me close. âYouâre right. Cadeâs sillier than you.â
I nodded solemnly. âSomeoneâs got to be the oldest.â
âThat means youâre the boss too, right? Mommy always says sheâs the boss but I think maybe daddy and you are bosses too.â Then she leaned in and pulled my ear out way too hard for it to be comfortable. I didnât even wince because the little girl with her gray eyes and big dark curls had my whole soul, and I wasnât wiping that smile off her face for even a second. âCadeâs not the boss though.â
âCareful, you little monster,â Cade said, even though he was looking into his phone now. âI hear everything. Itâs my super power and it might just make me the biggest boss of all.â
She giggled and shook her head which turned to a full body shake in my arms.
The girl had infinite amounts of energy and I wasnât sure we were all ready for it, but we had her for the day and would just have to deal. I threw her up in the air and she squealed in delight.
Then I plopped her on one of my hips. âWhat are you hungry for?â
âYour friend Morina fed me.â She pointed over to the woman I still hadnât acknowledged.
I should have said hi or told her thank you, but we needed to have such a big conversation about what lay ahead that I decided we didnât need one at all.
We could just follow my lead. She could step in line like most people.
Like Ivy said, I was the boss.
Or one of them.
âThat was very nice of Morina,â I said softly to Ivy but was looking at the woman I hadnât seen in days.
Her wavy hair was, as always, a mess that somehow worked around her face. She wore a tank top that was much too loose, with a picture of a hand making up a peace sign. Sheâd paired it with a blue sports bra that left little to the imagination. Her ripped jeans fit over her ass much better than I remembered and she glared at me with a face I found I was starting to really like.
I set Ivy down and motioned for her to go play with Cade. He swooped her up into his lap and they started playing a game on his phone.
âSorry for the visitors today.â I slid my hands in my pockets, not sure how to approach this awkward phase weâd stumbled into.
âI like tiny visitors actually.â She smirked toward Ivy who looked up and wiggled her fingers at Morina, always half listening. âIvy kept me company for a little bit while I made grilled cheese. The chef had the fridge stocked with lots of different cheeses, Iâm guessing after they found out I eat that.â
âRight.â I cleared my throat. âWeâre going to head over to the amusement park first thing in the morning. Run her around there and then sheâll be going back home.â
Cadeâs head popped up. âNot today?â
âCade, you canât go to the park in the middle of the day. There are rides that take hours to get on and even if you hack every fast pass system, we still wonât see everything. You want to start your time at the park with a half-tired child and with the knowledge you wonât get to show her everything?â
Ivy nodded and looked at Cade with big puppy eyes. âI want to see everything, Uncle Cade.â
âOf course you do.â He hopped off the bar stool with her. âGuess we need to go mess up Uncle Bastianâs house then. We need to build a fort for our movie night.â
âYay!â Ivy screamed, but instead of skipping over to me to give me a high five, she skipped over to Morina. âYouâll watch a movie with me, right?â
âUmâ¦â She glanced at me and then back at Ivy. âSure. I think. I justâ¦â She wrung her hands together. âI have to go take care of some dogs first and then Iâll be back to watch whatever you want.â
I swear Ivyâs whole body, even her curls straightened at the mention of dogs. I shut my eyes in defeat and Cade slapped a palm to his head. Morina mouthed âWhat?â to us over Ivyâs head.
âI want to see the dogs you take care of,â Ivy announced.
Scratching the scuff of my five oâclock shadow, I waited to see how Morina would navigate this one.
She glanced at me like she was caught between a rock and a hard place.
Yes, woman, you did this to yourself.
I looked away and ambled toward the fridge. She could figure out how to tell the cutest thing in the world no.
âUm⦠well, I think your uncles probably want you to stay with them.â
âOh, they will come with. Uncle Bastian, you have a car to drive us right?â She turned those misty eyes toward me and I didnât even hesitate.
âOf course I do, monster.â
Morinaâs jaw dropped. âYouâ¦you canât come.â
âWhy canât we all come, Morina?â I blinked real big like a little kid.
âI mean⦠I guess if you want to hang out, but you havenât wanted to hangââ
âYay!â Ivy cut her off and barreled into Morinaâs thighs to hug her.
She patted the childâs back awkwardly and then side eyed me. âIâm just going to change. I guess we can get going in ten minutes if everyoneâs ready. I have to do a quick sweep of the kennels. Iâm not going to be there long.â
âBut thereâs going to be dogs for me to pet, right?â Ivy asked, a tiny little pointer finger up in the air as if she needed to be clear.
âMmhmm.â Morina started down the hallway to her room. When Ivy followed, Cade glanced at me and I shrugged.
âJesus Christ,â my brother mumbled, then called, âIvy, weâre making a tent in Bastianâs room while Morina gets ready and talks to Uncle Bastian.â
The little girl shot off down the hall, and Cade ran after with a roar.
Just as he did, Morina turned into her bedroom even though sheâd heard Cade announce that we would be talking.
I sighed and made my way to her door. With it being cracked and my being right behind her, I didnât think to knock.
When I cleared my throat, she spun away from her closet. âDo you think you could knock next time?â
âKnock?â
âYes. This is my room.â Her tone held anger and accusation.
It immediately put me on a defense I didnât need. âThis is our room. Just like this whole place is our place.â
âWouldnât know it from who is in it all the time.â
âAre you mad I havenât been here?â
âNope.â She said the word so loud it ping ponged off the walls.
âI work and I told you I wouldnât be here much. Iâm giving you space.â I crossed my arms.
âGreat. Iâm happy with it.â She didnât sound happy at all.
âI come home after three days and you immediately are galivanting off to the humane society. So, that just proves the point that we donât want to be around each other.â
âYup, that proves the point.â
âAre you going to say anything you mean right now?â
âNo!â She stomped her foot. She breathed fast, holding her fists tight at her sides. âI donât want to talk to you right now.â
âCare to share why?â
âBecause youâre annoying me!â She winced when the words flew out of her. âI donât⦠Iâm not comfortable here. And I have my crystals and oils, and I surf to stay comfortable. I live in comfort, Bastian. I donât do luxury or chefs or white countertops well. I have to figure out the will because I canât buy food processors for my foodtruck to make money so I can buy more ingredients to sell and make more money. And I canât do any of that because Iâm out of my depth.â
âOut of your depth?â I repeated, trying to catch up with all the words sheâd just thrown at me faster than a peregrine falcon diving for food.
âAnd this stupid packet of a million words and pages is like a different language. And itâs boring, Bastian. Like really boring. And I know we donât know each other except for some not boring sex on a plane, but I canât do boring. Iâm not⦠I donât think Iâmââ
âStop.â Her eyes darted up to mine and she suddenly looked her age. At least ten years younger than me with big sapphire eyes that were scared and vulnerable. I always assumed she didnât care or it was no big deal for her because she acted nonchalant and told me exactly how she wanted things. Butâ¦
I took a deep breath. âJesus, you talk fast, huh?â
âI normally donât.â
I squinted at her. âWhenâs the last time you were really nervous about something?â
âWhat type of question is that?â She wrung her hands like she had in the living room.
âNever mind.â I had a feeling we were both going to get to know ourselves a lot better in the next few months. âLetâs not do boring right now, huh? Letâs go see the dogs and then watch the movie and act like children at a theme park. Then, weâll do boring.â
She peered over at the paperwork lying on the bed. âItâs really boring, Bastian,â she whispered.
For some reason, I cracked up with her omission and the lines on her forehead disappeared as she smiled big.
Brilliant. Beautiful.
And brutal.
Thatâs what that smile was.
Sheâd wreck my world if I wasnât careful.