Twisted Pride: Chapter 26
Twisted Pride: A Dark Mafia Romance (The Camorra Chronicles Book 3)
They allowed me to stay with Adamo, and I crouched at his feet, feeling sick to my stomach from what Iâd witnessed and even worse thinking about what was to come.
âRemo will exchange himself for you,â I whispered. âTomorrow, you will be back in Vegas, and Nino will treat your wounds.â
Adamo tilted his head, dark eyes bleak. âRemo is Capo. He wonât die because Iâve been stupid enough to get myself captured. Iâve been a disappointment to him since I was born. He will use this chance and kill Dante instead of handing himself over.â
I lifted soaked fabric from his burn, and he groaned deeply. His wrist and nose were broken and his shoulder dislocated. He must have been in horrible pain, and there was nothing I could do to help him. Playing the guilt card forced my family give me this small freedom. It didnât convince them to call a doctor though. They would have probably kept torturing Adamo if I hadnât refused to move away from his side.
âYouâre wrong, Adamo. Remo will protect you. He doesnât fear death or pain. He will take your place because you are his brother and he cares for you. Heâd do anything for you.â
Adamo let out a choked laugh. âWhy do you speak about him as if you donât hate him? He kidnapped you. He ruined your life.â
I looked away. I wouldnât tell him about Nevio and Greta and certainly not about my twisted feelings for his brother either.
Adamo leaned forward, wincing, and brought our faces closer together, a risk because we were undoubtedly being watched, and my family was still eager to spill Falcone blood. His or Remoâs, it didnât matter, as long as it was a Falcone. I met Adamoâs gaze, and realization settled on his face.
âFuck,â he whispered hoarsely. He leaned even closer, despite the rope binding his unharmed arm to the chair. âYouâre giving me the same look Remo has whenever someone mentions you.â
My chest constricted. âI need to go now.â I stood and took a step back. Adamo Falcone. Falcone, the name my children were supposed to carry.
âGoodbye,â I whispered, but deep down I wondered if this was really the last time I would see him.
I turned quickly and left the room. Samuel waited right in front of the door. He regarded me, incomprehension in his features. âWhy do you take care of a fucking Falcone bastard?â
âHe never hurt me. Heâs a boy.â
Samuel shook his head. âHe is a Made Man, Fina. You should let us handle him and Remo. We are capable of doing what needs to be done.â
We walked into the main hall where Dad, Danilo, and Dante were talking in hushed tones. They turned to us the moment we entered.
I faced Samuel. âAnd what is that?â
âBring Remo to his knees. Make him beg for mercy. Beg for death. I will cut his dick off myself. Danilo will take care of his balls, and then we will keep them in a nice bag with ice so he can see them while we tear him apart. Then weâll shove them down his throat.â
Danilo smiled grimly, and even Dad looked like he could imagine nothing better than committing the most brutal murder he could think of.
I swallowed. âHe is the father of my children.â
Samuel grabbed my shoulders hard, desperately. âHe broke you, Fina,â he said softly. None of them had ever asked if I considered myself broken. They had declared me as such, and all four of them made me feel like I was.
âHe is a monster,â Samuel added.
âHe is not the only one,â I whispered, my eyes wandering over the gathered men.
Samuel dropped his hands, face twisting as if Iâd stabbed him. âIâm doing this for you. To avenge you.â
âDid any of you ever ask what I wanted? If I wanted more blood spilled? If I wanted to be avenged?â I shouted.
Dante came forward, expression tight. âDonât you want to see Remo Falcone on his knees? Donât you want to see him broken?â
I did, but not in the same way they wanted. âI want nothing more,â I said quietly, because they could never, would never understand.
Samuel wrapped an arm around me and kissed my temple. âFina, letâs go home.â
âYes, letâs go home,â I said quietly. I peered up at Samuel, realizing that for the first time in my life, we didnât mean the same place.
REMO
Nino, Savio, and I linked arms, pressing over the tattoo of the other. âYou will be a better Capo than me, Nino. You wonât kill people who might be useful to us. Your logic will make the Camorra even stronger.â
Nino didnât say anything, only stared at me.
Savio shook his head. âRemo, letâs attack them. Iâd rather die fighting than have you in their fucking hands.â
I smiled darkly. âYou will have to die another day. I will pay for my sins.â
Nino made a low sound. âShe didnât return, Remo. She stayed in Minneapolis. They wonât let you anywhere near her. You will die for nothing.â
âNo, I will die so she gets what she wants.â
Nino pulled away. âDamn it. Be reasonable for once.â
âI made my decision and you will accept it.â
Cars pulled up, and I moved away from my brothers who took shelter inside the car. Nino and Savio raised their guns through the open windows. I wasnât armed as I walked toward the parked cars, my arms raised over my head. I didnât think Dante would attack Nino or Savio. Once heâd dismembered me in the cruelest way possible, heâd send my brothers the recording and probably to Luca as well. Heâd try to break my family like I had broken his, killing us all just wouldnât do. Not yet.
Dante got out, followed by Samuel, Pietro, and Danilo, and more men I didnât know and didnât give a fuck about. Samuel walked around to the back of the car and pulled Adamo out.
Adamo could hardly stand as Samuel dragged him behind himself toward me. Rage boiled under my skin. Samuel shoved Adamo to the ground in front of my feet, and Adamo looked up at me with his blood covered face, cradling his broken and burned arm against his chest.
âDonât,â he whispered. âDonât do this. Donât let them kill you because of me. Iâm a fucking failure.â
I moved toward him and touched his head briefly. âYou are the one from all of us who deserves death the least, Adamo.â I removed my hand from his head, but before I could move on, he grasped my forearm, his fingers curling over my Camorra tattoo. âItâs us against the world,â he croaked.
âUs against the world,â I said.
Samuel gripped my arm, and I shoved down the instinct to smash his face. I saw his fist coming toward my face and smiled. The first punch only blurred my vision. His kick to my balls brought me to my knees. And his gun to the back of my head finally pulled me into blackness.
SERAFINA
Samuel and Danilo dragged Remo into the safe house, his arms and legs bound, his nose busted and dripping blood, his hair sticking to the back of his head with more blood. I slowly rose from the sofa where I had been waiting for almost one hour with two bodyguards.
Dad moved toward me, trying to shield Remo from my viewâor me from his. I wasnât sure and didnât care. âDove, you shouldnât be here.â His eyes narrowed on my bodyguards, harshly, cruelly. I touched his arm.
âI will stay,â I said firmly, my voice resolute.
Dante was the last to enter.
The men exchanged a look. Their word was law, not mine, but their guilt gave me power over them, more power than theyâd ever held over me. I hated using it against them, but they would never allow me to possess power for any other reason.
I walked past my father, toward Danilo and Samuel holding Remo between them. His head hung down, body was slack. I tried to hide the tremor that had taken hold of me the moment Iâd spotted him.
Remo Falcone.
Daniloâs expression twisted like it always did when he saw me. With guilt and a flicker of humiliation because something had been taken from him, because Remo had taken it from him. He was a strong, powerful man, and having lost me haunted him like it haunted every man in the room. I was their failure. Their pride a tattered sullied rag. Every time they had to peer into my eyes, and worse the eyes of my children, they were reminded.
Theyâd never let me be anything but the dove with broken wings. They couldnât. But I wanted to fly.
âHave you come to watch the bastard die, Fina?â Samuel asked, his face cruel, eager, brutal as his blue eyes settled on Remo, who still hadnât moved, but I noticed the almost imperceptible shift in his shoulders, his muscles twitching. He was waking up.
My heart beat faster, my palms becoming sweaty.
âI know you deserve your revenge, dove, but this is going to be more than you can stomach, trust me,â Dad said, coming up behind me and putting a hand on my shoulder. His voice was soft, compelling, but his face held terrifying eagerness and cruelty as he regarded the father of my children.
âWhat are your plans for him?â I asked my uncle, because he was the man who would have the last word on the matter.
His cool blue eyes werenât as controlled as usual. He, too, wanted to tear into Remo. They had waited a long time for this moment. âWe will prolong his torture as long as possible without risking an attack from the Camorra.â
âHe wonât die today?â
âOh, he wonât die today,â Samuel muttered. âBut he might wish for it.â
I gave a nod. It was what I had expected. Remo wouldnât experience any mercy at the hands of the Outfit, not that heâd ever ask for it.
âHeâll beg for death,â Dad said harshly.
âI donât beg for anything, Pietro.â
I shivered at the familiar timbre, at the underlying threat, the undercurrent of power. How did he do it?
Remo lifted his head, and my brother and Danilo tightened their hold, but they blended into the background when Remoâs eyes finally met mine. Fourteen months.
The force of his gaze hit me like a tidal wave. In the time since heâd released me, Iâd often wondered if I could ever forget him, if I could move on and live a new life, but now as I looked at him, I realized I had been foolish to consider that an option.
The corners of his mouth lifted in a twisted smile. âAngel.â
My brother punched Remoâs face, but he only laughed darkly as blood spattered on the ground.
âThis is your chance to ask for forgiveness,â Dad said.
Remo looked from each of them until his eyes finally settled on me. âDo you want me to beg for forgiveness?â
His eyes dragged me down fiercely, mercilessly, irrevocably as theyâd always done. As they always would. âI wonât give you my forgiveness,â I said quietly.
Something flickered in Remoâs eyes, but Samuel and Danilo wrenched him away from my view, down the corridor into their torture chamber.
Dad kissed my temple. âWe will avenge you, make him pay for what he did.â
He walked away, leaving me with Dante, who regarded me with calm scrutiny. He touched my shoulder lightly, and I met his gaze. âHe will ask for forgiveness in the end,â he promised.
I briefly touched his hand. âI donât want him to because it would be false.â
Remo did everything with unbridled passion, with ferocious rage, without an ounce of regret.
He consumed, obliterated, ruined.
He took everything and left nothing in his wake. He was an unrepentant sinner. He was a destroyer, a murderer, a torturer.
A monster.
The father of my children.
The man who held my heart in his cruel, brutal hand.
âYou will castrate him?â It was an unnecessary question. I knew they would, and it was only one of the many atrocities theyâd planned. All I needed to know was when.
Dante gave a terse nod. âTomorrow. Not today. It would speed up his death too much. Danilo and Samuel will do it. Iâm not sure you should watch any of this, but maybe you need to. Today will be easier to stomach than tomorrow, so stay if itâs what you want.â
âThanks,â I whispered. Slowly I made my way toward the screen on the table and turned it on.
My brother and Danilo were kicking Remo in the stomach, in the side, and Remo made no move to defend himself. When they finally let up, because Dante had entered, Remo rolled onto his back and looked directly into the camera, knowing I was watching.
He didnât look away when my father took out his knife and cut his chest. Not when it was Samuelâs turn. Not when it was Daniloâs turn. Not when it was Danteâs turn.
Iâd spent so many hours, day and night, wondering how it would feel to see Remo broken, to see him on his knees.
This wasnât how I imagined things to be, my heart clenching in my chest so tightly I could hardly breathe, the tears pressing against my eyelids so fiercely I had to bite the inside of my cheek to hold them back. And even through the torture, Remo didnât look broken because he couldnât be broken, not with violence and pain. Maybe not at all.
I turned away from the screen and walked away. My bodyguards followed close behind, their steps slow and measured. Shadows meant to protect and save me. But I was beyond saving. My family tried to mend me, but I didnât need it because I wasnât broken.
Slipping behind the steering wheel of the Mercedes limousine, I revved the engine the second my bodyguards were inside. My foot pressed down on the gas. They slanted looks my way but didnât comment. They were meant to protect not judge.
I was allowed this freedom because my familyâs guilt had paid for it. They couldnât bear keeping the dove with broken wings in a gilded cage.
The second I had the car parked in front of my familyâs home, I killed the engine and got out, not waiting for them. I stepped inside and hurried upstairs, didnât stop until I entered the nursery. Both Nevio and Greta were asleep in their shared crib, looking peaceful and painstakingly beautiful.
I stroked their heads, the thick black hair like their fatherâs. When my fingers brushed Nevioâs temple, his eyes peeled open with those dark brown, almost black eyes. I leaned down and pressed a kiss to his forehead then to Gretaâs, breathed in their scent, then sank down in a chair and watched them sleep.
I wasnât sure how long I stayed like that when the door opened. Familiar steps sounded behind me, steps that had accompanied me almost all my life. A warm hand came down on my shoulder, and I covered it with mine.
Samuel pressed a kiss to the crown of my head then rested his forehead against it for a couple of moments. So gentle and caring, so very different from the man Iâd seen torturing Remo. He straightened and I tilted my head back, peering up at him. His gaze rested on Greta and Nevio, but for him there was nothing beautiful about them. As always, his eyes shone with guilt and aversion when he regarded them before he noticed my scrutiny and lowered his gaze to me.
Warmth filled his expression. I wished he could spare some of it for the children I loved more than life itself. Samuel was my blood. He would always be. He was part of me as I was part of him, and I didnât resent him for his feelings toward my children. I knew he hated their father, not them, but more than that he hated himself.
I stood, grabbed his neck, and pulled him down until his forehead rested against mine. âPlease, Sam, stop blaming yourself. Please, I beg you. Iâm not broken. You have no reason to feel guilty.â
He returned my gaze but I realized his guilt ran too deep. Maybe tomorrow heâd finally be free. Maybe he could let go of his guilt when he had to let go of me. âI love you,â I said, knowing it was the last time.
Samuel wrapped his arms around me. âAnd I love you, Fina.â