Sinners Condemned : Chapter 10
Sinners Condemned : An Enemies to Lovers Mafia Romance (Sinners Anonymous Book 2)
cream floors and rich mahogany walls continues throughout the yacht, and between them, obscene wealth thrives like bacteria on a Petri dish. Italian sofas draped with cashmere throws dominate the lounge. The scent of tobacco and secrets hangs thick in the cigar room, which is cleverly hidden behind a false bookshelf in the library. The bar itself, with its marble surfaces and tawny leather stools, could be mistaken for the lobby of any five-star hotel, if it werenât for the steam rising off the hot tub on the other side of the sliding French doors.
Below deck, a network of narrow corridors and oddly-shaped rooms make up the staff quarters, and a gleaming kitchen with enough pantry space and stove burners to feed a small country beats at the heart of it.
Laurie tells me there are two types of staff: service crew and ghost crew. Weâre service, in charge of making sure anyone who comes onboard has a good time, while the ghost crew make sure the yacht runs smoothly. Theyâre the captain, engineers, and deckhands, and they all live onboard and, captain aside, way below deck.
âPretty impressive, huh?â Laurie asks, flinging open a door and spilling light onto what appears to be yet another terrace. We step outside. Now, the night is dark and frosty and the coastline is nothing but an inky shadow peppered with twinkling lights.
Truthfully, I donât think itâs so impressive. In fact, I think itâs pretty gross that, for more than seven-eighths of the year, this boat probably bobs unoccupied in some glitzy European port, while there are millions of people who canât even secure a regular roof over their head. Whatâs worse is that this asshole apparently has of these things.
But I bite my tongue and manage a nod. âYeah, impressive.â
I follow Laurie as she dodges tables and heat lamps and heads toward a staircase in the shadows. I let out a small groan, because how the fuck is there yet another deck above us? We climb the stairs up to another patio, and Laurie tugs a key from her pocket to open the set of sliding doors leading back inside.
âFinal stop, I promise,â she says, rubbing the back of her hand over her mouth. âThank because my stomach canât handle all this walking about.â
Warmth and low jazz brush my face when we step inside. As I scan the room, an unwelcome sense of nostalgia and familiarity creeps over me.
Deep-seated chairs flanking green velvet tables. Black and red squares and the sensual purr of a spinning roulette wheel.
âThereâs a casino onboard,â I say flatly, my eyes skimming up to the half-moon bar and the man cleaning glasses behind it.
âOf course there is; itâs Raphael Visconti,â Laurie replies in a blunt tone designed to squash any other questions. âWeâll be working in here tonight.â
My gaze slides to her, wide and flecked with mild panic. âIn the casino?â
âNo, in the toilets around the corner,â she deadpans. âOf course in the casino! Iâm going to put you behind the bar because Iâve just looked at your resume, and you definitely have the most experience.â Mistaking my expression for nerves, she adds, âDonât sweat it. Tonight will be just friends and family, so think of it as a trial run. The real opening night isnât until the New Year, so thereâs loads of time for you to learn the ropes. Come on, let me introduce you to Freddie.â
I converse with the bartender, asking and answering mundane questions that both float out of my mouth and over my head. I canât concentrate on pleasantries, because I canât shake the ominous feeling of dread looming over me.
My fresh start is taking the same shape of the life I left behind and I donât like the look of it. Soon, this room will be filled with oversized watches and overstuffed wallets, and temptation, in all of its hot, itchy glory, will drip from the walls like condensation. As part of going straight, I vowed to never step foot inside a casino again. Not because I donât want toâ
do I want toâbut because the impulse to be bad is too great.
I swallow the lump clotting my throat. Force a smile when Freddie makes some shit joke about the Viscontis drinking the bar dry.
When the small talk finally fizzles out, Laurie checks her watch then leads me back down to the locker roomâthe first door on the âto get ready for the shift.
As we enter, expensive perfume and laughter float over the tops of the wooden lockers. I turn the corner and find a gaggle of girls leaning against a row of marble sinks. I recognize some of them, including Anna, from the wedding, and others from childhood summers spent on Cove beach.
âWhat are we gossiping about, ladies?â Laurie drawls, sliding my bag off my shoulder and stuffing it into a locker with my name emblazoned on the front of it. Fancy. âAnd donât say ânothing,â because Katieâs face is as red as a tomato.â
I lock eyes with a pretty blond and smile. Laurieâs right; sheâs flushed something rotten.
Another blond pushes off the sink, jumping as she tugs a pair of tights over her tiny waist. âWeâre having a debate Amusement tugs on Laurieâs lips. âPray, tell.â
âWe canât agree on the type of girl Raphael goes for. Katie and I reckon he has the hots for blonds, but Anna thinks he only goes for brunettes.â
She pronounces Anna like , and based on that alone, I stop feeling even the tiniest bit guilty about interrupting her chat with Raphael.
Anna leans over the sink, reapplying her blood-red lipstick in the mirror. âI donât think; I My friend has worked as a shot girl in one of his Vegas casinos for over a year and she says he always has a brunette on his arm.â
âWell, one thing is for sure. He goes for girls with at least half a brain, so that rules all of you out, anyway,â Laurie mutters. A beat passes, then she doubles over, gritting her teeth. âGreat, back to the bathroom I go. Meet me in the lounge for the start-of-service briefing in fifteen.â Hurried footsteps thud on the tiles, then a door slams shut in the distance.
âPoor Laurie,â Katie says, before turning her attention back to Anna. âAnyway, it sounds like you just have a bad case of wishful thinking.â
âIt wishful thinking,â Anna snaps back, far too quickly. âI have my eye on him, so whether he goes for brunettes, blonds, orââher gaze slides to mine in the mirror with a spark of disgustââeven gingers you better back off, because Iâm staking my claim right now.â
Soft laughter ripples between the girls. My cheeks burn and my tongue twitches with a nasty clap-back. Reminding myself of the Ace of Spades stuck to the refrigerator door, I busy myself with tugging my makeup bag out of the locker and rummaging around in it for my compact.
girls take back-handed compliments with a grain of salt, or bitch to their friends about it later. They donât start pulling hair.
âI think he has his eye on you, too,â the other blond admits, spritzing herself with enough perfume to set off the fire alarm. âNot that it matters, because those rumors are definitely true.â
âWhat, that he never goes on a date with the same girl twice?â another girl says, breezing around the corner in just her bra and panties. âI agree. Heâll be a bachelor until heâs eighty.â
âAnd even then, weâll all still want to fuck him.â
Girlish laughter rises up like shower steam and for some dumb-ass reason, irritation slithers down my spine. I couldnât give a flying fuck about Raphael Viscontiâs love life, but the fact that he fucks-and-chucks women is just the cherry on top of his obnoxious cake. It makes all the smooth talking and shark-like smiles seem even worse.
âYou know what I think?â bra-and-panties girl says. âI think heâs got the hots for the new girl.â
The laughter stops, and the weight of five pairs of eyes falls heavy on my back.
Silence. Bitchiness crackles in the air like static, and then a retort from bra-and-panties girl flutters through it.
âNot a fucking chance.â
Itâs low and syrup-like, but it wades through the locker room and steels my spine.
Sighing, I close my eyes and rest my forehead on the frame of my locker.
Iâm not used to being around catty women. Being around women at all, actually. Good times spent with my mother only existed in pockets of sobriety. Outside of them, the only time sheâd talk to me would be to drunkenly whine that my existence had ruined both her figure and her relationship with my father.
In high school, the girls I ate lunch with acted like I had leprosy after my parents were killed. The only group of girlfriends Iâve ever had were the strippers I worked with for a few months. They were kind and uplifting and would be the first to come to my defense with an eight-inch glass stiletto in hand when a patron stepped over the line. But strippers, like swindlers, follow the money. Theyâd bounce from bar to bar, even city to city, and it was all too easy to lose contact.
Itâs sad to say aloud, but itâs all Iâve ever wanted. Maybe itâs because when my parents would pass out on the sofa, exhausted from a day of strong liquor and loud arguments, Iâd sit on the rug in front of the television and watch on mute. I longed to have friends like that. Friends I could complain about my parents to and whoâd invite me to sleepovers on Saturday night so I didnât have to hear them fighting on the other side of my bedroom walls. Instead, all I had was a hotline, and, of course, Nico. While I love him, itâs just not the same. Sure, Iâm forever grateful to him for teaching me how to unbuckle a Rolex crown clasp with my eyes closed, but it wouldâve also been nice to have someone teach me how to do winged eyeliner, or how to choose a bra that fits.
I learned how to insert a tampon from a YouTube tutorial, and I donât know how to braid my hair.
Thereâs a rustling beside me, and I pop an eyelid to see Katie sliding down the bench and coming to a stop next to my locker. She looks up at me with an embarrassed smile. âIgnore her; sheâs on her period.â
I roll my eyes and cross over to the mirror above the row of sinks to touch up the concealer on my faint head wound.
I stand beside Anna, pretending like I canât see her gaze travel down the length of my body in the mirror.
Sheâs thinking what all the other girls are thinking. I can see it in their sideways glances, but sheâs the only one to be so blatant about it. I donât look like them. Iâm not six feet tall and I donât have the type of body that only eating leafy greens and doing a hundred crunches before bed will achieve. But I donât give a flying fuck, because I like how I look. Well, Iâm about it, at least. Worrying about the little pouch of fat that hangs over the waistband of my panties has never paid my bills. Obsessing over the fact that my thighs rub together has never given me a winning Blackjack hand.
And being judgmental about other womenâs bodies has never made mine miraculously perfect, either.
âPenelope, isnât it?â
Gritting my teeth, I slide my eyes over to Annaâs reflection and nod. For whatever reason, she smirks and goes back to applying her makeup.
Skin stinging from thinly veiled insults, I focus on dusting powder over my nose and removing a mascara clump. Itâs easy to feign indifference, until the conversation turns even lewder and my cheeks turn crimson.
âWhy do you think he only fucks from behind?â bra-and-panties chick muses.
âIâm guessing because he likes using hair as a leash,â Anna retorts, swishing her own long locks over her shoulders for dramatic effect. âIâve heard he fucks Which is so hot, considering heâs such a fucking gentleman.â
Bra-and-panties eyeâs meet mine in the mirror. âWhat about you, new girl? What do you think?â
I snap my compact shut and hold her gaze. âI think Iâll just ask the man himself.â
âWhat?â
âUh-huh. Whereâs his office?â
âButââ
âWhereâs his office?â I repeat, calmly.
Silence stretches from the lockers to the sinks. Katieâs laugh slices through it. âBehind the bridge.â
âThank you, Katie,â I say, walking over to my locker, tossing my makeup bag inside, and slamming it shut with more force than necessary. Before I stomp out, I pin Anna with a blistering glare. âDonât worry, Iâll find out whether he prefers blonds, brunettes, or even â Not waiting for her reply, I switch my wrath to bra-and-panties chick. âAnd what did you want to know again? Whether he gets off on pulling hair? Iâll ask on your behalf, donât worry.â I pretend to scratch my head in thought, ignoring the way her jaw drops open. âOh, what was the other question you had? If heâs into choking, right?â
âI didnât sayââ
âYes, that was it. Choking and spitting into girlsâ mouths. Got it. Iâll report back. Toodles!â
I give an enthusiastic wave over my shoulder as I stride toward the door, ignoring the breathy âWait!â coming from behind me.
Out in the hallway, I lean against the wall and take a deep breath. Christ, maybe thereâs a book on how to deal with mean girls in the workplace without getting fired.
One thingâs for sure; I wonât be sharing a pair of Leviâs with these girls over a long summer.