Sinners Condemned : Chapter 8
Sinners Condemned : An Enemies to Lovers Mafia Romance (Sinners Anonymous Book 2)
The low, slow rhythm seeps into my subconscious, tickling a dark corner of my brain. Itâs not the sound of my alarm. Maybe itâs my ringtone? I have no idea what that sounds like; not only because I usually have my cell on vibrate, but because no one has the number to my burner.
Itâs annoying, whatever it is.
I grunt and roll over to bury my head in the gap between the pillows, but something tugging on my hand stops me.
Only a few seconds pass before the pain starts. It sears from one temple to the other and snaps across my forehead like an elastic band.
I pop an eyelid open and sweep the room. White ceilings, white bed sheets. Clinical and Even with blurry eyes and a pounding head, I know Iâm not in my apartment. In fact, I donât remember getting home at all.
I was at the port.
The memory opens the floodgates in my foggy brain, and everything rushes back to me.
The orange sky.
The deafening explosion.
The The beeping gets faster, and I have just enough sense to realize itâs because the clip on the end of my finger is monitoring my heart rate.
Light, quick footsteps approach, and then a woman appears in the doorway.
âYouâre all right, youâre all right.â She strides into the room with the gait of a leisurely Sunday stroll. She stops at the end of the bed and studies my chart, giving me a chance to study White hair swept into a tight bun, middle-aged, and plump in a way that makes the buttons down the front of her uniform sit in a zig-zag. Sheâs the type of woman parents tell their children to seek out in the park if a creepy man approaches them.
She must be a nurse, which means Iâm in the hospital.
âWhat happened?â Well, thatâs what I to say. It comes out in a garbled groan and ignites a trail of fire up my throat.
Her gray eyes snap up to me, amused. âSave it, sweetie. Iâll get you some water in a second. Iâm Minnie, the charge nurse here at Devilâs Hollow Hospital. And you areâ¦â She glances back at the clipboard and her expression lights up. âOoh! A Jane Doe! How exciting.â
I blink.
She breezes over to the side table and pours a glass of water from a jug. âEasy does it,â she says, watching me drink the liquid as fast as I can in an attempt to quell the fire. âAll that screaming has made your throat dry,â she tuts. âThey could hear you in Canada.â
My eyes feel like theyâre going to pop out of my head.
Why the hell would I be âThere was a little accident at the port, my dear. Your notes say you were struck by a stack of falling boxes, and youâve taken a particularly nasty blow to the head.â
She tugs a pen light from her breast pocket and does a quick sweep of my eyes with it. Pulls out the IV, and puts a fresh bandage on the back of my hand. âDoesnât look like a concussion, but weâll be monitoring you for a little while, all right?â
But Iâm not listening.
Because all I can feel is my own plea on my lips and all I can see is a hazy orange heat distorting the cold black sky.
I asked for a sign that Iâd lost my luck and I received a full fireworks display.
I drop my head against the pillow, feeling the ice-cold hand of realization pressing down on my windpipe.
âOkay, sweetie. I need to do my rounds, but Iâll come and check on you in a few. Rest up, okay?â With a soft pat on my shoulder, she bustles out into the brightly lit corridor, a hearty whistle floating after her.
Only one beat passes before a wave of guilt breaks over me. It snatches the air from my lungs and I slump down, resting my thumping head on my pillow.
Logically, I know my asking for a sign didnât cause the explosion, but I canât shake the feeling it was somehow my fault anyway. My brain forms an image of the port worker. One minute he was walking toward me in a halo of headlights, and the next, he was just gone Swindling and hustling are one thing; arson and explosions are another ball game entirely. Christ, these sins are stacking up like charms on a necklace, and I donât know how much longer I can bear that burden around my neck before I keel over from its weight.
Sitting upright makes my head spin, so I grip the side bars of the bed and stare at the ice-blue sky framed by the window, waiting for the dizzy spell to pass. As the wispy clouds and the soaring birds come into focus, emotion prickles in my throat, threatening to supply my eyes with a fresh wave of tears.
âDid you know two thousand frowns equal one wrinkle?â
My spine goes rigid at the sound of a sweet voice drifting in from the door. I turn, wincing as tightness tugs at my neck, and lock eyes with the girl it belongs to.
Silky blond hair and a golden tan that doesnât make sense in a blistering cold December. Her eyes are big and blue, filled with the type of innocence that only one girl on this coastline can truly claim.
Wren Harlow.
Grinding my teeth so my groan isnât audible, I force a dead-eyed smile. Of all the people Iâd want to walk through that door while Iâm having a private meltdown, Wren would be pretty low on the list. Itâs not because sheâs not niceâquite the opposite, in fact. Sheâs nice. So nice, sheâs known on the Coast as the Good Samaritan. Not a single Friday or Saturday night passes in Cove where you wouldnât find her trawling the strip and helping drunk people. She hands out Band-Aids and flip-flops to girls with aching feet. Hails cabs for the drunk and disorderly. Sheâs so sweet it hurts my teeth looking at her.
Her gaze trails from my head wound to my feet and back again. Maybe itâs the pain meds making me loopy, but I canât help notice her nail polish is the exact shade of pink as her shirt dress.
I have a feeling she did that on purpose.
She blows a bubble. Pops it. âYou thinking about something bad?â
Frowning, I bite back the urge to tell her itâs none of her business. Partly because I donât need any more bad karma, and partly because Wren is the type of girl whoâs probably never experienced even a dog barking at her, let alone a scruffy red-head going through an existential crisis.
âMaybe.â
âWhen I have bad thoughts, I try to distract myself.â
I rub the bridge of my nose, trying my hardest to keep my mouth shut. The last thing I need right now is an impromptu therapy session from a girl with a fast-pass to heaven.
âHow? By cross-stitching your favorite Bible verses?â I mutter under my breath.
She sinks down on the foot of the bed, stretching her long, tight-clad legs across the floor tiles. âNo, by going through the alphabet and thinking of a curse word for each letter.â Her blue gaze comes to mine as she blows another bubble.
âFor example, A is for asshole,â she says pointedly, a dark glint in her eye.
Despite the searing pain in my head and the sins weighing heavy on my chest, I canât help but let out a gruff laugh.
âTouché.â
She grins, too, a beautiful smile that softens the planes of her face. She nods at the space above my eyebrow. âLooks nasty.â
âFeels it.â
âWant a candy bar?â
I blink. Before I can ask what sheâs on about, she jumps up, ducks into the hallway, and returns with a cart. âIâve got all the classics, plus potato chips and cans of soda.â She crouches down and squints at the bottom shelf. âI had some ham and cheese sandwiches too, but Billy in room eight took like even though theyâll be serving lunch in an hour.â
She returns to her full height and looks at me expectantly. When I donât reply, she grabs two Hershey bars off the cart and tosses one into my lap. Holding the other between her teeth, she drags the armchair across the room and sets it beside my bed.
I stare down at the chocolate wedged between my thighs. âYou work here?â
âNope, just volunteering.â
She flops down in the chair and swings her boots up to rest them on the end of the bed. âI work at The Rusty Anchorâbeen there for about a year now. What have you been up to, anyway? I havenât seen you on the Coast in a while.â
I ignore her question because Iâm still stuck on her job. âThe bar?â
âUh-huh.â My gaze instinctively cuts to the sparkly pink bobble wrapped around her high ponytail and she laughs. âItâs not as bad as you think, really.â
Mm. The last time I stepped foot in The Rusty Anchor, I left with six splinters and salmonella from the chicken burger. Iâd assume that if a girl like Wren stepped into The Rusty Anchor, sheâd spontaneously combust from the sins that lived inside of it.
She tosses her gum in the trash, tears open her candy bar, and stares at my wound. âWhat were you doing at the port, anyway? Iâm sure I saw you at the wedding last night. Or did I have too many lemonades?â
âNo, I was there.â My fingers creep up to my pendant again. âBut I went for a walk on my way home.â
âJeez. Thatâs unlucky.â
âWell, it could have been much worse. Working at The Rusty Anchor means I know pretty much everyone who was injured.â Her throat bobs. âAnd those who didnât make it.â
My own throat dries up faster than the Sahara after a storm. âHow many died?â
âThree. So far, anyway.â
âWhat the hell happened, a burst gas pipe or something?â
Biting off a chunk of chocolate, she chews thoughtfully for a moment. âTerrorist attack,â she mumbles, all candy and teeth.
âIâ
?â
âNo idea who did it, though. Everyone was being pretty hush-hush last night.â
Now, Iâm starting to think these pain meds are making me loopy. âWhy would somebody want to blow up that tiny port?â
âBecause the Viscontis own it.â
The name shoots from Wrenâs chocolate-filled mouth and hits my chest like a bullet. Of the Viscontis own the fucking port. âItâs too much of a coincidence that Angelo announces heâs moving back to Devilâs Dip, and then the port blows up on his wedding day.â
My eyes slide to hers. âAngeloâs moving back?â
âOf course. Rory wonât leave the Coast.â She sighs through another mouthful of chocolate. âPoor Rory. Doesnât look like sheâll be going on her honeymoon after all.â
Despite the cocktail of numbing agents taking the edge off my pain, the slow dread filling my stomach feels all too real. If Angeloâs moved back to the Coast, then what does that mean for his brothers?
âOn his own?â
âWhat do you mean?â
We lock eyes for a beat too long, then a knowing smirk stretches her pink lips. âOh, I see.â
âSee â
She sinks back in her chair, that smirk widening to a grin. âIf youâve got your eye on Rafe, then you better get in line.â
Heat rises to my cheeks, making my skin prickle. âIâm interested in Raphael; I was just making polite converââ
âHey, hey, hey, Iâm not one to judge.â She holds her hands up in mock surrender. âThey donât call him Prince Charming for nothing.â
My laugh is bitter. âI must have grown up watching different Disney films.â
âAw, come off it. Rafeâs lovely.â Her hand touches her chest and the small smile that graces her lips suggests her mind has gone elsewhere. Somewhere Raphael Visconti isnât a raging asshole, presumably. âHeâs not my type, but I can fully appreciate the appeal. Heâs justâ¦such a You know, the type of guy in black and white movies that lays his jacket over a puddle of mud so his date doesnât ruin her shoes? Or, like, the kind of guy to send you a dozen roses, simply because itâs a Wednesday â
I canât help it. âYou seriously believe that shit?â
Her tinkling laugh floats across the room. âSeems like youâve had a different experience.â
I gnaw on the inside of my cheek to stop myself mentioning things like dicks in doors and guns in glasses.
When the silence lingers too long, Wren lets out another chuckle and swipes her boots off my bed. âYikes. F is for âfuck him,â am I right?â
Despite feeling like all the problems in the world are pinning me to this bed, I canât help but laugh.
Her gaze comes to mine, all sparkly and innocent. âIf youâre hanging around for a while, you should swing by The Rusty Anchor some time. You know, once weâve cleared up the mess from the explosion, and once you donât look like Frankenstein.â She prods the IV drip with a pink fingernail. âRory and Tayce swing by every Tuesday night, and thereâs always room for one more at the bar.â
Her offer is probably just in passing, a sweet gesture from a sweet girl. It shouldnât make the backs of my eyes burn like it does. Maybe itâs because morphine makes me emotional, or maybe itâs because I feel guilty about palming her off as just the weird girl who does good deeds.
I swallow the knot in my throat and nod. âIâd like that. Thanks for the chocolate bar and, you know,â I murmur, my throat tightening, âbeing so nice.â
Her laugh floats through the room like a welcome breeze on a warm day. âNice is just what I do. See ya!â
And with that, she click-clacks down the hall, taking her cart with her. Left alone, I infect the sterile room with a loud groan. It seems like Iâve stepped out of one fire I caused and into another I didnât. How am I going to go straight when Iâm surrounded by trouble?
Iâd never expect this type of shit in Devilâs Dip. It isâ
âthe sleepy town on the Coast. The one in the shadows of the flashing lights, where residents can close their eyes at night and not have to worry about getting caught in the middle of Cosa Nostra chaos.
Besides, if my luck really is waningâ¦
I swallow the lump in my throat. Give a small shake of my head in an attempt to rid myself of the thought.
Thatâs what the woman told me in the alleyway when she gave me her necklace.
My lids fluttering shut, I give in to the softness of the pillow under my head for a few moments.
Still, I canât help but consider selling Raphaelâs watch, paying off whatever extortionate medical bill Iâm slapped with, and then getting a bus over the border to Canada.
Eyes still closed, I reach out to the bedside table for my purse and realize itâs not there.
The last time I remember having itâremember anything actuallyâwas at the port. Groaning, I weakly wrestle with the wheelchair folded up beside the bed and slide my heavy limbs into it. Iâll just wheel myself down the hall to the nursesâ station and ask.
As I push myself out to the hall, white walls and silver doors pass in a cool, drug-fueled haze. A chill caresses my back and I realize Iâm wearing nothing but a flimsy hospital gown, the type that ties up at the back. No bra, and my body is too numb and sluggish to assess whether I even have panties on.
The moment I turn the corner, my gaze locks with another and my heart drops on instinct.
Cold and brown as a slushy pile of mud on a winter morning, the manâs eyes trail up from my muddy toes to the bandage on my head, before settling into a thin line of suspicion.
Silence screams, but the ghost of his gruff voice yells even louder in my brain.
Itâs the man who was guarding the top of the stairs at the bar. Heartbeat jittering, my attention darts to the cluster of sharp suits and sour faces that loiter in the hallway behind him. Shiny shoes reflect clinical lights. Beefy hands curl around Styrofoam cups.
And then a familiar cashmere voice seeps out from the unknown and wraps its soft hand around my lungs. My wheels come to a slow stop.
âThank you, Sheriff. Our family truly appreciates your help during this difficult time.â
A shuffle of papers, then heavy footsteps grow louder. âAnytime, Mr. Visconti. Please send your brother my congratulations on the wedding.â
âOnly if you tell your mother those gingerbread cookies she sent over have changed my life.â
Thereâs a gruff chuckle, then black shoes and a beige uniform emerge from the door on the right. The Sheriff glances over his shoulder and grins. âSheâll be happy to hear. Take care now, Mr. Visconti. And if you need anything, you know you can always reach me on my personal cell.â
He strolls down the hallway in the other direction, trying to force a very thick brown envelope into the pocket of his slacks.
Annoyance prickles at my chest, because of course the Viscontis have the police under their thumbs.
For a few seconds, Iâm torn between scrambling back to my room or continuing with my mission to get my phone. Stubbornness makes me settle on the latter. That, and my burning need to call my hotline and mull over my thoughts of moving to Canada.
I stare at the ugly geometric print of my hospital gown and keep pushing my chair, but as I grow closer and closer to passing the door on the right, unease slides under my skin like tectonic plates.
I peer into the hospital room to my right, and let my gaze settle on the man himself.
My heart hitches in my chest.
Black suit. White Shirt. Gold collar pin. I donât know why I bother checking his hallmark features off a mental list, because Raphael Viscontiâs outline is unmistakable.
The room is darker than mine, save for the lone sunbeam slicing a diagonal line across his profile. The bed is tightly dressed, and stacks of notes are wrapped in bands and piled high on the bedside table. More bribes, no doubt.
Heâs spilling out of an armchair in the corner, resting his elbows on his knees and subjecting the tiles underneath his Oxfords to an expressionless stare. He spins something between his fingers in a slow, hypnotic rhythm, and it takes four revolutions for me to realize itâs a gold poker chip.
The chip, diamond cufflinks, and his citrine ring wink at me.
Until they donât.
When Raphaelâs hands still and his shoulders tighten, the dust particles floating inside the sunbeam fall stagnant, as if theyâre holding their breaths on my behalf. Shadows shift to accommodate the planes of his face as he lifts his head and meets my gaze.
My pulse strums violently; my aching muscles brace for impact. For three loud heartbeats, Iâm trapped in his glare.
Then, he does something I donât expect.
He laughs.
Itâs soft. Dark. As gentle as a kiss on a collarbone and no good could ever come from such a sound.
âAre you obsessed with me, Penelope?â
His tone is cushioned with amusement but thereâs something around its edges that tugs at my nerves.
âYeah, thatâs exactly why Iâm in the hospital,â I reply sarcastically.
His gaze sparks with confusion, before turning a few shades darker. It carves a lazy path down my neck. My breathing stills as it crackles over the thin fabric of the hospital gown, and when it settles like a heavy weight in my lap, the warmth in my stomach simmers half a degree hotter. Itâs irritationânothing more. Because, although Iâm used to men staring at my body while wearing a lot less than this, thereâs something about the way he regards meâclinically, âthat makes my jaw stiffen.
âYou were there.â I catch the flare of his nostrils before they disappear behind his knuckles. When he speaks again, it seems to be just to himself. âOf course you were there.â
âWhat, you think I bombed the port, or something?â
His eyes meet mine again. A pensiveness mars the ever-present amusement behind them. âOr something.â
With a cocktail of frustration and annoyance flaming inside me, I huff out a shaky breath and turn my attention to harsh fluorescent lights lining the hallway ceiling. Obviously he knows I had nothing to do with the explosionâhe wouldnât be sitting next to a stack of bribe money if I didâbut I hate how the suspicion in his tone, even if fake, mirrors my own.
Itâs pathetic, but the idea that Iâve lost my luck is scarier to me than anything else in this world. Scarier than threats by Atlantic City casino owners, and scarier than the fear of my biggest sin catching up with me.
âLucky charm?â
A voice flecked with ice-cold scorn slices the silence. My eyes skim down from the ceiling to find Raphael looking at my necklace with tight disgust. I didnât realize I was running the four-leaf clover up and down the chain.
âNo,â I lie. Then I straighten my spine and lie a little more. âI donât need a lucky charm. Iâm lucky enough.â
My voice is hoarse and sounds pathetic, thanks to the desperation woven within it. Itâs obvious Iâm only trying to convince myself.
âSo you said.â He runs a slow tongue over his top lip as he nods to the bandage on my forehead. âYou donât look so lucky to me.â
I swallow the wedge in my throat. âIâm lucky to be alive.â
His gaze slides to mine, dark and hot. âFor now.â
Silence eats up the oxygen between us. I canât stop at him. His threat was subtle, elegant, delivered on a velvet cushion upon a silver platter. I have no doubt heâd follow through with that thinly-veiled threat if provoked. So why the fuck does everyone on this Coast think heâs a gentleman? That heâs somehow different from the rest of his family, from his brothers?
Most people have an IQ big enough to spot a lion in sheepâs clothing, surely?
My jaw tightens as I realize the truth. Itâs because he doesnât act like this around other people.
Suddenly, it clicks.
âThis is about your watch,â I announce, a quiet glee humming in my aching bones. âThatâs why you hate me so much. Your fragile male ego canât handle a woman getting one over on you.â
I donât get the reaction Iâm expecting. Just another laugh. âNice, but still, no.â
I watch the chip glint with every revolution, taunting me. When the last of my self-restraint dissolves, I jerk my chin toward the bunch of suit-clad idiots loitering in the hallway. âDo I get to choose?â
He cocks a brow, still spinning his chip.
âWhich of your lackeys get to kill me, I mean? Because itâll be one of them, right? I know a gentleman like you would never risk getting blood on his pretty little suit.â
He gives me nothing but a polite smile, and the darkness in his eyes suggests his mind is elsewhere. Medical machines beep through white walls and somewhere down the hall, a coffee machine bursts and sputters.
Eventually, he leans forward into the path of the sunbeam and the quiet calmness in his green eyes glitters under the light. âRumor has it youâre looking for a job in Devilâs Dip.â
My gaze narrows. What a left-field response. Thereâs only two people who could have told him that: Rory or Nico. I discount Matt immediately, because I doubt he could hold a conversation with Raphael Visconti long enough to tell him this without jizzing in his pants.
âYeah, but not with you or your family.â
Dark amusement pulls at his lips. âImpossible.â
My eyes itch as I force myself not to roll them. As much as his smugness grates down my spine, I know heâs right. Even if the Viscontis donât own the business directly, they sure as hell will have their sticky mafia fingers in the pie one way or another.
âYou offering me a job, or something?â
âOr something.â
The change of tune is enough to give me whiplash. I squint at him, trying to figure out what heâs playing at. Maybe itâs because my brain is damaged from the blow, but I canât tell if heâs joking or not.
âWhy do I feel like Iâm about to get sex trafficked?â
Raphael lets out a short sigh. âIâm offended. All of my businesses are perfectly legitimate; thank you.â
I open my mouth and close it again, trapping my insult behind my lips. Iâm pretty hard up right now, so Iâm not going to ruin my chance of finding employment ifâand itâs a big ifâthis isnât a joke.
âWhatâs the catch?â
Now, something in Raphaelâs gaze flickers to life. âI thought youâd never ask.â He run two fingers over his bottom lip, but it does little to conceal his soft smirk. âPlay a game with me.â
Despite my aching bones and jaded heart, the simple command stokes the embers in the pit of my stomach. A game?
Before I can ask about rules and wagers, he stands and closes the gap between us in two long strides.
My heartbeat skids to a halt. Heâs so close Iâm entirely engulfed in his cold shadow. So close the soft fabric of his slacks nearly brushes against my bare knees, reminding me of how thin this stupid hospital gown is, and that I have almost nothing underneath it.
Instinctively, I grip the wheels of my chair, but when I jerk them backward, I donât move.
I look south and find the toe of a shiny Oxford shoe pressing against the base of the tire.
I look up just in time to see Raphael slip his hand in his pocket and produce a deck of cards. He holds them just above my eye-line in a large, tanned fist with a of his thumb snapping against the base of the deck, and I catch a flash of color up his sleeve.
âChoose a card.â
The demand knocks all suspicion of hidden ink out of my brain. âWhat?â
He fans the deck. âChoose a card.â
âWell, what card?â I huff out. âWhat game are we playing?â
âYou wonât like it if I have to ask again.â
His voice is butter-like, but by now, I know better than to be fooled by it. My front teeth capture my bottom lip, and I glare at the cards like theyâve done something to piss me off.
Right, well. Thereâs a one-in-fifty-two chance that I choose the card he wants me to choose. And if I choose that card, I have no idea if itâs a good or a bad thing. Thatâs if there even a card he has in mind.
Fuck it.
Without allowing for another thought, I tap on a card three in from the right end of the deck. Raphael stiffens, then, as if in slow motion, he slides it out. With a snap of his wrist, he straightens the remainder of the pack and slips it into his pocket.
I look up to his face and our gazes clash for five long, unbearable seconds. Eventually, he tears his eyes from mine and regards the card. He remains expressionless, disinterested.
A tick of his jaw. A flare of his nostrils.
Then he does something that takes me by surprise even more than his laugh did. He bends over, grips my throat, and snatches all the air from my lungs like itâs his to take.
I part my lips to gasp, and when I do, something stiff slides between them.
The tangy taste of ink on my tongue. Sharp, cardboard edges on my lips.
But Iâm too distracted by the heat on my earlobe and the rough jaw against my cheek. âMonday, six pm on the fishermanâs docks,â he whispers in my ear. His thumb grazes over the thumping pulse in my neck, sending an unwelcome shiver between my thighs. âBring your resume and donât be late.â
A cold breeze skitters over my chest as he returns to his full height. He side-steps my chair and strides down the hallway without so much as a backward glance. I watch in disbelief, my heart slamming against my rib cage, as his convoy of black suits follow after him.
When heavy footsteps cease and a door slams, I let out a choked groan. With trembling hands, I tug the playing card from my mouth and stare at it.
A few seconds pass before I allow myself a small, shaky laugh.
It hums in my blood, swirling with a cocktail of adrenaline and relief.
The Ace of Spades.
The luckiest damn card in the deck.
Iâm back, baby.