I didnât even notice Dante slip into bed that night, but his side was rumpled, so he must have slept in it. I spent a few more minutes in bed, feeling somehow lighter now that Iâd ripped down one barrier between Dante and me, but I wasnât kidding myself into believing that sex would change our relationship fundamentally. I didnât think Dante would suddenly act like the loving and caring husband Iâd wanted when I was younger. It was strange. While Antonio had never been able to give me what I physically needed, heâd been my friend and confidante. Weâd spent time together when he wasnât busy and Iâd never felt overly lonely in our marriage. I had a feeling the same wouldnât be true in my second marriage. Even if Dante now satisfied my sexual needs, it would take some time before weâd become partners.
After Iâd showered and dressed in my favorite plum pencil skirt and a white blouse, I headed into one of the guestrooms that now harbored a few of my moving boxes that I hadnât unpacked yet. It took me a few minutes of rummaging before I found what I was looking for, a wooden case where I kept a few things from Antonio. Inside were our wedding bands, which Iâd never much cared about. The most important thing in the case was a thin photo album that held mostly pictures of the time before Antonio and I had married. Back then weâd only been friends without the added weight of having to pretend to be more. Antonio looked nothing like Dante. He had dark hair and dark eyes, and wasnât very tall. Heâd never wanted me to wear heels so I wasnât taller than him. But appearances werenât the biggest difference between my first and my second husband; that was their aura. Where Antonio had been open and friendly, someone people perceived as a likeable albeit ordinary buddy type, Dante oozed power and cold. Nobody would mistake him for a follower. If Dante hadnât been born into our world, heâd probably be a governor or senator. He would have done well in that world. But as with all of us¸ our birth determined our fate. We were all bound to the mob. I glanced down at a photo of Antonio and me on a horse. It had been the first time for me. We both looked young and happy, hopeful. Antonio hadnât been inducted into the mafia back then, had still thought he could find a way out of his duty.
I put the wooden case back down before I could dive deeper into sad memories. I straightened, took a deep breath and left the guest bedroom. There was no going back, but it wasnât always easy to move forward, especially if you didnât know which way to go. But I needed something that gave my life meaning and structure, something I could put my energy into, as long Dante didnât let me into his life.
I missed having a purpose, a daily task. I wasnât someone who could sit at home all day, or spent our going over the newest piece of juicy gossip. I wanted a job, but even during my time with Antonio, people had found it strange that heâd allowed his wife to work. I worried that it would be a scandal Dante wasnât willing to risk.
My steps slowed as I headed toward the door he hid behind almost all the time. I wasnât only nervous because I wanted to ask Dante for a job. What if things would be awkward and strained between us now that weâd slept together? Though I really wasnât sure how our relationship could take a further nosedive down. We were already barely being civil to each other. Apart from throwing dishes at each otherâs heads and bickering constantly there really was no way our interactions could change for the worse. And to be honest, I wasnât even sure if I wouldnât prefer heated fights to the cold ignorance I was getting now.
Gathering my courage, I knocked at his door.
âCome in,â Dante called after a moment.
I entered his office. My eyes immediately darted to the spot on the desk where the photo of his first wife had been, but heâd removed it. I didnât think heâd thrown it out. It was probably hidden away in one of the drawers in his desk, and I didnât expect him to forget her, to throw away every piece that reminded him of her, to banish her memory from his heart; I only wished heâd leave a little room in his heart for me.
Dante looked up from a pile of papers. âWhat do you need?â He didnât say it in an unfriendly way, but it was obvious that he was busy. His demeanor toward me hadnât changed at all, despite what weâd done yesterday. As my eyes took in his dark gray vest, my body remembered the way it had rubbed against my nipples yesterday and I almost crossed the room and threw myself at Dante again. But I didnât want to appear too needy. Our next sex would have to be initiated by Dante. Of course, maybe heâd go back to not touching me again. I pushed that worrisome thought aside as I closed the door after me and walked closer to the desk. âI have something Iâd like to discuss with you.â
Dante scanned my face. âGo on.â
âI want to work. When I was married to Antonio I helped him run his family restaurants too.â Theyâd always only been a way to launder money, but Iâd enjoyed the task. Iâd greeted guests and organized arrangements when someone booked a wedding in our restaurants. After his death, his younger brother had taken over. A woman alone couldnât possibly handle the task. Thatâs what our men thought anyway.
Dante leaned back in his desk chair with a frown. âWork? What did you have in mind?â
I was glad he was open to the idea and didnât shoot it down immediately. Emboldened by this, I walked around the desk and settled on its edge. Danteâs eyes flitted to my legs but too quickly they returned to my face. âIâm good at organizing and event planning. Iâm also very good with people.â I was also good at leading people but I kept that to myself. Made Men didnât like women who enjoyed being in charge. Somehow most of them couldnât get it in their heads that a strong woman at their side didnât make them less of a man.
Dante nodded. âI need someone for one of our casinos.â
I tried to curb my excitement. I didnât even know what Dante had in mind for me yet. âRiverboat or underground?â The casinos on land werenât official of course. It was still illegal to run a casino in Chicago that wasnât situated on a riverboat, but the mob and Dante in particular were working to change that. He could be very convincing, and it certainly didnât hurt that a few senators were regular customers in the Outfitâs casinos and brothels. Not that legalization would mean that the Outfit would make their secret casinos public. Theyâd lose too much money if they did.
âUnderground. I donât want you in the public eye.â
That made sense. People knew I was Danteâs wife. It would attract too much attention if I worked in one of the Riverboat casinos. âI know a little about gambling, and Iâm sure I can learn everything else I need to know very quickly.â Actually, the only knowledge about gambling I had were the rules of Texas holdâem that Antonio had taught me, but Dante didnât need to know that.
There was a knowing glint in Danteâs eyes. âThe only thing you need to know about gambling is that the bank always wins.â
I raised my eyebrows. âReally. What kind of job do you have in mind that requires next to no knowledge about the workings of a casino?â I assumed Dante wouldnât let his wife be one of the girls behind the bar that encouraged men to drink more.
âI want you to manage one of the smaller casinos of the Outfit. The man whoâs been in charge for the last three years was laid off yesterday.â
Was that what Dante had done after heâd slept with me? For a few moments, Dante and I stared at each other as if weâd been thinking the same thing, but now wasnât the moment to bring up sex. âLaid off?â I echoed his words, which I was fairly sure were an euphemism for something else, since it was hard to be fired from a position in the mob. If you messed up in one mob business, it was unlikely that youâd get a position somewhere else, unless you were someoneâs son, nephew etc. And if you werenâtâ¦
Dante watched me closely when he said his next words. âI found out that he filled his pockets with Outfit money.â
âSo you killed him,â I finished for him. I knew how things worked in our world. Maybe Iâd never been allowed in the midst of it, but I heard the stories.
Dante nodded. âI did. And if you want you can have his job.â
âI never managed a casino before. Why are you giving such an important position to me?â
âThe assistant manager can do the main work in the background. I need someone to make the high rollers feel welcome.â
I stiffened. Dante of course picked up on it. âI think you misunderstand me.â He stood and stepped in front of me. He rested his hands lightly on my thighs, making my skin tingle even through my tights. âYou are mine, Valentina.â
I had to bite back a smile at the possessiveness in his voice. âSo what exactly am I supposed to do?â
He removed his hands and strode over to the window, hands in his pockets. âI want you to welcome the high rollers. Show them to their table. Introduce them to our complimentary girls.â
âComplimentary girls, really?â
Dante turned. âGambling and prostitution are our main businesses, and both can easily be combined.â
âOkay. I can do that.â Even if the word complimentary girls made me want to tear my hair out. âThat doesnât sound like a lot though.â
âAlso you organize special events. We have event nights once a month, and I think a female touch might make them more appealing. You also make sure that everything goes smoothly. I want you to be my eyes. I have a feeling I havenât weeded out all the rotten fruit yet.â
âYou want me to spy on your employees.â
âYes. I want you to keep your eyes open.â
âIs it because you think theyâll be less cautious around me or because you donât have anyone else you trust with the task?â
âI have enough men I trust. But you are right, I think many men will underestimate you and be less vigilant around you.â He leaned against the window sill. âI donât trust anyone unconditionally.â
âNot even me?â It was said in a teasing voice, but Danteâs eyes became cool. âYou havenât given me reason to. You lied to me about your marriage to Antonio and you refuse to give me the name of an outsider who might be privy to compromising information about the Outfit.â
The way he worded it made me sound like a notorious liar. âI didnât lie to you about the marriage. I told you that Iâve never been with Antonio.â
âYes, you did, but it was a truth I suspect you gave up only because you feared Iâd uncover it eventually.â
Of course he hit the nail on the head. I couldnât deny it. He would have known I lied and that wouldnât really have helped my situation. âDoes it matter why I decided to tell you the truth?â
âIt matters greatly, Valentina. Because I donât know if youâll be as forthcoming with future truths if you donât feel cornered. If I counted every coerced truth as redeeming, I would have to spare every traitor who gives away his knowledge under duress.â
Under duress, what a mild word for what the Outfit did to traitors. âI know what you do to traitors, and thatâs exactly why I wonât give you the name of Antonioâs lover.â
âYou realize that by aiding Antonio in his deceit you became his accomplice and thus a traitor to the Outfit, and that you keep betraying the Outfit and me by withholding information.â
I pushed off the desk, unable to sit still any longer. âI know. But no matter what you think of me, I am loyal to those I care about. I was loyal to Antonio. If he were still alive, I would have taken his secret to the grave with me to protect him.â
Dante shook his head. âThatâs something you canât say for sure. Youâve never suffered through excruciating pain. Torture is a powerful motivator.â
âI guess weâll never know, unless you intend to test the theory on me and try to coerce the name of Antonioâs lover out of me,â I said insolently.
Dante fixed me with a hard look. âBecause you are my wife and because you are a woman, you are safe. You know that very well.â
Because I was his wife, not because he liked me or even cared for me. âI know,â I said, then because I couldnât bear the tension between us I added. âIf you had a secret you needed to hide, I would keep it for you. I would try to brave torture, pain and death to hide it for you.â
Dante didnât say anything, didnât even bridge the distance between us, only gazed at me with his unreadable eyes. I decided to take my exit before I said something sentimental, or before Dante could send me out. Dante didnât stop me, but I could feel his eyes on my back.