âWe are all born mad. Some remain so.â
âSamuel Beckett âSOMEBODY HAD BETTER START EXPLAINING what the fuckâs going on right !â Papà snapped. When his gaze flicked to me at the top of the staircase, he paused and then his expression became even stormier. He shook his head, gesturing toward me with his gun. âGo to your room, Elena.â
On instinct, my feet began to comply.
âStay.â Nicoâs voice was a deep timbre of control.
He was the don right now. No soft edges.
I halted, my blood going cold with indecision.
Nico stepped away from Benito and faced my papà . My cousin and father had a gun aimed at his head while he held his by his side. A cold sweat drifted down my back.
Papà and Nico stared at each other, communicating with their eyes. Something only dons could understand.
âYouâve gone too fucking far,â Papà spit. âElena is not yours until the marriage. And if youâve somehow forgottenâthat hasnât fucking happened yet.â
âLet me enlighten you, Salvatore,â Nico growled. âAs soon as the contract was signed she was .â
âFuck the contract and. Fuck.
. Ace.â
Nico ran a hand across his jaw with sardonic amusement. âYouâre backing out?â
âThatâs what I said.â
My heart threatened to beat out of my chest.
Nico took a step toward my papà . âYou want to know how to start a war with me, Salvatore?
would be how to do it.â
My eyes widened.
Papà âs jaw tightened. Tony and Dominic remained silent and unreadable, their attention and guns unmoving from the Russos in the foyer.
âCome here, Elena,â Nico demanded.
Papà shot me a narrowed gaze. âYouâll go to your fucking room. Now!â
Indecision twisted so violently in my stomach it felt like I might be sick. I didnât know what to do, who to listen to. Why this was happening to me.
I should have known Nico wouldnât have found that sufficient.
Nicoâs gaze flicked to me. His eyes were dark around the edges, but the irises were shimmering depths. Awareness ran through me. He said nothing, though he didnât have to. He wanted me to choose him and he was letting me see it. It was the most vulnerable thing Iâd ever seen him do, and the fact that he might show me a side of him not many had before sent a throb to my chest.
As my hands grew clammy and my breaths short, I did the thing that had been ingrained in me since I was a child. I listened to my papà and took a step toward my room.
But something stopped me.
If I picked my papà âs side, it could mean violence and death. Possibly Although, that wasnât only it.
A tug deep in my stomach pulled me in the other direction. A place near my heart grew cold and empty with the small step Iâd taken.
As I hesitated, the tension hung over my head like a formidable cloud.
My papà sold me to Oscar Perez.
Nico killed him for me.
I avoided my papà âs gaze as I descended the stairs, but his anger was strong enough it burned my skin. I sucked in a shallow breath as Luca reached out and wrapped a heavy arm around my waist as though I might change my mind.
My gaze met Tonyâs. While he was usually the first one to pull out a gun at the word , he didnât seem to want the same thing as Papà , or he wouldnât have let me by him. Maybe he and Nico were on better terms now that theyâd beaten the crap out of each other. Whatever it was, I was grateful.
Iâd already been the cause for one manâs death.
I couldnât survive another.
Luca walked me like a prisoner to the car, his arm a warm shackle around my waist.
Nico and the others were still inside, and I prayed they were doing the Made Man version of hugging it out, which usually involved violence of some kind, but not .
âInstead of running off next time,â Luca said dryly, âIâm betting if you ask him for something he might just give it to you.â
âI didnât run off. You were a little ââmy gaze hardenedââso I left a note on the island.â
His eyes narrowed. âThere was no note.â
I blinked.
He watched my expression before giving his head a shake, muttering, â
.â
I sat cross-legged on my bed, flicking the Zippo open and closed.
Iâd come to the conclusion that Nico made me as crazy as he was. Because was an easy fix to a problem I wouldnât have hesitated to utilize with anyone else. It was simple: when Nico was in the equation, all rational thoughts were lost.
I flicked the lighter open, and hope ignited with the new flame.
Perhaps I didnât have to see him with other women, to with one. The hope was only an ember, barely flickering with light, because the idea that there would be other women at all cut me straight through the chest, leaving a raw and bleeding ache behind.
However, infidelity was a fixed denominator in a Made Man. Like a surfer and a board. A writer and a pen. You couldnât separate the two. And asking would be a fruitless endeavor.
as the saying went.
I could live with not knowing.
My grip on the lighter faltered when the quiet purr of an engine drifted to my ears. I walked to the window to see Nico get out of his car and head into the garage. Luca had hung out in there since weâd gotten back close to an hour ago.
When Iâd come inside, I found my crumbled note in the trash.
was right. I hadnât gone about anything the right way, but I hadnât left without telling anyone, as Nico must have believed.
Shame became a heavier weight on my shoulders with every minute I waited. Iâd been upset, and the choice to leave was rash and not me.
Luca left the garage and rubbed his jaw before getting in his car. I stood there, waiting for Nico to make an appearance, but he didnât. Iâd spent the last hour wondering how he would react, what I was going to say to him, and now that he was here, a restlessness inside me demanded I get it over with.
I headed down the stairs and out the back door. The cement was hot against my bare feet as I stood in front of the garage. Nicoâs hands were braced on the worktable, a glass of whiskey sitting nearby. His shoulders tensed when he realized I was here.
His gaze came to me. It was dark, warm, every emotion in between. A shiver danced across my spine, and before I knew what I was doing I walked toward him. I didnât expect a rough palm to cup my face and brush across my cheek. My heart glowed like a Zippo flame.
He made a quiet noise of satisfaction when I pressed my face into his chest. His hand slid from my cheek to the back of my head, his fingers threading through my hair.
He smelled good. Felt so good. Like comfort, security, and all in one. There was a name to it, but I didnât know what.
âIâm sorry,â I breathed. âI didnât mean for any of that to happen.â
He let out a breath in between disbelief and amusement, and I thought he muttered, âSo this is the Sweet Abelli.â
Heâd done something no other Made Man should do and paraded his mistress in front of his fiancée, and somehow, I had ended up apologizing for the outcome.
My nonna and mamma were right.
This man would eat me alive.
But he was so warm, felt so , it was hard to even care.
His fist tightened in my hair, tilting my face to his. His gaze hardened.
âWhereâs your cell phone?â
I suddenly realized I hadnât taken it with me when I left. I hadnât had one for so long it was hard to remember. âI forgot it.â
âConvenient.â
I swallowed. âI wrote a note.â
âSo I heard.â His gaze fell to my hand. âWhere did you find that?â
I glanced at the lighter, recognizing Iâd brought it with me. âOn the floor after you got into it with my brother.â
âYou kept it.â
âYes.â
âWhy?â
I hesitated, a lie forming on my tongue before I swallowed it down. I felt bad enough about today that I couldnât stand to be untruthful.
âIt was yours,â I breathed.
It went so quiet I could hear the beats of my heart.
âYouâre forgiven,â he rasped.
A heavy pressure drifted off my shoulders.
His tone was harsh. âYou wonât leave this house again without talking to me first, do you understand?â
I nodded.
âSay it.â
I forced myself to meet his gaze. âI wonât leave the house without talking to you first.â My lungs tightened because it wasnât a promise I could keep. Not yet.
âIf you want to see your family, Iâll take you.â
I chewed my bottom lip. âMy papà might shoot you.â
âMaybe.â He seemed unconcerned.
Something twisted in my chest at the thought. Made me feel hollow.
He pressed my back to the workbench, braced his hands on either side of me, and then he leaned in and kissed my throat. I sighed and tilted my head. I hadnât expected it to go like this, but it could be said I never was that great at guessing what Nico would do.
âCan I ask for something?â
âShoot,â he drawled against my neck.
I said it before I could stop myself. âI want Isabel gone.â
His lips traced my ear, and seconds passed as I held my breath.
âDone.â
My heart ached.
His hand ran up my thigh and around to my ass, pulling my body against his. He kissed a line down my throat.
âCan I ask for one more thing?â I breathed.
I felt a smile on my neck. âYouâre awfully needy today.â
I swallowed. âNo women . . . not here, okay?â
He stilled for a moment, and with a sinking sensation in my belly I wondered if Iâd taken it too far. If he would say no.
âThatâs what you want?â
âYes.â
In the next moment of silence, the anticipation of his answer wrapped around my lungs and squeezed.
His face came up to mine. Our gazes met. Lips inches apart.
I wouldnât take a simple ring off when heâd asked, nor would I kiss him. The knowledge settled between us, mixed with the smell of motor oil and summer.
What he didnât know was that soon I would ruin everything to the point heâd never trust me again.
A thumb ran across my lips, down my chin. âDone.â
The band around my lungs released, though a tainted feeling remained. Thick as tar and black as night. Like a venomous snake in a tropical paradise.
âSo loyal to your family,â he said quietly. âYet you listened to me and not your papà . Why? Preventing a war?â
Thatâs what he expected. I could read it in the way he looked at me with a sort of forced detachment.
I did it because it felt right.
An unfamiliar ache began in my chest. A need for him to know.
I met his gaze, as golden as the glass of whiskey beside me.
âMaybe I wanted to,â I whispered.
He watched me for so many seconds it made my pulse race. He closed his eyes and shook his head. âCome on. Letâs go inside.â He grabbed my hand and tugged me along.
I followed.
He was comfort, security, and all in one.
It had a name.