âI have killed no men, that, in the first place didnât deserve killing.â
âMickey Cohen THE FAN WHIRLED AS SWEATÂ dripped down my back under the heat of the sun. I wiped my neck and tossed the rag on the worktable. Tension coiled beneath my skin, and I gave in and grabbed a pack of smokes from a drawer and lit one. I inhaled until my lungs burned and nicotine spread through my veins in one relaxing rush.
In all honesty, I didnât feel like working on my car right now. I felt like fucking my wife, or even staring at her. Whatever I could get. But I came out here for a reason. Inside, she was everywhere. The sound of her voice. Her soap in my shower and her clothes in my room. Her hair ties and little wedding notes on every surface. The soft scrape of her nails on the back of my neck whenever she sat on my lap.
Fuck, I was in so deep I didnât know the way up.
I needed a few hours to think, or maybe just to stew in spite over never getting that fifty-cent ring off her finger. I wanted her. Her genuine smiles. Her loyalty. Every fucking piece of her. Iâd been testing the waters earlier, but as tense as she got I realized she was nowhere near where I was. Not by a long shot.
I gave my head a small shake.
The worst had happened. I loved the fucking woman. And now my biggest weakness walked outside my body, with soft brown eyes and long black hair. There were a lot of men who would love to hit me in my weak spot; the reason I had never wanted the vulnerability. But what I didnât expect was this calmness to come with it, this surety that I would fucking die before I let them.
My cell phone rang on the table, and I picked it up without looking to see who it was. âYeah?â
âHello, this is Judy from AMC Gold. Am I speaking to Nicolas Russo?â
âYou are.â
âI just need you to verify your birth date before I can proceed.â
Jesus, the lady fucking called me. I rubbed a thumb across a brow and rattled off the information.
âGreat, thank you. Thereâs been some suspicious activity reported on your account, and Iâm calling to make sure youâve authorized it.â
I leaned against the table and blew out a breath of smoke. âWhat kind of suspicious activity?â Hell, everything I did was suspicious.
âA transfer from your savings account today, on August sixteenth, at eleven-forty-two a.m.â
I stilled. âThe amount?â
âTwo million dollars even, sir.â
I ran my tongue across my teeth, a sardonic breath escaping me. âThis transaction already went through?â
She hesitated. âYes, sir. There was a note on your account not to flag transactions, but we appreciate your business here at AMC Gold and wanted to inform you in case it in fact wasnât authorized. You have sixty days to dispute the chargeââ
âIt was authorized.â It goddamn wasnât. But I didnât deal with thieves through the normal channels.
âOh, thank goodness,â she said, before awkwardly clearing her throat. She apparently knew who I was. âThatâs great to hear. Iâll go ahead and note it on the account. Have a great day, sir.â
I ended the call, my gaze coasting to the spare room window. Sunlight glared on the glass, but as I stood there looking at it, something abnormally cold settled in my stomach. I took one last drag and then put the cigarette out on the wooden table.
Heading to the house, I opened the back door to see a silent kitchen and living room. A breath of cool air hit my skin, but inside my bloodstream heated as though held over a burner. The house was still, nothing but the air-conditioning and my boots against the hardwood sounded as I walked into the kitchen.
Her phone sat on the counter and I grabbed it as I walked past.
As I made my way up the stairs, that god awful squeak cut through the air and somehow settled under my skin with a grating texture. I rolled my shoulders to push the odd sensation away.
With an unnatural calmness, I searched every room. Mineâ
. The spare rooms. The bathrooms.
All empty.
Something tightened in my throat and pierced me in the fucking chest.
She ran. She fucking stole from me and ran. To be with another man? He was the deadest goddamn man to ever exist.
Her clothes were here as well as her bag, but maybe she hadnât needed them. Maybe they wouldâve slowed her down.
I inhaled deeply and made my way down the steps while making a call. The ringing sounded faraway, blurring with the drumming of blood in my ears.
âAllister.â Christianâs cold tone crept through the line.
âFind my wife,â I rasped. âShe has a bank account downtown. Sheâs either been there or will be soon.â I gritted my teeth before adding, âAnd then most likely the bus station.â
Two quiet moments passed.
âGive me an hour.â
He hung up, and I slipped my phone into my pocket. I still held hers in my other hand, and before I knew it, it was flying across the room and hitting the wall.
âFuck!â
I swept all the decanters off the bar before pushing the entire thing over. Glass shattered and skidded across the hardwood. The strong smell of liquor hit my nose as the liquid spread to my boots. Bitterness bit into my chest. I ran my hands through my hair and let a dangerous calm settle over me.
, she called me.
She had no idea how goddamn crazy I could be.
Iâd give Christian an hour before I started tearing this city apart piece by piece.
The flames flickered and crackled in the fire pit. I sat on the edge of my seat, my elbows on my knees and a steady burn radiating in my chest. I heard the back door slam shut but didnât look up. I didnât even remember what Iâd texted Luca earlier, but heâd gone inside without a word when he got here a few minutes ago.
âA little warm for a fire,â he commented, sitting in a lawn chair across from me.
I didnât respond, just watched the blaze eat the pink fabric alive.
âBurning her clothes already?â
Using the poker, I pushed the Yankees shirt further into the flames.
âLook, Ace, I know youâre pissed right nowââ He paused when I shot him a dark look. âBut she left all her pink clothes hereââ
âShut up, Luca,â I snapped. I didnât want to hear his stupid theories about why she left. I didnât fucking care. No, that wasnât trueâI cared so much it pissed me the fuck off.
He put his hands up but opened his mouth again. âJust donât see a girl like her leaving her family behind, is all.â
âSheâs done it before.â
He shook his head. âShe wasnât running. She didnât even leave the city.â
I let out a bitter laugh when I realized it made more sense that she would stay for her family than she ever would for me.
âYouâre not thinking with your head, Ace. Fuck, walk in your house.â
Been there. Thatâs why I was sitting out here.
My narrowed gaze found his. âWhy are you sticking up for her?â
âIâm not. Sheâs making me wear a fucking pink tie to your wedding.â He grimaced. âOnce her papà finds out you lost her, she knows itâll get violent. Sheâs not dumb. Iâm just putting the facts together and it doesnât add up.â
It made perfect sense to me. That stupid ring. How tense sheâd gotten this morning. She loved some other man and had left everything behind to be with him. My throat tightened, a hollow fucking feeling unfurling in my chest.
âTwo million, Luca. Explain that.â
He was silent.
I gazed into the flames. I didnât know what I would do when I found her, but Luca was right. My head wasnât on straight concerning her. Sheâd always be my wife, but I didnât need to be in this deep, especially when she wasnât.
My phone rang, and I picked it up.
Christian rattled off an address, and my heart rate spiked.
âJust a warning, Ace. Sheâs not alone.â
His words hit me like a punch to the chest, and my grip tightened on the phone.
âGot it.â