âIwant to be clear. There is no landlord anymore. I own the damn buildingâ ââ
âLift your arm,â mutters Vito to my left.
I obey. âSo Iâm the one you deal with. I donât care if you get ten letters from the landlord. That doesnât change the fact that itâs me. Soâ ââ
âOther arm.â
âJust rip those up, burn them, I donât care, okay? In fact, beyond that, I own the fucking land it stands onâ ââ
âChin up.â
âSo if anyone has any problem with that, then they need to come to me directly. Beyond that, I can look into where those threats are coming from, but the bottom line is Iâm in charge now and youâ ââ
Before I can finish, Vito snatches the phone out of my hand and hangs up.
âVitoââ
âEnough,â he scolds, sliding the phone into my pants pocket. âYouâre getting married today. In an hour, in fact. No more business.â
âYouâre playing a dangerous game.â
âAm I?â He lifts one brow as he adjusts my tie and smooths down the suit jacket he wrangled me into while I was busy. âHow do you feel?â
âFine,â I say curtly. âDid you dig anything up on Pascal?â
âNothing,â Vito replies, moving around me and smoothing things out. âHe seems pretty regular, and I couldnât find a good reason he would give up his daughter. The deal between him and the Giordanas seems to have been beneficial to both businesses, so I think heâs scrambling to keep himself afloat. Heâs got a lot of debt.â
âGambler?â
âNo. Loans to pay for the shit he sells. Construction has been slow in the city as well. Everyoneâs poor, so no oneâs renovating.â
âThere must be something else.â I turn to face the mirror and admire the black suit Vito picked out for me. The tie and silk handkerchief tucked into my pocket are the same burnt amber as Adelinaâs hair, my choice to make us match. âWhy else would he give up his daughter?â
âWhy does anyone?â Vito brushes along my shoulders. âMoney. Power. Business. Youâre saving his, so that could be it.â
âMaybe.â I adjust my cufflinks and wiggle my head back and forth, fighting the constriction of the collar around my throat. âMy gut tells me thereâs something more.â
âMaybe sheâs a problem woman, and heâs just going to be insanely grateful to you for taking her off his hands.â
âYou think thereâs something wrong with her?â
âMaybe.â Vito snorts. âA beautiful woman like that, being single and only being wed out to other families?â
âYou know our traditions,â I point out. âHer father is old.â
âMy point is that if he cared about those traditions, he would have married her off the moment she turned eighteen.â
âSo why did he wait until now?â I ask, finally catching on to what Vito is saying. âSee, thereâs something else going on.â
âMaybe sheâs going to assassinate you in your sleep.â
âKinky.â I snort. âThat would be the most exciting thing thatâs happened to me all year.â
âRight, come on. Enough stalling.â
âIâm not stalling, Iâm musing behind the hidden reasons Iâm about to marry this woman. And also wondering why some fucker is pretending to be the landlord of the buildings we claimed from the Amantes and milking me for money.â
âProbably some idiot who doesnât know who heâs dealing with.â Vito stops in front of me and places his hands on my shoulders. âEnough stalling. You asked for this.â
âI did.â
Vito squints at me, and I avoid his gaze, tweaking my tie slightly. âAre you nervous?â he asks.
âNo.â
âYou are, I can tell.â
âFuck off, Iâm not nervous. Iâm justâ¦â I canât place my finger on it. While I never expected Pascal to agree to these terms, itâs strange to me that this is happening. Adelina didnât try to run and Pascal didnât try to negotiate terms like divorce after five years. He just said yes. That was it.
Itâs strange.
âWhatever.â I shrug the uncomfortable feeling away and straighten my posture. âLetâs go and get fucking married.â
The hotel is decorated exactly as I expected from the hotel brochure with only one exception. Since I had no time to spend with Adelina to learn what she likes and was under no illusions that this was anything other than a business transaction, I simply selected a package when I booked the place and ran with it.
The only request I made was to ensure the flowers matched the gorgeous copper red of her hair. Standing at the altar, they did exactly that. Each chair, filled with guards from my family and a handful from hers, is draped in white fabric with orange roses holding the silk ribbons closed along the backs. The aisle is covered in orange and red rose petals, and each large planter that sits in the gaps between the floor-to-ceiling windows is filled with orange, brown, and red flowers. The scent in the air is amazing. Sun pours in through the lace curtains, creating a golden hue in the room, which brings an unexpected warmth.
Maybe too much warmth.
Heat beads underneath my collar, but I refuse to adjust it, knowing every pair of eyes in this room is locked on me, watching and waiting. Iâm about to marry a woman I have never met, but she currently holds immense power over me. One decision could leave me standing here, alone, while she vanishes into the wind.
That kind of embarrassment will not be lived down.
I debate leaving. If Iâm the one to leave her at the altar, then I can come up with some crazy excuse and have us married at the registrarâs office a few hours later. Maybe I should have done that instead, a smaller wedding with a handful of people to watch us sign on the dotted line. That would have been my preference.
Over the years, however, Iâve learned that my position of power comes with certain unusual expectations. If I were to get married in secret, people would talk, and that kind of talk is the seed of distrust. To some degree, it has to be a spectacle. It shows people that Iâm confident in my people to keep me safe while showing off the woman I deem good enough to be by my side. The showy side of things has never been to my taste, but if itâs the price I have to pay for getting this far in this life, Iâll get through it.
Vito stands next to me, ready to throw his life on the line should it come to it. If anything, he looks more nervous than I do and when our eyes meet, he flashes me a quick smile.
âImagine she doesnât turn up,â I murmur in a low voice.
âDonât fucking jinx it,â Vito hisses back. âWe donât need that kind of bad press.â
âBad press?â I snort. âWhat are we, celebrities?â
âYou know what I mean. Something like this makes people look at you differently. Itâs the difference between someone agreeing to a deal or pushing back because they think youâre weak.â
âItâs just marriage.â
âItâs commitment.â Vito sighs. âItâs power. Itâs responsibility, and it opens you up to the most powerful thing everyone looks for.â
âWhich is?â
âAn heir, dummy. Youâre powerful now, and having an heir implies you mean to stay that way.â
Shit.
In all the commotion, I hadnât given much thought to what would happen after Adelina and I marry. I presume sheâll hate me, given that everyone else does, but if she comes from a family following traditions such as arranged marriages and more, will she do her duty there and lie in bed with me?
This new information worms around my mind and serves as a good distraction for the next few minutes as we wait for the arrival of my bride.
Then, the subtle music filling the air swells and the traditional wedding march suddenly belts out from the speakers. The double doors at the far end of the aisle swing open and in walks my bride.
Adelinaâs face is hidden by a long white veil draped over it. Her modest but beautiful dress has lace sleeves that wrap down to her hands, a silky ivory bodice that hugs her natural curves, and a large puff skirt that kisses the ground with each slow step she takes. The ivory against the vibrant, deep red of her hair makes my heart skip a beat.
The pictures donât do her justice, and I havenât even seen her face yet. Sheâs escorted by her father, a portly man with a thick mustache that takes over most of his face. He pats her hand as she grasps his elbow and together, they slowly walk toward me. Pascalâs gray suit is as muted as the rest of him, and he quickly fades into the background.
I watch Adelinaâs every step like a hawk. She flows down the aisle like sheâs walking on air, and itâs difficult to decipher each step. With one hand holding onto her father, the other clasps a small bouquet of orange roses and the petals tremble slightly with each step she takes.
Sheâs nervous. Her body language betrays that in a second, and I donât blame her. She must be aware of how her familyâs future now rests on her shoulders, and thatâs a weight Iâm familiar with. Years ago, my family were nothing but feral attack dogs for the Italian Mafia. Easily expendable. Now I have the power, and other people bark for me.
The music swells once more and then tapers away as Adelina and Pascal reach me. I breathe in. The floral scent of the room is suddenly mingled with a sweeter scent that drags me right back to a childhood candy shop.
Pascal flashes me an over-eager smile. âMr. Varricchio.â
I say nothing. My full attention is on Adelina, but she doesnât speak. Despite the tilt of her head, itâs difficult to tell whether sheâs looking at me or beyond, but it hardly matters. I hold out my hand, and she slides her lace-clad fingers into my grasp.
My attention stays on her for the entire ceremony. The officiant marrying us gives a generic speech about love and acceptance, but the words barely resonate with me. Iâm too caught up in watching her, intrigued by the sweetness of her scent and the way in which she hasnât moved a muscle since she took my hand. Sheâs almost like a porcelain doll.
We recite vows that hold no personal value, vocalizing the contract that will bind us together, and after Iâve said everything that is required of me, itâs Adelinaâs turn. Her head shifts direction away from me, and when she speaks, I realize itâs the first time Iâm hearing her voice.
She speaks softly and carefully, enunciating each word as if they hold some sort of importance to her. Itâs not until she gets to the end that I realize what sheâs doing. Sheâs not carefully reciting these vows because theyâre important to her. Sheâs repeating them like one would carefully go over the lines of a contract.
Itâs subtle, but itâs becoming abundantly clear that thereâs defiance in her heart too.
âRings?â asks the officiant after the vows complete.
Vito steps up to my shoulder and holds out the two simple gold bands purchased for today. I take Adelinaâs hand in my own and raise it so I have a full view of her delicate, lace-wrapped fingers. âIf the ringâs too big,â I say as I slide it into place, âweâll resize it.â
By fate or some stroke of luck, the ring slides easily onto Adelinaâs finger and remains there. Then we switch, and her delicate yet firm touch takes hold of my hand and shoves the ring on. Itâs subtle, but thereâs a fraction of force behind the movement, and something hot stirs in my gut.
She doesnât like me.
And she isnât going to hide it.
âI now pronounce you husband and wife,â states the officiant with a wide smile, completely oblivious to the historical marriage sheâs just created between Adelina and myself. âYou may now kiss the bride.â
Adelinaâs head tilts back to me, and we stare at one anotherâor rather, I stare at where I think her eyes are behind the veil.
This is the moment. The moment where she could embarrass me or kill me, depending on how sheâs feeling. Her hands fall away from mine and the room is completely silent while I grasp the end of her veil and slowly lift it over her head.
A pair of stunning blue eyes, shining like glass, stare at me from dark lashes. Thick, ruby-red lips press together, and my breath catches in my throat. I knew she was beautiful from her pictures, but reality hits a little differently.
Sheâs like staring into the face of a siren, holding the very ocean she emerged from in her gorgeous eyes. She blinks slowly, and her eyes flutter, betraying her nerves. Adelina is clearly a woman who tries to remain in control of herself, but the subtle signs are there.
The room holds its breath as I reach for her face and cup the side of her neck. My thumb runs along the soft line of her jaw, and two of my fingers trace over the smooth skin behind her ear. Her lips press together once more, and as I guide her closer for that kiss, I expect to feel resistance.
There is none.
I close the inches between us and breathe deeply, soaking up the sweetness of her perfume. This close, I detect something warm like chocolate mingling with the scent. She smells as divine as she looks. Something hot twists in my gut. I look in her eyes, then down to her lips, then back up to her eyes. She doesnât look away.
Suddenly, her soft breath ghosts over my skin, and a shudder rolls down my spine. Her eyes flutter closed and her lips part a fraction. I step close and slide my other hand around her waist, which causes her eyes to fly back open. Then, as I press my palm flat against her hot back and pull her close, I lean down and kiss her.
Mrs. Adelina Varricchio.
Welcome to my world.