Silent Vows (Bonds of Betrayal): Chapter 9
Silent Vows: A Dark, Mafia Romance (Bonds of Betrayal)
The wedding dress hangs like a ghost in the predawn light, mocking me with its perfection. Yards of Italian silk and French lace cascade from delicate cap sleeves to a cathedral train, the bodice hand beaded with thousands of tiny crystals that catch the gray morning light. Itâs a Vera Wang masterpiece, the kind of dress I used to sketch in the margins of my notebooks during boring lectures.
But in my dreams, my father was always there to walk me down the aisle.
I curl tighter into the window seat of my studio, pulling the cashmere throw closer around my shoulders. I havenât slept, couldnât sleep, not after what happened in Matteoâs study. My lips still tingle from his kisses, my skin burning everywhere his hands touched me. The memory of his mouth on my neck makes heat pool low in my belly even now.
God, the way heâd kissed me. Not gentle or hesitant, but demanding, possessive, like a man starving. The taste of himâscotch and smoke and something darker, more dangerousâhaunts me. His groans when Iâd touched his chest, the way heâd growled my name against my throat, how his hands had felt sliding up my thighs ⦠I squeeze my eyes shut, but that only makes the memories more vivid.
My studio, at least, offers some refuge from the madness. Matteo had it prepared before I arrived, setting it up on the third floor with windows facing east to catch the morning light. The space is bigger than my apartment, with pristine white walls, perfect track lighting, and enough room for multiple easels. He even stocked it with better supplies than Iâve ever ownedâimported paints, handmade brushes, canvases of every size.
Another gilded cage, but at least this one speaks my language.
I painted until my arms ached last night, trying to capture the storm inside me. Grief for my father weights every brushstrokeânot just that heâs gone, but that his death has forced me into exactly the life he tried to protect me from. Rage follows close behind, that the Calabrese family could just decide to destroy our lives, that I have to marry for protection like some medieval princess.
And then thereâs Matteo.
The canvas before me tells that story too wellâdark swirls of midnight blue and crimson, shot through with glints of gold. The colors of desire and danger, of attraction I shouldnât feel and safety I canât trust. How can I want a man who represents everything Iâve tried to escape? How can my body crave his touch even as my mind rebels against his control?
A knock at the studio door makes me tense. âGo away, Maria. I know itâs time.â
âItâs not Maria.â Elenaâs voice comes through the door, followed by her striking presence. My best friend is everything Iâm notâtall, willowy, with the kind of blonde beauty that turns heads. This morning sheâs perfectly put together in a pale blue dress that makes her eyes look like sapphires, her honey-blonde hair falling in elegant waves past her shoulders. Even at this ungodly hour, she looks like she stepped off a magazine cover.
âElena.â My voice breaks as I launch myself at her. Just having her here makes me feel less alone, less like Iâm drowning. âYou came.â
âOf course I came.â She hugs me tight, then holds me at armâs length to examine me. Her perfect features draw into a frown. âYou look like hell, B. Did you sleep at all?â
âHow did you get past security?â I change the subject, not wanting her to know the truth.
âPlease.â She rolls her eyes, but thereâs something tight around her mouth. âI do all the event planning for these families. The guards know me.â She pauses, those striking blue eyes turning serious. âThereâs still time to run.â
I shake my head, moving to study my painting. Elenaâs the best event planner in New York, especially for our worldâs particular brand of parties. She can make a mob wedding look like a royal celebration, knows exactly how to arrange seating to prevent blood feuds, and can spot an undercover FBI agent at fifty paces.
But even she canât plan an escape from this.
âYou know there isnât.â
âThen tell me what happened last night. Maria said you never came to bed, and Matteo â¦â She trails off meaningfully.
Heat floods my cheeks as the memories rush backâMatteoâs hands tangled in my hair, his mouth hot on my neck, the way heâd growled my name like it was something sacred and profane at once. The way his chest felt under my hands, all hard muscle and heated skin â¦
âOh my God.â Elenaâs eyes widen as she takes in what must be a very telling blush. âYou slept with him?â
âNo! We just ⦠almost â¦â I canât even form coherent thoughts about it. How do I explain that I wanted him so badly it scared me? That part of me wishes Antonio hadnât interrupted? That Iâm equal parts relieved and disappointed we didnât finish what we started?
âDetails. Now.â Elenaâs demand is cut short as the studio door bursts open. My mother sweeps in like a perfectly coiffed hurricane, her Chanel suit impeccable, her platinum hair styled just so. Even at dawn, Cher Russo looks ready for a society photograph. A team of stylists trails in her wake, laden with bags and equipment, their faces a mix of determination and fear.
âIsabella Marie Russo!â Her voice could cut glass. âWhat are you doing hiding in here? In your paint clothes, no less! The hair and makeup team has been waiting for an hour.â
âMomââ
âNo arguments. Youâre marrying one of the most powerful men in New York in four hours. You will look perfect.â She snaps her fingers at the stylists. âGet her cleaned up. And someone do something about those paint stains under her nails.â
Elena squeezes my hand before the whirlwind of preparations sweeps me away. Soon Iâm seated in front of my vanity, surrounded by people intent on transforming me into someone I barely recognize. The irony isnât lost on meâthis is what Iâve been doing all my life, trying to paint myself into something Iâm not. Only now itâs being done for me.
I catch glimpses of myself in the mirror as they work. My dark hair is being curled and pinned in an elaborate style that somehow looks both elegant and effortless. Makeup artists turn my pale skin luminous, define my eyes until they look huge and haunted in my face. My handsâmy artistâs hands with their telltale stains and callusesâare being scrubbed and buffed into submission.
âThe foundation needs to be heavier,â my mother critiques, circling like a shark. âThose dark circles are atrocious. And do something about that rebellious curl at her nape.â
âShe looks beautiful,â Elena interjects, earning a glacial stare from Cher.
âBeautiful isnât enough. She needs to be flawless. The other families will be watching her every move, analyzing every detail.â My motherâs perfectly painted lips twist. âThe DeLuca name comes with certain expectations.â
I close my eyes, trying to block out her voice, but it only makes everything more intense. This should be a happy day. I should be surrounded by bridesmaids and champagne, giggling about my honeymoon and my future. Instead, Iâm being polished like a weapon, prepared for a marriage that feels more like a funeral.
âThe dress is Vera Wang,â my mother continues, directing the chaos like a general. âThe emeralds are from the DeLuca family collectionâthey belonged to Matteoâs grandmother, then his first wife.â
My stomach lurches at the mention of Sophia. Another ghost haunting this wedding. âMom, pleaseâ ââ
âOh, donât be dramatic, darling. Sophiaâs been dead for years. Though you might want to avoid emeralds at first, just to be safe. Speaking of safe â¦â Her voice drops to a stage whisper, eyes gleaming with gossip. âI hear Johnny Calabrese paid a visit last night.â
The makeup artistâs hand jerks at the mention of Johnny, smudging eyeliner across my temple. I barely notice, my mind flying back to the interruption in Matteoâs study. The way his body had tensed against mine, how quickly passion had turned to rage at the mention of those photos. What happened after I fled? What evidence did Johnny have?
âFor Godâs sake,â my mother snaps at the makeup artist, her beautiful features twisting into irritation. âAre you qualified to do anything besides ruin my daughterâs wedding photos? Fix it. Now.â
A commotion in the hallway saves me from my motherâs continued criticism. Maria appears in the doorway, her kind face pinched with anxiety. âMiss Bella? Mr. DeLuca sent this for you.â
She holds out a large black velvet box. Inside, nestled on white silk, lies a delicate gold chain supporting a stunning oval pendant. My breath catchesâitâs my painting from last night, perfectly reproduced in miniature enamel and gold, backed by a spiral of tiny diamonds. Every brushstroke I made in my midnight frenzy has been captured with exquisite detail, the dark blues and crimsons swirling around hints of gold.
How did he do this so quickly? More importantly, why? The note accompanying it makes my heart race.
You see the beauty in the darkness. Wear this today instead of Sophiaâs emeralds. -M
âBut the traditionââ my mother begins to protest, gaping at the necklace.
âIâm wearing this,â I cut her off, my voice firm for the first time today as Elena helps me put it on. My fingers trace the pendant, remembering how Matteo had looked at my painting when heâd come to the studio last night after dealing with Johnny.
He hadnât said a word when he entered, just studied the canvas for a long moment. Iâd tensed, expecting him to try to resume what weâd started in his study. The air had crackled between us with unfinished desire, but heâd maintained his distance.
Still, his presence had filled the room like smoke, making it hard to breathe, hard to think. When he finally left, the ghost of his cologne lingered, reminding me of how his skin had tasted under my lips.
A sharp knock shatters my reverie. Bianca enters, already dressed in her bridesmaidâs gown of deep blue silk. She looks exactly like what a Mafia princess should beâall elegant angles and expensive grace. Her dark hair is swept up in a complicated twist, her makeup perfect, her entire demeanor radiating cold disdain. The resemblance to her father is striking, especially in the way she holds herselfâlike she owns every room she enters.
âDad wants to know if youâre still going through with it,â she says bluntly.
The room falls silent. Even my mother stops her fussing to stare at me, waiting for my response.
I meet Biancaâs eyes in the mirrorâsteel blue like Matteoâs, yet harder somehow. I touch the pendant as if to ground myself. âTell him Iâll see him at the altar.â
She raises a perfectly sculpted eyebrow. âEven after what Johnny revealed last night?â
My hand freezes on the pendant. âWhat are you talking about?â
âYou donât know?â Biancaâs smile is cruel, satisfaction gleaming in her eyes. âAbout how my mother really died? About Dadâs part in it?â
âBianca!â Maria tries to intervene, her voice desperate, twisting her hands in agitation. âThis isnât the timeâ ââ
âNo,â Bianca shoots back, âshe should know what sheâs marrying into. Grandfather Giuseppe would haveâ ââ
âDonât.â Matteoâs voice cuts like steel. âDonât ever presume to know what he would have wanted.â
Iâve never heard that tone from him before. Itâs not angerâitâs something deeper, darker. The temperature in the room seems to drop ten degrees.
âThatâs enough.â His voice is still razor-sharp, and my whole body reacts to his presence before I even turn to look at him.
He fills the doorway in his wedding tuxedo, and for a moment I forget how to breathe. The custom Tom Ford fits him like sin, emphasizing broad shoulders and narrow hips. His dark hair is styled just so, the silver at his temples catching the light. But itâs his face that undoes meâthose steel-blue eyes intense as they lock onto mine, his jaw shadowed with just enough stubble to remind me how it felt against my neck last night.
He looks dangerous and devastating and entirely too attractive for my peace of mind.
âLeave us. Now.â
âBut itâs tradition for the groom to notââ my mother starts to say but Matteoâs sharp glare stops her in her tracks.
âI said leave us. Now.â
The room clears instantly at his command, leaving me alone with my soon-to-be husband. I rise from the vanity, acutely conscious of being in only a silk robe with my hair half done. His eyes trace over me, and I feel each look like a physical touch.
âWhat was she talking about?â I demand, proud that my voice doesnât shake despite my racing heart. âWhat donât I know about Sophia?â
Matteoâs jaw clenches as he looks at me. His eyes catch on the pendant around my neck, softening slightly. âNot now, Isabella.â
âYes, now. Before I walk down that aisle, I need the truth.â I step closer, drawn to him despite my anger, despite my fear. His cologne wraps around meâthat familiar mix of spice and danger that makes my head spin.
He moves closer too, reaching out to touch the pendant where it rests against my collarbone. The brush of his fingers against my skin sends electricity shooting through me. âThe truth is complicated.â
âThen uncomplicate it.â Why does he always talk in riddles? Why does he have to be so infuriatingly controlled when I feel like Iâm falling apart?
His hand slides up to cup my cheek, and despite everythingâall the secrets, all the lies, all the dangerâI lean into his touch. My body is a traitor, craving his contact even as my mind screams for answers.
âThe truth is, Iâll tell you everything tonight. After youâre my wife. After youâre safe.â
âSafe from what?â My heart thuds against my ribs, though whether from his proximity, his touch, or the warning in his words, Iâm not sure.
âFrom making a decision that will get you killed.â His voice roughens as his thumb traces my cheekbone. This close, I can see the flecks of gray in his eyes, count every dark eyelash. âThe Calabrese family has people inside the church. If you donât go through with this wedding â¦â
The threat hangs in the air between us. I close my eyes, feeling the warmth of his hand on my cheek, the weight of the pendant at my throat. Everything in me wants to lean forward those few inches, to taste his mouth again, to lose myself in the dark pleasure I know he can provide.
Instead, I force myself to focus. âFine,â I whisper. âTonight then. But I want all of it, Matteo. Every dark truth, every secret. Or this marriage wonât last until morning.â
His thumb traces my bottom lip, and my breath catches at the intimate gesture. I want him to kiss me so badly it hurts. Want to forget about secrets and lies and just lose myself in the heat that always flares between us.
âWear your hair down,â he murmurs, his voice like gravel. âYou look beautiful with it down.â
Then heâs gone, leaving me alone with my reflection and the haunting certainty that Iâm about to marry a man Iâm not sure I can trustâbut one Iâm increasingly sure I want anyway. The worst part? Iâm not sure which scares me moreâthe secrets heâs keeping or how much I want him despite them.
In less than four hours, Iâll walk down that aisle alone. No father to give me away, no dreams of true love to sustain me. Just political alliances, death threats, and this maddening attraction to a man who deals in secrets and shadows.
Some wedding day.