Savage Lover: Chapter 8
Savage Lover: A Dark Mafia Romance (Brutal Birthright Book 3)
Weâre meeting with the Griffins today to talk about the South Shore development.
We meet at The Brass Anchor, which has become our regular spot, since that first night where Papa and Fergus Griffin had to negotiate on neutral ground to avoid an all-out war.
We all waited in our cars that night, Papa and Fergus approaching each other in front of the double doors, stiff and formal. Today the mood is completely different. Papa shakes hands with Fergus like he does with all his old friends, gripping Fergusâs elbow with his opposite hand, then clapping him hard on the shoulder as he releases him.
âYouâre looking well, Fergus,â Papa says. âTell me how you never age. Is there formaldehyde in that Irish whiskey?â
âI hope not. Gray hairs are good for business,â Fergus says, smiling. âNobody trusts a young man.â
âThatâs not what I hear,â Papa says, turning to shake Callumâs hand, too. âI hear youâre getting all kinds of things done.â
âYes, we are,â Callum says.
The other half of that âweâ isnât Fergusâitâs Aida, my baby sister. She kisses Papa on both cheeks.
I never thought Iâd see the day, but Aida actually looks really fucking professional. Sheâs wearing a manâs dress shirt with the sleeves rolled up, tucked into high-waisted trousers. Sheâs got on heels, and earrings, and even a little swipe of lip gloss. Itâs not totally conventional, but she looks chic.
âWhat the hell is this?â I say, letting her kiss me on the cheek as well. âWhereâre your sneakers?â
âOh, Iâve still got âem,â Aida says, tipping me a wink. âIf you want to race me.â
âI do like racing,â I say.
Aidaâs eyes gleam. âGot any good stories for me?â she says.
Sheâs been down to the street races a few times. I never let her use my car. That would be like handing a spear gun to Jason Voorheesâitâs just begging for mayhem.
âBella Page tried to race Camille Rivera,â I tell her.
âI donât like Bella,â Aida says, making a face.
âWho would?â
âI dunno. Maybe those people who like eating weapons-grade hot sauce.â
âMasochists,â I say.
âRight.â She grins. âSo what happened?â
âBella almost rolled her G-Wagon.â
âUgh! Canât believe I missed that. Whoâs the girl that won?â
âCamille?â
âYeah.â
âHer dad owns that auto shop on Wells.â
âHm. Is she a friend of yours?â Aida says, her sharp eyes scanning my face.
Goddamnit. Aida is like a heat-seeking missile. If thereâs some information youâre trying to hide from her, sheâll hone in on it with breathtaking precision, then hound it out of you.
And Iâm not even hiding anything. Thereâs nothing to tell.
âI sort of know her,â I say.
âIn the biblical sense?â Aida teases me, in her most annoying and persistent way.
âNo.â
âA girl you havenât slept with? What, does she have three eyes? No teeth? Whatâs the problem?â
Jesus Christ. Iâve already given Aida too much ammunition.
The truth is that Camille isnât my type at all. But I sort of felt like we might be becoming friendsâa little bit. I kind of liked her. And I donât like anybody. I barely like my own family. In fact, right now, Iâm only 50/50 on Aida.
So it was a new thing for me, feeling like hanging around with Camille wasnât the worst thing in the world. Then she was so weird in the parking garage. I couldnât tell if she liked me or hated me, if she wanted me to touch her or didnât. So I defaulted to what I always do with women, when I want them to shut the fuck up. I kissed her.
And hereâs the weirdest part of all. The kiss was . . . good.
With a lot of girls, thereâs a kind of mechanical routine to sex. They want to go through their list of tricks, like a show pony. And a lot of what they do is so fucking fake. When they ride on top of you, theyâre posing the whole time, demanding you look at them and acknowledge their hotness. And theyâre not hot. Theyâre needy and pathetic. I want to get what I want out of them, as quickly as possible, so I can be alone again.
Before the sex thereâs the clumsy flirting. And after the sex thereâs the whining and clinging. I go through the rotation of blondes, brunettes, and redheads. But in the end, theyâre all the same, and I feel hollow afterward. Spent but not really satisfied.
Kissing Camille was different. She smelled like motor oil, gasoline, and soapâall my favorite scents. Her mouth wasnât all slicked up with lipstick. I could taste her lips and her tongue. They had a mellow sweetness, under the spice of the malt liquorâlike vanilla. Barely noticeable at first but lingering pleasantly.
The way she kissed was different, too. She seemed like she was exploring me, trying me out. At one point I saw that her eyes were open, looking at my face. Which should have been off-putting, but it wasnât. Her eyes were big and dark and curious. Like we had invented something new, that nobody in the world had tried before, and she didnât want to miss a moment of it.
All of those things were odd and confusing to me.
I donât want to share any of it with Aida. But every millisecond I hesitate, sheâs ferreting out the meaning behind my silence. So I have to say something.
âIâm glad to see that getting married hasnât matured you any,â I tell her. âExcept for the clothes.â
Aida grins. âKinda seems like youâre trying to change the subject with a personal attack . . .â
âAida,â I snarl, âIf you donât get off my ass, Iâm gonnaââ
Weâre interrupted by Papa, whoâs finished the small-talk part of this meeting.
âComing inside?â he says to me.
Iâm about to say, âGladly.â Then I spot a man on the sidewalk, leaning up against a lamp post. Heâs wearing sunglasses, but itâs pretty clear that heâs looking right at us. Heâs got blond hair buzzed short on the sides, a square jaw, and an athletic build. Heâs wearing a t-shirt and jeans. Still, thereâs something in the arrogant posture and the clean-cut grooming that makes me think cop.
âGo on ahead,â I say to my father. âIâll catch up in a minute.â
He glances over to the man, then nods.
âSee you in a minute,â he says.
The others file into the restaurant. I wait until theyâre inside, then I stride toward our Peeping Tom. Iâm thinking heâll spook and leave. Instead, he stays exactly where he is, arms folded, a little smirk on his face.
âHow can I help you, Officer?â I say, as I draw close.
He grins. âOh, I was just wondering how your car was doing after you put it through its paces last night.â
âI donât know what youâre talking about,â I say. âI was home all night.â
âYou should get a less distinctive vehicle if you want to use that line.â
I shrug. âThereâs a lot of Mustangs in the city. Do you have a plate number for the vehicle in question?â
Iâve already swapped my plates out. I did it the minute I got home. Iâve got dozens of spare license plates, none of which can be linked to my name.
âYouâve caught my attention a couple times this year,â the cop says, his sunglasses like blank bug eyes staring at me.
âIs this an interrogation, or are you trying to hit on me?â I say.
âThatâs cute.â The copâs not smiling anymore. âYou Gallos think you can do whatever you want in this city. Your brother gets arrested for murder, breaks out of Cook County Jail, and then somehow gets his charges dropped a few weeks later? Iâve got news for you. Not every cop has their hand in the cookie jar. Some of us actually care about getting you greedy fucking gangsters locked up where you belongâin a cage, with the other animals.â
âOh, youâre a clean cop?â I say. âKinda sounds like a friendly mosquito or a gourmet Twinkie. Iâm not sure it exists; Iâve sure as shit never seen it.â
He smiles again. It looks like a dog baring its teeth.
âJust know youâre on notice, Nero. I like a fair game, so Iâm giving you a warning. Iâm watching you. If you step one fucking toe over the line, Iâll be there to clap the cuffs on you. And you wonât be slipping out of them like your brother did.â
âIf this is an example of your surveillance skills, Iâm not worried,â I scoff.
âThis is me telling you exactly whatâs going to happen. And itâll happen anyway. Because thatâs what you sleazy, arrogant shitheads canât seem to comprehend. Youâre always going to lose in the end. Thereâs more of us than there is of you. Weâre smarter, better trained, better funded. Iâve got the whole city behind me. But youâll keep breaking the fuckinâ law anyway. You donât know anything else. You canât be anything else.â
âHuh, maybe youâre right,â I say, nodding slowly. âBut you sit behind a desk filling out incident reports for $65K a year. While Iâm sipping champagne at parties with your boss. So I guess Iâll take my chances.â
I saunter away from him, still feeling his stare boring into my back.
When I join the others in the restaurant, my father says, âWho was that?â
âSome cop.â
âWhat did he want?â
âTo inform me that he suspects that our family may, at some point, have been involved in illegal activity. Apparently, the police frown on that.â
Papa is not amused. He scowls, his thick gray eyebrows drawing together over his broad nose.
âDid something happen last night?â he demands.
Fuck, heâs worse than Aida. Every one of them is like a bloodhound, sniffing out weakness.
âNo,â I lie.
âFind out who he is and what he actually wants,â my father says.
âI will.â
With that, we return to the discussion of the Steel Works property. Fergus Griffin admits that heâs had his eye on it for a while.
âItâs going to require an insane amount of capital. Plus every favor weâve ever been owed,â he says.
âIf I was mayor, I could get it done,â Callum says.
âWilliams is up for reelection in eight months,â Papa says.
âHard to beat the incumbent,â Fergus says.
âNot impossible, though,â Aida says.
âIâve only been Alderman for a year,â Callum steeples his fingers. âItâs a big jump.â
âThe campaign will be expensive.â Fergus frowns. âThe Russians cleaned out our cash reserves.â
âWeâre short at the moment, too. We splashed out big on the Oak Street Tower. Wonât see the return until itâs all leased out,â Papa says.
âWe might need to bring in another partner,â Fergus says.
âThe Braterstwo?â Callum says.
His father flinches. He hasnât quite accustomed himself to the fact that Mikolaj Wilk, the Braterstwo boss, kidnapped and married his youngest daughter.
âPerhaps,â Fergus says stiffly.
âWeâll look at our options,â Papa says.
The meeting wraps up quickly.
As Iâm driving Papa home, he says, âCatch your brother up on everything we talked about.â
Dante handles all the projects we already have in the works, while the rest of us are scheming to add more work to his plate.
Iâll summarize for Dante. And then Iâll ask him what he thinks about my idea for getting capital.
Iâve got no interest in trying to bring other investors on board. If we need money, we should get it the old-fashioned wayâby stealing it.
As that cop reminded me, we are gangsters after all.