Alexius: Chapter 2
Alexius: A Dark Mafia Romance (Dark Sovereign Book 1)
Relief is all I feel as I stare at my motherâs grave. Itâs supposed to feel different, burying a parent. I should miss her, cry for her, mourn her. But I donât. Her absence provides some respite from years of carrying the kind of responsibility a child should never have. For the first time in six years, I no longer have to take care of her. Sheâs the devilâs problem now. Sheâs been his problem since she took her last breath a few weeks ago. And instead of visiting her grave so I could feel close to her, I come here to remind myself that sheâs really gone. I want to make sure her death isnât some dream or illusion I conjured up out of desperation to be rid of her.
Not missing her is my curse. Itâs Godâs way of punishing a daughter who couldnât do the right thing. So now, instead of wondering why she was taken from me, Iâm left wondering why I feel nothing. Why Iâm incapable of crying for her. Maybe if I cried, mourned, grieved, Iâll be able to forget her. Perhaps then I wonât wake up every morning thinking of her and what she made me do. Maybe then Iâll be able to wash away the guilt she piled onto my soul every goddamn day.
Itâs your fault.
Heâs gone because of you.
You took him from me.
Itâs all your fucking fault.
I close my eyes, willing her voice out of my head. She might be gone, but her ghost still haunts me. It always will.
The sun starts to rise, and I clutch my coat tighter against the early morning chill. My black pumps force the dirt deeper into the ground as I walk down the path. A woman and a boy stand by a headstone that reads, âLoving husband and father.â With one hand on the boyâs shoulder, she wipes a tear from her face with the other. I envy her ability to cry, giving her grief a face. Some people wish they could feel nothing when they lose a loved one, but feeling nothing is worse than feeling somethingâeven if itâs pain.
The walk to work is the same as every other morning. My feet walk faster, and Iâm aware of my surroundings without making eye contact with anyone. The lewd remarks and whistling from a group of men on the other side of the road disgust me, but I pretend not to hear a thing, praying theyâll leave me be. The last thing a woman wants on this side of town is to be noticed. While other girls crave attention and pray to be pretty, I spend my day trying to be invisible. My shirts are always a size too big, my jeans baggy, and dinner dresses below the knee. I made the mistake of glamming up once, wearing a tight-fitted dress I had bought myself with my first paycheck from a secondhand shop. My dark curls flowed over my shoulder, and my lips shimmered with a seductive pink, only to be stained with my blood an hour later. Dark purple bruises were all I had left of that dress after that night. It was a stark reminder that women were treated as objects on these streets instead of equals. If I hadnât known how to defend myself, that the human ear is easily torn off, I would have walked away with more than just a ruined dress that night. After that day, I realized that the price of beauty is just too high on these streets.
Bells chime above the door as I walk inside, the smell of coffee and bacon making me forget what a shithole Uptown Diner really is. Uptown, my ass.
âLeandra,â Paul calls. âYouâre late.â
âSorry.â I offer no explanation as I walk to the back of the counter, shoving my bag and coat into the bottom shelf and grabbing an apron.
Wendy comes up behind me and helps me fasten it. âPaul is in an extra bad mood today.â
âWhy?â I turn to face her as I pull the black scrunchy from around my wrist and tie my hair. âDid something happen?â
âI donât know.â She narrows her green eyes while staring at our boss. âBut I think he slept here last night.â
âAgain? Thatâs the second time this week.â
âYup. My guess is heâs pissing his wife off more than usual.â
The bells chime as two men stroll in, their dirty clothes and ratty beards reminding me why I hate this job. âWendy, youâre up. First customers are yours.â
âThey ainât the first customers.â
I look at her, and she purses her lips, moving her gaze to a man sitting in the farthest corner, sipping his coffee. The black jacket and clean white shirt heâs wearing are all the confirmation I need that heâs not from around here. Men like him donât come to an old, crumbling diner with faded and peeling walls, a cracked ceiling, and windows shut with steel bars.
âWhoâs he?â I ask, watching him place his cup back down.
âDonât know. But I want to serve him more than just his coffee.â Wendy bites her thumbnail, her wedding ring glinting under the yellow ceiling light.
I reach out and tug at her blonde ponytail. âStop perving over the customers.â
âOkay, okay.â She smiles. âA girl can look.â
âNot a married one.â I grab a pencil and notepad, but I can feel Wendyâs eyes on me. âWhat?â I give her a sideways glance.
Her expression softens. âYouâre too good for this town.â
âBelieve me,â I flatten my apron, âIâm not.â
Thereâs a sharp pang in my chest as I walk across the checkered floors. No one knows the real Leandra Dinaliâa stray who wandered in here six years ago looking for a means to survive. I was a desperate fourteen-year-old girl left with no choice but to grow up really fucking fast. At night, I would tell myself that Iâd never come back to this place once I was rid of my mother.
Alas, I came back. I still do.
I follow the two men who just walked in and hand them the menus as they take a seat. âCan I get you guys some coffee?â
One glances to the other side of the diner at the man in the corner and nods to the guy he walked in with. âIs that who I think it is?â
âJesus,â his friend curses. âWhat the fuck is Maximo doing here? What did you do?â
âNothing. My God. Who says heâs here for us?â
âWhy the fuck else would he be here? Alexius Del Rossaâs guys donât hang out in dives like this.â
I drop my pen. The sound of it hitting the floor echoes like a gunshot right next to me.
Alexius Del Rossa.
A chill ripples down my spine. Iâve never seen him, but Iâve heard the whispers. Alexius isnât a name you often hear in this part of town, but you know trouble is headed in this direction when you do. Everyone knows him. His family. How they own half of Chicago. Stories of the Dark Sovereign mob are told to children when you want them to stay off the streets at night. They are like the boogeyman you never see, yet always think about when you round a dark corner.
Thereâs a warning that trickles along the back of my neck as I crouch and pick up my pen. This is going to be a long-ass day.
I straighten and glance at my customers. âCan I take your order?â
Their eyes are wide, and itâs hard not to notice the fear on their faces. Itâs like they were staring at the Grim Reaper, knowing their souls were about to be taken to hell.
âHow long has that guy been here?â one of them asks, still not taking his eyes off the man whose name I now know as Maximo.
âNot sure. He was already here when I started my shift. Can I get you guys some coffee?â Iâm desperate to get their order so I can go to the back and tell Wendy who that guy is. She has no idea heâs one of Alexiusâ men, or she wouldnât be so eager to flirt.
âYou know what?â He grabs his jacket and stands. âWeâll get our breakfast somewhere else.â
Both of them walk so fast one would think the floorâs on fucking fire the way they hustle out the dinerâall because of one man sitting in the corner, drinking coffee and reading a newspaper. If I ever wanted to know the full extent of the Del Rossaâs power, I just witnessed all I needed to.
Wendy slips in next to me. âWhy did they leave?â
âBecause of your customer over there.â I slip my pen and notepad back into my apron pocket. âHis name is Maximo.â
âMaximo,â Wendy purrs, biting the end of her pen. âThatâs a strong name.â
âYeah, especially since heâs one of Alexius Del Rossaâs men.â
Thereâs a fast shift in the air as Wendy stiffens next to me. âDark Sovereign?â she whispers.
âAccording to my customers who just hauled their asses out of here at top speed, yes.â
âJesus.â Wendy turns to face me. âWhat is one of his men doing here?â
âI donât know. But whatever it is, it canât be good.â
âNo shit. Come on.â She grabs my wrist and makes me follow her to the back, where she drops my hand the second the swivel door closes. âShould we tell Paul?â
Even though my every instinct screams at me to tell Paul, quit my job, and get as far away from this diner as possible, the last thing I want to do is panic and do something stupid. âLetâs wait and see what happens. Heâs probably going to finish his coffee and leave.â
âIf he doesnât?â Wendy bites her thumbnail again, but thereâs nothing sexy or flirty about it this time.
I brush my fingers through my ponytail and place a hand on my hip. âIf he doesnât leave in the next half hour, we tell Paul. Besides,â I peek through the circle window in the door, âPaul probably already knows who he is. Might explain his bad mood other than problems at home.â
âOkay,â Wendy agrees, but anyone can see sheâs nervous as hell.
I place my hands on her shoulders and force her to look me in the eye. âGet your shit together. You donât want to be acting nervous around him.â
âI know. But I canât help it. I know these men, Lee. They are vicious and cruel.â
âHow do you know them?â
Wendyâs gaze drifts to her feet, and she shifts from one leg to the other. My stomach coils tight as I anticipate what sheâs about to tell me.
âMy cousin Sam managed to gather a fuckton of debt at one of their casinos.â Her eyes find mine. âLetâs just say heâs still paying his debt behind bars in a prison where the Dark Sovereign control him. He canât even take a piss without them knowing.â
âMy God. How did he end up in prison?â
Wendy glances around to make sure no one is close enough to hear. âHe supposedly killed someone on their orders and got caught.â
âSupposedly?â
âLetâs just say we donât think itâs a coincidence that Sam got caught with a gun in his hand standing over a dead body.â
I frown. âSo, they framed him?â
âI donât know. Sam never really told us what happened. We were all just left to make our own assumptions. But Sam is no longer considered a family member since everyone is too shit scared to be associated with him in any way.â Wendyâs eyes shoot open wide, her cheeks instantly pale as she stiffens. âJesus, Lee. What if theyâre here for me? What if Sam fucked up, and now theyâre here to make me pay for it?â
âHow can he possibly fuck up when heâs in prison?â
Wendyâs brows slant inward as she stares at me with the glint of disbelief. âHave you not watched a single episode of Inside the Worldâs Toughest Prisons?â
âI canât say that I have.â
âThese mobs get more done behind bars than they do behind a fucking desk. Prison doesnât stop them from hurting or killing others.â She clutches her middle like a child with a tummy ache. âIâm telling you, Sam did something, and now theyâre here for me.â
Ice shatters inside my veins, the frozen shards piercing my stomach. The skin behind my ear burns as I sink my nail into the flesh. Itâs a nervous habitâsomething Iâve been doing since I was five. The night after my father left, I scratched that one spot until blood gathered beneath my nails. And I continued to do it for weeks, picking the scabs and opening the wounds. My mother had a field day telling me what a psychotic bitch I was and that the scars behind my ears were proof of that.
I willfully stop scratching and rub my fingers along my chin. âIf that were true, they would target you in some dark alley somewhere. Not at your work in broad fucking daylight for everyone to see.â
âThe Dark Sovereign doesnât give a fuck who sees. They know no one would dare say a word against them. These fuckers are untouchable, Lee. And they are not discreet. I can tell you that.â
âOkay.â I step back and start to pace. âMaybe we should call the police.â
âAre you kidding?â Wendy places her hand on her forehead. âThey own the motherfucking police, Leandra. They are not street thugs who go in and out of jail. Thereâs a reason they call themselves the Dark Sovereign.â She inches closer. âThey are the fucking royalty of Chicago with ninety-nine-point-nine percent of law enforcement on their payroll.â Sheâs practically spitting out the words, her cheeks red and irises flames of fear.
âOkay, letâs just take a breath.â I hold up my arms and try to disarm Wendyâs borderline panic attack. âFor all we know, this man is just drinking his fucking coffee without the intention of killing or hurting anyone.â
âFor all we know, heâs sitting there thinking of twenty different ways to kill me.â
âWendy!â I blurt. âCalm the fuck down, would you?â
âEasy for you to say. You donât have a felon in your fucking family.â
Her words cut deep into a reality Iâve spent years trying to forget, but my mother never allowed me that luxury. And even now, with her gone, the sins of my bloodline still haunt me.
Iâm scratching behind my ear again as I lean with my back against the wall, trying to focus on my breathing so I wonât freak the fuck out. âLike I said. Letâs give this guy half an hour. If heâs not done by then, we tell Paul, and we get our asses out of here. Okay?â
The air-conditioning starts up with a loud thump, and both of us yelp, snapping our gazes up at the machine. The noise is fucking awful, like a damn car engine that wonât start. It shakes and rattles while spitting out cold air, and I make a mental note to break that damn thing in half when no one is around.
âHow that fucking thing is still working is beyond me,â Wendy mutters, cursing under her breath while shooting flaming daggers at the air-conditioning machine that just scared the bejesus out of us.
The bells chime, signaling new customers, and I tighten my ponytail before wiping my palms down my apron. âYou stay here and get your shit together. But if you run and leave me alone in this dump, I am emptying your tip jar.â
The swivel door creaks as I push my way through. Immediately, my gaze finds Maximo still sitting in his seat, but heâs no longer reading the newspaper. Instead, heâs looking right at me, and the eye contact strips me of the confidence I need to pretend like his presence isnât scaring the crap out of us.
My feet come to a halt when he stands from his seat, sauntering toward the customers who just walked in. Thereâs a heaviness inside my chest as my heart thumps violently against my ribs, and itâs impossible to ignore the sense of foreboding that turned the air toxic.
Maximo is easily six-foot-five, his shoulders broad, and thick veins rope up the side of his muscled neck. The man is built like a fucking machine, and all I can do is remain frozen on the spot as he merely looks the new customers in the eyeâa silent threat that makes them turn around and walk out.
I take a step back, the skin at the back of my neck cold yet clammy, thinking Wendy might have been right. Him being here is no coincidence, and stopping new customers from entering the diner just confirmed it.
Slowly backing away, I keep my eyes on Maximo while he holds the door open as a man walks in. Dressed in a black coat, white-collar shirt, and slate gray tie, itâs impossible for me to look away. The tension in the air tightens the moment he turns to face me. Recognition flashes in his eyes as he keeps my gaze, his expression stern and unreadable.
âJesus Christ,â Wendy whispers. I didnât even notice her slip in next to me. âThatâs Alexius.â
I swallow hard, my throat dry and chest unable to expand while I struggle to breathe. The way his presence wraps around my throat proves the stories Iâve heard of him are true. Itâs all there in the blue-blaze of his irisesâthe crashing chaos and wicked wrongdoings of a man who possesses too much power.
With every step he takes toward me, his stare burns into mine, and I struggle to breathe in deeply enough so my lungs can expand.
Midnight hair falls across his eyes, the strands as dark as the intentions that lurk behind the deceptive elegance he carries on his squared shoulders. Confidence radiates from him with every wide step he takes as he closes the distance between us. The man is as beautiful as he is intimidating.
âFuck this, Iâm out,â I hear Wendy mumble, but Iâm unable to move, unable to break the lock his gaze has on mine like Iâm a target.
With shaky legs, I inch back a step, but his tall frame already towers over me, and he reaches into his coat pocket. My lips part with a sharp uptick in my panicked heartbeat, and a soft whimper escapes me as I try to move to the side, desperate to get away. But he merely steps up in front of me, invading my personal space, and reaches out, placing his palm against the drywall and boxing me in. He smells of whiskey and spice, and subtle notes of sandalwood that coil around me, intoxicating my senses.
Something deep inside me stirs, and my breath catches in my throat.
âLeandra Dinali.â I hardly recognize my own name, shuddering at the orotund tone of his voiceâa deep, rumble of power that makes me hold my breath.
Rooted to the spot, Iâm paralyzed by his presence as he leans forward, pulling out a black envelope from his coat pocket.
Panicked tension threatens to snap my spine, and I lay my head back against the wall, turning my face away from his as he slips the envelope down the front of my dress, soft paper gliding against my flesh and sharp edges nicking my breasts.
Heat surges across the skin of my neck as he leans closer, gently dragging his nose up toward my ear, inhaling deep. âYou have twenty-four hours.â
I pinch my eyes closed, my wildly beating heart thrumming like a drum inside my head. The bone-chilling terror renders me incapable of moving, but I open my eyes just in time to see him walk out the door.
A tear slips free, and I sink down the wall onto the floor, breathing rapidly and biting my lip so I wonât break down in sobs. Iâm no stranger to fear. Iâve lived through it for years. But this is different. It wraps me up in chains and squeezes the air from my lungs, but at the same time, I am consumed by something other than fear. Something stronger.
After catching my breath, I pull out the envelope, my name neatly written in gold with elegant calligraphy. But itâs the letters on the back that has my heart crawling up my throatâa gold D with a silver S cutting through it. Itâs their symbol.
The symbol of the Dark Sovereign.