Silent Vows: Chapter 36
Silent Vows: A Mafia Arranged Marriage Romance (The Byrne Brothers Book 1)
âYour mother was Agostinoâs sister, wasnât she?â Iâd meant to let the subject rest until morning but couldnât settle my racing thoughts. Noemi had yet to fall asleep herself, so I decided maybe a brief talk would be necessary before we could find rest.
âYes. She and Aunt Etta were twins, and Uncle Agostino is their older brother.â
That was what Iâd been afraid of. âHe and Renzo would want to know the truth, but Iâm not sure itâs our place to say something.â Iâd been debating the issue in my head for the last ten minutes. As far as I could tell, one crucial bit of information was missing. âWhy did Fausto kill his wife, Noemi?â
Iâd been holding her cocooned against me, so it was easy to feel her body stiffen in response to my question. I wasnât surprised. When she first unveiled the truth about her motherâs death, Iâd sensed she was holding something back.
âDoes it matter why?â she asked quietly, her voice worn from months of anguish. It had to have been hell living with the man whoâd inflicted so much pain in her life.
âIâm afraid it does. I need to know what happened.â Yet again, I sensed the tension in her body intensify, so I continued. âNormally, we donât involve ourselves in the domestic disputes of people outside of our organization. But if thereâs more to her death than a violent husband, your uncle may need to know.â
âYou would get involved if there was more to it? My father would likely know that you were the source of that information.â
âYes, but we owe a certain loyalty to the Donatis. I donât like inserting ourselves into a Mafia matter, but if weâre the only ones who have that information, it may be necessary.â
She was silent long enough for unease to prick at the back of my neck.
âI agree that itâs a delicate matter,â she finally said. âThatâs why I think you should leave it to me. Let me keep this in the family.â
My reaction was visceral. No way in hell was I sending my wife into the middle of a potentially dangerous situation. âItâs not happening, Em, so donât even try.â
Noemi wrestled out of my hold to turn and face me in the dark. âPlease, Conner. Iâm the one who should talk to my uncle. I wanted to from the beginning but was so worried about protecting Sante that I held off. I should be the one to do it, and then you and your family wonât be thrown into the middle of it.â
I didnât like it one bit, but she wasnât entirely wrong. Had I been in her shoes, I would have argued the same. âYou know your brother is no safer now than he was before.â
She sighed, relaxing back into my arms. âI know, but it needs to be done. And Iâd rather this way than ⦠well, letâs just say that bringing you and your family into it would only make things worse.â
I grunted, irritated that she made sense. âIâm not making any promises, but Iâll think about it.â
Setting up a meeting for her to talk to her uncle wouldnât be so bad, but I couldnât imagine not attending. And if I was present, I might as well handle it myself. The whole thing was a shit situation. I didnât like any of the options but knew we had to commit to something, even if that was to ignore the whole thing.
I lay there and continued to think as my young wife relaxed into sleep. She might have felt better after our talk, but I was all too aware that sheâd avoided answering my question about why her mother was killed. Fausto hadnât lashed out and accidentally struck his wife with too much force. Sheâd died in a car wreck, which meant her death was premeditated. That wasnât domestic; that was murder.
But how could I fault Noemi for holding back when Iâd done the same?
I still hadnât told her about my father. I should have, but the words were bottled up inside. The truth still felt too raw. Too unbelievable to be real.
And if I wasnât already overwhelmed sorting my feelings about Miaâs revelation, the jumbled storm of emotions my wife evoked would have certainly pushed me over the edge. Iâd been so fucking angry when I got home and found the place empty. Angry and worried and frustrated as hell. Yet the second I saw the genuine fear sheâd felt for me, for my safety, all of it had melted away and left nothing but scorching desire.
It was a good thing she offered herself to me because Iâd been so damn ravenous for her, I wasnât sure I could have resisted what Iâd wanted. What Iâd needed.
I trailed my fingers down the delicate indentation of her spine. Pliable yet strong, just like her.
Iâd never met a woman who was so deceptively resilient. I had thought Iâd wanted her gentility, but it was her fierce tenacity that hooked its claws into me. I couldnât help but respect her strength.
In my world, respect was everything.
It prompted the question whether Iâd earned her respect. Apparently not, considering she was still keeping secrets. Respect went hand in hand with trust. What did I have to do to prove I was worthy?
A dull ache radiated in my chest at yet again finding myself faced with that question.
As a boy, Iâd spent years asking myself why my birth mother had given me away. Once Iâd matured and learned sheâd been a teen mother, Iâd accepted that her actions werenât a reflection of how she felt about me; however, the echo of those feelings still stirred down deep in my memories.
I wanted to be certain of Noemiâs feelings for me. I wanted to know she was just as irrevocably drawn to me as I was her, and there was only one way to accomplish thatâI would have to become the air she breathed. Make myself so indispensable that she couldnât imagine a life without me. And the first step in that process was eliminating Fausto Mancini from her life, no matter the cost.