Devil Mine: Part 3 – Chapter 55
Devil Mine: A Dark Cartel Romance (London Underworld Book 1)
If I thought a night away from home would dull my fury, I find out the next morning just how wrong I was. Not just because I wake up with a crick in my neck from sleeping on the shitty couch in my office at Tanta, the cartelâs biggest club, but because the first thing I think about when I open my eyes is Tess.
âIâm not your wife.â
The fist of anger squeezing my heart crushes it once more just replaying those words in my head. Theyâve been on a constant, endless loop in my mind since she said them.
I didnât want to go home in the mental state I was in last night. Iâd been so blinded by my rage that Iâd feared going too far with her and actually hurting her. Visions of tying her up, of gagging her, of torturing her until she admitted to being mine had assaulted me almost nonstop since Iâd left.
Keeping the monster away from her was in both our best interests. She already thought the worst of me and proving I was even more reprehensible than she could imagine wasnât going to help my cause.
So instead I spent the vast majority of my day staring at my phone, looking at the dot that represented her location.
After Franklin assaulted her, Iâd gifted her a gold necklace. What I didnât mention was that it doubled as a tracking device. I knew if I told her about it, sheâd refuse to wear it, so Iâd said nothing. Iâm incredibly happy about that decision now as I stare at her unmoving dot.
She hasnât left the house since I stormed out yesterday. Today is Friday, she should have gone to work, but she didnât.
She hasnât missed work since our âhoneymoonâ.
I let myself hope that todayâs exception is because of me.
I clench my phone so tightly in my fist, Iâm surprised the screen doesnât shatter.
She thinks she isnât mine.
She thinks I could even think about another woman.
She thinks she doesnât consume my every waking and sleeping thought.
Iâm going to kill her father for poisoning her mind against me. I know he had to say a lot more to her than just playing a recording of our conversation. We were fine and then we werenât, and itâs because of him.
Itâs simple, really.
I love her.
So much that thereâs nowhere for me to keep it. It overflows out of my heart and past my ribcage and spills embarrassingly out of me.
I would give it to her if I thought she wanted it, but last nightâs argument proves she doesnât. That she isnât ready to hear it.
Sheâs softened to me over the past few months, yes, but she doesnât love me back. Not yet at least, but I wonât stop until she does. I just canât rush it. Sheâs like a skittish mare, ready to run away at the first sign of fear, and the last thing I want to do is scare her.
What if she disappears again? Itâs a looming worry in my mind thatâs never far away.
The door bursts open and Arturo stalks in, the severe expression on his face getting my immediate attention.
âMatteo Leone wants to meet.â
I lean back in my office chair.
Thatâs a surprise. I hadnât expected the new capo to try and take the diplomatic route with me.
âWhen?â
âNow,â Arturo answers. âHeâs here.â
Not the diplomatic route then. He wants all out war.
Adrenaline roars to life in my veins. I stand, reach into my desk drawer and pull out a second gun. I check the magazine to make sure itâs full and tuck it into the back of my trousers.
âHow many men did he bring with him?â I ask, clinically inspecting the magazine of the gun already in my holster.
âNone. He came alone.â
Surprise flares once more and I pause.
Matteo Leone has caught me off guard twice in under a minute now, which puts him way ahead of the curve. He has to know that coming here, and especially coming alone, is a death sentence.
âAlone?â
âHe says he wants to discuss a truce.â
âHe knows Iâm the one who killed his father.â
Arturo shrugs, looking as uncertain as I feel. Being off-footed like this feels like weâre at a disadvantage even though heâs the one whoâs defenseless and on my turf.
âWhat do you make of him?â I ask.
âYoung. Cocky. Brash,â he states, adding, âDangerous. Very dangerous. Easy to underestimate.â
I grunt in acknowledgement and tip my chin at him.
âLet him in.â
Arturo ushers in four more of my men, each with their weapons drawn as they stand at the four corners of the room. And then Matteo Leone saunters in, jacketless with his sleeves rolled up to his elbows and not a care in the world. Heâs got an easy grin on his face and pretty boy good looks. He looks more suited to the front pages of magazines than the Underworld and that, combined with his obvious youth at twenty-seven, makes him someone easy to look over. But I see why Arturo told me not to underestimate him when my gaze meets the cold green of his eyes. Thereâs an edge there that reveals heâs much more calculated and conniving than one might believe on first impression.
Heâs been temporarily relieved of his weapons, so he walks in here at my mercy. Every gun in the room save my own are pointed at his head and yet he ignores them with ease. He gives the impression of not having a care in the world.
Alarm bells go off in my head that this is a trap, but I canât see how it possibly could be.
He plops down in the chair opposite my desk and rests his elbows on either armrests, threading his fingers together over his stomach.
âInteresting tactic, showing up here.â
He grins, a quick flash of teeth before he says, âIâm not one to play childish games.â His gaze turns shrewd and he cuts straight to the chase. âYou killed my father.â
He says it with about as much emotion as if we were discussing our tax returns.
The new capo of the Italian mafia isnât what I expected him to be. I can already tell that heâs a different adversary than what Iâm used to dealing with from the Italians, one thatâll require more brain power than usual.
I welcome the challenge. Itâs about time.
âI did.â
He waves a dismissive hand between us.
âI should thank you for doing my dirty work. Iâd been trying to think of ways to get rid of the old man. You went ahead and did it for me and I got to keep my hands clean.â
I lean back into my chair, looking at the man opposite me. If I was sitting in front of the man whoâd killed my father, heâd already be dead.
âNot a fan of his?â I ask.
He barks out a laugh. âNot at all. He was bad for business. The famiglia used to be the crown jewel of the Underworld, and look at us now. Barely scraping by on historically earned respect and nothing more. I intend to restore us to our former glory and I finally might be able to with him out of the way.â
âAnd why would I let you do that when I could just kill you right now and knock another piece off your familyâs board?â
He gives an easy smile. âYou can, if you want. Thereâs an endless line of Leone cousins waiting to become capo after me so youâll just be replacing me with someone far less amenable to working with you.â He rubs a hand over his jaw, considering me. âThereâs room enough for both of us. If we work together, we can pull each other towards the top and maximize our profits.â
âIâm already at the top,â I point out, unsure why Iâm even entertaining this conversation with a man who is at best related to the people responsible for Adrianaâs death.
âTake my familyâs situation as proof that getting to the top is far easier than staying there. If the two of us stand shoulder to shoulder, we can fight off those encroaching on our territory. We could expand beyond the UK, which I know youâre interested in.â
This isnât an impromptu drop-in. Clearly the man did his research on me before coming here. That explains why there was no immediate eye-for-an-eye killing retaliation after Augustoâs death.
Matteo takes in my blank expression and adds, âI have something to offer you thatâll sweeten this deal.â
âGo ahead.â
âIâll help you find your sisterâs killer.â
My eyes narrow on him at the same time as I hear the sound of a safety clicking off a gun from behind me. I look over my shoulder and see JoaquÃn with a livid expression on his face, his gun hand shaking as he points it at Matteo.
The man in question barely flicks him a look, remaining unaffected by the danger aimed at him.
âWhy would you do that?â I ask, not correcting JoaquÃn for his protectiveness.
âI donât want a rogue individual in my organization any more than you do and, unlike my father, I wonât protect him. Iâll help you get to the bottom of what happened and will hand any culprits over to you. I wonât interfere with whatever punishment you choose.â
âWhat do you want in return?â
Matteo spreads his arms, the very image of congeniality.
I see him for the chameleon that he is.
âA truce. No more bloodshed. No more going after members of my family. This ends today. If I walk out of this door without an agreement, then itâs war. But if you can agree to those terms, then Iâll overlook your crimes against my family up to this point.â He smiles. âI think you can agree my offer is extremely generous.â
I examine him, trying to see the lie in his eyes.
Heâs right. His terms are almost charitable in their leniency. I wouldnât forgive crimes against my family for so small a price.
The smile fades, his lips pulling down into a flat, serious line as he clenches his jaw. The muscle in his cheek twitches.
âAnd,â he adds after a moment.
There it is. I knew it was too good to be true.
I lift a brow at him. âI knew this wasnât a selfless pursuit.â
âNever claimed it was,â he quips back.
âWhat do you want?â
Sharp, intense eyes pierce mine. Whatever it is he wants me to give him, heâs ready to go to war for it.
âThe woman in the gold dress.â
I stiffen, my shoulders straining against my shirt. Thatâs just about the last thing I expected him to say.
His fists clench when he notes my reaction.
âWhat?â
âAt Callum Tellierâs gala a couple months ago, there was a woman there in a gold dress. I saw her hug you.â His eyes glitter angrily in the most palpable display of heated emotion Iâve seen from him. âI assume sheâs one of yours. I want her.â
He leans forward and for the first time, I see the man behind the mask. Cunning, scheming eyes, determined set of his jaw, ruthless expression on his face.
This is what he came here for. This is what he set out to achieve, to walk out of my office with.
This is what victory looks like to him.
Itâs not about a truce or an alliance. No, those are secondary objectives.
This is about Valentina.
The vehemence in his tone is completely at odds with his previously easy going demeanor.
Alarm bells go off at the way he speaks about my little sister. âHow do you know her?â
He stands and stares down at where Iâm seated.
âThatâs not relevant, nor is it any of your concern. What is, is the fact that I want her and I will have her. Give her to me and you have my word that Iâll help you find out what happened to your sister,â he announces.
â½â½â½
Later, Iâm sitting alone at the bar before Tanta opens for the night, trying to nurse my bad mood with a fifth glass of whiskey. No matter how much I drink, I canât make the images of my wife go away. Theyâre engraved into the backs of my eyelids. Every time I blink, sheâs there. Tempting me, luring me to her. Hitting me like a goddamn earthquake and jumbling all the pieces inside me.
My phone is in my other hand. I watch the blinking, unmoving dot that is her location. Iâve been staring at it for hours.
Meanwhile, Iâm sure she hasnât even spared a thought for me since I stalked out yesterday. I grunt angrily and bury my face back in my glass.
âWhat are you still doing here, jefe?â Arturo asks, walking up to the bar and sitting on a stool next to me.
âDrinking.â
âI can see that. Are you going to sleep here again tonight?â When I look over at him, he explains, âMarco told me, although I could have guessed based on the shit mood youâve been in since yesterday.â
âCareful,â I warn.
He snorts and waves at Sofia, the bartender, to pour him a drink and refill mine. âIsnât there a certain blonde anxiously waiting for you to go home?â
âNope,â I clip, picking up my glass. The ice clinks loudly.
Silence stretches as he takes a sip of his drink.
âI donât believe that.â
I twirl my glass haphazardly on its side, my eyes glazing over. Alcohol loosens my tongue until Iâm doing my version of spilling my guts. Part of me feels like a frustrated teenager for being unable to resist talking about my girl troubles.
âWe argued.â
âBecause of her father?â
I glare at him. âHow the fuck is it that you seem to know everything all the time?â
âI overheard part of their conversation,â he admits. He turns his head towards me, looking into my eyes when he adds, âHe fired her, Thiago.â
My blood turns to ice, my features slackening in fury. âI beg your pardon?â
âHe told her she has until next Friday and then sheâs out.â
To know Tess is to know that her job is the most important thing in the world to her. The fact that he could so easily fire her, that he even has the power to do so, sickens me.
Rage churns in my gut on her behalf. No wonder she was that angry yesterday. She may have been arguing with me about important things to do with our relationship, but that wasnât the underlying issue.
Like a roaring beast, my protectiveness rises to the surface once more, called to action by this injustice against her. I wonât let it stand.
âCall the lawyer,â I ask Arturo. âI want him here in the next thirty minutes.â