Sinners Condemned : Chapter 24
Sinners Condemned : An Enemies to Lovers Mafia Romance (Sinners Anonymous Book 2)
I miss about Atlantic City.â I set my cell on the bathroom counter and drag a brush through my hair with a shaky hand. âBut nothingâ¦big you know? The salmon and cream cheese bagel from that little cafe on the pier. The passion fruit martinis at Ronnieâs bar. Umâ¦what elseâ¦â
I pick up my phone and carry it into the bedroom, holding it up to my mouth while I rifle through my closet. I pick out a pair of jeans and a sweater, then drop my cell on the bed to change. As it bounces off the mattress, I get a glimpse at the call time and balk.
Iâve been on the line to Sinners Anonymous for forty-five minutes. Talking utter shit, simply to fill my empty apartment with something other than my own nervous energy.
Every bone in my body hums from the aftermath of last night. The ghost of textured wool still caresses the space between my thighs. Soft commands in strangled tones still nip at the shells of my ears. And every time I look at one of my stark white walls, the image of Raphaelâs inked skin flashes against them.
My nerves are tinged with somethingâ¦odd Something that toes the line between unease and defeat. I called Raphaelâs bluff and gave him a lap dance, so why donât I feel like I beat him at his own game?
Bringing myself to orgasm like a fucking rabid animal against the front fold of his slacks might have something to do with it. Or, you know, the fact that I in his passenger seat.
My cheeks heat for the millionth time today. Why canât I repress last night like I can with all my other problems? The fear of being caught by Martin OâHare barely rears its ugly head. Raphael Visconti, from his sharp suit to his hidden ink to his stupid collar pin: he fills every cubic square meter of my conscience, to the point I might burst at the seams.
Biting out a noise of frustration, I cross the room and peer out the window, taking in the empty street below.
âDoing nothing all day was torture. Iâm also not working tonight and I have no plans,â I tell the hotline. âMattâs coaching his hockey team, Roryâs got a flying lesson, Tayce is working, and so is Wren. Well, I suppose I could go down and see Wren at the Rusty Anchorâ¦â
Earlier, I almost told the hotline about Raphael, but something stopped me. I guess growing up with the line makes the robotic woman on the other end of it feel more like a childhood friend. I donât want to pollute her with sordid tales of lap dances and dry-humping. So, I keep it superficial.
I frown, squint at my cell, and realize Iâve got an incoming call from Laurie.
Heart skipping a beat, I stab the âswitch linesâ button. âYeah?â
An easy chuckle floats down the line. âRelax, hun. Iâm not firing you quite yet. Actually, I was calling to see if you can come in today? I know itâs late notice but thereâs a super intimate meeting onboard andââ
âYes! Yes, Iâm free.â
âJeez, that was easy. Usually, I have to bribe people with double pay before I can get them to agree to come in on their days off.â
Iâm about to backpedal when my gaze flicks to the mountain of money on my dresser. Itâs more than Iâve seen in my life.
She tells me the staff shuttle craft will be waiting for me in an hour and hangs up.
An hour later, Iâm being hoisted off the small boat by a heavy-handed Blake. By the wink he flashes me as his grip slides off my hip, he hasnât realized I stole his wallet yet, or that itâs a very real possibility Iâll shove him overboard if he continues to wolf whistle every time I walk away from him.
I make a stop at the locker room to get rid of my shoes and coat, then follow Laurieâs earlier instructions to head to the bar on the sky deck. Itâs only me and one other bartender today, so either barely anyone at this meeting drinks, or theyâre super low maintenance. Somehow, I highly doubt either is true.
As I reach the top of the stairs, I canât stop myself from rolling my eyes at the sight of Blake.
Christ, all of Raphaelâs men are idiots in one shape or form, but this one really is the biggest dunce of them all. Why is he ? Heâs guarding the sky lounge along with a bald-headed lackey who doesnât talk much, and when I shove past without so much as a smile, Iâm treated to another wolf-whistle.
It stiffens my back and makes white heat spark in my fist. âIâm not a fucking dog,â I hiss.
âBet you fuck like one, though,â he mutters back.
Baldy snorts.
Glaring at the gold doorknob, I suck in a lungful of air and wait for the red mist to fade.
Fury cooling to a simmer, I roll my shoulders back and shove into the lounge.
The door is lighter than I think, so it crashes against the back wall and I wince. When I pop my eyes open, I slow to a stop.
, I didnât realize it was happening in here; itâs a smaller room off the sky lounge. But it makes sense, because it only consists of three people, a deck of cards, and a box of Cubaâs finest.
And a loud Irish accent. It belongs to a cherub-looking man with a gray buzz-cut and piercing blue eyes. But thereâs nothing angelic about his voice: heâs obnoxious, and every other word that slides through his mouth is a curse. All three pairs of eyes come to me, but I train my gaze on my toes and scurry along the wall until I reach the safety of the bar behind another set of doors. I open this one a lot more gently and turn to catch it before it slams shut behind me.
In the narrowing gap, I meet Raphaelâs amused gaze.
I smile sheepishly.
He Christ. Spinning off-kilter, I shut the door and drop my head against it, waiting for my blood to simmer down to a more appropriate temperature. I was so eager to get out of the apartment that I opted to do overtime without thinking of the consequences: seeing Raphael after âSurprise!â A feminine trill makes my eyes pop open. Rory is sitting on a bar stool grinning at me. Sheâs wearing a khaki fly suit unzipped to her waist and a white T-shirt underneath.
I break into a smile. âWhat are you doing here?â
âAngeloâs got a meeting with Rafe and some old dude. Found out you were working so I decided to cut my flying lesson short and keep you company.â She cranes her neck to peer into the storage room, then whispers theatrically as she taps the deck of cards on the bar. Waves her notepad around. âIâve been practicing!â
I didnât even realize Angelo was here, I was so distracted by a loud Irish accent and the heat of Raphaelâs wink. I bite out a laugh, slipping behind the bar. âI hope youâve been practicing in private â
âOh, of course. Angelo thinks Iâve got a sudden obsession with gardening because Iâve been hiding in the shed.â She snaps the deck with a roll of her eyes. âWhat grows in winter, seriously? Oh, by the way, what are you doing Saturday night? Thereâs a game night in Hollow; you should come and watch me beat Rafe.â
Before I can respond, a man breezes out of the storage room, face hidden behind the crate of beer in his arms. He sets it on the floor, returns to his full height, and does a double-take at me.
âJesus. Am I seeing a ghost?â
It takes me a few seconds to realize who it is: Dan.
As in, âIâm very much alive,â I say dryly. âWhat are you doing here?â
âWell, I usually work at the Rusty Anchor, but I moonlight as Rafeâs personal bartender.â He hitches a shoulder and grins. âHe calls, I come.â
I have to grit my teeth to prevent an eye roll. Having a personal bartender only solidifies his status as the most pretentious asshole of the year.
Dan starts unloading beers into the fridge, chuckling to himself. âCanât believe Rafe chased you with a hammer.â
Roryâs gasp feels hot against the shells of my ears.
âYeah, and canât I believe you handed it to him.â
âHey, what the boss wants, the boss gets.â
âOkay, someoneâs gotta fill me in,â Rory says, a breathless excitement to her tone. âWhat are you going on about?â
âShe swindled Rafe out of his watch at the in Devilâs Cove. It was â
Roryâs eyes slide to mine then down the watch on my wrist. To be honest, it looks ridiculous on me. Itâs far too big and even on the tightest notch, the face constantly slides around to my pulse. I donât know why I keep swiping it off my dresser and putting it on every morning. I pull my arm off the bar and put it behind me, feeling defensive.
âWhat do you mean, swindled?â she whispers.
âNot We played a game, and I won his watch.â
âYou won his watch,â she repeats, all-knowing mischief filling her gaze. âAnd now youâre wearing it.â
âAnd now Iâm wearing it.â I scowl back.
She opens her mouth, then closes it just as quick. She goes back to scribbling on her notepad, a smirk lifting her lips.
.
The sound of the door opening travels down my spine. Roryâs head snaps up, and in a panic, she scoops the playing cards and the notepad to her chest and slides off the stool. âGotta make a phone call,â she mutters, before diving out the terrace doors.
Raphaelâs bemused gaze follows her, before coming to me. I smooth down my dress and give my best attempt at not looking flustered. Dan, on the other hand, is as easy as a Sunday morning. âWhatâs up, boss? What can I get you?â
Raphael continues to stare at me for another beat, before sliding up to the bar and giving Dan his full attention. âTwo whiskeys and a water that looks like whiskey.â He runs a hand over his ticking jaw. âThink Kellyâs been mixing his liquor with Benzoâs again.â
âOn it, boss.â
Dan disappears into the storage room, leaving me to bear the brunt of Raphaelâs attention all on my own. Itâs crazy that in the darkness of his car, high off his heat, I craved his gaze, yet in the sober light of day, it makes me want to crawl under a rock.
He looks down at my chest with a hint of disapproval. âNo new uniform yet?â
âLaurie said itâs coming in tomorrow.â
He gives a tight nod and glances at a message that pops up on his cell screen.
Silence swirls us like a storm, me coming on his thigh and then falling asleep in his car for at the eye of it. I grab a rag and busy myself with wiping up imaginary spillages on the oak-clad bar, trying to ignore the sudden disappointment closing in on me.
I donât know⦠In the cold sunlight streaming through the windows, Raphael oozes corporate perfection. Fresh shave, pinstripe suit, shoes so shiny they reflect my glum expression.
Last night, he was a whole different man. Soaked in rainwater, his ink shone through his shirt as if they were his true colors. Being around man gave me a different kind of thrill. It felt like heâd let me in on his dirty little secret. But man is what he broadcasts to everyone else in the world. And for some reason, I donât like being lumped with everyone else.
His cell locks shut and he looks up at me through a half-lidded gaze.
âDid you sleep well last night?â
A simple question, but a wave of relief coasts through me so fast, I feel a little dizzy. At least I know it wasnât a fever dream.
Of course, I donât let it show on my face.
âEh. Could have been better.â
His lips tilt. âYeah? How come?â
âNo pillow, and the blanket was only a blazer. If your car was an AirBnb, Iâd give it a four-star rating.â I tap my lip in thought. âNoâthree and a half.â
âWhyâd you knock off the half-star?â
âThere was also this creepy man staring at me all night.â
He laughs a beautiful, raw laugh, and a rush sweeps through me knowing Iâm the reason for it.
When the lines of his face settle back to neutral, I search it unashamedly. His eyes are bloodshot, and dark circles shade the undersides of them.
âBig meeting?â
âMm.â
âYou look tired. Didnât sleep?â
He leans over the bar, warming me with his body heat. My breathing shallows. âYeah,â he says softly. âSeems I was too busy being a creepy man and staring at a beautiful girl all night.â
My embarrassment is written all over my face in different shades of red. He huffs out a laugh and throws me another wink.
Christ, heâs charming when he wants to be. Even though I know whatâs underneath, I could see myself being a little fooled.
Dan comes out with a tray of whiskeys and sets one slightly aside from the rest. Raphael raps his knuckle against the bar and returns to his full height. âPenelope, bring them in for me.â
And with that, he breezes through the door, leaving the absence of in his wake.
Dan doesnât say anything, just watches me with pursed lips as I clumsily take the tray through to the lounge.
Inside, the air is thicker than it was when I first walked through, partly due to cigar smoke hanging above the coffee table, and partly because of the cards splayed out on its surface.
Immediately, I recognize the layout to be this Visconti Blackjack they all play here, and a conditioned zap of adrenaline crackles through my core.
My present life involves serving those at the table instead of sitting around it. I set a glass next to Angelo. His gaze slides to the watch on my wrist then up to me, something unreadable flickering in its depths. My heart lurches but he doesnât say anything.
I move to Raphaelâs side of the table. He doesnât acknowledge me, but still, my arm crackles as it brushes against the sleeve of his suit. Then, without a break in his stoic expression, his hand glides up the back of my thigh and comes to the hem of my skirt.
He downward I stifle a gasp. Angelo snaps out a card from the shoe and tosses it on the pile.
Queen of Hearts.
Raphael folds.
He huffs out a breath and settles back into his armchair.
Shaky from the unexpected skirt grab, I set down the Irish manâs drink a little too hard. He winces then turns to me with wild eyes. Something warm floods through them, and he shifts in his seat to get closer.
âHit or stand, Princess?â
My jaw ticks at the nickname, but I canât stop my eyes from gliding to the table anyway. Only a quick sweep at the dealt cards tells me he should standâthere are too many low-value cards already playedâbut I clamp my mouth shut and plaster on a smile. âHow would I know? Iâm just a silly little Princess.â
His laugh melts into a thick silence. Even with unfocused eyes and a reckless sway to his movements, thereâs something in his gaze that makes unease trickle down my spine like syrup. I move to get away from him, but heâs quicker than he looks. His hand shoots out and grips my wrist.
Three pairs of eyes, including my own, glare down at it. In my peripheral vision, Raphael leans forward, resting his forearms on his knees.
âWhatâs your name, sweetheart?â
âPenny.â
Again, another laugh. One too loud for a three-person meeting. âThatâs a very lucky name. Whatâs that expression again? Find a Penny, pick it up, all day long youâll have good luck? Although, red-heads arenât very lucky on boats, are they?â
âUh-huh,â I say dryly, silently recoiling at the old adage that haunted my childhood. I tear my arm away, but his hand reaches for my necklace. He strokes the four-leaf clover pendant, expression curious.
âKelly,â Rafe says, too calm for comfort.
âYouâve got the luck of the Irish,â Kelly murmurs, ignoring the way Raphael delivers his name in a silk-clad warning. âYou got any Irish in you, sweetheart?â
âNope.â
âWould you to have Irish in you?â
Raphaelâs on his feet, but Iâm quicker, leaning in and hissing in Kellyâs face. âIf you donât remove your hand from me right now, Iâll bite it.â
He stares at me for long, awkward seconds. Somewhere in the room, a clock ticks. Raphaelâs gaze scalds my cheek. Angelo clears his throat.
Eventually, with a shit-eating smile creeping onto his thin lips, he releases me.
But not without a parting word. One I know is meant for my ears only.
âI knew it was you.â
I blink, and then the dread hits. Itâs lazy, seeping into my veins hot and sticky, deadening my limbs. It pools in my chest and slows my heart rate; fills my lungs.
Numb, I stand to my full height and glance at Raphael. Heâs poised but his eyes are on me, simmering with unadulterated rage. Still reclining in his armchair, Angelo says something in clipped Italian, and with a slow roll of his head, Raphael begrudgingly sinks back to his seat.
I wade toward the bar, swimming through words filled with arrogance and amusement. âI was kidding,â I hear behind me. âBut how about we up these stakes a littleâ¦â
I slam the door shut with the heel of my foot and press my back against it. Roryâs nowhere to be seen, but on the other side of the bar, Dan stops twisting a rag in a glass and cocks a brow at me. âKelly really that bad?â
When I shake my head, the words rattle around in it. I donât recognize him, but even in his fucked-up state, it seemed like he recognized me.
Unless I imagined it? He said it so quietly, so that he could have said anything. But thereâs one niggling observation that makes his words impossible to dismiss.
Heâs Irish.
Martin OâHareâs Irish.
No. Thatâd be unlucky of me. Wouldnât it?
With nerves racking through my body like a freight train, I nod and agree in all the right places as Dan takes me through the signature cocktail of the weekâpassion fruit martiniâand rambles on about the snacks in the crew mess: salmon and cream cheese bagels.
I couldnât give a flying fuck about cocktails or food, and my cheeks ache from holding up a plastic smile.
When the phone rings behind the bar, I jump out of my skin.
âYes?â I breathe down the line.
Raphaelâs voice comes smooth and somber. âTell Dan to bring a water, no ice.â He pauses. âPenelope?â I clutch the receiver tighter, my shoulders bracing for impact. âDan Not you.â
He hangs up.
âWas that the boss?â Dan asks, tone too chipper for my frazzled state.
I nod, scrambling for a glass and filling it up with water. Why Dan? Why not me?
Christ, my mouth is watering in suspense.
Maybe I do recognize him, and I just wasnât looking at him properly.
Thereâs only one way to find out.
I slide the water on a tray and stomp into the sky lounge. Now, the air is thick from something other than cigar smoke and lighthearted competition. My gaze sweeps over the back of Kellyâs head to Angeloâs stony expression, then locks on Raphael. His eyes simmer with a cool green fury that suggests Iâm in deep shit for disobeying his request, but right now, I donât fucking care. I drop the glass on Kellyâs side of the table and glare at his profile.
No, I definitely donât recognize him.
He rolls his head on his neck to give me a smarmy smile. âWould you deal, Princess?â
I blink. Shift my gaze to the cards in front of him. Heâs playing the last hand of the game; thereâs a pile of discarded cards on the table, and only one card left in the shoe.
I donât know why it slides out of my mouth. Maybe itâs because I want to keep him looking at me for longer, so I can truly study his face and see if I recognize him. Or maybe, itâs because Iâm a fucking idiot.
âDepends if youâre playing the ace as a high or low value card,â I whisper.
A second passes like the beat of a drum.
Raphael rubs the bridge of his nose. Angelo lets out a slow breath. And Kellyâs resounding chuckle reverberates in the hollow of my chest. âDeal.â
Raking a cautious eye over Raphael, Angelo plucks the last card from the shoe and flicks it on the table.
Ace of spades.
Itâs so quiet I can hear the tick of Raphaelâs Breitling on my wrist. The whir of the blender going on the other side of the door. How can Dan make passion fruit martinis at a time like this?
I look to Raphael for an answer, which is stupid, because I donât even know the question. Head dipped between his shoulder blades, he slowly drags his gaze up to me, and I donât like what I see in it.
Itâs soft. At odds with the suffocating tension pressing against the four walls of the room. When it drops to the pendant around my neck, it hardens with resolve.
âPenelope.â
âYes?â I whisper back.
âTell me what the weather is like today.â
I blink. I couldnât cut the air in here even if I had an obsidian knife, and heâs worried about the weather? âWhat?â
As if trying to convey something calming with his eyes, he nods to the French doors behind me. âLook out the window, and tell me what the weather is like.â
After a breathless second, I do as Iâm told. My gait is clumsy as I make my way to the glass and press a sweaty hand against its cold surface.
I swallow. âWell, uh. Itâs cloudy, but I donât think itâll rââ
My forecast is sliced in half by a sound Iâd know anywhere. Itâs a sound Iâve heard before, as it took the lives of both my dead-beat parents.
The gunshot reverberates off the walls and rings in my ears. Everything stopsâmy words, the time, my pulse.
âPenelope?â I latch on to the tranquility in Raphaelâs voice like a life-line. âDonât turn around. Just open the door and take a walk.â
I follow the calm voice. Slide the door open with trembling fingers and step outside.
I suck in a lungful of icy wind and tilt my head to the sky.
You know, maybe itâll rain today after all.