Sinners Condemned : Chapter 2
Sinners Condemned : An Enemies to Lovers Mafia Romance (Sinners Anonymous Book 2)
on the Devilâs Coast. Itâs etched into every craggy cliff and it pollutes every gloomy shadow.
Itâs common sense, really. Not pissing off the mafiaâspecifically, the Cosa Nostraâis a law as old as time.
The Viscontis dominate the coastline. In fact, Iâd bet my left kidney I could twist my head around three-hundred-and-sixty degrees like a fucking owl, and everything my eyes touched would be Visconti-owned. Every bar, hotel, casino, and restaurant in Cove, Hollow, and Dip, plus all the sorry souls within them.
I of all people should be able to spot a Visconti. Itâs not like I stumbled off a Greyhound bus and into parts unknown. I grew up, quite literally, under their roof at the Visconti Grand Hotel and Casino. I learned to crawl among their Brioni loafers underneath the poker tables; started my period in one of their gilded toilet cubicles. Had my first taste of liquor in one of their bars. Hell, one of them even taught me everything I know about advantage gambling and swindling.
Gripping the edge of the bar, I cast a wayward glance to the shadowy figure in the corner. The screen of his cell lights a path along his jawline as he holds it to his ear, and as he turns in a lazy circle, his eyes flash green under a soft spotlight.
Against all odds, Iâve made it to twenty-one and I credit that achievement to both luck and always listening to my instincts, even if they only whisper. Right now, my instincts arenât whispering; they are screaming at the top of their lungs.
Dan has moved on to collecting glasses from the tables. I snatch up the bills on the bar and leave one to pay for my drink. Unfortunately, Iâll have to be a lousy tipper tonight, but as a fellow Devilâs Coast resident, Iâm sure Dan will understand. Sliding away from the bar, I slip on my coat and head toward the table I kicked my suitcase under.
Despite the awful sense of dread pressing down on my shoulders, my movements are relaxed and natural; anything else will draw unwanted attention.
Iâm just a girl leaving a bar after choking on an overpriced drink. No big deal.
At the bottom step, Iâve bent down to pick up my suitcase when a voice slices through the air like a hot knife in a block of butter.
âOff so soon?â
âYeah,â I say, as breezily as I can muster. âGot a train to catch.â
âThere are no trains on the Devilâs Coast.â
âIn the morning, I mean. From a different town. Gotta be up early to get there, so I should probablyâ¦â
Three slow footsteps, each one closer than the last. The weight behind them makes my excuse trail off into nothingness.
Balling my hands into fists, I glance up the stairs to the small sliver of light at the top of them. If I sacrifice my belongings, will I be able to get out the door before he catches me?
Blood thumps in my ears. Another two footsteps reverberate off the low ceiling, then heat brushes against the nape of my neck. Only a stuttered heartbeat later does the scent of warm whiskey and cool mint drift under my nose.
Goosebumps prickle down the lengths of my arms, and my knees threaten to buckle underneath me.
His thick, tranquil voice floats over the planes of my shoulders.
âLetâs play your game.â
Itâs a command masquerading as a suggestion, delivered with the sharp zap of a cattle prod.
It should scare me, but it just pisses me off. Iâve never taken too kindly to being told what to do, especially by a even if said man is a Visconti.
Raphael Visconti. Jesus. Despite my annoyance, I canât believe I had the gall to call a mark, even in my own head. Heâs the middle one of the Devilâs Dip brothers, and unlike the Cove and the Hollow families, they havenât had a presence on the Coast for years, not since their parents died when I was around eleven years old. My memories of him in particular are hazy, probably because heâs a lot older than me. He exists in flashes of sharp tailoring and charming smiles. I never got more than a brief glimpse of him before he disappeared behind a sea of suits or a locked door.
Everything I know about Raphael Visconti isnât from my childhood memories, but from hearsay around blackjack tables in Atlantic City. His name was always uttered in a breathless whisper, often with a rumor attached to it. Invite-only poker games and parties that rivaled Jay Gatsbyâs: that kind of thing. Itâs hard to know what was true and what wasnât.
There are only two things I know to be fact.
The first is that Raphael owns the majority of the big-name casinos in Vegas.
The second is that Iâd be stupid to swindle a man who owns the majority of the big-name casinos in Vegas.
With a false confidence, I spin around with a get-out clause on my tongue. Heâs standing closer than Iâd thought and it takes me off-guard. I stumble backward, heels hitting the bottom step, but before I land on my ass, a strong hand reaches out and wraps itself around my forearm.
My defiance flickers like a candle in the wind. Heâs tall. Really tall, and now that I know who he is, heâs also really fucking My eye line barely reaches the third button on his shirt.
Being in his shadow makes me uncomfortable, so I mount the bottom step and fold my arms in an attempt to level the playing field.
He smirks.
âYou sure are persistent for a man that isnât interested.â
His gaze drops to my mouth. âOh, Iâm interested.â
Sudden heat flares against my stomach lining, and I let out a little involuntary puff of air. Something about the intensity of his gaze and the silkiness of his tone feelsâ¦
I donât doubt he has women skipping to his bedroom with a lot less effort.
I fake a yawn. âSorry. Gotta go.â
Although his stillness is magnetic, I manage to tear myself away long enough to reach down, grab my belongings, and turn toward the entryway at the top of the stairs.
One step. Then another. My boot is hovering over the third when darkness shrouds me. I pause to squint up into the dim light and see a security guard, the one with the punchable face and rhetorical questions. Heâs looming at the top of the stairs, blocking the exit.
Fuck.
As if heâll give me answers, I glance back at Raphael. Heâs standing in the same spot, with the same tight smile tugging at his lips, hands resting easy in the pockets of his slacks.
My attention shifts over his shoulder, and thatâs when my confusion settles into something denser. The other men in the bar are now on their feet, all glaring at me. One steps into the path of a spotlight and turns his head.
I catch sight of his earpiece, and realization slaps me across the face.
Wearing suits mid-week. Sitting alone. Things I usually see as green checks, are in this case, massive red flags. It wasnât a coincidence that they were all sitting separately, because theyâre all bodyguards. They are And all forâ¦
My eyes drop back to the Visconti. His dimples deepen. Cashmere charm and a razor-sharp smile.
âIâm afraid I have to insist.â
Ice-cold dread trickles into my bloodstream.
Less than ten minutes ago, I thought this dude was a little fish that wouldnât nibble on my bait, and how wrong I was.
Heâs a great white shark about to swallow me whole.
My pulse strums in my throat, and my hands grow clammy.
Thatâs awful odds for a girl as lucky as me.
With defeat heavy in my stomach, I drop my bags on the step and smooth down the satin of my stolen dress. Outwardly, Iâm calm, but internally, all of my organs are rattling with a new plan. My original game isnât going to cut it anymoreâI need something less seedy. Something less likely to get me tossed off the Cove Pier in a body bag.
Guess Iâm heading into Act Three.
âWell, since you â I snap in a tone that doesnât mirror the panic creeping up my throat. Raphaelâs amusement blisters my cheek as I make my way back to the bar and take a seat.
Dan catches my eye and gives a small, sorrowful shake of his head, conveying what Iâve already figured out: Iâm well and truly fucked.
Raphaelâs large hands grip the stool next to me, then he pulls it away from the bar like it weighs nothing. He hitches up his slacks and perches on the edge of it. With a small, expressionless nod to Dan, he rests his forearms on his knees, steeples his fingers, and bathes me in his attention.
âTell me more about this game.â
My eyes slide unwillingly to him. His own gleam with quiet enjoyment, and, suddenly, I remember the time I picked up
at the library. There was this whole section about Great Whites, and how they can detect heartbeats in the water. He can hear mine thumping in fear and he it.
Despite finding myself in the bottom of a pit without a ladder, my pride flares up like a nasty rash. I steel my jaw and rise to my feet. Without breaking eye contact, I slip off my coat again, and this time, I actually his gaze warm the length of my body. It rolls from the skinny straps on my shoulders to the dip of my hip, down the length of my exposed right leg, and comes to a stop at my Doc Marten boot. Every inch he absorbs lays another brick of confidence in my core. And a fluttering feeling in my stomach, but Iâm trying to ignore that.
Heâs just a man, for Christâs sake. Sure, a man with an infamous last name and surrounded by bodyguards who might chop me up and stuff me into my own suitcase, but, nevertheless, a man. And under the surface, they are all the fucking same.
I lean against the bar and run my necklace up and down its chain.
Iâm going for my least seedy tactic and hoping for the best.
âItâs less of a game, and more of aâ¦
â
Dan lays two drinks on the table. Oneâs a whiskey, the other is bright yellow and in a cocktail glass. I glare at the glazed cherry and pink curly straw. âChanged your drink?â
âChanged yours. Lemon drop martinis are less of a choking hazard.â
âDelightful,â I retort dryly. I couldnât care less about the drink. Besides, I have a rightful suspicion that if I take so much as a sip, thereâs a good chance Iâll wake up chained to a radiator somewhere dark and damp.
âA quiz. Tell me more.â
âFive questions. If you answer any of them wrong, I get your watch.â
He cocks a brow. Smirks in a way Iâve already grown to hate. âAnd if I get them right?â
âYou wonât.â
A gruff little laugh escapes his lips, and as he rubs his large hands together, his diamond dice cufflinks taunt me.
âYouâre a confident little thing.â
A shiver of displeasure ripples down my spine.
falls into the same category as and Patronizing expressions used by men to knock women down a few pegs.
It makes me want to hit his pockets as hard as I can.
âLetâs begin.â He is, of course, confident.
âYou donât want to hear the catch?â
âThereâs a catch?â
âThereâs always a catch,â I say smoothly, ignoring the way his voice darkens a shade. âNone of my five questions are trick questions. In fact, the answer to each is very simple. However, the catch is that you must answer each question If you answer correctly, you lose, and I get that lovely timepiece on your wrist.â I slide my hand out into the gap between us. âItâd look nice on me; donât you think?â
He regards my arm with mild disinterest, then glances up at me. Impatience flickers like flames in his irises. âFine.â
âHave you played this game before?â
His drink is halfway to his lips when he stills. âIt wouldnât be smart of you to take me for a fool, darling.â
A shiver rolls through me. âWe havenât started yet. You can answer truthfully.â
He thinks for a moment. His sip turns into a gulp, then he sets his glass on the bar. âThen no, I havenât.â
A heady rush coasts over my skin, a blend of excitement and danger.
âQuestion one. Where are we right now?â
He hesitates. âThe moon.â
âQuestion two. What color is my hair?â
His gaze skims up to my messy top-knot. His throat bobs and he mutters something that barely leaves his lips.
But before I can put weight to it, he bites out an answer. âBlue.â
âAnd the color of hair?â
âBlond.â
âFuck, youâre good at this,â I mutter, tucking a stray hair behind my ear.
âIâm good at most things.â
The husky insinuation in his tone makes my pulse stop for a second. Something warm grazes my knee, and when I look down, I realize itâs his own.
Ignoring the heat rising in my face, I continue. âOkay, how many questions have I asked you?â
He strums a thick finger against the bar at a rate three times slower than my heartbeat. He cuts a knuckle along the length of his cheekbone before saying with finality, âTwelve.â
I exhale so hard the stray hairs framing my face flutter. âShit,â I mutter under my breath, scanning the room.
Raphael regards me with quiet glee. He picks up his tumbler, swirls the liquid around with a slow roll of his wrist. âFeeling the heat?â
âYeah, because youâre a fucking cheat,â I snap back.
The swirling stops. âIâm sorry?â
By the chill threading through his words, I know replying with wouldnât be the smartest decision. âYou heard. Youâre a cheat.â
He sets the glass down. âSay it again,â he says softly, yet his gaze is anything but soft.
I fight the urge to apologize, even if itâs just to relieve the tension building up under my rib cage, but this only works if I double down. âI youâre a cheat. A liar, too.â
His jaw muscle spasms. âA liar.â
âUh-huh. You told me you havenât played this game before, but you have, havenât you?â
âI already told you I havenât.â
A beat passes. It turns into two. We stare at each other as thick and sticky realization trickles into the small gap between us.
That was my fifth question.
I wonder if he can hear the pulse thumping against my temples, or the ragged edge to my breathing. If he does, the hard planes of his face donât show it.
I winning. The feeling of getting one over on a mark is as addictive as any drug. But tonight, my high is snatched away by the feeling of the walls closing in. When I look up, I realize with mounting horror that itâs not the walls but Raphaelâs security team forming a slow, moving circle around us.
Oh, shit.
But then Raphael raises his hand. Itâs such a subtle move, I wouldnât have noticed it if it werenât for the glint of his citrine ring, but it brings his entire team to an immediate stop.
âYou tricked me,â he says simply.
âI didnât. I asked you before we started if youâd played the game before, and you saidââ
âNo,â he finishes thoughtfully.
His silence screams. My triumph I regard his inscrutable expression with caution as he drains his drink and rubs his thumb over his bottom lip. He rests his forearm on the bar.
For the shortest of seconds, I think maybe, I might have gotten away with it. But thenâ
âDan, pass me the hammer.â
He says it so impassively. Like heâs merely asked for the time, not because he has anywhere to be, but simply for the sake of making conversation.
My blood flash-freezes. âWhat? Why?â
He ignores me. Dan offers me a look halfway between an apology and an then bends behind the bar and comes back with a small hammer, the type that smashes up ice.
Or kneecaps.
I donât wait to find out.
Fueled by self-preservation and adrenaline, I combine the two tasks of pulling on my coat and walking backward toward the stairs. The room is a haze of amber, heat, and fear; everything blurry apart from the hammer and the large hand curled around its handle.
My heels hit the bottom step, but this time, no strong hand shoots out from the darkness to stop me from falling. When I land on my backside, the impact reverberates up my spine, sheer terror chasing after it.
Raphaelâs cousinâs parting words to me ring in my ears as black warmth ghosts over my chest. Itâs a shadow, from which a steel claw, glossy watch face, and a citrine ring glint.
âPlease,â I whisper into the darkness. The last time I said with such desperation was when I was ten, in the alleyway behind the Visconti Grand Casino. It didnât stop the hands coming down on me then, and it doesnât now.
A rough palm with a soft touch comes down on my thigh. The silky fabric of my dress falls away at the deep split, and instantly, my stomach drops to my boots.
Fear runs into fury, blazing hot and dangerous.
But it all happens so fast. I grit my teeth, squeeze my eyes shut, and grip the four-leaf clover around my neck as the hammer comes down to the left of me.
No pain. No broken bones. I pop a lid and look down at my side slit, and white-hot embarrassment immediately floods my bloodstream.
A black security tag. It lies in smashed, plastic shards next to my quivering thigh. I didnât realize this dress had one, but of course it did. Thatâs why the fucking alarm went off as I left the store.
It takes me three long seconds to remember to breathe. I draw in a lungful of air, and when I slide my eyes up to meet Raphaelâs, I let it out in an angry exhale.
Humor sparkles behind his gaze, like heâs just heard a joke and heâs looking right at the punchline. âYou got lucky.â
âYeah?â I snap back.
âMm. Sometimes they put ink in those things.â
I glare at him. Heâs a cool drink of water to my burning inferno. A calm, green sea to my shaking storm.
I fucking him.
Before I have the semblance to bite back, he sticks out a hand and hauls me to my feet. My legs are trembling from leftover adrenaline. Without breaking eye contact, he hands the hammer to the nearest guard and unbuckles his watch in one, swift motion.
He leans forward, just close enough to reach into the pocket of my coat, and slips the Breitling inside of it. It falls like a dead weight to the bottom.
âLook after it.â Something beautifully melancholic passes through his gaze, and despite my wanting to grab that hammer from his guard and crack him over the head with it, his expression echoes in the hollow chambers of my chest.
Itâs gone in the bat of a dark eyelash, replaced by that ever-present amusement.
A sassy remark is out of my mouth before I can stop it. Despite having scored one of the highest paydays of my life, I hate feeling like a man has got one over on me. It must be a knee-jerk reaction to level the playing field.
âWant to play again?â I ask with all the nonchalance I can muster. âI kind of like the look of that ring on your finger.â
He smiles tightly. âIâd rather shit in my hands and clap.â
Iâd laugh at his reference to my earlier crude remark, if I werenât halfway to a heart attack. Yeah, I think Iâve pushed my luck to the limit tonight. A heavy beat passes, then he jerks his chin to the stairs behind me. âGo.â
A soft, simple command, and one Iâm more than happy to submit to. I snatch up my belongings and jog up the stairs, trying to ignore the gaze burning the nape of my neck.
It feels like a lifetime ago that I stood in this entryway, hiding from a pissed-off store clerk. Itâs crazy that Iâd thought itâd be the most drama Iâd encounter tonight.
The sour-faced guard watches me until I reach the door, then his gruff voice coasts over my shoulders. âYou have no idea how lucky you are.â
I pause with my hand on the doorknob. Suddenly, the four-leaf clover around my neck weighs more than the six-figure timepiece in my pocket.
I huff out a bitter laugh.
âTrust me, itâs who has no idea.â