Having dinner with Ava is the highlight of my day.
Thereâs something about coming home to a shy smile and a homemade meal, sitting down at the table with her, and just talking about regular shit. I donât have to talk about the hits I approved or ordered, the guns that arrived at the warehouse, or how much the Playground made overnight.
We have an unspoken rule that, when weâre together at home, I can go back to being Lincolnâto being Avaâs Linkâwhile leaving Devil and all that poor bastardâs responsibilities and dark reputation at the door.
Do I know that Iâm fooling myself?
Of course I do. I canât not be Devil any more than I can go back in time and return to being the boy that Ava first fell in love with. But can I do whatever it takes to make my wife fall in love with me again?
Fuck if I know, but Iâm going to try.
I bring her flowers. I ask her about her day, and she lies about how much she doesnât hate being trapped in the penthouse. I promise to take her out before, inevitably, my business phone rings and I have to grab another soldier to watch over her while I go out to take care of thingsâ¦
Maybe itâs not what I thought married life would be like when I fantasized about marrying Ava Monroe when I was seventeen, but weâre still working things out. Itâs only been a month, and while Iâm damn sure to spend every night in bed with my wife, everythingâs still new for both of us. I still lose my temper when I think about that stupid bastard who laid his hands on my Ava. Add that to how Burns keeps me updated on how the âsearchâ for âmissing personâ Joseph Maglione is goingâstrong-armed by a member of the Libellula Family, the cop confirmsâand I canât risk letting her step foot out of the penthouse again unless Iâm right there at her side.
When weâre sitting in the dining room, sharing a meal, chatting about stupid shit like a real couple, I can fool myself into thinking that she chose me. That she wanted me as her husband instead of being forced into saying âI doâ with me.
Iâm getting pretty good at it, and then reality comes crashing down on ordinary Tuesday night while weâre eating the steak and mashed potatoes that Mona served for dinner.
Iâm almost done with my meal when I notice that Ava has spent more time moving the food around her plate than eating it.
âWhatâs wrong, pet? Youâve been quiet all night.â
As though sheâs trying desperately to find some normalcy in our ârelationshipâ, Ava acts like the girl I remember whenever weâre alone. Sheâs chatty and smart, witty and thoughtful, silly and sweet. Sheâs mine, and I spend every minute away from her counting down the seconds until I can tuck a stray strand behind her ear as she tells me another story about her last group of first-graders.
Iâm head over heels for a teacher. Part of me is so fucking proud that she lived out her dreams, that she didnât let me going off the rails the way I did throw her off her path. The other sideâthe darker side thatâs Devilâwonders how sheâs going to react when I eventually tell her that she wonât be going back to Springfield Elementary in September.
I couldnât risk it. Set aside how a school is a dangerous place these days because of fuckers with no brains and guns that I never wouldâve passed into their hands. Sooner or later, all of Springfrield is going to know that sheâs the Devilâs bride. It wonât be safe for her out there.
I donât know if itâs safe for her in here, either, but thatâs where sheâs going to stay.
Tonight, somethingâs on her mind. I wonder if itâs because sheâs figured that out, but then she looks up from her barely-touched food and says, âDid you mean it?â
âMean what?â
âWhen you said that this was a real marriage⦠did you mean it?â
I drop my fork to my plate. âWhy are you asking me that?â
I thought we got this shit out of the way. From the moment I claimed her in the judgeâs bathroom, she was mine, and there was no going back. For Godâs sake, she has my name wrapped around her fingerâjust like she has me wrapped around her fingerâand she still doubts that Iâm dead-fucking-serious about spending the rest of my life with her?
What else do I have to do to prove that sheâs mine?
âItâs nothing,â she says, pushing her potatoes around the plate.
The fuck it is. âAva. Tell me.â
She exhales.
I grip the table, so tight my knuckles turn white.
Pretty green eyes flicker my way. âNo.â
Iâm glad she feels comfortable enough to deny the monster in her midst. I donât ever want Ava to fear me the same way the rest of Springfield does, and I thought I lost the silver of affection I garnered from her after I showed my true colors at the Playground.
But this is different. The whole conversation started because she canât shake the idea that our marriage is fake.
Iâll get her to see that it couldnât be any more real if itâs the death of meâor someone else.
âIf you donât tell me, Iâll get them to.â And they wonât like my ways of getting them to talk. âMona, too. If theyâre talking shit in front of my wife, I know she heard them.â
âNo,â yelps Ava. âShe stood up for me.â
Ah. âMona,â I call, lifting my voice so that my housekeeper can hear me. âCome here, please.â
âLink⦠itâs fine. I shouldnât have said anything.â
Yes. She should.
âYou will always tell me when something is bothering you,â I say firmly, waiting for Mona to bustle her way into the living room. âI want to know, especially if itâs something that I can fix.â
âYouâve done enough for meââ
âIâm your husband,â I remind her, hating how cold I sound as I say that. Itâs better than ragingâwhich part of me wants to doâbut not by much. âI will do everything I can for you.â
âLinkâ¦â
Iâve said what I had to about that. Turning as Mona appears in the doorway, I hold up my hand. She comes to a stop, a curious look on her weathered features.
âYou called for me, Mr. Lincoln?â
âYes. I was just talking to my wife and she mentioned that there might have been a few of my men not treating her with the respect she deserves. Now, we both know how sweet Ava is.â As Mona nods in agreement, I try to keep the predatorâs edge out of my grin as I add, âAnd we know what kind of man I am. So, please, as a favor to me⦠what did they say?â
Iâve known Mama Mona since I was four. Sheâs always treated me as her own, and when I found out she was being evicted from her shitty apartment through a landlordâs slimy loophole all because it was rent-controlled, I moved her in with me, giving her a job, and a second lease on life.
My mother kicked me out on my eighteenth birthday. Iâd stopped thinking of her as any kind of maternal figure long before she did. That was all Mona.
Sometimes I think she still has some idyllic idea of who Lincoln Crewes is. Deep down, she has to know how I built my wealth, but sheâs spent eight years pretending that she doesnât.
As she wrings her hand together, looking from me to Ava and back, Iâm sure sheâs weighing how much to tell me.
That right there is a big clue that Iâm not going to like it.
âMona. Please.â
Her bottom lip trembles. âOh, Mr. Lincoln. They think sheâs⦠I canât say it. It was so cruel.â
Cruel? âI still want to know.â
âWhore,â snaps my wife. âHappy? I heard one of them joke that you finally fell for one of the whores, okay? And they were looking right at me when I heard them talking about it.â She lets her own fork fall to her plate, covering her face with her hand. âIt was humiliating.â
âIâm so sorry, Mr. Lincoln. I sent them away, and I was going to tell youââ
âBut I told her not to,â Ava cuts in, speaking through the gaps in her fingers. âItâs not her fault they got the wrong idea about me.â She pauses, dropping her eyes to the table. âAbout us.â
No. Itâs not Monaâs fault, is it?
Itâs mine.
Ice floods my veins. I havenât felt that sort of detachment since the fateful night when I hacked Skitteryâs head off of his neck, but it hits me now as I realize just how oblivious I was in my happiness.
So damn pleased that I maneuvered Ava into being my wife, I was blind to how some of the men were treating her. Just because they got their kicks, getting close to the girls at the club, somehow they got the idea that Ava was one of them.
Itâs my fucking fault. I didnât make it clear enough after the altercation at the club. Those in my inner circleâmy underboss, my counselorsâthey know sheâs my wife. The soldiers just know sheâs to be protected.
Lord knows rumors spread, too. I beat the shit out of a wallet for trying to bring Ava upstairs, so why wouldnât some of the lower-ranked syndicate members get the idea that she was another one of the sex workers at the Playground.
But for her to hear them⦠for her to think thatâs what she is to me⦠for my Ava to even doubt for one second that sheâs the most important person in this world to me?
That sheâs my goddamn wife?
Itâs my fucking faultâbut Iâll fix it. Iâll find out from Mona who exactly spoke about my wife like that in her hearing, and Iâll take care of them.
And thatâs not all.
What do I have to prove that sheâs mine?
Show those who are putting doubts in my Avaâs pretty little head that Iâm hers.