Liliana
Aria called me thirty minutes after my call with Romero, trying to talk me out of my plan to marry Benito. But she was already fighting with Luca because of me. I wouldnât allow her to really put her marriage at risk for my own selfish reasons. I would marry Benito and try to make the best out of it.
The next few weeks passed in a blur of wedding dress shopping with Valentina, choosing flowers and the menu, calling important guests to invite them personally. I only saw Benito on two occasions and there wasnât time for more than a few exchanged words and a kiss on the cheek. That and the fact that I was too busy to be worried, I almost managed to forget that I was actually preparing my wedding to a man I could hardly stand. But reality set in on the day of Fatherâs wedding to Maria. He hadnât talked to me since Iâd told him I wasnât a virgin, except on the few occasions when we had to pretend for Benito or other people.
While Gianna and Matteo would arrive later to attend my wedding only, Aria and Luca were also invited to Fatherâs feast of course, and that meant Romero was with them. Iâd hoped heâd decide to stay in New York, not because I didnât want to see him but because I was scared of facing him, of being confronted with what I was losing.
Luckily, they were all coming directly to church because their plane arrived so late; that meant there was a chance of me being able to avoid an encounter with Romero.
I sat in the front row, Benito beside me. He didnât touch me in any way, thank God, because it would have been improper before our marriage, but every time Aria or Gianna looked my way I felt like I was doing something indecent by sitting next to a man I didnât even want to marry.
I wasnât sure where Romero was sitting. Since he wasnât family, probably somewhere in the back of the church. After the service we headed toward the hotel where the wedding celebration would take place. I managed to get through dinner without seeing Romero, but later into the evening when I was dancing with Benito I spotted him at the other end of the room. He was watching me. Suddenly the other dancers around me faded into the background. Shame washed over me. I wanted to push Benito away. I wanted to cross the room and fling myself at Romero, wanted to tell him that I needed him. I had to look away. When the song ended, I excused myself and quickly left the dance floor. I hurried toward the exit. I needed to get away from this for a moment before I lost it.
Once the door closed after me and I found myself in the hallway of the hotel, I could breathe easier. I didnât stop though. I didnât want to come across guests returning from the bathroom or heading in that direction. I wanted to be alone.
I turned two corners before I stopped and leaned against the wall, my chest heaving. In two days weâd be celebrating my wedding. Panic flooded me. I squeezed my eyes shut.
Soft footfalls made me turn and my gaze fell on Romero. He stood a few feet from me, watching me with an expression that felt like a stab to the heart. Despite everything Iâd gone through and despite my best intention to mute my feelings for him, they seemed louder than ever. Romero looked irresistible in his dark suite.
âWhat are you doing here?â I whispered.
âI hated seeing you with him. Itâs wrong and you know it.â
I did. Every fiber in my being fought Benitoâs closeness, but I couldnât tell Romero that.
He took a step closer to me, his dark eyes burning into my own.
âWe shouldnât be here alone,â I said feebly, but I wasnât trying to leave. I didnât want to.
He took another step closer, every move so lithe and graceful, and yet dangerous. I wanted to fly into his arms. I wanted to do more than that. I stayed where I was. Romero bridged the remaining distance between us and braced one arm above my head, his gaze hungry and possessive.
âDo you want me to leave?â
Say âYesâ. If Father found us here, heâd kill Romero on the spot, and as distracted as Romero was at the moment, my father might actually succeed.
I released a shuddering breath. Romero bent down and kissed me, and then I was lost. I raked my hands through his hair and down his back. He kissed me harder. His hands cupped my butt and then he lifted me up. I wrapped my legs around his waist, so the skirt of my cocktail dress rode up but I didnât care. Romeroâs erection was hot against my opening despite the fabric of my panties and of his pants between us. I ground myself against him desperately. I was already so aroused. Iâd missed this. Iâd missed him.
I knew someone might come down this corridor and find us, but I couldnât stop. Romero pressed me against the wall and held me with only one arm. His other hand cupped my breast through my dress, making me moan into his mouth and my nipples harden. Romero groaned. He thrust against me, rubbing his erection against my panty-clad heat.
âI need you,â I gasped against his mouth. Romero stroked his palm down my side, then slipped it between my legs and pushed a finger under the fabric of my panties. He found me wet and aching. I shivered at the feel of his touch.
âFuck. You are so wet, Lily.â He pushed a finger into me and I arched off the wall with a gasp. Only he had that effect one me.
He removed his finger again and opened his zipper. My core tightened with anticipation and need. I heard the rip of a condom package and then his tip pressed against my opening and he started to slide into me. My walls yielded to his hot length until heâd sheathed himself completely in me. We peered into each otherâs eyes. This felt so right. Why did it have to feel so right?
âYou feel so fucking good, Lily. And so fucking tight, good God.â
Our lips found each other again. It had been too long. Romero thrust into me, driving me higher up against the wall. I moaned when he hit a spot deep inside of me. âWe have to be quiet,â he murmured in a low voice, then his mouth swallowed my next sound. I wrapped my arms even tighter around his neck. It felt like we were one, inseparable.
I dug my heels into his butt, driving him deeper into me. Pleasure surged through me and I came apart. Romero kept pounding into me until his own orgasm hit him. We clung to each other, still united. I kissed the side of his neck. His familiar scent flooded my nose and I closed my eyes. I wanted to stay like this forever.
Distant sound of laughter dragged me back into the realm of reality. Romero pulled out of me. I loosened my hold on him and let my legs slide down until my feet hit the ground. I couldnât even look up at him as I straightened my skirt. Romero threw the condom into a nearby bin before he returned to me. Neither of us said anything. From the corner of my eye, I saw him reaching for my cheek. I backed away. Bracing myself, I lifted my gaze. âThis was a mistake,â I whispered.
Shock crossed Romeroâs face, then it became emotionless. âA mistake.â
âIâm going to marry Benito soon. We canât do this again.â
Romero gave a terse nod, then he turned on his heel and walked off. I had to resist the urge to run after him. I waited a couple more minutes before I headed toward the restroom. I needed to clean up before I returned to the party or people would realize something had happened. To my relief, there was no one in the restroom when I stepped in. I checked my reflection. My hair was all over the place and my make-up needed touching up. Sweat trickled down my back. But worse than that was the telltale prickling in my eyes. I couldnât cry now. That would ruin everything. I took a few deep breaths through my nose before I started to redo my make-up. When I left the restroom twenty minutes later, I looked like nothing had happened, but my insides were twisting. Iâd thought Iâd made peace with my marriage to Benito, had hoped my feelings for Romero had lessened, but now I realized that was far from being true.
The moment I stepped onto the dance floor, Luca was there and asked me for a dance. I knew he wanted more than that. He steered us toward a part of the dance floor where there werenât as many dancers before he started to talk quietly. âYou are still going through with this marriage? You and Romero were gone for a while.â
âYes. I will marry Benito, donât worry,â I said tiredly. I couldnât even blame Luca for being so insensitive. Heâd invited me into his home and taken care of me, and Iâd paid him back by making one of soldiers break his oath.
âYou donât have to stay married for him forever,â Luca said casually.
âFather would never agree to a divorce.â Father would kill me before that ever happened.
âThere are other ways out of a marriage than divorce. Sometimes people die.â
âHeâs not that old.â
Luca cocked an eyebrow. âSometimes people die anyway.â
Was he really suggesting that I should kill Benito? âWhy canât he die before my wedding?â
âThat would look suspicious. Wait a few months. The time will pass quickly, trust me.â
I wanted to believe him but months sharing a bed with Benito, of having him inside of me like Romero had just been sounded like hell.
âRomero wonât want me anymore then.â
Luca remained silent. He knew it to be true. Why would Romero still want me after Iâd spent months sleeping with another guy? I was already disgusted by the thought, how much worse would it be for him? âThere are good men in the Outfit too. Youâll find new happiness. Youâre doing the right thing by marrying Benito. Youâre preventing war and youâre protecting Romero from himself. Thatâs a brave thing to do.â
I nodded, but I wanted to cry. Luca and I returned to our table. Aria tried to talk to me again but she gave up when I barely said anything. I needed to survive this day somehow and then my wedding, and the months thereafter, and then maybe Iâd get another chance at happiness. I searched the room until my eyes settled on Romero. He was pointedly not looking at me. I loved him, loved him so much it hurt. I knew there would be no happiness for me without him.
***
Aria and Gianna helped me with my dress. It was white of course, with a veil that trailed after me. I wore my hair open because Benito had wanted me to.
âYou look beautiful,â Aria said from behind me.
I checked my reflection but I could only see the look of utter despair in my eyes. Iâd need the veil to hide if from the world. Gianna and Aria didnât know about my last conversation with Father, and it was better that way. If they knew how much heâd scared me, theyâd take me away despite the risk for their own lives.
âThis is crap,â Gianna muttered. She touched my shoulder. âLily get the hell away from here. Let us help you. Whatâs the use of being married to the Capo and the Consigliere of the Famiglia if we canât force them to start a war for our little sister? Youâre going to be miserable.â
âLuca said I could get rid of Benito in a few months when it wonât look suspicious anymore.â
Gianna snorted. âOh sure, and what until then? My God, could Luca be any more of a jerk?â
Aria didnât say anything, which was a sign in itself. She usually always tried to defend Luca.
âAre you and Luca still fighting?â I asked.
She shrugged. âI wouldnât call it fighting. Weâre basically ignoring each other. Heâs angry at me for keeping you and Romero a secret from him, and Iâm mad at him for making you marry Brasci.â
âHe isnât making me, Aria. Father is. Lucaâs acting like a Capo should. Iâm not his responsibility but the Famiglia is.â
âGood God, Romero has really rubbed off on you. Please tell me you donât really believe what you just said,â Gianna said.
âI wonât have you all risk everything for me.â
Gianna touched her forehead in exasperation. âWe want to risk it for you. But you have to let us.â
Even if I said âyesâ now, what could they do? Both Luca and Matteo wouldnât help us, not when they were surrounded by Outfit soldiers. This would be suicide. And Romero? He would do it without hesitation and get himself killed. Fatherâs words flash in my mind again. No, I had to go through with this. It was the only option.
Someone knocked and a moment later Maria poked her head in. She was one of my bridesmaids, even though we still werenât talking much. âYou need to come out now.â
She disappeared before I had time to say something.
âI canât believe Father is married to her,â Gianna said. âI donât like her but I still feel sorry for her. Father is a bastard.â
I barely listened. My vision was turning gray. Fear filled my bloodstream, made me want to bolt. But I held my head high and lowered my veil over my face. âWe should go now.â
âLily,â Aria began but I didnât give her the time to finish whatever she wanted to say. I hurried toward the door and opened it, startled to find Father right in front of it. I hadnât expected him to wait for me here. I knew heâd lead me to the altar but fathers usually waited in the ante-room. Maybe heâd worried Iâd run off in the last minute.
âThere you are. Hurry,â he said. He slanted a hard look at Gianna when she and Aria walked by but didnât say anything. He held out his arm for me. An image of him with Maria popped into my head and I wanted to throw up. I put my hand on his forearm and let him lead me toward the main part of the church, even though every fiber of my being wanted to get away from him. Inside the church music was already playing. Before we entered, Father leaned down to me. âYou better convince Benito youâre a virgin or heâll beat you to death, and if he doesnât I will.â He didnât wait for my reply. We went through the double doors and every pair of eyes turned toward us.
My feet felt like lead as I walked toward the altar. Benito waited for me at the end of it, a proud grin on his face, as if he could finally present his catch to everyone. Despite the risk, my eyes searched the crowd until they settled on Romero. He leaned against the wall on the right, an unreadable expression on his face. I tried to catch his gaze, even though it would have made this walk even harder but Romero didnât even glance my way. He was completely focused on Aria, playing the part as her bodyguard.
I returned my attention to the front, hoping no one had noticed the detour my gaze had taken.
In the spot where my mother should have been was Maria, hunched shoulders, pale skin, sad eyes; maybe she thought nobody was looking because this was the first time she hadnât put on a brave face. This was a taste of what I would look like soon enough. I peered up at Father. He on the other hand seemed rejuvenated, as if the marriage to a barely twenty-year old had allowed him to drop a few of his own years. Didnât he miss Mother at all? She should have been at his side for my wedding. My eyes sought Romero again. I couldnât seem to stop. And Romero should have been the one waiting at the altar for me. We reached the end of the aisle and Father handed me over to Benito. Old-man fingers curled around my hand, sweaty and too firm. Father lifted my veil and for a moment I was worried my disgust and unhappiness were plain as day but from the look on Benitoâs face, he didnât seem to notice or care. I didnât listen to the priest as he started his sermon. It took everything I had to stop myself from peering over my shoulder, seeking out Romero one more time.
While the priest and the gathered guests waited for my âI doâ, I considered saying ânoâ for a brief moment. This was my last chance, the last exit before I was forever stuck on a highway to unhappiness, or at least until I figured out a way to get rid of my husband. Was I even capable of something like that? I couldnât even smash a fly when it bothered me.
Just say ânoâ. I wondered how people would react if I refused to marry Benito?
Benito would be furious, and so would Father. But my sisters and Romero, they would understand, would probably fight everyone else to protect me. Benito cleared his throat beside me and I realized how long Iâd been saying nothing. I quickly said what everyone expected even when the words tasted like acid. âYes, I do.â
âYou may kiss the bride.â
Benito grasped my waist. I stiffened but I didnât push him away. His rough lips pressed against mine. I could taste cigars. I pulled my head away and turned to our guests with a forced smile. Benito shot me a disapproving look but I ignored him. If he knew how much restraint it had taken not to shove him away, he wouldnât be mad at me for ending our kiss a bit too soon.
Taking my hand, he steered me down the aisle. My eyes darted toward Romero but he was gone. I searched the entire church, not finding him. He probably hated me now that heâd seen me kiss Benito and didnât want anything to do with me. Would I ever see him again?
Romero
I should have never come to Chicago. Watching Lily stride down the aisle toward Benito, I felt like someone was squashing my heart under a boot. I wanted nothing more than to stick my knife into Benitoâs eye very slowly, see the light leave him, hear his last labored breath. I wanted to skin him alive, wanted to give him more pain than any man had ever endured.
I forced my eyes away from Lily and focused on Aria as I was supposed to do. She looked back at me and gave me an understanding smile. I didnât react. I shut off my emotions like Iâd learned to do in the first few years after my initiation when seeing people get killed or tortured still bothered me.
âYou may kiss the bride.â
My eyes shot toward the front of the church where Benito fucking Brasci had put his hands on Lilyâs waist and was practically dragging her toward his body. I saw red. I wanted to kill him. I pushed away from the wall, turned around and walked out of the church. I didnât run like I wanted. I moved slowly, as if nothing was wrong. Fuck, what a fucking lie. Everything was wrong. The woman that was supposed to be mine had just married some old bastard.
I headed straight toward our rental car. Iâd wait there until it was time to drive to Brasciâs mansion for the feast.
***
Luca hardly left my fucking side at the wedding party. He probably worried I was going to lose my shit on everyone. He wasnât wrong. Every time I glanced toward Lily and Benito, something snapped in my brain. I couldnât stop imagining pulling my gun and putting a bullet in Benitoâs head, and then one in Scuderiâs head for good measure. If I was lucky, they wouldnât stop me quick enough.
Aria came toward me after dinner. I wasnât sure if I could take her pity, but I wasnât going to send her away. She was only trying to be kind. âYou donât have to stay, you know? Luca is here for my protection. This must be hard for you. Why donât you go ahead and find yourself a hotel? Iâm sure you donât want to spend the night under the same roof with Benito.â
Tonight. So far Iâd managed not to think about the wedding night too much. âNo. Iâm fine. I can handle this.â
Aria hesitated as if she wanted to say more but then she headed back to Luca.
When the party drew to an end, I could feel myself getting more and more agitated. And then what Iâd been dreading happened. Benito and Lily rose from their chairs to head to the master bedroom for their first night together. A crowd followed them, cheering and making suggestions of what should happen tonight. My pulse quickened and my fingers longed to reach beneath my vest.
I trailed after them, though I knew it was the last thing I should do. I had always prided myself on my control but I could feel it trickling through my fingers.
I knew Iâd said to Lily that I would accept her marriage. She had told me she didnât want me. As a soldier of the New York Famiglia it was my duty to put them first. Wanting Lily could mean war. No, it would lead to fucking war. Dante Cavallaro was a calculating man but his soldiers had been waiting for a chance to tear into us again. Iâd seen it in many of their eyes today. Things between us had gone steeply downhill in the past few years. The honeymoon phase of our union had waned off quickly after Lucaâs and Ariaâs wedding, and now this was a marriage of convenience, a marriage both the Famiglia and the Outfit wanted out of. The smallest infraction would be enough to blow up everything.
Without realizing it Iâd followed the other guests into the lobby. I spotted Lilyâs dark blond locks at the top of the steps, next to Benitoâs bald head, and a crowd of other men around them. And then my feet started moving, my hand going for my gun, my temples pounding with anger. I had to push through the crowd, and ignored the mumbles of protest. I couldnât let that fucker Benito have her. Lily was mine, and would always be mine. If that meant a fucking war, then so be it. Iâd spend until the end of my days hunting Russians, and Taiwanese and Outfit bastards if that meant I could keep her.
I sped up and then Luca was suddenly in front of me. I ground to a halt, breathing hard. I had half a mind to punch him, but I fought the urge. If I made a scene surrounded by so many people, I could screw up everything. Luca grabbed me by the shoulder and steered me into an empty corridor. He pushed me against the wall, making my ears ring, then he released me.
âGoddammit!â He snarled and gripped my shoulder again. âSheâs not yours. Sheâs a married woman now.â
âShe never wanted any of this,â I said harshly and shook Lucaâs hand off. âIt should have been me next to her at the altar.â
âBut it wasnât. Itâs too late Romero. This is Chicago. We wonât start a fucking war because you canât keep it in your pants.â
I got straight into his face. âThis is much more than that and you know it.â
âI donât care, Romero. You watched Liliana walk down that aisle and now you have to accept the consequences. She did her duty and so should you. Go to your room and get some sleep. Donât do anything stupid.â
Luca was Capo. It was his job to look out for the best of the Famiglia, but right then I wanted to kill him. Iâd never wanted to kill my Capo. âYes, Boss.â
Luca grabbed my arm. âI mean it. This is a direct order. I wonât have war over this. Iâve warned you about how this would end a long time ago, but you didnât listen.â
âI wonât do anything,â I gritted out. Even I wasnât sure if it was the truth, or if I was lying. I hadnât made up my mind yet.