So, here's chapter 2 of If The Seas Catch Fire. The book is available for pre-order, and releases January 3rd.
Chapter 2
Every step Dom took was agony. Thank God this kid
had intervened when he did. Left to their own devices, Floresta and Mandanici may
or may not have killed him, but they sure would’ve done some more damage.
Clutching his side and holding his breath, Dom
stole a glance at the slight blond enigma walking beside him. He didn’t know
what to make of this kid. Not a fucking clue. He had to be around twenty-five,
give or take a year, and judging by his accent, he must’ve been a Russian
immigrant. There were a lot of those in Cape Swan. The way he was dressed—tight
red leather and not a lot of it—he was either a stripper or a hooker. Nobody in
this town dressed like that unless they were selling orgasms.
He obviously wasn’t a pussy. There was no telling
what he’d done to Mandanici and Floresta. Dom had been on the verge of blacking
out when the kid had shown up, and he’d only just been aware of the shot that
had apparently hobbled Mandanici. Then Floresta had knocked Dom to the ground, and
everything that happened after that was hazy at best. Next thing he remembered,
he was being guided out of the car and onto his feet, and why the fuck were
they down by the marina?
“Here.” The kid gestured at a bench beside a bus
stop. “Sit.”
Dom didn’t argue. With some help, he eased himself
down onto the hard bench, groaning as blinding pain ripped through him. “Fuck…”
“You really need to see—”
“I’ll be fine.” Dom moistened his lips, pausing to
gingerly tongue the sweet raw spot where a fist had apparently shoved the
tender flesh against his tooth. It had stopped bleeding as near as he could
tell. His mouth tasted metallic, so he couldn’t tell spit from blood anymore,
but the wound didn’t seem too severe. And he hadn’t lost or cracked any teeth,
so… He’d call it a win.
He lifted his head and blinked a few times, trying
to bring his eyes into focus. Whoa. If this kid was selling sex, he was in the
right line of work. He was slim and ripped, the contours of his muscles
standing out thanks to the harsh overhead light. The blanched light made his
bottle blond hair almost white but didn’t quite pick out the color of those
intense eyes. Or maybe it was just because Dom couldn’t focus his own enough to
tell if they were blue, or black, or… whatever. Piercing, that was for sure,
especially coupled with those sharp Slavic features.
Dom gingerly drew a breath. “You never told me
your name.”
“It doesn’t matter.”
“Who am I gonna tell? The cops?”
The kid glared down at him.
“You asked my
name,” Dom said.
“Yeah. I did. Anyway, you’ll be good here till
help shows up.”
Dom glanced at the phone in the stripper’s
hand—those gloves didn’t seem like part of his ensemble—then at him. “You
calling, or am I?”
“You are.” The stripper tossed him the phone. “I’m
out of here.”
Dom eyed him. “You’re pretty tough for a hooker.”
He bristled. “I’m not a hooker. I’m a stripper.”
Dom didn’t laugh—his ribs wouldn’t allow it
anyway, and he really didn’t want to piss off this kid till he had a better
idea what he was dealing with. “My mistake.” He gestured at the piece tucked into
the kid’s waistband. “Strippers always pack heat like that?”
The stripper looked at the gun as if he’d
forgotten he had it, and then shrugged. “This is a shit part of town. Everyone’s
armed.”
Dom glanced around. His vision was a little fuzzy
and doubling around the edges. He was up the road from the marina, that much he
knew. This area was all too familiar.
How the hell had he gotten here tonight? In the
trunk of one car and the backseat of another, that much he knew, but at the
beginning of the evening, he’d been clear on the other side of Cape Swan. He’d
been parked behind an upscale restaurant, palms sweating and stomach sick over
a date he didn’t want to be on, when the assholes got the drop on him. How long
ago had that been? Shit. He had no idea what had happened, or when, or where…
All he knew was that he was fucked up and he
needed to get out of here. He turned on the phone. It didn’t require a
passcode, fortunately, and thank God he’d committed a few key numbers to
memory. “Do you need me to get you a cab or something?”
He lifted his head, but the stripper was gone.
He scanned the deserted road as much as his sore
muscles and shitty vision would allow, but there was no sign of the guy. Not
even footsteps fading into the night.
They got
ninjas working as strippers in this town or something?
Well. Whatever. He was alone now.
He shifted his gaze back to the phone, gave his
eyes a second to focus, and entered a number. It rang several times, before
Biaggio, his uncle’s consigliere, picked up.
The sleepy,
irritated voice muttered, “Hello?”
“It’s Dom. I need help.”
He could almost hear the old man snapping to
attention. “What’s going on? Are you all right? Where are you?”
“I’m… down by the marina. Couple of blocks from
the gate. Banged up.”
“What? My God, what’s… Are you all right?”
“I’m… I think so? I just need to get out of here.”
“I’m on my way. Do I need to call Rojas?”
Dom knew damn well Biaggio was going to call the
family’s physician either way—better safe than sorry—but he still croaked,
“Yeah. Call him.”
Biaggio swore in Italian. “Where exactly are you?”
Dom gave him the intersection, and after they hung
up, he leaned back against the bench, but that only aggravated the bruises on
his back.
As his body ached and throbbed and threatened to
just fall apart, his mind reeled. He tried not to think about everything that had
happened tonight, tried not to pick apart exactly how the motherfuckers had
caught him with his guard down, but that was easier said than done. It was like
his brain had split into two pieces, and both sides were pulling him in
opposite directions. One wanted to focus solely on staying conscious and
watching for his ride. The other wanted to go back to the restaurant where his
evening had started and retrace his steps. Figure out exactly when things had
gone to shit. When he’d ceased to be meeting with Brigida Passantino, the woman
his uncle was pressuring him to marry, and when he’d suddenly been in serious
danger. And serious pain. And…here.
He rubbed his forehead, carefully avoiding the
goose egg swelling near his hair line. There’d be plenty of time to retrace
those steps when he got home. Biaggio had undoubtedly notified Uncle Corrado—no
one in the family got roughed up without the boss knowing about it. Corrado was
probably already pacing in his office, ready to grill Dom about what had
happened. Or more importantly, who
had happened. Who had dared to fuck with a boss’s nephew? Who was Corrado going
to order dead before sunrise?
Dom was pretty sure the guys who’d fucked him up
were dead already, though. The shouting and struggling in the trunk of the car
had ceased after a few small caliber gunshots. Assuming he hadn’t hallucinated
that part. Had he? No, he was pretty sure that had been real. Along with the
red leather clad stripper who’d pulled him out of the car and then vanished. Had
he been a hallucination?
Except Dom hadn’t gotten to his feet, into the
car, and out of it again on his own power. Someone had been there beside him—he
could still feel every tender spot the kid had touched while helping him up.
No, he’d definitely been real. And dangerous.
The back of Dom’s neck prickled. In his mind’s
eye, he saw the pistol in the stripper’s waistband, the way the kid had carried
it comfortably and naturally.
The gunshots echoed in Dom’s mind. There hadn’t
been anyone else around. No one else could have pulled the trigger. Which
meant…
No way.
But then, who else could have done it? For that
matter, it didn’t take a big guy like Dom to pull a trigger, though God knew
he’d pulled his fair share. A pistol made anyone, however slim and slight,
physically capable of killing. If Dom could cope with putting a bullet through
someone, he had no reason to believe that stripper couldn’t. And those ice cold
eyes hadn’t held a trace of fear, though Dom had hardly been a threat to anyone
by the time he could look at the kid’s face. Still, Dom was alive, Floresta and
Mandanici were dead, and…
And who the fuck was that kid?
* * *
It seemed like hours before the sleek black car
pulled up and stopped on the curb. Two doors opened. Stan, the driver, hurried
around the front as Biaggio, the white-haired consigliere, stepped out of the
car.
Biaggio’s eyes widened. “Domenico, what happened?
Who did this?”
“Couple of Raffaele Cusimano’s thugs. I’d know…
I’d know Michele Mandanici’s fucking face anywhere.” Dom held his breath as he
tried to stand.
“Easy, easy.” Stan took his arm and gently helped
him to his feet. “Sir, he’s bleeding and that looks like a hell of a bump on
his head. Don’t you think we should take him to the—”
“No,” Biaggio snapped. “Corrado’s waiting for him.
Dr. Rojas is on his way. He’ll there by the time we get back.”
Stan pursed his lips, but didn’t protest. As the
driver helped him into the car, Dom questioned whether Stan and the stripper
were right. Maybe he did need a hospital. But that would be for the doc to
determine, and Dom wasn’t going to the ER unless it was absolutely necessary.
Inside the car, Dom closed his eyes, trying in
vain to get comfortable on the luxurious leather seats.
Across from him, Biaggio was silent. Paternal
concern radiated off him—he had long been more of an adoptive father to Dom
than Corrado, and Dom doubted Biaggio would sleep tonight until Rojas gave Dom
a clean bill of health. While Corrado raged and plotted vengeance, Biaggio
would be wringing his hands about broken ribs and internal bleeding.
He said nothing, though. He undoubtedly had a
million questions, but Corrado would interrogate Dom as soon as the doctor had
determined he was all right. Anything Dom told Biaggio, he’d be repeating to
Corrado later, so there was no point in asking now.
Thank God for that. Talking hurt. Hell, breathing
hurt. Dom really wasn’t in the mood to say anything to anyone unless it
involved the words “morphine” and “now.”
All the way to Corrado’s house, Dom swam in and
out of darkness. He was exhausted. Completely drained. As if the adrenaline had
kept him going until the car arrived, and now he was collapsing. Like both of
the other car rides he’d taken tonight, this one was a blur of turns and stops
and starts until Biaggio quietly said, “We’re here.”
Dom opened his eyes as Stan eased to a stop in the
portico in front of Corrado’s mansion. Beyond the tinted windows, a handful of
people were waiting for him. Just four that he could see, and for that, Dom was
grateful. This kind of offense—two thugs kidnapping and beating a made man—certainly
warranted waking everyone in the family, but Corrado must’ve known Dom wouldn’t
be able to handle a crowd of angry Italians. Not until he’d had some pain pills,
some sleep, some coffee, and some more pain pills, sleep, and coffee.
Among the tiny cluster of people in the portico
were his uncle, of course, and Dr. Rojas, the physician who’d come any time Corrado
demanded it. Like most immigrants in town, the doc was owned by the family, and
he was at the beck and call of the Maisanos to show up whenever he was needed,
day or night, to treat anything from a child’s ear infection to a bullet wound,
all the while turning a blind eye to certain things.
Things like exactly why Corrado’s nephew-slash-adopted-son
was stumbling out of a limousine with blood all over him.
Rojas looked Dom up and down, his tanned face
lined with concern. “Rough night?”
“Rough night.” Dom swallowed. “You’ve got
something for pain, right?”
The doctor nodded, no humor registering in his
expression. “Of course. But first, I need to make sure none of your injuries
are serious.” The doc inclined his head. “If there’s anything internal or
broken, there’s nothing I can do here.”
“Then let’s hope there isn’t,” Dom said.
Rojas nodded. He probably hoped as much as Dom did
that this could be handled with a house call—nobody liked broaching the subject
of a hospital transfer with Corrado.
With Biaggio and the doctor at each elbow, Dom
shuffled up the portico’s marble stairs. Aunt Marcella had set up one of the
guest rooms on the first floor, and they guided him in there.
Getting his jacket and shirt off was excruciating,
but with the doc’s help, he was able to strip out of them.
“Sorry they woke you up,” Dom whispered.
“It’s all right,” Rojas ground out. “I got here as
soon as I could once I realized it was you.”
They exchanged glances, but let the subject drop
when Corrado appeared in the doorway. Wordlessly, Dr. Rojas examined Dom, poking
and prodding just right to make his vision turn white, Corrado hovered at the
edge of the room, arms folded and lips taut. Biaggio paced outside,
occasionally pausing to peer into the room.
Finally, the doctor gave Dom a couple of pills and
let him lie down. “I don’t see any signs of internal trauma beyond some
bruising. Only an X-ray will tell us for sure if any ribs are broken, but if
they are, the fractures are mild and there isn’t much to be done except wait
for them to heal.”
“What about his head?” Corrado asked. “That’s
quite a bruise.”
“The concussion appears to be mild. I’ll come back
in the morning and see how he is.” Dr. Rojas paused. “He can sleep, but check
on him every couple of hours.”
“Thank you, doctor.”
They continued talking for a moment, but Dom was
already starting to fade out. He had no idea if it was exhaustion or whatever
was in those pills, and he really didn’t care.
Corrado touched his arm. “Your cousin will come
tomorrow and bring you some fresh clothes.”
Dom nodded slowly. “Thanks.” He didn’t need to
tell his uncle he’d sworn off clothing forever. There was no way it would be
any less painful to dress than it had been to undress, and dressing meant
eventually undressing anyway, so he was going to be a nudist for the rest of
his life.
“Get some sleep, Domenico.” Corrado patted his arm
gently. “We’ll discuss what happened in the morning.”
And that was the last thing Dom heard before
everything went dark.
* * *
Though there’d only been a handful of people
waiting when Dom arrived in the middle of the night, the house was crawling
with them when he awoke the next day. That was what it sounded like, anyway.
From what Biaggio told him, every Maisano within a hundred-mile radius, not to
mention every lieutenant and soldier who wanted to stay in the boss’s good
graces, had flocked to the mansion the minute they’d heard.
Though Dom wanted nothing more than to inhale
painkillers and sleep until he was dead, he had no choice but to come out and
show his face. He needed to give visual confirmation that last night’s
“incident” hadn’t done any lasting damage, that he was still strong and on his
feet. The longer he took to recover, the more word would spread that Floresta
and Mandanici had brought him down a peg. A black eye and a cut lip were badges
of honor so long as the man wearing them still faced the world like he was
ready to take on an army. Image, image, image.
First things first, though—Dr. Rojas came by again
to check on him. The doc was bleary-eyed and unshaven, but still looked a hell
of a lot better than Dom felt.
“How are you doing?” Rojas asked as he checked
Dom’s ribs.
“I’ll feel a lot better once you stop—” He hissed.
“Fuck.”
“I’m not the one who beat you up.” Rojas pressed
his thumb against a particularly tender spot, turning Dom’s vision white.
“Don’t blame me.”
Dom tried to mutter about him being a son of a
bitch, but he couldn’t breathe.
Rojas finally finished and sat back in the chair
beside Dom’s bed. “You’re damn lucky they didn’t kill you.”
“Am I?”
They locked eyes, and Rojas sighed. Nothing needed
to be said. Rojas wasn’t much older than Dom, and his involvement with the family
had been about as voluntary as Dom’s. They’d surreptitiously had conversations
like this for years. Rojas was probably the only man on earth who knew Dom
would sell his soul to get the fuck out of the Maisano clan. The doc himself
felt the same way. He didn’t have a drop of Sicilian blood, but his father had
essentially sold him to the Maisanos. A desperate Colombian immigrant, the
senior Rojas had bargained with Corrado to send his eldest son to medical
school, on the condition that the newly minted doctor would, in addition to a
legitimate career, be the family’s personal physician. Of course, he’d
neglected to mention this to his son until the degree had been earned, at which
point Dr. Rojas was caught up in someone else’s deal with the devil.
In the past, when they were sure no one was around
to listen, Dom and Rojas had confessed how much they’d love to run away from
all of this. Leave Cape Swan. Change their names. Start over.
But others had tried, and they’d been found. Dom
had witnessed what Corrado did to, as he called them, apostates. Those screams
were lodged deep enough into his psyche to both remind him why he wanted to
leave and why he didn’t dare.
Rojas cleared his throat and stood. “I should get
going. I’ll let your uncle know you’re recovering nicely.” He glanced at the
door, and quietly added, “Unless you want me to tell him you’re in no condition
to meet with visitors?”
Dom groaned. Right. He had to go out and show his
face, didn’t he? And nothing short of being comatose in a body cast would be a
severe enough injury to make it acceptable to be bedridden. The message had to be clear that Floresta and
Mandanici hadn’t given him more than
a schoolyard beating. “No, I’d better do this.”
“You sure?” The doctor’s brow knitted. “Wouldn’t
take much to—”
“I know. But…” He shook his head. “I’ll be fine.
Thanks, though.”
“Don’t mention it.”
Rojas left so Dom could make himself presentable. As
promised, one of his cousins had brought him some clothes, and with the help of
some more pain pills, Dom was able to shower, shave, and dress himself. Then he
came out and followed the steady hum of voices toward the cavernous dining room
where Corrado regularly held court.
Outside the room, Biaggio stopped him. “How are
you feeling?” His brow creased, and the dark lines under his eyes suggested he
hadn’t slept at all. Guilt prodded at Dom—at Biaggio’s age, he couldn’t afford
to sacrifice rest.
“I’m fine. They just knocked me around a bit.”
Biaggio sighed with relief and smiled, gently
squeezing Dom’s arm. “Well, you must’ve had a guardian angel watching over
you.”
The red-clad stripper flashed through Dom’s mind,
and he suppressed a shiver. He didn’t tip his hand about the stripper. If he
did, Corrado would send every Maisano in town looking for him, and either the
kid would get roughed up until he told them everything he knew, or he’d coolly
take out anyone who hassled him. The thing was, Dom did want answers from the
kid, but he also owed him his life. He didn’t want to put a bull’s eye on his
back or get anyone else killed who got too close if the stripper turned out to
be a psychopath. He needed to find him and talk to him personally.
Yeah,
someone was watching over me last night, but “angel” isn’t the word I’d use.
“You’d better go inside.” Biaggio gestured at the
huge double doors to the dining room. “A lot of people are waiting to see if
you’re okay.”
Dom smiled thinly. They were waiting for Corrado
to see them waiting. But whatever.
Image, image, image.
The second he walked in the door, someone called
out, “There he is!”
Every head turned, and instantly, every made
Maisano descended on him, shaking his hand and—carefully—clapping his shoulder.
Such was the game they all played. The beaten had to show his face and prove he
was all right, and anyone who wanted to be on Corrado Maisano’s Christmas card
list had to show his face to make
sure the old boss knew he was concerned. Image, image, fucking image.
Aunt Marcella served everyone a massive lunch, and
afterward, having played their part as concerned members of the family, the men
left. Still in pain, still hazy from the pills, and now drowsy after eating,
Dom wanted nothing more than to go back to bed.
But just as duty had called the troops into
Corrado’s house, it called Dom into his uncle’s office.
Only Corrado’s innermost circle was invited to
this meeting. Biaggio, of course. And Corrado’s sons, Luciano and Felice. Like
everyone else, they’d all put on a show of strength and solidarity, laughing
and carrying on over wine and antipasto, but now they were quiet and serious.
Corrado leaned back in his big leather chair,
cradling a brandy glass between his fingers. “We need to discuss what happened
last night.”
Luciano folded his arms. “If word got out that Dom
was meeting with Passantino’s daughter, these goons might’ve been trying to
interfere.”
Corrado set his glass down. “Biaggio, any word on the
girl?”
The consigliere patted the air. “I spoke to
Passantino last night. His daughter is at home and is fine. They both give
Domenico their best.” With a faint laugh, he added, “She was pleased to know
she hadn’t really been stood up.”
Dom didn’t dare laugh. He wouldn’t be doing much
of that anyway until his ribs stopped feeling like they were on fire.
Corrado didn’t laugh either. “Well, once Domenico’s
back on his feet, the two of them can arrange another date. Maybe one with more
security.”
Can’t wait.
Dom shifted around, and at least everyone in the room was likely to blame his
grimace on the pain. As much as he’d been loath to meet with Brigida, this
wasn’t exactly how he’d wanted to get out of a blind date. Thank God no one had
laid a hand on her and she was all right. Initially irritated that she’d been
stood up, no doubt, but all right.
At least no one knew that the date had been the
reason the two assholes had gotten the drop on him in the first place. He’d
been nervous, almost sick to his stomach, and he hadn’t wanted to be there at
all. He’d only been there because his uncle insisted it was time for him to get
married, and a Passantino-Maisano marriage would be tremendously beneficial to
both families. On his way from his car to the restaurant, Dom had been so
distracted and queasy, Floresta and Mandanici had been able to get right up on
him and—
And here he was.
He had no doubt that his uncle was serious about
arranging something in the near future. Corrado and Passantino would
undoubtedly have them meeting up again as soon as Dom could move. And as soon
as he was presentable in public—nothing like a battered face to charm a lady.
Dom bit back a joke about this being a sign from
God that maybe he wasn’t ready to get married. Corrado was in no mood for jokes
right now. Not even to take the edge off. And as far as he was concerned, there
was nothing funny about his nephew pushing thirty-five without a gold band on
his finger.
“Doesn’t
look good, Domenico,” he’d lectured him again a few nights ago. “Doesn’t look good at all.”
“Maybe I
just haven’t found the right girl. People aren’t getting married so young
anymore.”
Corrado had shaken his head and waved his hand in
that dismissive way that meant the discussion was over. “You’re not most people. Image, my son.”
Image. Fuck image. Just one more thing to resent
about this life.
Corrado sat up a little, resting his arms on the
desk. “Domenico, I need you to think back to last night.”
“I’ve been thinking about it almost constantly.”
“Tell me again, everything you remember.”
Dom took a breath and told the story all over
again. When he was through, his uncle scowled.
“It doesn’t make any sense.” Corrado drummed his
fingers on the desk. “Either these idiots were too inept to kill you, or they
just wanted to shake you up.”
Dom gritted his teeth, reminding himself that
Corrado wasn’t actually angry or disappointed that they hadn’t finished the
job. He was only trying to sort out what all of this meant. Such was the mind
of a boss—a man in his position had to be this businesslike, so wrapped up in
the politics and deeper meanings of every move anyone made that everything came
down to numbers and messages instead of flesh and blood.
Corrado was quiet for a moment. “The men who
attacked you. Are you sure you saw their faces?”
“Yeah. Floresta and Mandanici.”
Corrado and Luciano exchanged uneasy glances.
Felice shifted his weight, watching his father and elder brother.
Luciano turned to Dom. “Are you sure it was Floresta and Mandanici?”
“Absolutely sure. Why?”
“Because their bodies were found last night by Cape
Swan PD.” Luciano locked eyes with Dom. “Two bullets apiece.” He tapped the
center of his forehead. “And one of them took one to the knee too. From the
gravel in the wound and the amount of blood he lost, it happened before they
were put in the back of the car.”
Dom shuddered.
“They were killed in the car,” his cousin went on.
“Somebody put them in the trunk, drove them down to the marina, and shot them
both.”
“The marina?” Corrado’s eyes lost focus, and then
his gaze slid toward Dom. “That’s not far from where Biaggio picked you up last
night.”
“I know.” Dom shifted, wincing when his ribs
protested. “And I remember getting out of a car, but not much else.”
Except that stripper. The blond stripper with a
gun. The eyes. The accent. The stone-cold demeanor that was intimidating
despite the guy’s small stature. Red leather wrapped around narrow hips and—
“We need more than that, goddammit.” Felice
fidgeted impatiently. “Someone’s trying to send a message if they’re offing
people that close to the marina. Or they’re trying to get cops down there to
sniff around.”
“If he’d wanted to get cops sniffing around,”
Corrado said, waving his hand, “he wouldn’t have taken them out in the parking
lot. He’d have left them on the marina.”
Luciano nodded, folding his arms. “Either way, I
think we need to increase security measures down there. We can’t take the risk
of someone interfering with supply lines or leading cops anywhere near the
merchandise.”
Corrado grunted. “Agreed.”
Dom resisted the urge to roll his eyes. Of course,
the concern was about supply lines and merchandise. Beating him up was well and
good as long as nobody got too close to the stream of cocaine and immigrants flowing
through Cape Swan via Maisano hands.
“But as for this guy who took out Floresta and
Mandanici,” Luciano said, “he had to have been a pro. He didn’t leave a thing
at the scene. No weapon. No witnesses. No fingerprints. Guy didn’t even leave
any footprints—they said the ground around the car had been wiped. Like he’d
used his foot to erase his prints until he got to the concrete.”
Dom drummed his fingers on his arm. “They’re going
to find my blood in the backseat of that car. I’m almost sure of it. Probably
the trunk, too.”
“Well, that’s your alibi,” Corrado said. “You were
in the trunk and backseat, so you weren’t the one driving. The only thing you
might be questioned about is the identity of the shooter.” He narrowed his eyes
a bit. “Do you remember anything else, Domenico? Anyone else who might’ve done this?”
Dom shook his head. “I blacked out. After that…
nothing.” That wasn’t entirely true, of course, and he didn’t like lying to his
uncle—never a wise thing to do—so he
added, “I remember someone else being there, but the details… it’s all a blur.”
Beside Corrado, Felice glanced back and forth from
his father to his brother, but he said nothing. Luciano swore under his breath.
Corrado sighed. “Well, in any case, the men who
did this to you are dead. When I find out who sent them, he’s dead too.”
“But we should also find out who the fuck killed them,” Felice said. “Are you just going
to let that slide? I mean, how do we know this guy’s on our side?”
“Because he didn’t kill me,” Dom said through his
teeth. “Trust me, he had ample opportunity.”
Felice eyed him. “So you did see the guy?”
Dom’s blood turned cold. He held his cousin’s
gaze. “I was on my knees and spitting blood while he was putting those boys in
the trunk. And someone helped me into
and out of the backseat. He even gave me a phone to call Corrado. If he’d
wanted me dead, I would be.”
Felice scowled, shifting in his chair.
Luciano pursed his lips. “He might not have known
who you were.”
Dom vaguely remembered telling the guy his name.
Which seemed stupid now, but he did recall feeling like he didn’t have a
choice.
“What’s your
name?”
“Who wants
to know?”
“The guy
who’s going to decide whether you wake up tomorrow in a hospital, a jail cell,
or a morgue.”
“Domenico
Maisano.”
“You’re
shitting me.”
He shuddered, which hurt like hell. Yeah, that kid
knew who he was. Exactly who he was. And yet, Dom was still alive.
And his cousins and uncle were still watching him,
waiting for him to say… something?
He shook his head again. “If he knew something, he
didn’t say anything. And he didn’t shoot me.”
“You’ve got to remember something about him,”
Felice said.
“No.” Dom looked him in the eye, and despite the
mental images of that leather crop top, the sharp cheekbones, and those icy,
unflinching eyes, said, “I don’t remember anything.”
“Then that’s all we have,” Corrado said. “The
important thing now is finding out who sent those boys after you. Because I
want a message sent to whoever sent them.”
Usually Dom would be the one dispatched to send a
message. Most hitmen were just goons or independent contractors—they were more
disposable, more easily shot and discarded if the cops got too close—but his
uncle kept Dom in plain sight. The boss’s well-known nephew, the man who everyone
assumed was a turncoat coward just like his father, the one who maintained debt
ledgers and efficiently laundered even the bloodiest money, was apparently the
last person anyone would suspect of carrying out dirty work like that.
But the message that needed to be sent couldn’t
wait until Dom had recovered enough to send it, so Corrado would handle it. Who
he’d send and what they’d do to whom, Dom had no idea, but with his uncle
involved, the message would be received loud and clear that the Maisanos were
not to be fucked with. And although Dom wasn’t thrilled about the condition he
was in at the moment, he was secretly relieved because being this fucked up
meant he wouldn’t be the one pulling the trigger this time.
“What about the guy who took them out?” Felice fidgeted
in his chair. He was more agitated than usual, which said a lot. “We just gonna
forget about that?”
Corrado shook his head. “No. I’ve got cops filling
me in on what they know, and plenty of ears to the ground in case somebody
talks. Domenico, if you remember anything, I want to know about it. Until then,
he’s done us a favor and he did it for free.” He chuckled. “Perhaps we’ll find
out who he is when he tries to send us a bill.”
Luciano laughed quietly.
Felice didn’t. “Dad, we need to find—”
“When your cousin remembers more details, we
will.” Corrado shot his younger son a pointed look. “Until then, you’ve all got
business to attend to.”
Felice swore in Italian, and then got up and stormed
out of his father’s office. Corrado watched him, but didn’t try to stop him—he
shook his head, muttering something about God blessing him with a bullheaded
son, and then dismissed Luciano and Dom.
On the way out of Corrado’s office, Dom didn’t say
a word to anyone. Nobody here needed to know that, once he’d finished licking
his wounds and could breathe without pain, he had every intention of finding
out who the stripper was and what he’d seen. That he fully intended to find out
what this kid’s deal was.
But he wasn’t bringing the family into it. This he
was doing on his own.
*****
If The Seas Catch Fire will be available January 3, and is currently available for pre-order.
Sergei Andronikov was a child when the Mafia wiped out his family, leaving him with nothing but a hunger for revenge. Years later, through ruthless strategy and tireless patience, he’s a contract killer working for the three families ruling Cape Swan… and he’s nearly in position to bring them all down from the inside.
Domenico “Dom” Maisano is Mafia royalty, a made man… and a hitman. He’s caught up in a violent life he can’t escape, struggling to maintain an image he doesn’t want, and suppressing desires he can’t have.
A chance encounter throws the killers into each other’s paths. Though Dom knows he’s playing a dangerous game, he’s intrigued and keeps coming back. Sergei can’t resist him either—Dom is everything he set out to destroy, but he’s also everything he’s ever ached for in a man.
Then Sergei gets the contract he’s been waiting for—the hit that promises to bring the town’s Mafia to its knees.
But when a boss makes an unexpected move, Sergei must choose between dropping the hammer on the families he vowed to annihilate, and protecting the man he swore he wouldn’t love.
And the wrong choice—or even the right one—will destroy them both.
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