The Misters: Books 1-5 Box Set
Page 70
And then I ease into her, slowly. Just the way she likes it. There are plenty of ways to have sex with her. Hard and rough, the way I sometimes prefer. We can talk dirty, or not. We can go fast or not. We can do it standing, in the shower, against the wall, or outside in the pool. We can fuck so many ways.
But tonight I make love to her. Love. Soft and sweet, just the way she likes it. I know her heart and it is soft. I know her soul and it is sweet. I know her, and I want her to know me too. This me. The one who cares so deeply, he’s willing to give up everything for the only woman he will ever love.
It’s not a night of multiple orgasms. It’s not a night of screaming my name, or me shoving my dick down her throat so I can feel her muscles contract as I come. It’s not even about coming, together or otherwise.
It’s just about being there. In the moment when we decide, yes. We will stop all the nos and just say yes to each other.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
I say it as I move inside her. She says it as she digs her nails into my back and bites my shoulder. We say it together, just once. But once is all we need. Once is more than nothing. Once is enough.
I fall asleep, exhausted, spent, and happier than I have ever been in my life.
Victoria Arias, the love of my life, falls asleep, cradled in my arms, her head resting on my chest. Our breathing is matched and perfect. Our love is complete, because no matter what happens, we have this night. This one perfect night with her in the bed I made for her. With her in the house I want to give her. Next to me, Weston Conrad, her soulmate.
But when I wake up, ready to face the challenge ahead of us, it all feels like a dream.
Because she is gone.
Chapter Forty-Five - Victoria
My leg is bouncing as the pilot tells me we’re about to land in New Jersey. I calculate the route back into Brooklyn from the private airport and debate whether or not I should call someone and announce that I’m coming back home.
No. Let Lucio be surprised. Let him see me sitting there, in his bar, his disbelieving eyes wide and his mind racing with all the possible reasons I might have come back.
Fuck him. Fuck him. That’s all I’ve been thinking since last night. West was so sweet and genuine. So perfect. God, how did I ever let this shit go so far? Why didn’t I know that Lucio was the one who set them up? Why didn’t I look into it at least?
Fear.
I hate myself right now. Hate myself for letting Lucio control me—even after I got out of that situation, he controlled me in so many ways.
The fear of being alone in the daylight. Fuck the night, I was afraid of the light.
It pisses me off so bad.
West’s phone vibrated last night, just after we fell asleep, and I checked it. It was Jerry, saying the jet was all fueled and the flight plan filed for New Jersey at seven AM. I got up, waiting to see if West would notice. And when he didn’t, I slipped my clothes back on and crept out of the house, snatching his keys from the foyer on my way. Burbank Airport was only a few miles away. It was like… meant to be. Like fate was telling me this was my problem and I needed to solve it myself.
“Um, Tori?” Jerry is worried, I can tell. I don’t think West has noticed I’m gone yet, so I still have time to get there and not have anyone stop me. But he’s gonna know soon. “Are you sure you don’t want me to have the pilot radio someone?”
“No, Jerry. Please. I just need to get home. ASAP.” I lied to him. Told him West and I got in a huge fight, the Mister flight was canceled, and I just needed to leave. And he bought it. God knows, I’ve used the same excuse before, while we were dating. Only all those times it was true and this time it’s not.
“I’m sorry things didn’t work out.”
My face crumples. Because everything is working out. And how is that fair? To anyone? Especially West. How could I possibly let him and his friends fight this last battle for me when I was the reason their lives were ruined? Still am, apparently.
“You two are so right for each other,” Jerry says, noticing my pained expression. “I know you can work it out if you just try. Maybe talk things through? See where you can’t come together? And find some kind of compromise?”
But we did that. Mr. Corporate was straight with me last night. Everything I’ve been waiting to hear from him came pouring out. And now, the only thing left in our way is this one last loose end. My loose end.
“I know,” I tell Jerry. He’s always been so good to me. Always been so understanding. And this is not the first time I’ve hijacked the Mister jet for my own personal escape. Only this time I’m not running away, I’m going home to finish what I started.
I’m coming, Lucio Gori. I’m coming for you. I’m gonna settle this once and for all.
Chapter Forty-Six - Weston
“You have no control, do you?” Mysterious is sitting across from me in Five’s private jet as we try to race Victoria back to the East Coast. He’s drinking a mint julep, complete with a few sprigs of mint leaf sticking out of it, and something about that is so wrong. I get he’s from Kentucky, but who the fuck drinks mint juleps?
I decide to ignore him.
“I mean, this chick, Corporate. She’s got you by the balls, man. She’s got us all by the balls. And I’ll tell you what, I don’t care for it. I’m the master in my relationships. My woman would—”
“Would you shut the fuck up?” Five says, from across the plane. He’s got the Wall Street Journal spread out in front of him, scanning the financial page like this is just another day.
“What?” Mysterious says. “Don’t get pissy with me, Rutherford. This chick is gonna ruin everything.”
“Use my real name again, motherfucker,” Five says, looking up, expressionless, “and I’ll throw you out of this jet from thirty thousand feet.”
I have to hide my smile. Not many people talk to Paxton Vance that way. But Pax just shrugs it off and says, “Don’t wet your panties, Five. Corporate’s one of us. So what if he knows your real name? And I’m just fucking with him, anyway. You’re so fucking serious.”
“Yeah,” Oliver says. He’s also been doing his best to ignore the fact that shit is going wrong in just about every way at the moment. “Which means we cut him slack when he needs it, Pax. And he needs it, OK? I know Victoria better than you do. So I know there’s no stopping her once she’s got an idea in her head. And it’s partly our fault for encouraging her last night. So shut the fuck up and chill out. We’re gonna land less than an hour behind her, so we’ve got time. Five’s got the addresses of all the Gori businesses and we’ve narrowed them down to two or three possible places where she might confront him. Until we’re on the ground, just drop it.”
I have to hand it to Oliver Shrike. He’s always been in control of his shit. Maybe it is weird that he never has a girlfriend, but whatever. He’s good people. He must have a valid reason for that. He’s not excitable. In fact, Oliver and Five have a lot in common and it occurs to me, maybe they’ve known each other for a long time. Maybe they are related or something?
“We’ve all got a lot at stake here, so I get it,” Five says, folding his paper and pushing it aside to reach for his coffee. “You’re worried. And you’re next, right?”
“What the fuck is that supposed to mean?” Pax asks.
“Well, we know more than we told Tori,” Five says. “She thinks this is the end game. She really thinks Lucio Gori is the one who set us up.”
Five looks at me and I have no escape, so I just shrug. I’m not telling him shit unless I have to. And I don’t have to yet. I’m not convinced this is all tied back to what I suspect. Best to keep that secret under the hood a little longer.
“But it’s not the end game. None of this Lucio shit adds up, does it Corporate?”
I shrug again. Keep fishing asshole. I’m not gonna bite.
“So you’re next, Mysterious,” Five says. “Then Oliver, probably. Lucio cannot be our final target; it can’t be that e
asy. So you better step your shit up, son. And pull yourself together.”
“Maybe we’re wrong?” Pax says, taking a seat across from me. “Maybe it’s not who we think.”
But he doesn’t ask it like a question. He doesn’t ask it because he knows his theory is weak. I know this is tied back to Liam. They know this is tied back to Liam. But what they don’t know is how Liam got involved.
I don’t know that either. So I keep my mouth shut and think about all the moving parts in this machine.
We each have a theory. Even Nolan and Mac have one, but we’ve thrown those out. I don’t think Nolan’s sister, Claudette, is the mastermind behind all this. Besides, she wasn’t around back when we were accused of raping that girl. She was off causing trouble somewhere else. And Allen, the reappearing thorn in Mac’s side, was there. But he’s just not smart enough to pull off a con like this. Besides, he could’ve gone down with us.
Should’ve gone down with us, I correct myself.
“We’re not wrong,” Oliver says. “It’s definitely Liam calling these shots. He’s pissed off that West stole that treasure. And you know what? I can’t believe I’m saying that with a straight face. Who the fuck gets caught up in some kind of buried treasure scheme?”
He’s looking at me with an accusatory glare. “Hey,” I say, throwing up my hands. “I was seven years old. I didn’t ask to find that shit.”
“But you played along,” Five says, our temporary alliance gone.
“I was seven. What kind of seven-year-old doesn’t wish he’d find buried treasure?”
“Your life is some kind of Goonies movie sequel, Corporate,” Pax says, smiling.
I smile back, because whatever. We’re all in this together now, like it or not. We’re a team.
“I’m waiting for the cool shit to start. Maybe we’ll get to play the bones with sexual torture devices?”
Pax, Oliver, and I all laugh. Fucking Goonies was a favorite in the frat house when we were partying.
“Laugh it up, you assholes,” Five says, opening up his laptop. “And you won’t have to wait long for your shit to hit the fan, Mysterious.” Five takes a sip of his coffee. “Like I said, you’re next.”
“We’ll see,” Pax mutters, finding a loose thread on his suit coat to pick.
I shrug. “Maybe you’re right,” I tell Pax. “Maybe it’s not Liam and this Lucio fuck will get what’s coming and everything will go back to normal.”
“Normal?” Oliver says, swiveling in his chair like a kid. “I don’t think the lives we were living before all this started back up were anything I’d call normal.”
“Mr. Five,” the flight attendant says in a soft, apologetic voice. “We just got word that the Mister jet has landed. Miss Arias took a cab from the airport. They’ve got a tail on her. We’re a little ahead of schedule, so we’ll be landing in about thirty minutes.”
“Good,” Five says. “Make sure the helicopter is ready. Mysterious, I hope you can land that thing in Brooklyn. Because if not, Corporate can kiss his girlfriend goodbye. My associate just sent me a slew of reports about Mr. Lucio Gori’s suspected offenses.” Five stops talking and looks straight at me. “Do you want to know? Or not?”
“Tell me,” I say, my heart beating faster than ever. “I want to know just who this fuck is. I want to know all of it so when I kill that motherfucker, there’s not a drop of remorse in my blood.”
“Sex trafficking being the most serious on this list. Of course, he was never charged, or even brought under suspicion. His father had deep pockets and connections that go back more than fifty years. Alonzo Gori, Lucio Gori Senior’s maternal grandfather, started a trucking company in Brooklyn in the early sixties and since then their territory has grown steadily. Gori Senior was made boss in 2001, after he killed his own father in an argument regarding online gambling.”
He pauses there, waiting to see if I say anything.
But I don’t. I know when to keep my mouth shut.
“Since then, most of the online sites have been shuttered, and business moved away from drugs and towards the sex slave business due to increased demand in other burgeoning crime families, especially the Russians.”
He stops again, but I stay silent.
“OK,” Five says. “You can keep your own confidence if you want, Corporate. But this shit will all come out in the end.”
“What’s that supposed to mean?” Pax says. Apparently this is news to him, which should make me feel smug. Five is clearly his source. Apparently Mr. Mysterious isn’t omnipotent.
“We can wait,” Five says. “No one’s life is on the line or anything, right?”
“Just get on with it, will you?” I snap. “If I had more info you needed, I’d fill you in.”
“Right,” Five says, looking back down at his computer. “An unnamed girl got away about fifteen years ago”—Five glances at me to make sure I picked up on the timeline, and I have—“and a sting operation was put in place based on her private testimony to a judge.”
“I guess we can safely assume that was Victoria?” Oliver says.
I ignore him as Five continues. “She disappeared before the trial and nothing ever came of it, aside from rescuing about half a dozen girls from a slave house in Brooklyn. So looks like Lucio has been biding his time. But now that Victoria is on her way back to confront him, all bets are off as to how he plans on paying her back. So there you go, Corporate. You keep your secrets. But if something happens to your girlfriend, don’t blame us.”
I swallow hard as the seriousness of what we’re doing hits me again. Like a fucking brick to the chest.
“Don’t worry,” Pax says, leaning over to clap me on the shoulder. “She’s gonna be OK. We got your back, bro. No matter what, we got your back.”
I believe him, of course. Pax doesn’t say shit he doesn’t mean.
But there’s so much more going on than they know.
I do have more secrets.
Chapter Forty-Seven - Victoria
The main hub for the Gori crime family is Flats Trucking, a large warehouse with a small five-truck fleet that has no purpose whatsoever other than the obvious cover they need for their illegal money laundering. I can remember cops being there all the time when I was a kid. I used to think, Finally. They will go to jail and I will never have to see any of them again. Lucio will be locked away and I will be safe.
But they were never arrested. They never went to jail. I was never safe. My adopted father was the only who cared back then, and he wasn’t even in the area. He made some kind of deal with Lucio and took me far enough away to let people forget.
“He’s reasonable,” my father said that day. “He understands when he can’t win.”
I used to believe that.
No. Wait, I never really believed it. I wanted to think my father is all-powerful. That he was the strongest man alive. That he could save me from anything because he talked Lucio Gori into letting me go fifteen years ago.
But it was a deal with the devil, as they say.
So no. No one is clean in this. Not the Gori crime family. Not my father. Not me.
I get dropped off about three blocks away from the trucking company. They don’t hang out there anyway, it’s just a front. No, I get dropped off at ground zero for the Gori family.
Hederman’s Bar.
There are three or four bars where Lucio always worked and hung out. But Hederman’s was always his first choice.
So it’s my first choice now.
I don’t even know what I’m doing here. I just feel the need. Some kind of internal need to confront him. The only recording device I have is a cheap pay-as-you-go phone I bought, along with a fake leather purse, at the airport. I doubt the sound quality will be great inside my purse, but I switch on the voice recorder as I approach my destination.
There are no windows to look in from the outside, but there are plenty of ways for them to see out and it starts with the CCTV camera mounted at the corner of the front door.r />
The bar is always locked. You knock, you wait, they come, or they don’t. You go in by invitation only.
I don’t need to knock. It opens just as my knuckles are grazing the old, weather-beaten wood.
A man appears on the other side, someone I have never seen before. Young, muscular, frightening.
He doesn’t ask who I am or what I want. That’s not his job. His job is to open the damn door, so that’s all he does.
I step into the hazy darkness. It smells like cigar smoke and stale whiskey. There are four men playing pool in the back, three couples having lunch in the dark red booths along the perimeter, and no sign of Lucio Junior.
I stare at the bartender, who is doing his best to ignore me, but failing. When he notices me noticing him, he ducks his head and begins wiping down the bar.
Lucio does that to people.
Scares them.
“Violeta,” the smooth voice says from the far side of the bar.
The way he says that name makes my stomach clench in fear. I hate that name, I hate that name, I hate that name. Keep calm, I tell myself. Just keep calm.
He knows I hate that name.
I look to find Lucio Gori standing near the back, holding open a red velvet curtain that leads to his private work area.
“Victoria,” I say, with as much defiance as I can muster. “My name is Victoria.”
“Sure,” he muses, like I’m nothing but a joke. “You will always be Violeta to me. But come in the back, Victoria. I can adapt to a new name. Let’s catch up, eh? It’s been a long time.”
I lift my head and walk slowly towards the back, eyeing all the men in this small bar. Thinking about all the ways they can hurt me. How quick they will be to grab me with one word from their boss.
“They know better, my sweet. Don’t even look at them. They are not worth your attention. Besides, I have someone you know back here. And he is very eager to see you again. I hear you’ve had some trouble this past week?”