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Three Hitmen: A Triple Bad Boy Mafia Romance (Lawless Book 2)

Page 67

by Alice May Ball


  He jumped back, his face drained and pale. Then he flattened himself against the window. Two big shapes came slowly out of the alley. I couldn’t make out their features, but they were huge men.

  They hunkered in front of him. He was frozen and obviously terrified. A Bentley convertible pulled up sharply to the curb and a big man’s voice called out, “Brock! Amon!” The two men hesitated, still leaning towards Ant, then they both jumped into the back of the car and it swept away into the darkness and the rain.

  I stood rooted to the spot. I didn’t even notice Ant slink away, but I know he did because when I looked back, he wasn’t there. I had recognized the man’s voice. My gorgeous companion was at the wheel of the Bentley.

  So Ant was gone, and he was gone. It was a perfect early end to a perfect evening.

  On my slow, resigned walk home, a lot of things bothered me. Brock and Amon were two of them. They weren’t unique names, but they aren’t ones that you across every day. The tremors in my little world were all juddering beneath me, and they all melted into one sea of turmoil.

  The one thing I knew that I really wanted out of the evening drove away in a Bentley, and I couldn’t see any chance that I’d run into him again.

  Ant chose a corner table in the little bar last night to deliver his little ‘I think we need some space,’ talk. He mumbled the rambling speech into his beer mug, since eye contact was an exertion that his feeble strength couldn’t manage. After I got the headlines, I didn’t wait around to listen to all the sidebar excuses and justifications.

  When we first met, he was spending his whole life online, blogging, tweeting, chatting and whatever else. His complexion was pale and blotchy, and his contact with actual human beings was scarce. We got together, and I helped him to turn his minute and invisible blog about the SoHo and TriBeCa arts scene into something that more established arts journalists would want to plunder for trends and gossip.

  He thought that they were stealing from him. I told him to check his visitor counts. Also, he started to get invitations to private views and to gallery and show openings from then on, and he began to grow a little reputation on the scene. So people were taking notice of him. That was when he started to think that I should be dressing maybe a bit less ‘showy,’ a bit more ‘in keeping.’

  When we met, he couldn’t peel his eyes out of my cleavage, except when it was to roam around my hips and my thighs, or over my ass. All of a sudden, he doesn’t want to see me like that when we’re out together.

  Soon after the invitations started to come in from the agents, artists, and gallery owners, Ant started ‘forgetting’ to mention them to me, or he’d say something like, ‘Oh, don’t you have a thing that evening?’ or, ‘You really don’t have to come.’

  Like, I’d worked my butt off to get him into these places, and I wouldn’t want to come along for the follow-up? No, it hurts like hell to think it, but I had to face the facts. Ant was thinking that he could do better. He could do better, now. Now that I had helped him to gain some credibility, I’d served my purpose for him, and he was ready to move on. FUCKER!!!

  I took a walk on my first solitary Saturday in months, feeling utterly miserable. I went to Central Park and sat on a cold rock by a lake for a while. The autumn sunlight sloped beautifully across the trees. The towers on Central Park West sparkled with a dark gold to match the leaves on the thinning branches.

  Traffic noise faded behind the birdsong and rustling leaves. Children squeaked and scampered nearby. All of it left me miserable. I walked over by the Dakota building where John Lennon had lived, and died. I was miserable.

  I crossed the noisy traffic of Broadway by the block with the lovely green Beaux-Arts domes and carvings, and I walked down to Riverside Park, where the Hudson gleamed and shimmered. There’s a pretty café by the marina where I thought I might get coffee and an ice-cream.

  As I got nearer, the idea made of it me lonely and glum. Fuck it, Ant was hardly the world’s most eligible bachelor, but I’d put a big chunk of my little life into him and I had really believed that we could be going somewhere. Only I was to find out that he wanted us to be going to different somewheres, and he’d tossed me away like a candy wrapper.

  Well, I was done crying about him. I did so much of that last night, I must have shed a couple of pounds of saltwater at least. So, best fucking foot forwards, Ceris, onwards and fucking upwards.

  By the waterfront, the trees behind me muffled the honking buzz of traffic, and the rasp of a boat horn occasionally punctuated the lower, slower, sputtery engine sounds of the river ahead. Across the river is New Jersey, hundreds of thousands of apartment windows, where people were all living their lives, just like they were yesterday, just like they would be tomorrow.

  Leaves were turning golden yellows, reds and browns on the trees in the park, and every few moments a jogger huffed by. The breeze carried a few brown leaves, and a slight chill.

  As I wandered towards the river’s edge, a big street-dweller came towards me, his arms outstretched. Nine times out of ten in Manhattan, these encounters are funny, charming or just plain goofy.

  As a girl, I always expect them to be the one time when it’s not any of those. The large, round man had a straggly beard and a grin with an incomplete set of teeth.

  His breath reached me long before he did. I tried not to flinch as he croaked, “Hey, baby,” at me. His hand reached out towards my shoulder and I moved a step back. “Aw, don’t be like that.” His gap-toothed grin widened and I saw a flash in his eyes that I didn’t like. I shrank back towards the bushes. He came after me.

  Then he froze. He was looking past my shoulder. His eyes stretched wide and his face went gray. Behind me, I heard a rustling in the bush, then a deep low, grating sound. It was soft, but still shocking. I didn’t think I could risk taking my eyes off the wooly homeless man, even though he was starting to back away slowly, with a look of terror growing across his face.

  Behind me, I heard a rustle of leaves and I felt heat. The warmth of a large body moved close to my back. When the homeless man had backed a safe distance away I turned, but all I saw was a large shape slipping back into the bushes and I heard the rustling of the leaves.

  As I looked around, the homeless man fled in a panic. The few other people I could see were just enjoying a balmy Saturday, like nothing was going on. In the marina nearby, little boats bobbed on the water, and a massive, silver yacht was cutting through the Hudson and heaving to.

  On the prow stood a big, fine looking man in white pants, a white shirt, Raybans and a white sailor’s cap. He shielded his eyes and gave a jolly wave towards the shore, the way that people on boats do. I gave as jolly a wave as I had in return. His golden beard made him look like the man from Gush.

  In Manhattan, that kind of a chance meeting never happens. Not to me anyway, and not to anyone I knew. He pointed. I looked around, because he must have been waving to someone else. Me, misreading signals again. I didn’t see anyone, and he was still pointing, towards the marina.

  I knew he must be gesturing to someone out of my view, but I gave him a friendly wave goodbye as I turned back. Then I heard a man’s voice in the distance. It sounded familiar. It sounded as though he was calling, ‘Ceris!’

  I looked back up. That really couldn’t be my beautiful man from the gallery opening shading his eyes on the front of the yacht. It couldn’t be. He called out, “Ceris! Wait for me!” and his voice carried easily across the water. He turned and headed towards the rear of the boat. It wasn’t a short walk.

  A motor launch was winching out at the far end of the yacht, and as soon as he reached it, he climbed into the launch and it began to lower into the water. As the boat reached the river and was released from the winch, I had a recollection of Tyler climbing down from his bunk.

  “Ceris, what a fantastic surprise.” He strode towards me, long, thick legs beautifully draped in the white flannel pants, the top of his broad, dark golden chest peeking out of the loose white shirt.
As he peeled off the sunglasses, his deep brown eyes shone into mine and my insides turned to jelly.

  His arm stretched out and went around my waist. I realized too late that he was coming in for a European cheek kiss, or maybe a fashionable metrosexual hug. My arms were already as far around him as they would go and his scent was like a big leather armchair by a crackling fire.

  Feeling my soft, hot cheek against his warm, hard chest, my swelling breasts squeezed against his firm rippled stomach, and my arms tight around him, the emotions that I had been holding down and suppressing bubbled and frothed over, and I let out a quiet sob. No blubberer, me, I held on just long enough to get some composure, then I pulled away.

  I admit it was a reluctant retreat. Standing there, holding him, enfolded in him, I had felt a tenderness, a huge strength, and I felt so safe, as though nothing could reach me there, except him. I felt as though something was growing between us. And something had been quite literally growing between us.

  Something hard, strong, and very large had been growing against my stomach, making my thighs quiver. If I had stayed pressed there against him for much longer, I don’t know what I might have done, out there in the broad daylight.

  I needed to recover myself. The perfect gentleman, he said, “Ceris, I think you might like something to eat. Perhaps you’d allow me to buy you lunch.”

  His low, honeyed voice melted my insides. At that moment, he could have finished his sentence any way he liked. Perhaps you’d allow me to… Yes, I would. I would have agreed to just about anything he could have said.

  He guided me to the café in the sharp morning sun, and he sat across the metal table from me. I had no appetite, but he told the waiter to bring me coffee and a piece of lemon meringue pie.

  “Pie?” I said when the waiter had left, “Do I look to you like someone who needs pie?”

  His grin was as delicious as it was infuriating. It had an easy warmth and an openness. At the same time, there seemed to be something about it that was perpetually amused and quite pleased with itself.

  The sound was soft and intimate under the café sunshade as he said, “You look to me like someone in an urgent need of pie. I would say that you were a borderline emergency.” He was playing with me. I tried hard not to like it. I hate it when men do that. I reminded myself so, repeatedly.

  He continued, “Ceris, I see someone who needs to be loved, who wants to be needed. Someone born to care and be cared for, and who wants to be protected. Someone made for nurturing.”

  I watched his eyes. I took in his strong, broad chest. I was trying to take in what he was saying. He said, “I’ve been looking a long time, Ceris. Hunting, you might say. I need a woman like you. My family needs a beautiful woman, exactly like you, Ceris.”

  I was flustered. I didn’t know how to respond. His words made me tingle inside, but I couldn’t process his meaning. As I peered into his eyes, I was reminded, again, of Tyler.

  I changed the subject and said, “Listen, I’m sorry I ran off like that on Thursday. I really didn’t mean to be rude.”

  He said, “Funny. That’s exactly what I was going to say. I looked for you, but something came up and unfortunately, I had to leave. I’m so very sorry.” I thought about the two big shapes as they slipped into the back of his Bentley. “And I’m so glad now to have found you again.” As he said that, his grin grew quite wide. His eyes sparkled, crinkling in the corners.

  His strong, white teeth shone above his perfectly cleft chin. A girl could get herself into a whole lot of trouble with a man like this.

  A very large piece of pie arrived, along with my latte. I said, “Aren’t you having anything?”

  He said, “I had a late brunch on the boat.”

  “Is your boat going to be OK out there in the middle of the Hudson?”

  “It’s a big boat, it can take care of itself. Besides, it’s not my boat.”

  “Really?”

  “Strictly speaking, no. A smart man said, ‘always rent if it flies… or floats.’” I caught his hesitation. I said,

  “Flies, floats or fucks, wasn’t it?”

  He smiled and said, “I only apply it to machinery and vehicles.”

  “Are you sure?”

  “Oh, yes.” His grin was so mischievous it made me want to do something very wicked. He said, “The man who said that had an insatiable appetite for Japanese girls. Beautiful girls to whom he was wildly generous and permanently unattached.”

  “Are you not permanently unattached, then?”

  “Not permanently, I hope.” Now I couldn’t tell whether he was playing or not. I knew that I was even more infuriated by his grin, but I couldn’t tell whether it had actually grown any more annoying, or whether the effort of not slapping him was just getting too much for me.

  The pie had that perfect pastry base that dissolves on contact with warmth and moisture. The sweet pastry and sharp lemon was a heavenly balance with the crumbly cloud of meringue. His attention was rapt as he watched me eat. In spite of my earlier protest, the pie did make me feel a whole lot better.

  A last triangular bite of pie sat among golden crumbs on the plate. He said, “You should finish it. It’s doing you good.” I wanted it, but I also wanted to show some restraint to myself as much as to him.

  “Really, I’ve had enough.”

  “Mm. Enough is as good as a feast?”

  “Sure.”

  “But there’s nothing wrong with an occasional feast.” He picked the little triangle up with his fingers. His nostrils flared as he lifted it and inhaled. His eyes sparkled as he held the delicious morsel towards me.

  I tried not to lean forwards. I didn’t succeed. My lips parted and I leaned forwards. It was still just out of reach. He held it further forward, and moved it between my lips.

  As the sweet pastry began to melt, his strong fingers gently traced my tingling lips. His tongue moistened his lips as he watched me eat that sweet morsel. Our eyes stayed locked on each other’s as I felt his fingers, still on the plush pillow of my lower lip.

  My heart pounded as he watched me, as the sweet meringue and tangy lemon flavor melted away in my wet mouth. When I swallowed, I tilted my head slightly, slid my lips over the top joints of his fingers, drew them into my mouth, licked and suckled them.

  “Have you remembered yet where we last met, Ceris?”

  I stared at him. He slipped a business card from his pocket and slid it across the table to me. I couldn’t believe it, although the evidence of my eyes was clear. The card read, ‘Tyler Bone, CEO, Bone Capital.’

  “All this time.” I said, a sob near the back of my throat. “I thought about you, Brock and Amon every day.”

  “And we’ve been thinking about you, too, Sis.”

  With a rush, all of the feelings that I’d had so long ago about the three brothers came rushing back and poured through me. Now I understood them, now I identified them.

  Now I knew why they were so wrong. And I shook so hard because now I knew that it didn’t matter to me how wrong it was.

  The chairs scraped and fell behind us as we both jumped to our feet. Tyler swept across the table with an arm, and the plates and cutlery clattered to the stone floor. The waiter appeared and we had to part.

  With impeccably pleasant manners, Tyler gave the waiter a warm smile but his voice was a firm rumble as he said, “Would you kindly fuck off.” Off he kindly fucked.

  My body rammed against Tyler’s, my hips ground into him as he slipped his fingers from my mouth, and his lips met mine. We kissed softly at first, then hungrily, wet and forcefully, and my ass suddenly stinging as he slapped it, hard.

 

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