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UNPROTECTED: A Dark Bad Boy Baby Romance (Hanley Family Mafia)

Page 37

by Zoey Parker


  No, there’s no point in even trying.

  I wipe away the tears.

  It’s just too horrible, all of it – losing Papa, losing Gabriel, having Carlos win and deceive everyone with that lying piece of paper. Me having to become my worst nightmare. No, I can’t take it.

  And I don't even want to think about what’s going to happen to Maria Fernanda and Jane.

  My hand automatically slips back in my pocket and, feeling nothing, I sigh.

  I don’t even have my phone to see if Gabriel changed his mind, considered believing me. No, I have been left to my fate – unavoidably, doomed.

  I never had time to respond to his text, explain why I never showed up to the bar, though I’m sure he’s figured it out by now.

  I glance at the flap door again, inch toward it.

  There’s no point in even trying and yet, what do I have to lose?

  I stop in front of it, glare at it, turn away.

  Why not wait and see a bit longer? Why not try something else?

  My starving belly rumbles out the answer: There is nothing else to try. This is all that’s left.

  I crouch down and shove my leg through the flap.

  Sure enough, it connects with a soft surface that’s my favorite armchair.

  I throw it out again, then again and again, each time sending the armchair shaking, but not moving it.

  I strike out with all my might, over and over and over until – suddenly – my feet hit nothing. I pause, then find my feet being shoved backwards.

  As I watch in horror, Clarence crawls through the flap. Then, his face horrifically calm, he sits in front of my escape.

  He’s holding a gun.

  His deadly smile is saying, “I was hoping we’d get to see each other.”

  Chapter 31

  Gabriel

  Pip is still sitting in the living room. He’s wearing an unobtrusive expression that indicates he heard everything.

  “Is it surprising?” I ask him.

  “Is what surprising?” he asks me.

  With a bitter smile, I say, “Knowing that your Boss is as big an idiot as the rest of them. Fell for Toni Piccolo of all women.”

  Pip shakes his head, slides his foot side to side over the black tiles.

  “You’re not an idiot.”

  I flop down on the couch and glare at the black cityscape on the wall across from me. All the buildings are fused into one black rectangle with white squares of lights, while the sky is a single ashen swirl. It’s the view of an apocalypse, of no hope, of how I’m feeling right now.

  “Yes, I am, Pip.”

  Even as I speak, I’m reaching for my phone on the table. To check if Toni’s texted me.

  “Your sister is right, Boss.”

  Pip’s voice is low, sure.

  He takes a swig of his water, says, “She’s right, you know.”

  As I stare at it, the cityscape is changing before my eyes. Instead of being a somber ode to grey and black, it’s actually that of hidden light: its white pattern on the buildings, the ivory of the sky amidst the gray.

  “You realize what you’re saying I should do,” I say.

  Pip responds by gulping down the rest of his water.

  I rise, check my phone again.

  Still nothing. If I’m going to go back to the Piccolo house, I’ll have to do it soon, before…

  The door swings open, and Jaws and Pulse walk in.

  Seeing me and the empty space on the couch where Hannah was, tentatively Jaws says, “Uh Boss?”

  I stride to the door, past them.

  “Hannah is fine, I have something I have to do,” I say.

  And before I can change my mind, I hurry to the hallway and get on the elevator.

  I rush outside through the parking lot. It’s only when I get to the van that I realize I’m not alone.

  Pip is waiting there, leaning on the hood of the ugly old thing.

  “How did you—?”

  Pip gives the hood a pat.

  “Elevator is slow. So is van.”

  “Hiya Boss we’re coming!” Jaws says, he and Pulse jogging on up.

  “You don’t even know what I’m going to do,” I say.

  Pulse shrugs.

  “Pip filled us in on the staircase.”

  I stare at him evenly.

  “And so you know just who I’m going to see.”

  “We believe in love! We believe in you!” Jaws says.

  He’s smiling like an idiot, and I turn to Pip, who shrugs. “Really, they’re hoping you find out she’s a lying bitch and kill her.”

  I turn back to Jaws and Pulse, whose scared shitless expressions indicate Pip’s telling the truth.

  When I stretch out my arms, Jaws jumps. Smiling, I say, “Okay.”

  Pip pats the car bumper again. “Van is slow. Bikes are fast.”

  I shake my head. “Bikes are fast but the van is unobtrusive.”

  Pip casts a derisive look over to our old white Honda, then, with a scowl, stalks over and gets in.

  The others pile in, I get in the driver’s seat, and we’re off.

  The trip is fun. The others have the same frenetic energy I have, clearly enjoy me speeding this van along for as good as it’s worth. Soon, the van is flying toward the Piccolo house at an incredible pace. Cars are obstacles to weave around, sidewalks are roads to use during red lights, and the police? They’re nowhere to be found.

  Our ride is one smooth-sailing race to the Piccolos. By the time I park down the road from it, my blood is boiling and I’m running on fumes.

  I’m ready. I’m more than ready.

  I get out of the van, take out my phone and send a message to Toni.

  “Where are you?”

  And then I wait, leaning against a 10-foot high stone fence with the others.

  Five minutes go by, an old woman hobbles by with a trailing stare, and no response comes.

  Finally, I call her. It goes straight to voicemail.

  When I look down the road where the house is, in the sky I see a plume of smoke.

  I’ve got a bad feeling about this.

  “You guys wait here,” I tell them, starting for the house.

  But Jaws steps in front of me, shakes his head so hard that his hair spikes move with it.

  “No way. We came here to back you up. We’re not letting you go in there alone.”

  I take out the White Lady.

  “You don’t get it. You guys can spot me outside, but you can’t come in the house. If it’s a trap, then we’ll all be done for.”

  The others frown at my words, but don’t argue. Can’t argue with common sense.

  So we go.

  We walk at a natural pace, only throw easy glances around. As if we’re not the guys who just blew up several buildings and are actually returning to the scene of the crime.

  Either our strategy works or there’s no one to attack us, because we creep up to the Piccolo property’s front gate undetected.

  The gates are wide open, as if beckoning us to enter. It’s ominous and yet, it certainly makes things easier.

  “You wait here,” I tell the others as I head inside.

  “We’ll wait at the door,” Pip says.

  I turn to glare at him, and find myself glaring at all of them, as Pulse and Jaws are also following behind me.

  We stop at the front door, which is still lying on the ground from my first forced entry.

  I take a step into the door and stop.

  I turn to my friends. I look at them, really look at them. My friends, my brothers. My men whom I may have just led into a trap, and yet who would follow me gladly anyway, through countless traps, through unspeakable danger. Through everything.

  Hannah may be family, but these men are family too.

  I look into their determined faces and a pit of guilt rolls around my stomach.

  What have I done, put family in danger to find family?

  I glance away.

  “I’ll text you in 5
when I know the coast is clear or I’ve found her. You see anything, you text me.”

  They nod. I nod. And then I run through the door.

  Inside, there are voices coming from down the hallway. From the room at the end of the hallway.

  None of them are Toni’s. Maybe I shouldn’t be here at all.

  I creep toward the room slowly, ensuring each step is as gradual and soundless as possible.

  I stop at the corner, take out my phone.

  Still no text from Toni, nothing. Either she can’t message me back or doesn’t want to. Which option do I prefer?

  I switch back to Jaws’ conversation so I’ll be ready to send him a message.

  No sooner have I tapped our conversation than is something hard pressed into the back of my head.

  “Make a sound and I’ll shoot,” says a familiar voice.

  Shit.

  “Hand me back your gun,” it commands, and I do.

  An ironic scowl comes on my lips. Now the White Lady might actually be used on me.

  It’s not unlikely, since the man pulling me into the room with the voices, the man pressing the gun into the back of my head, is none other than Carlos Piccolo.

  Inside the ornate Chatelaine-ready room are two burly men who look like they don’t belong. One is short and one is tall and, at my entrance, grins slither onto their faces.

  “Gabriel Pierson… No fucking way!” the little one hisses.

  With one hand, Carlos tosses him my phone.

  “Yes way. When I give the order, send his men out there a text that the coast is clear.”

  He taps my head with the gun.

  “That is the plan, isn’t it? Fearless leader scouts it out first, then loyal troops rush in?”

  I shrug, and he jams the gun into the back of my head again.

  “You want me to shoot you right now?”

  As he walks around me, he slides the gun around to the front of my head too.

  So that we’re face to face, so I can see his red-brown eyes, his snarling mouth, see that he really means it.

  The hand not holding the gun is bandaged, but that makes no difference when the hand that is holding the gun has it pointed at my head.

  “Go ahead,” I say, “The shot they’ll hear will be enough of a signal.”

  Carlos’ snarl grows until he almost looks comical, like a caricature of himself. His glare shifts to the wall, as if imagining my blood spatter amidst the gold paisley design, and shakes his head.

  “No, you’ve caused me enough trouble already.”

  He yanks me over to the clear sliding door, throws it open.

  “This’ll just take a minute,” he yells to the others.

  They’re smirking like I’m dead already.

  Now outside, he pulls me along, talking as we move.

  “When we capture your guys, don’t worry, we’ll make sure that they think you betrayed them to us. That you were planning with Toni to turn them over for months.”

  We’re walking toward an open field, away from the house, away from my men, and maybe Toni too.

  “Where’s Toni?” I ask, and Carlos laughs.

  “You should’ve taken her with you.”

  I struggle and he laughs again, shoves me to my knees.

  The gun at the back of my head, he says, “Don’t worry about Toni. She’s going to get a first-hand experience of our trade.”

  I twist to glare at him. “You bastard.”

  His ugly smile doesn’t shift, only says, “Ironic, like mother like son.”

  “What did you say?” I ask.

  “You heard me. Your mom was crude and rebellious to the last, until I finally put that bullet in her cheating whore head.”

  I grit my teeth. “You’re lying.”

  “Huh, makes no difference now really. I put her down and now I’m going to do the same to you, put you down like the dog you are.”

  I stare at the dirt in front of me. The dirt that’s soon going to be wet with my blood. The dirt I’ll die on, just how Carlos said: like a dog.

  “Why did you do it?” I ask.

  “Shut up,” he says, pressing the gun into the back of my head harder.

  “I’m going to die anyway, you’ve got a gun to my head, just tell me.”

  A kick to my back sends me sprawling to the ground.

  Then, after a reflective second he says, “True. Besides, you really should know what a whore your mother was before you die. She’d been cheating with my father for years, you know. Was going to leave your dad for mine. Leave all of you. Really I did you a favor.”

  Clenching my hands into the dirt, I hiss, “You’re lying.”

  He kicks me again.

  “Guess you’ll never know for sure.”

  I stare at the dirt, the dirt I’m going to die on in minutes, or seconds.

  This is it. And I never even made a go of it, fought for my life, anything.

  I wrench myself around and lunge on him. The gun goes off, and I collapse back, my leg exploding with pain.

  There’s a bullet lodged in my left lower leg, blood streaming out already.

  When I look up, Carlos is crouching down, smiling in my face, pointing his gun at my forehead, asking me, “You really thought you could fight a man with a gun, eh?”

  He presses the gun into my forehead again.

  “Though I can’t blame you, you are the great Gabriel Pierson after all, fearless leader of the Rebel Saints. To be honest, I’m a bit disappointed how easy this has all been. I expected, I don’t know, more.”

  Through gritted teeth, I growl, “Just do it, you Piccolo scum. Just kill me.”

  “Gladly,” Carlos says, and a gun goes off.

  Chapter 32

  Toni

  Clarence watches me back away to the wall with amusement.

  He’s wearing a dapper pinstriped suit and an unsettling smile. “Toni, Toni, Toni,” he says, spreading his legs.

  I don’t say anything.

  His watery blue gaze is roving over me. “Missed you at the funeral.”

  “Please,” I say, “Clarence, please. Let me go.”

  He runs a single finger over his cheek, licks his lips. “It really is a tricky situation. I mean, Carlos told me what you’ve been up to.” He wags his finger at me. “You naughty girl.”

  “Clarence please. You’ll be rid of me, I’ll leave here, I’ll do anything, anything… but this.”

  Clarence runs his finger over his other cheek. “Anything, eh?”

  I stare at him uncomprehendingly, not wanting to comprehend.

  He unbuttons his black pants, then unzips them, and at once I understand.

  “Clarence…” I say.

  “Oh come onnn, Toni. You know you’ve wanted this since the first time we met.”

  I shake my head, say, “Clarence, please.”

  When he rises, his pants stay on the ground. Through his sleek black underwear, I can see his giant penis. He steps out of his pants, spreads his arms. “So, Toni, what do you say?”

  I shake my head, rush to the other corner of the room. “No. No I won’t!”

  Clarence purses his lips. “Ah well, guess we’ll have to do it the other way. He advances slowly, lifting his gun. “Don’t move.”

  I shrink into the wall, press my face up into it, close my eyes.

  The edge of the gun presses into my chest. “Open your eyes.”

  I open them.

  “Look at me.”

  I look into his ice blue eyes, plead with my own.

  “Oh Toni, don’t you get it?” he’s saying, rubbing his gun up and down between my breasts, “I like it when you beg.” His gun slides down further, to my pants, inside them. “Take them off.”

  “Clarence—”

  The gun slides up to my lips.

 

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