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“Shit,” the guy muttered under his breath, his hands gripping the counter until his knuckles turned white. He eyed the gun and started whimpering.

“Thanks for the lovely stay.” Chase laughed as the gun was removed from under my clothing and placed wherever the hell he had kept it in the first place.

Chase wrapped his arm around me and paused. “Oh and we ate some things from the mini-bar.”

“Consider them taken care of, Mr. Abandonato.” The man looked ready to pass out, still steadying himself on the counter.

“How nice. Thank you.” Chase smirked and pulled me close to him. “Such a fancy establishment, don’t you think, Mil?”

The doorman tipped his hat at us.

Yeah, our marriage was so not going to be the typical white picket fence with two-point-five children.

Chapter Sixteen

Nixon

“Get dressed,” I barked and walked back into the bedroom where Trace was sleeping.

I heard the cocking of a gun, my old pistol. Shit, not again. I turned around to see it pointed at my face and Trace looking angry as hell. “I’m not one of your associates, I’m not part of your family, and I’m sure as hell not Tex or Chase. Ask me again… nicely.”

“Sorry, Trace.” Apologies always sounded so foreign on my tongue. It felt like I’d just swallowed a bitter-tasting pill as I choked down my pride and tried again. “Will you please get off your very nice ass, find something to cover your delectable body, and do it at a speed that doesn’t make me want to murder someone for breakfast?”

She put the gun back on the nightstand and yawned. “Not a total apology but a bit better than yelling.”

“I didn’t—”

“You did.”

Glaring, I walked into her closet and pulled out the smaller of her suitcases. “Pack for warm weather.”

“Are we going somewhere?”

“Vegas.”

“Nixon!” Trace jumped out of bed and wrapped her body around mine like a koala. “I can’t believe it! We’re eloping! Oh my gosh, you’re the best—”

I shouldn’t have winced or tensed when she said elope.

“Not exactly.” I cleared my throat as she peeled her body away from mine. “It’s more of a business dealing.”

Trace’s eyes narrowed until they were tiny slits.

“Shit, are you going to get the gun again?” I scratched the back of my head and eyed the pistol.

“Spill.” Trace sat cross-legged on the bed. “Or I’m not changing into clothes, and I’m not packing.”

“Chase needs us.”

Her anger disappeared. Just like that. I say his name, and all of a sudden she was ready to run head first into anything? How was that fair? Pissed, I almost said something but thought better of it since she had just pointed a gun at my face.

“Are we all going?” Trace got up from the bed and walked into her closet. “Or is it just us?”

“Everyone.” I peered around the closet door and watched her pull her shirt off. It came flying at my face along with a few Sicilian swear words I know she probably learned from Tex, damn him.

“Is Chase already in trouble? By the way, you never told me where you went last night, not that I don’t trust you — well, actually…” She paused. “I’m still working on trusting you, you know, after the whole fake death episode.”

I winced again. “I deserved that.”

“And more.” Trace peeked around the door. “You do realize putting Tex and Mo on the same plane may start an all-out war?”

“Too late for that,” I murmured.

Trace’s face fell. She stepped around the door and pulled me into a hug. “What’s going on?”

I answered her question with a question. “What’s the worst possible thing that could happen to us?”

“Other than death?” Her arms tightened round my neck.

“Yeah.”

“Going to prison? Being ratted out—”

I licked my lips.

“But we’ve done nothing wrong. Our dealings are legal, damn it!” Trace stomped her cute little foot and pulled away. “No way can anyone pin anything illegal on us.”

Silence was probably my best bet, considering I couldn’t lie to her face.

“Nixon.” Her voice had a pleading edge. “Tell me your family doesn’t do anything illegal.”

“Okay.” I nodded. “Our family doesn’t do anything illegal.” It was different when she was asking me to lie, right?

“Jackass.”

I grinned at that and smacked her backside. “Just get ready and don’t worry about things that you can’t fix… oh and don’t look too slutty. Your grandpa’s coming.”

She laughed and threw another shirt at my face. “Grandpa, huh? Three mafia bosses in one plane? Better hope it doesn’t go down.”

“We’d just parachute out or have Tex fly it,” I teased.

“Stop being so calm about everything.”

“My job,” I said seriously. “Now hurry up.”

Trace’s nostril flared.

“Hurry up, please.”

She blew me a kiss and walked back into her closet. I was still smiling when I walked into Tex’s room — that is, until I saw a chick there, with him in bed, sprawled across him with lipstick smeared across her cheeks. Classy.

I grabbed her by the hair and jerked her away from Tex. “Out.”

“Hey!” The girl tried to lunge for me. Oh, hell no. That wouldn’t end well for her.

“Just leave,” Tex said in a muffled voice. “I’ll call you.”

With a huff, the girl grabbed her things and stomped off down the hall.

“I swear I won’t hesitate to put a bullet to your head if you keep bringing skanks into my house.” I kicked Tex’s bed. He turned over and glared; two hickeys mocked me from his neck.

I really had no other choice — I punched him in the jaw. He cut loose with a string of curses and almost fell off the other side of the bed.

“Pack your shit. We’re going to Vegas.”

“Really?” He perked up.

“Tex…” I warned.

He scowled, his reddish brown hair fell across his face. He pushed it out of the way and turned. Damn it to hell.

“And cover that shit up.” I pointed at the two hickeys glaring from his neck.

“Like Mo cares,” he grumbled.

“I care. Me. Your boss. Your best friend.” I walked over to the bed and slapped his cheek twice in jest. “Now stop feeling so damn sorry for yourself and get your shit together or I will send you to Sicily.”

“You’d ship me to my enemies?” Tex had the audacity to look offended.

“To keep myself from shooting you? Or worse, from Mo poisoning your Captain Crunch? Yeah, I would. Now don’t make me tell you twice. Better yet, don’t make me any more pissed than I already am. My shit’s about to blow if you keep this up.”

“Fine, fine.” He rubbed his jaw and crawled out of bed. I slammed the door behind me and went on to the next room. Why have kids when I already had Tex?

“Mo.” I knocked softly on her door then opened it.

“You’ve got to be shitting me,” I muttered. She was sleeping with noise-canceling headphones on. Her makeup was streaked black down her face.

“Mo.” I said it louder, this time sitting on her bed and giving her shake. Her eyes snapped open, and then a gun was pointed in my face. I pushed it away and swore. “What the hell is it with you women?”

“Sorry.” She pulled off her headphones. “Thought you were Tex.”

“Glad you took the time to make sure before you shot.”

She grinned, though her eyes looked swollen from crying.

“Mo… you want me to talk to him? Order a hit? Force him to spend some time with the Alferos? Just tell me how I can make it better.”