Tied Down Read online

Page 3


  I march to his chair. “What the hell happened last night?”

  He lowers the hardcover, a smile playing on his lips. “Eva, I’m glad to see you’re feeling better.”

  The bastard knows something’s up. “I woke up with a goddamn bite on my chest. Care to explain?”

  His face cracks with an evil grin. “I could, but the mystery of it is much more fun.”

  “Was it you?” I remember him biting my tits, but I want him to admit it.

  “Of course.” His gaze licks me up and down, and a shudder runs through my body. “You were a very willing participant.”

  “You’re lucky I’m not in the mood for another funeral.”

  “Slow down, Killer.” He snaps the book shut and stands from the chair. “You don’t remember what you did.”

  My jaw drops. “You’re going to blame me for biting my tits?”

  “Yes.” Shadows move across his face as he looks at me in a way Dad’s men never dared to. “You were handsy last night.”

  I stutter a denial. “No, I wasn’t.”

  His eyes twinkle with amusement. “I might be disciplined, but even I can’t help myself when a hot girl grabs my cock.”

  No, I didn’t.

  We were outside my father’s house. We kissed. I remember a haze of desire. The taste of his lips. How big he was through his slacks. Self-disgust rises in my throat, and there’s not a hole large enough to bury me and my shame.

  “Oh my God.” My face heats like a lamp. “I’m so sorry.”

  He ignores the apology. “You kept throwing yourself at me all night.”

  This is beyond embarrassing. What am I supposed to say? “I’m sorry. Really.”

  “Am I complaining?” A wicked grin tugs at his lips. “If you want a good time, all you need to do is ask. Preferably while sober.”

  He’s fucking bold. Dad’s guys never flirt with me. Especially under his roof.

  It’s hot.

  I stamp down on the barrage of inappropriate thoughts. “Thanks for the invite, but no. I don’t want to fuck around with anyone.”

  “That’s not what you said yesterday.”

  Jesus. “What else did I say?”

  He cocks his head. “You were very curious about my relationship status—single—by the way.”

  I’m sure I was. I glimpse my flaming-red reflection in the mirror above the fireplace. “Again, I apologize. I don’t think I want to know more.”

  “You told me you wanted kids—”

  “Okay, you’ve made your damn point! I’m a reckless, inappropriate drunk.” I breeze past him, but he snatches my wrist and blocks my way.

  The nerve of this fucking guy. “What do you want?”

  “Whatever you’re willing to give me.”

  My heart skips a beat. “How about a slap?”

  “Could be fun,” he purrs. “Not exactly my kink.”

  I pull away from him, hardly believing what I’m hearing, and yet my impulse is to jump into bed with him.

  My body wants this overconfident asshole. Now.

  It’s waited years for me to find the right man. The one who checked off everything on my list. Over time my bullet points shortened to a few requirements with barely enough deal breakers for the average sane woman.

  I just want a baby.

  At thirty-three, it’s all I think about. My first thought in the morning. The last before I close my eyes. I should deactivate my Facebook.

  Bastien doesn’t give a shit about having kids.

  He closes the distance between us. “I’m interested. Thought I’d tell you in case last night was more than a girl who had too many drinks.”

  Wow.

  I’ve never been stunned into silence by a man. His eyes smolder when he looks at me, as though he’s actively imagining me naked. “I don’t even know you. Before this week, I hadn’t seen you before.”

  “I’ve been around, hon. You’re the one who hasn’t noticed me.”

  A hot drop slips down my throat. “When did you start work for my father?”

  “About six months ago. You were already with Marc.”

  I glare at him. There’s no mistaking that tone, laced with greed. “And just when I was thinking you were a nice guy.”

  He crosses his arms, not the least bit abashed. “Let me offer you a valuable piece of advice, Eva. You want to marry a wiseguy? Have his kids?”

  “Yes.”

  He leans in close, his whisper tickling my ear. “Then give up on nice.”

  Bastien pulls back before I do, with a smile and a wink that make me wish this house wasn’t full of people. He heads for the hallway.

  The oak scent clinging to his jacket fades when I grab his wrist. “I’m not done with you.”

  “Usually that’s my line.” He doesn’t pull away from my touch. “What can I do for you?”

  I don’t know. I just want to keep talking to him. “How did you come to work for the family?”

  He shrugs. “I needed a job. My cousin, an associate of your dad’s, told me about easy money working for the Romanos. Not many businesses will hire a convicted felon.”

  My skin pricks with gooseflesh. “What do you do for my father?”

  “Things a girl like you would not be interested in. Trust me,” he adds with a faint smile.

  “How come you’re single?”

  A grin hitches to his face. “We covered that question last night, sweetheart.”

  I release his hand. “Oh.”

  “It is so typical for a woman to forget the conversation but remember my tongue on her tits.”

  “I didn’t!”

  “Sure,” he laughs. “That’s why you stormed in here all hot and bothered.”

  He’s trying to be funny, but it rubs me the wrong way. “You’re an asshole.”

  I can’t bring up the dead fiancé because obviously I didn’t love him. Otherwise, I wouldn’t be hitting on a new guy two weeks after Marc’s gone. The arrangement wasn’t built on affection, but guilt needles me when I look at Bastien and want him.

  It’s satisfying to watch the amusement vanish from his face. “Come on, Eva. I’m joking. There’s nothing wrong with moving on.”

  Move on to what?

  A wave of despair crashes over me. “What’s the point? You all die anyway.”

  Chapter Four

  Sébastien

  The burner phone snaps shut in my hand after I send a quick text.

  Meeting. Now.

  My handlers advised me to avoid contacting them as much as possible. The last time was a month ago because I was developing PTSD. They gave me pills and told me to suck it up, as though two Valium would fix everything. The night sweats haven’t stopped. Neither has the fear. I’m supposed to numb my senses and keep on keeping on as if everything’s not fucked. The temporary, three-week assignment ballooned into half a year, with no end in sight.

  I set out to the metro station a block away. Took me an hour to be sure I wasn’t being tailed. Can’t be too cautious. I don’t believe Vito would watch me, but clearly, he’s lost his mind.

  Marry his fucking daughter.

  She’d make a good wife. In another universe, I’d fall head over heels with her. All I think about was the last thing she told me: You all die anyway.

  It sends a chill down my spine. She’s right. The longer I stay in this shit, the more my chance of survival drops to zero.

  Am I fucked up to want her? Normally she’d be persona non grata due to her mob ties, but I meant everything I said. She’s a beautiful woman, and Vito deserves his guilt. Eva’s too fucking good for this dark world, and a sick part of me wants to be her white knight. Take her away from all this shit.

  I barely know her, though. Never spoke to her before today. The old man insisted it wasn’t a demand, but it would be suspicious if I turned him down. Any of them would kill to be in my position: son-in-law to the boss. Groomed to replace him.

  No.

  This has gone too far.

 
I descend the steps into the subway station, where there’s no cell phone reception, and take the train off the island. My gaze sweeps the car, over the heads of half-awake passengers and anyone else who could be watching me. I don’t expect to recognize faces. Vito wouldn’t send someone I knew to follow me.

  The doors slide and I leave, idling on the platform before making sure I wasn’t followed. They always choose a new place for me to meet them. Can’t afford to create a pattern. This time it’s in a bathroom that’s out of service.

  I rap my knuckles, and the door flies open. Detective Sergeant Carter, a man in his late thirties whose obnoxious gum-chewing pisses me off, grins at me. His colleague, Captain Ritter, stands with his arms folded in the middle of a dilapidated room. He’s soft-spoken—maybe it’s his age. That’s probably the only reason he reminds me of my father. That and I’m homesick.

  “Love the new place,” I say, gazing at the suspicious stains on the ceiling. “You guys know how to pick them.”

  “Yeah, we thought you’d feel right at home,” Carter says through a mouthful of gum.

  What is it about his face that begs for a beating?

  I glance at Ritter, who looks concerned. “What’s up?”

  A stab of guilt needles at me. “I understand how important this investigation is, but I can’t do it anymore. I need to get out.”

  Captain Ritter laughs at me as though I suggested something ridiculous. “You can’t give up now. We’re just getting started.”

  “If I stay any longer, I will be made. You guys told me I could back out whenever I wanted. It’s time.”

  Carter rolls his eyes at Captain Ritter. “What the fuck happened?”

  Screw you. “The boss wants me to marry his daughter.”

  My bombshell has the opposite effect I imagined. Both of them make excited sounds. Ritter grabs my shoulders, beaming at me. “That’s great! Means he trusts you.”

  Carter laughs unkindly. “Why you?”

  The memory makes me laugh, even though Carter’s pissing me off. “Because I’m Italian and respectful. His words.”

  The ugly truth? There’s not a drop of Sicilian blood in my veins.

  “That can’t be the only reason,” Carter says, leaning on the wall. “Have you ever met this girl?”

  “Not until this week.”

  “Wow.” Ritter looks impressed. “You must have made an impression on him.”

  “The man’s dying.” I pace in front of the mirrors. “He’s having some end-of-life crisis. Wants to see his daughter happy. Does it matter? I need to leave.”

  Neither of them are taking this seriously. They’re acting like I handed Vito over on a silver platter.

  Captain Ritter’s low whistle bounces off the tiles. “Ethan—”

  “No. Call me Sébastien. I can’t pretend to be two fucking people at once.”

  “Right,” Carter sneers.

  “Shut the hell up.” Captain Ritter walks to the cracked mirror and stares at his reflection, which is frozen in shock. “Seb, this is a golden opportunity to get closer to Vito.”

  They’re not listening. “I’m not marrying her.”

  Carter shrugs. “Why not?”

  “Are you both insane? There are so many reasons it’s a bad idea. I don’t know where to start.”

  “Jesus, grow a pair of balls.” Carter whips out his notepad and jots down notes. “We could organize the whole thing—put agents in the church. Make sure the priest is undercover. Right, Captain?”

  Ritter nods. “Doable.”

  I can’t believe I’m hearing this. “How the hell will you keep my cover a secret from the other cops?”

  “We’ll tell them our man will attend the wedding.” Ritter rubs his jaw. “They won’t know who it is.”

  “No,” I say roughly. “I don’t want her involved. That girl did nothing wrong. She doesn’t deserve—”

  “Now you grow a conscience?” Captain Ritter says. “I told you this would be difficult, son. We need you to do this.”

  I try to weigh fake-marrying an innocent woman against locking up a very dangerous man. “Why? Vito’s our guy, but he’s dying. The rest of the family will follow him to the grave. There’s no big score here.”

  “Says the rookie who’s been a cop for ten minutes,” Carter snarls.

  An exhausted sigh hits the ceiling as Ritter walks toward me. “He might last for a while. My uncle had a six-month cancer diagnosis and lasted two years. We have to push forward on this. Think of all the work you’ve done for us.”

  I don’t care. Burnout is fucking real, and I have to look at the facts. I’m pushing thirty. I spend my time bullying small business owners for cash and feel horrible for days.

  This isn’t what I want.

  Ritter’s still talking. “As Eva’s husband, you’d get privileged access to Vito.”

  They don’t understand. “I’d have to let her in my home. That means keeping this act up twenty-four hours a day. Even if I was willing, I can’t do that. I’m not a fucking God.”

  The bathroom echoes with Carter’s indignant voice. “All you have to do is fuck her a few times!”

  “I won’t ruin her life for you.” My lips burn with contempt. “Or you.”

  “Who the fuck cares?” he bellows. “She’s a Romano.”

  No, she’s just a woman who wants a family. I’ve done a lot of shit that’ll take years to forget. Making Eva believe she married me won’t be added to the list. “I’m not hurting that girl for anyone.”

  “Jackass.”

  “You want to take over as undercover?” I gesture toward Carter. “Go ahead. The Romanos have a ton of openings. You’re a meathead—you’d be a good enforcer.”

  Agitated, Carter kicks a broken tile. “Boo-hoo. I wanna quit ’cause it’s too hard. Grow the fuck up!”

  I don’t feel a flicker of rage for this dumbass. It’s a waste of energy, and there’s not enough of that these days. “Speak for yourself.”

  He pushes Ritter aside. “You said you wanted to help us.”

  No, I didn’t. “Not worth it anymore.”

  Carter changes tack with lightning speed. “What are you going to do, huh? Go back to that Podunk town you’re from?”

  Jesus, he will not shut up. “Yeah, probably.”

  “Fuck you!”

  I laugh at his outrage. “After six months of this, I’m done. There’s nothing you can say to convince me otherwise. You’re not my master, and I’m not your fucking slave.”

  All I see is Carter’s red face, twisted with fury, before pain explodes over my jaw. I stagger into the wall. Another fist whirls across my vision. I block, his knuckles glancing off the bone.

  The tiles crack. I grab his shoulders. His head hits plaster. I smash his nose, pummeling the asshole until Ritter slides an arm over my neck and yanks.

  “Stop it!” he yells at Carter. “That’s an order.”

  I’m blinded with red and pain throbbing through my skull. “I’ll kill you.”

  Douchebag picks himself up off the filthy floor and lunges at me. I break free from Ritter, who keeps screaming. I tackle Carter and sink two fists in his stomach, one right after the other. Then he grabs my face and gouges my eyes.

  A mirror shatters as we crash into another hard surface. A jagged piece slices my head, and I throw him off me. “What the fuck is wrong with you?”

  Carter’s always been an asshole, but he’s never hit me before. He crossed the line, and neither of them seems to think it’s a problem. Carter wipes his bleeding mouth, and Ritter scowls like we’re two misbehaving children.

  “Jesus Christ, stop it!” Ritter shoves Carter’s chest as he takes a step toward me. “If anyone sees us—”

  The piece of shit pushes against Ritter’s hand. “What do you think will happen if you walk out on us? News flash, moron, we’re the only two people who even know you’re a cop.”

  “What the fuck are you talking about?”

  His grin fills me with dread. “E
rasing your undercover file.”

  I glance at Captain Ritter. “What?”

  Carter points at me. “You leave, and your identity goes bye-bye. You won’t be a detective anymore. Just another thug on the streets.”

  Ritter shouts at me to stop, but I hear nothing but the blood roaring in my ears. Carter’s smile stains red as I punch his mouth. He drops like a stone. I knee his spine, twist his arm.

  Kill him.

  The voice. Louder this time.

  Carter deserves it.

  The lights go dark and flicker on. I’ll break his fucking arm. All I have to do—

  A fist smashes my face. I drop, blinded with the impact. Vicious kicks dig into my side.

  “Stop! STOP!” The sounds of scuffling. “We need him, you idiot!”

  “Captain!” I struggle to my knees as he swims into focus. “You can’t force me to do this.”

  He sighs. “I don’t want to, but I will.”

  “I’ll report you both. Whatever it takes.” I grab the sink and claw myself upright. Carter hammered my skull, but at least the bastard is bleeding all over his shirt.

  “This is not a negotiation, Sébastien,” Ritter says. “That’s what I said when you first started, remember?”

  “You said I could leave whenever I want.” I look from the captain’s grim face to Carter’s sneering one. This can’t be happening.

  “Marry the girl, and it’ll be over soon.” Ritter shrugs. “Or don’t. Up to you.”

  It won’t be over. It’ll just be the beginning. “You’re not going to erase my file!”

  “If I get a whiff of betrayal from you, I will. We’ve worked too hard and long on this investigation to throw in the towel.”

  Carter flips me the bird as he leaves the bathroom. He holds the door open for Ritter, who doesn’t spare me a backward glance.

  “Captain!”

  The door slams, trapping me inside. I clutch the sink and look up, recoiling from my reflection. Blood runs down my face from a cut above my eye.

  What the fuck just happened?

  He hit me.

  Carter assaulted one of his own. We’ve had our disagreements, but he’s never swung a fist at me before. He’s a fucking cop. Why would he risk his career like that? What are they both playing at? All I have to do is go to the station. Report them both.