11

Book:Owned by the mafia boss. Published:2024-6-4

Nico
I head down to the main floor.
There are about a hundred reasons why I shouldn’t fuck around with the hot little art historian housekeeper, but none of them make it easy for me to walk out the door when she’s still in my suite.
I’m going to have to make sure I’m not there when she cleans. Hell, if I had any decency in me whatsoever, I’d call her boss and have her transferred back to the main floors right now. I wait a few moments to see if my moral compass takes over enough to follow through on that thought.
Sadly, it doesn’t.
Sondra, Sondra, Sondra. I’ll have to hope her good sense kicks in.
It’s funny; the only other time I had it so bad for a girl was when I was twelve and became obsessed with my brother’s girlfriend, Trinidad Winters. But that was just my pubescent lust kicking into high gear. Trini was always around, riding along in the car when Gio picked me up, watching movies on our couch in miniskirts that rode up her long legs.
Sondra is nothing like Trini. She’s nothing like Jenna, the mafia princess I’m supposed to marry. I don’t date, but she’s definitely not like any of the girls I fuck-paid or volunteer.
I want more of her. I love the way she got breathless and excited back there. It wouldn’t have taken much for me to pry those knees apart and show her just how bad her taste in men really runs.
Oh, I’d have her screaming. Pleasuring Sondra would be easy-the girl looks ready to go off like a firecracker. Hell, I’d keep her up all night moaning my name and I wouldn’t even miss the sleep.
I walk around the tables, scanning for Sondra’s cousin, Corey. Just to get a look at her. Not because I’m totally obsessed with this girl and need to know everything about her. Researching her full background was necessary. I had to make completely sure she’s not working some angle.
The Tacones have a lot of enemies. Hell, I probably have enemies within the Tacone family. I run my Vegas branch of the business on the up and up, but there’s a long history of violence and crime going back at least three generations to the Chicago underground. And then there are the enemies from the legitimate business world. Anyone might send in a femme fatale to get close to me, learn my secrets and set me up to fall.
And Sondra Simonson is exactly the kind of girl they’d send.
No, that’s bullshit.
She’s not. She’s nothing like a professional. But if my enemies were really smart, if they could somehow intuit what’s taken me by surprise, they’d send Sondra Simonson to take me down.
Because it’s for certain.
I’m not going to be able to stop myself from going after her.
I find Corey working a blackjack table. I see the resemblance. She’s as lovely as Sondra, but totally not my type. Tall, red-haired. Leggy. She looks sophisticated and sharp. Deals fast and clean. Appears to be a good asset to my casino.
She’s focused on her customers and yet her gaze flicks around the room, taking in everything. Including me. Next time she glances up, she skips the room-sweep and looks straight at me. I saunter over to her table.
Nothing shows on her face, but I know she’s aware of who I am. Wonders what I’m doing at her table. My presence must make the customers nervous, because after a few hands, the table clears out.
“Mr. Tacone,” she murmurs without quite meeting my eye. She’s properly deferential. Plays it just right.
I shove my hands in my pockets. I’m not even sure what I want from her. Some more information about Sondra, I suppose.
When I don’t say anything, she offers, “You scared my cousin yesterday.”
I nod. “Yeah.”
She narrows her eyes at me. “You don’t still think you need to worry about her, do you?”
“No.” I scrub a hand across my face. “Scale of one to ten-how traumatized was she?”
Corey has an excellent poker face. Nothing shows-not surprise, not anger. Nothing. “Eight. But the flowers and money helped.” Corey moves in for the kill. “A dealer job would help her even more.”
I shake my head. “Not gonna happen.”
She lowers her gaze to her cards without comment, spreading them out on the table and flipping them over back and forth in a perfect ripple, showing off her tricks. After a long moment, she says, “If you weren’t my boss, I’d tell you to stay away from her.”
I like her pluck.
I pull a fifty-dollar chip from my pocket and drop it on the table for her as a tip. “I can’t.”
Sondra
Corey and I ride into work together the following week. I love when we work the same shift, but she hates it, because it means she’s working days, and she makes more money at night.
It’s the first chance I’ve had to fill her in on the latest with Tacone, which is nothing.
“So you haven’t seen him since the day he kissed you?”
“Nope. The next day I went in and there was a fifty on the table. I left it. The day after that, he left a hundred-dollar bill with my name on it.”
“You took it, of course.”
I didn’t want to. I was afraid it would mean something. Like if I accept his money, I’ll owe him something later. Except I really can use the money. I need at least two thousand for a deposit and first month’s rent. And another three thousand to buy a car that runs.
“Yeah. And then he left another one a couple days later.” I dig them out of my purse and hand it to her. “Here.”
She shoves my hand away. “What’s that for?”
“To go toward my share of the rent.”
She rolls her eyes. “Save it. Then you can move out sooner.” She gives me a teasing grin.
“You sick of having me?”
“No, I love it, actually. But I think Dean’s tired of sharing the family room. He likes watching movies at night, you know.”
Yeah, I noticed. Dean hasn’t exactly stopped that habit even though the sofa’s my bed. He stays up watching until one in the morning most every night.
“And every time we have sex, I cringe because the walls are paper thin. Can you hear?”
I make a face. “Yeah, sometimes.” They have sex at least once a day, sometimes more. I swear, Dean’s a sex addict. Not that once a day is bad, but I don’t see why he’s looking at me when he gets plenty from Corey.
“I think he wants to have a threesome.”
“Ew. Corey!”
She laughs. “I told him no way. I don’t share. Ever. Not even with my best cousin who’s like a sister.”
Thank God.
What in the hell would I say if she was into it?
But yeah, gross. Apparently my instincts are right about Dean.
“So back to Nico Tacone. What’s going to happen when you do see him again?”
Er…how should I know?
“I mean, you need to decide. I think the guy has the hots for you. And his instinct is to exploit you, like he probably exploits all women, but something made him hold back.”
“He thinks I’m innocent or something.” I say innocent like it’s a dirty word.
Corey grins at me. She knows better. “There’s something about you that comes off that way. I used to hate you for it.”
I gape. “What?”
She shrugs. “When we were kids. I mean, my dad was such a prick and I didn’t trust anyone as far as I could throw them, but you were so pure. With you, what you see is what you get. It’s what makes you trust losers. But it’s a pretty amazing quality.”
I roll my eyes. “Great. An amazing quality that made you hate me as a kid and makes me date losers. Sounds like one I should keep.”
Her eyes slide over at me. “No, really. I hope you never lose it.”
She sounds so serious I shut up.
“Anyway, I think that’s what he’s reacting to. You’re out of place in Vegas.” Corey pulls into the Bellissimo’s drive and heads toward the back employee lot. “So how’s it going to go when you see him?”
I draw a breath. I want to lie and say I hope I won’t see him at all, but Corey already knows the truth. I shrug. “I’ll follow his lead.”
Corey parks and faces me. “Seriously? How’s that been working out for you so far?”
“I know, I know, but…” But it’s part of the fascination. The way he dominates every moment we’re together makes my knees weak.
We get out of the car and walk into the casino together through the service entrance.
“I think you should decide. If you want to go for him, make a play. If not, be professional. Don’t let him jerk you around again. Okay?”
I nod, but I’m not sure about anything. I need to quit this job. Soon. Before I humiliate myself even more.
My phone buzzes as I walk down the hall. It’s a friend from Reno. She wrote, Tanner stopped by. Seemed really heartbroken. He begged me for your new number. I told him to get lost.
Right. Heartbroken. Ha. He wants the car back.
Thanks, I text back. I definitely don’t want to hear from him.
I head to the employee locker room to change into my pink housekeeping dress. Like every day this week, there’s an uptick in excitement as I put it on, remembering how Tacone stripped me out of it.
Damn. I have it bad for this guy and he’d be my worst man-move yet.