Copyright © 2019 by Bethany-Kris. All rights reserved.
PROLOGUE
har·bor
/ˈhärbər/
verb
1. keep (a thought or feeling, typically a negative one) in one’s mind, especially secretly.
2. give a home or shelter to.
There’s got to be more to life than this.
Even as the old man landlord bitched in the apartment doorway, Renzo Zulla’s mind was on something else entirely. Somewhere that bills weren’t a problem, and rent wasn’t due. Somewhere that a newborn didn’t cry harder than other newborns, and he didn’t have to stay up all night just to watch the baby shake in his sleep because the drugs their mother had pumped into her body during his pregnancy hadn’t left his blood yet.
Somewhere that was better than here.
He’d not found it yet.
“Where is your mother?” the landlord demanded.
Renzo came out of his thoughts to stare the man head-on. What should he say?
I don’t know.
She left the night we brought Diego home.
Probably shooting up somewhere.
Renzo figured none of those things would help his case here. If only because, well, the man might call someone on Renzo. It was just him and Rose, and two-week-old Diego in the apartment. He wasn’t even fucking seventeen yet, either.
“She’s out,” Renzo lied.
The bitterness that festered in his chest whenever he lied for his mother grew each time he had to do it. Mostly because he didn’t want to have to lie for her at all. It wasn’t like she deserved it. She couldn’t even do the bare minimum for the three kids she brought into the world, but here he was protecting her time and time again.
Even if it wasn’t really for her.
Still pissed him off.
“When is she gonna be back?” the landlord demanded.
Renzo swallowed the thickness in his throat, replying, “Later, maybe.”
Days was more like it.
If not weeks.
Carmen was harder to predict than the weather, and Renzo had stopped trying. Besides, he didn’t have the time or patience anymore. He had other things to worry about—the two-week-old in his arms, for example. Diego needed to eat, and Renzo was running low on that powder formula. Or even the girl in the living room trying to get her brush stroke just right with paint brushes he’d lifted from an art store, and a canvas her teacher let her take from school.
He couldn’t worry about where the fuck his mother was right now, or when she was going to get back. Frankly, a part of him wished she would never come back because honestly, life might be easier.
It would certainly be better.
“Well,” the landlord grunted, pushing his heavy body away from the door finally, “I am gonna need that rent before the end of the day, Renzo, or a notice is going up on the door. Do you hear me?”
Renzo wished his throat didn’t feel so fucking tight, so he could tell this man where he should shove his goddamn rent money. “You’ll get your money.”
“Make sure of it.” The man’s beady eyes dropped to the swaddled—the lady next door showed Renzo how to do it for Diego—baby tucked into Renzo’s arms. “Cute kid—having them younger and younger, huh?”
The landlord didn’t give him a chance to reply and deny that Diego was his son before he turned and left. Not that it would matter, really. Very few people had even known his mother was pregnant with a third child she would never be able to care for because of her drug habit and lack of love for her children. All the drugs she used kept her sickly-skinny, and sickly-looking, too. She’d barely looked pregnant when Diego was finally born, and he barely broke five pounds on the scale, too.
“Ren?”
Closing the apartment door, Renzo turned to face his almost-fifteen-year-old sister with what he hoped seemed like a smile. He couldn’t be fucking sure. Even smiling was more difficult than it should be, really.
“Yeah, everything is fine, Rose,” he told her.
His sister didn’t look like she believed it.
He didn’t have time to placate her. Not right now. A quick peek out the window told him they were getting close to the day being over which meant the rent needed to be in that asshole’s hand. He didn’t have the rent money—all the money he had saved up from doing odd jobs for Vito Christiano—which wasn’t very much—went straight into getting them into this place before Diego was born, keeping his mother calm so she didn’t ruin the whole damn thing, and making sure Diego had what Renzo assumed a baby needed.
He was deadass broke.
He hadn’t been able to pick up a job from Vito since Diego was born because he hadn’t been able to leave the baby alone. Who the hell else was going to take care of him? His mother? Her coked-out ass could barely take care of herself when she was around to do that.
“I need you to look after Diego for a couple of hours,” Renzo said, passing over the sleeping baby. “Do not put him down and walk away from him, Rose. He’s still shaking, and he doesn’t sleep a lot as it is. It helps when you hold him—he doesn’t get as scared or loud.”
Really, Renzo thought it didn’t hurt the baby as much when someone was holding him. It calmed him. Rose didn’t really understand because Renzo never thought to explain to her that drugs plus a pregnancy didn’t equal anything good, but as long as she followed his direction with Diego, then that was all he cared about.
Rose peered down at the swaddled baby. “What if he wakes up?”
“Change his diaper, and give him a bottle.”
“But he throws up every time he eats, Ren!”
Yeah, that was another thing …
“As long as he doesn’t choke, then he’s okay. Just pat his back and see if he’ll take more. Can you handle it, or what?”
Rose didn’t look all that confident, but Renzo didn’t have the time to find someone else to watch the baby.
“I need to get out of here—I will be two hours, tops. Okay?”
“Just two hours?” Rose questioned.
Renzo shrugged. “Maybe less.”
Unlikely, but if it got him out of that apartment …
“All right,” Rose said.
Great.
• • •
Vito Christiano was a terrifying figure on the streets—he always wore black, no matter what. Black shoes, black suits, and a fucking black heart, if you asked anybody. Black was his color. Like his dark eyes, and the color of the Cadillac he drove through the Bronx twice a week just to remind every fucker working on the corner that he owned their asses.
Renzo’s work with Vito always came down to two simple things—Renzo’s availability and willingness to do a job, and Vito’s needs at any given moment. He could always be available, and he was willing to do just about any job, but Vito on the other hand, didn’t always have work to give Renzo, or … he made it seem that way.
Another thing the guy didn’t do?
Take requests.
Maybe that was why Renzo was so surprised to see that familiar Cadillac pull up next to the alleyway where he’d been keeping safe from the rain for the last forty-five minutes since he made the call to Vito on the payphone down the block. The passenger side window rolled down, and Vito’s cold, dark eyes stared at him from the driver’s seat.
“What, are you going to stand in that alley all night, Ren?” the Italian asked. “Because I am not getting my ass out of this car to walk to you, cafone.”
It wasn’t that getting inside the Cadillac made Renzo scared, but rather … uncomfortable. Mostly because when he was outside of the vehicle, he felt like he had a little more control. He wasn’t closed off, and closed in. He could—or he had a chance, rather—to get away if he needed to.
There was nowhere to go inside that car.
And he knew things about Vito … he knew what people said about this man. Mafioso, they whispered. Organized crime, people said.
Bad fuckin’ news.
“I don’t have all night,” Vito snapped.
Renzo was quick to push off the wall of the alley, and head for the car. It wasn’t like he had a choice. The smell of new leather and pine needles filled his lungs the second he sat in the vehicle. Warmth blew from the heaters, and a quiet melody strummed from the speakers—old music Renzo had little to no interest in.
But he wasn’t here for the leather, the warmth, or the music.
“Lucky I was in the area,” Vito grumbled around the toothpick he’d pulled from behind his ear to stick in the corner of his mouth. “I don’t have time to chase boys all around the city, Renzo. What do you need? I thought you had other things to handle. New baby, right?”
Renzo kept one eye on the man in the driver’s seat, and one on the road ahead of him. “Need a job. Something to get done and be paid before the day is out.”
Vito grunted. “I don’t have anything for you at the moment.”
Shit.
“At all?”
Vito shook his head, and scrubbed a hand down his throat. “Nothing you would wanna take, anyhow.”
“I have a four-hundred-dollar rent bill to pay, and food to buy for my sister and brother. So, I’m not really picky now, Vito.”
There, he said it.
Now, he could pretend like he hadn’t.
Vito was quiet for a long while, but Renzo still felt the man’s eyes burning holes into him from the side. It was easier to act like the guy wasn’t sizing him up when he didn’t have to look at him. He hated pity—useless emotion, really. It did nothing for him. Pity didn’t make money appear, or keep them from going hungry.
Pity just was.
“Your Ma’s fucked off again, then?” Vito asked.
Renzo stiffened in the seat. He’d never told Vito about Carmen, or the constant shit she put her kids through. There wasn’t a need to tell the man, really. “How—”
“And I bet your fuck-up of a father ain’t been around, either,” Vito mumbled.
His head snapped to the side, and he eyed Vito openly, wary, and concerned. They didn’t talk personal shit whenever Renzo did a job for the guy, and he wasn’t even sure how Vito knew anything about his drug addict mother and deadbeat father.
Vito was about to explain, apparently. “Used to run these streets with your dad, yeah? Me and him, wanted that button like nothing else. Gonna be made, we used to say.” The man chuckled, and gave Renzo a look from the side as he shrugged with a raised brow, adding, “Made men, you know?”
Yeah, Renzo knew what that meant.
Sort of.
“Sure,” he said.
Vito nodded, and laughed in that dry, dark way again. “I think you know the words, but not what it is, kid. And that’s fine—you don’t need to know. Couldn’t leave that mother of yours alone, though. Like he couldn’t leave the fuckin’ bottle alone, too. Or how you couldn’t trust him with anything more than a few dollars because he ran it to the casino, or a damn bookie the first chance he could.”
Renzo swallowed hard.
None of that was a lie.
“Gotta follow the rules of made men if you’re gonna be a made man,” Vito mumbled more to himself than Renzo as he patted the pocket of his silk shirt. Soon, he found the cigarette and lighter he was looking for, lighting it up and sticking it in his mouth. Renzo ignored the heavy smoke, and tried to focus on the quiet street ahead of him. “I followed the rules, you know? Got my button, but had to step away from him. Can’t be connected to people who make you look bad. Knew about you, though, and your sister. Your ma never got any better; neither did your father.”
“Listen—”
Vito coughed on a heavy drag of the cigarette, and rolled down his window a bit to flick the ash outside. “No, you listen. I’ll spot you what you need, Ren. I bet you don’t like owing somebody money, so I suspect you’re gonna do whatever I want you to do to pay me back, and that’s good. That’s a good thing because you’re smart enough and just quick enough to maybe make something of nothing on these streets. We’ll get you figured out for that. But it’s not that—the money—that you need to worry about, okay?”
Renzo glanced over at the man. “I don’t understand.”
“There’s a book,” Vito said, taking another drag from the cigarette and then eyeing the cherry red tip. “A book called The Angry Christian. The author—a guy named Bert Ghezzi—says that resentment is akin to taking poison into your body willingly, and hoping it kills the person you’re resentful of, or who caused your resentment.”
He didn’t know how to reply to that, so he just stayed quiet. Vito didn’t seem like he minded, really.
“Anger’s the same way, you know. Bitterness, too. You harbor enough of that for them, Ren, and it’s only going to get worse over the years. It ain’t gonna do nothing to them, but it’s going to kill you. Like putting a gun to your head, holding it there, and then pulling the trigger hoping it’s going to kill them. It ain’t never gonna kill them, kid … harboring that only hurts you. Learn to let it go.”
Renzo blinked.
Vito wasn’t wrong.
He hated his parents.
Hated this life they brought him into.
Hated everything.
“Yeah,” Vito said quietly like he could read Renzo’s mind. “Yeah, kid, that right there. Gotta let it go, Ren.”
“I don’t know how—”
“Do you know what harbor means, yeah?”
Renzo cleared his throat. “I guess.”
“Mmm, not the noun, or the usage of the verb I just gave you, the other one,” Vito said.
“No.”
Vito sighed. “If you can’t let go of what you’re harboring, Ren, then you need to learn to be someone else’s harbor. The safe place—the refuge. People are counting on you, right? Don’t let them down. Don’t let them down by falling into the same rabbit hole of the people who made you, kid. You gotta be better.”
Renzo sucked in a sharp breath. “Yeah, all right.”
“You gotta do better.”
With that said, Vito opened the dash on the car to expose stacks of money. He gestured at it with one hand, saying to Renzo, “You take what you need, and you pay it back with forty percent interest on the top. You got me?”
That’s a lot of money.
“Go ahead,” Vito grunted, replacing the cigarette with the toothpick again, “and then we’ll talk about what job you’re gonna do for me next, kid.”
Renzo took the money.
Like Vito said, he had to be that shelter—the safe harbor.
People were counting on him.
He couldn’t let them down.
ONE
The world was prettiest when it was dark. Shrouded in silence, all distractions sleeping for the moment, a person could finally reflect on everything. Their life, and what had become of it. Their choices, and why they made them.
Anything.
A person could think about anything when it was dark.
Yet, the only thing Lucia Marcello could think about as she watched the dark highway climb ahead of their vehicle was how long they had been driving. She blinked one too many times, pretty sure that the last time she had stared at the highway, there had been a lot fewer trees and more sunlight. The highway had been far more congested, too.
She peered at the clock on the dash, taking in the time before counting back the hours.
“Twenty,” she murmured.
In the driver’s seat, Renzo passed her a look. Despite her confusion, she hadn’t for one second forgot that he was next to her driving like he had been for the last several hours--almost an entire day of driving, now. It was impossible for her to just forget this man was near. Her whole body felt it, like he lit her on fire in the best way possible. All of her little hairs stood on end, and her nerves snapped. Even sitting beside her, he wasn’t nearly close enough.
Or, that’s how she felt.
Strange how that worked …
His brow quirked up, a silent question without him saying anything to her out loud. He wouldn’t want to wake his sleeping brother in the back seat, after all. He’d even turned down the music when it seemed to be making Diego toss and turn more than usual. Always his first concern, Diego took importance.
Lucia didn’t mind.
“What are you mumbling about over there?”
Had she been mumbling?
“We’ve been driving for twenty hours,” she told him quietly.
Renzo nodded, and his grip on the SUV’s steering wheel tightened. “Yeah, I know.”
If he’d been keeping track, too, he hadn’t said anything to Lucia about it. Then again, they had just taken off … they were basically on the run in a stolen vehicle after burning another stolen vehicle. She didn’t blame him for being distracted, and focusing on the things he needed his attention to be on.
How many hours they had been driving probably wasn’t even a blip on his radar. But it was on hers, now. The more she watched Renzo from the side, the easier it was for her to see what he was trying to suppress. His gaze dropped every so often, darting to the clock before going back to the road. His eyes were dimmed with tiredness even if it was hard to see in the low lighting of the vehicle. He kept that tight grip on the steering wheel no matter what, though, but Lucia was wondering how much effort that was taking him to do exactly that.
“Ren?”
“Hmm, what, baby?”
She smiled.
He’d said it so absently, like she wasn’t far from his mind now, but he was still worrying about other things. He needed to sleep. They needed to stop and rest, or she needed to drive. Either one would be fine for Lucia as long as it meant Renzo was going to relax for a couple of hours, and close his eyes.
“I can drive,” she said.
“I know you can drive.”
“So let me do that for a while. Pull over, let me drive.”
His gaze drifted to her again, and the edges of his lips quirked up in a smile. “I’m good.”
“But—”
“Lucia, I don’t even know where I’m going. How are you going to know, huh?”
He did have a good point even if she didn’t want to admit it. What good would it do them if she ended up getting lost while he was sleeping?
“Still haven’t figured that out, then?” she asked.
“Where we’re going?”
“Yeah.”
Renzo let out a sigh, and one of his hands finally left the steering wheel to snake across the middle of the seats. His fingers wrapped tightly around her thigh, and squeezed. It wasn’t much. He wasn’t even looking at her then what with his attention back on the road ahead of them, and the darkness stretching across miles and miles of highway. It didn’t have to be a lot, though.
That touch was enough. It sent sparks shooting across her skin, and heated her blood up like nothing else. His touch grounded her. And really, she hadn’t realized how much she needed that feeling until he did it.
He was still in that mindset, she realized. The same mindset he’d been thrust into the moment his mother let the threat to take Diego away from him slip out of her dirty mouth. Self-preservation kicked in for Renzo; his need to take care and protect his brother came first before anything else. It was like nothing else mattered to him for the moment.
Just that.
His brother.
He was determined to put as many miles between himself and Diego and the threat as he could. Maybe once he felt like they had gone far enough, that part of his brain would shut off. He would come back—be Ren again. Relax, and realize things were as fine as they were going to get. Until he got to that point, though, he was going to be like this. Distracted, and distant. Quiet, and stuck inside his head.
He was still hers like this.
Just a little different.
Lucia blinked at the sign that they passed by in the darkness, lit up only by their headlights. Had she missed an entire state? Because the last time she realized where they were, it had not been Iowa. “I fell asleep?”
Renzo chuckled, and his smile deepened into something sexier. “Might have.”
She passed him a look. “What does that mean?”
“Means sometimes you talk in your sleep. Mumble, and go on, you know.”
Lucia might have felt embarrassed about that, but it was Renzo, and the last thing he ever did was make her feel ashamed. Oh, he made her feel a hell of a lot of things. Most, she didn’t even know what to do with.
The most prominent was love.
God, she loved him.
She loved him enough to do this—to get in a vehicle, and just drive. To go without looking back, as long as she was with him while she did it. To say fuck the rest because she was following him.
To forget where she came from because where she was going would always be better.
It would have to be better.
She was going with him, after all.
“I was thinking Vegas, actually,” Renzo said, his thumb stroking her inner thigh. “I know somebody there—an old friend, you could say.”
“Vegas.”
“What do you think?”
The city of sin.
Yet another city that never slept.
Too many people to count. They’d blend in well, the same way everyone else did. Lucia had been to a lot of places in her life, but Las Vegas was not one of them. Her aunt, Kim, came from Vegas and her family tried to keep a healthy distance for the sake of peace. Or, that’s what she had always been told.
Some mafia families simply didn’t play well together.
“Well?” Renzo asked, giving her another look.
It was still his eyes, she knew. Whatever it was he was feeling or thinking, but especially when it came to her, she could always find the truth shining in his eyes. There, nothing was hidden. At least, not from her.
Like now.
Anticipation.
Fear.
Love.
All that stared back at her, waiting.
“I’m going wherever you go,” she said.
Did he need her to keep saying that?
How many times would she say it before he finally believed it?
It was true—no matter what he thought, or how it made him feel, it was still going to be true. She didn’t doubt this would cause trouble. Mostly her taking off with him … everything else was just everything else. But couldn’t they climb that hill when it came? It wasn’t here yet, and so, Lucia didn’t want to deal with it yet.
Silly, yes.
Ignorant, sure.
What else could she do?
Lucia was where she wanted to be. Nothing was going to make that any less true.
“All right,” Renzo murmured. “We’ll stop on the other side of Iowa, grab some food, and switch some shit out.”
She didn’t know what that meant.
She didn’t care, either.
“You should still let me drive for a while,” Lucia said. “You could use some sleep, Ren.”
Renzo chuckled. “I’ll sleep when I’m dead, baby.”
Yeah, that’s what she was scared of the most.
• • •
Diego sat in the opened hatch of the back of the SUV eating a kid’s meal and chattering on in the afternoon light. Lucia opened the toy that came with his meal, and handed it over to the smiling four-year-old. It wasn’t like the toy was very much—a small writing pad and a pack of mini pencil crayons to draw with. She supposed that was better than a cheap piece of plastic that would either break before he could play with it, or would get thrown in the garbage when he had no interest in it anymore.
He took the pad and pencil crayons, happy with whatever.
“Thanks, Lucia,” Diego said around a half-full mouth of the cheeseburger.
She grinned. “You’re welcome. Draw me something pretty, okay?”
“Okay!”
Diego went back to his food—distracted and pleased. Like usual. Lucia took that chance to lean backward on her heels, and peer around the side of the SUV. She found Renzo kneeling against the back of a white car, and just removing the final screw for the license plate. He’d already taken the one off the SUV, too.
He hadn’t explained why he was switching license plates yet again. However, they were sitting in a fucking fast food restaurant’s parking lot, and while they were parked in the back where no one could see them, it still made her nervous.
“Are you almost done?” she asked.
“Almost. Diego just about finished?”
Lucia gave the boy a look, and found he was still working on his cheeseburger and had half of his fries left. “Almost, but not really.”
Renzo chuckled as he stood up, and came around the back of their SUV. He moved to the side of Lucia where he could bend down to the ground, put the license plate on, and still keep out of view with her mostly blocking what he was doing. Diego moved to the edge of the hatch, and watched his older brother with a curious eye.
“What are you doing, Ren?” Diego asked.
“Making us harder to find again, that’s all.”
“Oh, okay. Like Hide and Seek?”
Renzo glanced up, and smiled at his brother. “Sure, just like that.”
Seemingly satisfied with his brother’s answer, Diego scooted back inside the hatch and bit into his burger again while scribbling on the notepad with a red pencil crayon. He wasn’t paying Lucia and Renzo any attention, now. Renzo quickly finished up his work of switching the license plates on the vehicles—well, he didn’t put their original stolen plates on the white car. Instead, he tossed it inside the SUV to keep it before coming to stand next to Lucia. That left the white car with no plate but it was unlikely the owner would even notice that until they got off their shift later in the day.
“You sure you don’t want some food?” he asked.
She shook her head. “Not really.”
“We’re not going to stop for a while.”
“I’ll be fine.”
“If you’re—”
“Why did you switch the license plates again?” she asked. “No, sorry … took the license plate from that car and also kept ours.”
“I told Diego why.”
Turning her back to the hatch, Renzo did the same. Lucia lowered her voice as she replied, “Yeah, but maybe I don’t believe that’s why.”
Renzo snuck an arm around her waist, pulled her in close, and pressed a kiss to the top of her head. Murmuring, he admitted, “You’re right. I was thinking it’d be better to switch the plates back to the old one after we cross over into Nebraska.”
“But why—”
“We need more money.”
Lucia stilled. “We have money, Ren.”
“Not enough. Not enough for Vegas.” His hand tightened on her waist, squeezing just hard enough to take her breath away but ground her all over again. Without a word, he tugged her around the SUV where Diego couldn’t see them. Renzo backed Lucia against the SUV, and came close enough that his nose brushed against hers. All she could see was him clouding her vision, and for a moment, the rest of the world just disappeared. She sucked in a quick breath a second before his lips grazed hers. “Vegas is the most expensive place to live—and we have to stay underground, so that’s going to make it worse. We’re gonna need shit, Lucia.”
“I know.”
“Fake IDs. A place to stay. That’s going to eat up a lot of cash all at once right there.”
Would it?
Lucia didn’t know.
“We need to eat, to sleep, to get dressed every day … more. Okay? So let me take care of it. Let me handle getting cash to do something with. You just keep Diego in the car, and keep him down out of sight until I get out of here. Then, we’re on the road again. No looking back, baby, right?”
“No looking back.”
He let her go then only to pull the gun he’d kept tucked in his waistband out of his jeans. Pulling out the mag, he checked the gun, and then quickly tucked it away once more. Passing the fast food restaurant a look, his attention came back to her in a blink. “I’ll hit somewhere as we head out of Nebraska.”
She knew, then.
He was going to rob a place.
Not this place, she didn’t think. He’d said elsewhere. Plus, it wouldn’t be smart for them to be seen going inside a place, and then one of them coming back in to rob it. That felt crazy.
Like all the rest of this wasn’t crazy, too.
Lucia could tell him no. She could have stopped him, but she didn’t. She only nodded.
Whatever he needed, she was going to do.
That’s why she came.
That’s why she was here.
For him.
PROLOGUE
har·bor
/ˈhärbər/
verb
1. keep (a thought or feeling, typically a negative one) in one’s mind, especially secretly.
2. give a home or shelter to.
There’s got to be more to life than this.
Even as the old man landlord bitched in the apartment doorway, Renzo Zulla’s mind was on something else entirely. Somewhere that bills weren’t a problem, and rent wasn’t due. Somewhere that a newborn didn’t cry harder than other newborns, and he didn’t have to stay up all night just to watch the baby shake in his sleep because the drugs their mother had pumped into her body during his pregnancy hadn’t left his blood yet.
Somewhere that was better than here.
He’d not found it yet.
“Where is your mother?” the landlord demanded.
Renzo came out of his thoughts to stare the man head-on. What should he say?
I don’t know.
She left the night we brought Diego home.
Probably shooting up somewhere.
Renzo figured none of those things would help his case here. If only because, well, the man might call someone on Renzo. It was just him and Rose, and two-week-old Diego in the apartment. He wasn’t even fucking seventeen yet, either.
“She’s out,” Renzo lied.
The bitterness that festered in his chest whenever he lied for his mother grew each time he had to do it. Mostly because he didn’t want to have to lie for her at all. It wasn’t like she deserved it. She couldn’t even do the bare minimum for the three kids she brought into the world, but here he was protecting her time and time again.
Even if it wasn’t really for her.
Still pissed him off.
“When is she gonna be back?” the landlord demanded.
Renzo swallowed the thickness in his throat, replying, “Later, maybe.”
Days was more like it.
If not weeks.
Carmen was harder to predict than the weather, and Renzo had stopped trying. Besides, he didn’t have the time or patience anymore. He had other things to worry about—the two-week-old in his arms, for example. Diego needed to eat, and Renzo was running low on that powder formula. Or even the girl in the living room trying to get her brush stroke just right with paint brushes he’d lifted from an art store, and a canvas her teacher let her take from school.
He couldn’t worry about where the fuck his mother was right now, or when she was going to get back. Frankly, a part of him wished she would never come back because honestly, life might be easier.
It would certainly be better.
“Well,” the landlord grunted, pushing his heavy body away from the door finally, “I am gonna need that rent before the end of the day, Renzo, or a notice is going up on the door. Do you hear me?”
Renzo wished his throat didn’t feel so fucking tight, so he could tell this man where he should shove his goddamn rent money. “You’ll get your money.”
“Make sure of it.” The man’s beady eyes dropped to the swaddled—the lady next door showed Renzo how to do it for Diego—baby tucked into Renzo’s arms. “Cute kid—having them younger and younger, huh?”
The landlord didn’t give him a chance to reply and deny that Diego was his son before he turned and left. Not that it would matter, really. Very few people had even known his mother was pregnant with a third child she would never be able to care for because of her drug habit and lack of love for her children. All the drugs she used kept her sickly-skinny, and sickly-looking, too. She’d barely looked pregnant when Diego was finally born, and he barely broke five pounds on the scale, too.
“Ren?”
Closing the apartment door, Renzo turned to face his almost-fifteen-year-old sister with what he hoped seemed like a smile. He couldn’t be fucking sure. Even smiling was more difficult than it should be, really.
“Yeah, everything is fine, Rose,” he told her.
His sister didn’t look like she believed it.
He didn’t have time to placate her. Not right now. A quick peek out the window told him they were getting close to the day being over which meant the rent needed to be in that asshole’s hand. He didn’t have the rent money—all the money he had saved up from doing odd jobs for Vito Christiano—which wasn’t very much—went straight into getting them into this place before Diego was born, keeping his mother calm so she didn’t ruin the whole damn thing, and making sure Diego had what Renzo assumed a baby needed.
He was deadass broke.
He hadn’t been able to pick up a job from Vito since Diego was born because he hadn’t been able to leave the baby alone. Who the hell else was going to take care of him? His mother? Her coked-out ass could barely take care of herself when she was around to do that.
“I need you to look after Diego for a couple of hours,” Renzo said, passing over the sleeping baby. “Do not put him down and walk away from him, Rose. He’s still shaking, and he doesn’t sleep a lot as it is. It helps when you hold him—he doesn’t get as scared or loud.”
Really, Renzo thought it didn’t hurt the baby as much when someone was holding him. It calmed him. Rose didn’t really understand because Renzo never thought to explain to her that drugs plus a pregnancy didn’t equal anything good, but as long as she followed his direction with Diego, then that was all he cared about.
Rose peered down at the swaddled baby. “What if he wakes up?”
“Change his diaper, and give him a bottle.”
“But he throws up every time he eats, Ren!”
Yeah, that was another thing …
“As long as he doesn’t choke, then he’s okay. Just pat his back and see if he’ll take more. Can you handle it, or what?”
Rose didn’t look all that confident, but Renzo didn’t have the time to find someone else to watch the baby.
“I need to get out of here—I will be two hours, tops. Okay?”
“Just two hours?” Rose questioned.
Renzo shrugged. “Maybe less.”
Unlikely, but if it got him out of that apartment …
“All right,” Rose said.
Great.
• • •
Vito Christiano was a terrifying figure on the streets—he always wore black, no matter what. Black shoes, black suits, and a fucking black heart, if you asked anybody. Black was his color. Like his dark eyes, and the color of the Cadillac he drove through the Bronx twice a week just to remind every fucker working on the corner that he owned their asses.
Renzo’s work with Vito always came down to two simple things—Renzo’s availability and willingness to do a job, and Vito’s needs at any given moment. He could always be available, and he was willing to do just about any job, but Vito on the other hand, didn’t always have work to give Renzo, or … he made it seem that way.
Another thing the guy didn’t do?
Take requests.
Maybe that was why Renzo was so surprised to see that familiar Cadillac pull up next to the alleyway where he’d been keeping safe from the rain for the last forty-five minutes since he made the call to Vito on the payphone down the block. The passenger side window rolled down, and Vito’s cold, dark eyes stared at him from the driver’s seat.
“What, are you going to stand in that alley all night, Ren?” the Italian asked. “Because I am not getting my ass out of this car to walk to you, cafone.”
It wasn’t that getting inside the Cadillac made Renzo scared, but rather … uncomfortable. Mostly because when he was outside of the vehicle, he felt like he had a little more control. He wasn’t closed off, and closed in. He could—or he had a chance, rather—to get away if he needed to.
There was nowhere to go inside that car.
And he knew things about Vito … he knew what people said about this man. Mafioso, they whispered. Organized crime, people said.
Bad fuckin’ news.
“I don’t have all night,” Vito snapped.
Renzo was quick to push off the wall of the alley, and head for the car. It wasn’t like he had a choice. The smell of new leather and pine needles filled his lungs the second he sat in the vehicle. Warmth blew from the heaters, and a quiet melody strummed from the speakers—old music Renzo had little to no interest in.
But he wasn’t here for the leather, the warmth, or the music.
“Lucky I was in the area,” Vito grumbled around the toothpick he’d pulled from behind his ear to stick in the corner of his mouth. “I don’t have time to chase boys all around the city, Renzo. What do you need? I thought you had other things to handle. New baby, right?”
Renzo kept one eye on the man in the driver’s seat, and one on the road ahead of him. “Need a job. Something to get done and be paid before the day is out.”
Vito grunted. “I don’t have anything for you at the moment.”
Shit.
“At all?”
Vito shook his head, and scrubbed a hand down his throat. “Nothing you would wanna take, anyhow.”
“I have a four-hundred-dollar rent bill to pay, and food to buy for my sister and brother. So, I’m not really picky now, Vito.”
There, he said it.
Now, he could pretend like he hadn’t.
Vito was quiet for a long while, but Renzo still felt the man’s eyes burning holes into him from the side. It was easier to act like the guy wasn’t sizing him up when he didn’t have to look at him. He hated pity—useless emotion, really. It did nothing for him. Pity didn’t make money appear, or keep them from going hungry.
Pity just was.
“Your Ma’s fucked off again, then?” Vito asked.
Renzo stiffened in the seat. He’d never told Vito about Carmen, or the constant shit she put her kids through. There wasn’t a need to tell the man, really. “How—”
“And I bet your fuck-up of a father ain’t been around, either,” Vito mumbled.
His head snapped to the side, and he eyed Vito openly, wary, and concerned. They didn’t talk personal shit whenever Renzo did a job for the guy, and he wasn’t even sure how Vito knew anything about his drug addict mother and deadbeat father.
Vito was about to explain, apparently. “Used to run these streets with your dad, yeah? Me and him, wanted that button like nothing else. Gonna be made, we used to say.” The man chuckled, and gave Renzo a look from the side as he shrugged with a raised brow, adding, “Made men, you know?”
Yeah, Renzo knew what that meant.
Sort of.
“Sure,” he said.
Vito nodded, and laughed in that dry, dark way again. “I think you know the words, but not what it is, kid. And that’s fine—you don’t need to know. Couldn’t leave that mother of yours alone, though. Like he couldn’t leave the fuckin’ bottle alone, too. Or how you couldn’t trust him with anything more than a few dollars because he ran it to the casino, or a damn bookie the first chance he could.”
Renzo swallowed hard.
None of that was a lie.
“Gotta follow the rules of made men if you’re gonna be a made man,” Vito mumbled more to himself than Renzo as he patted the pocket of his silk shirt. Soon, he found the cigarette and lighter he was looking for, lighting it up and sticking it in his mouth. Renzo ignored the heavy smoke, and tried to focus on the quiet street ahead of him. “I followed the rules, you know? Got my button, but had to step away from him. Can’t be connected to people who make you look bad. Knew about you, though, and your sister. Your ma never got any better; neither did your father.”
“Listen—”
Vito coughed on a heavy drag of the cigarette, and rolled down his window a bit to flick the ash outside. “No, you listen. I’ll spot you what you need, Ren. I bet you don’t like owing somebody money, so I suspect you’re gonna do whatever I want you to do to pay me back, and that’s good. That’s a good thing because you’re smart enough and just quick enough to maybe make something of nothing on these streets. We’ll get you figured out for that. But it’s not that—the money—that you need to worry about, okay?”
Renzo glanced over at the man. “I don’t understand.”
“There’s a book,” Vito said, taking another drag from the cigarette and then eyeing the cherry red tip. “A book called The Angry Christian. The author—a guy named Bert Ghezzi—says that resentment is akin to taking poison into your body willingly, and hoping it kills the person you’re resentful of, or who caused your resentment.”
He didn’t know how to reply to that, so he just stayed quiet. Vito didn’t seem like he minded, really.
“Anger’s the same way, you know. Bitterness, too. You harbor enough of that for them, Ren, and it’s only going to get worse over the years. It ain’t gonna do nothing to them, but it’s going to kill you. Like putting a gun to your head, holding it there, and then pulling the trigger hoping it’s going to kill them. It ain’t never gonna kill them, kid … harboring that only hurts you. Learn to let it go.”
Renzo blinked.
Vito wasn’t wrong.
He hated his parents.
Hated this life they brought him into.
Hated everything.
“Yeah,” Vito said quietly like he could read Renzo’s mind. “Yeah, kid, that right there. Gotta let it go, Ren.”
“I don’t know how—”
“Do you know what harbor means, yeah?”
Renzo cleared his throat. “I guess.”
“Mmm, not the noun, or the usage of the verb I just gave you, the other one,” Vito said.
“No.”
Vito sighed. “If you can’t let go of what you’re harboring, Ren, then you need to learn to be someone else’s harbor. The safe place—the refuge. People are counting on you, right? Don’t let them down. Don’t let them down by falling into the same rabbit hole of the people who made you, kid. You gotta be better.”
Renzo sucked in a sharp breath. “Yeah, all right.”
“You gotta do better.”
With that said, Vito opened the dash on the car to expose stacks of money. He gestured at it with one hand, saying to Renzo, “You take what you need, and you pay it back with forty percent interest on the top. You got me?”
That’s a lot of money.
“Go ahead,” Vito grunted, replacing the cigarette with the toothpick again, “and then we’ll talk about what job you’re gonna do for me next, kid.”
Renzo took the money.
Like Vito said, he had to be that shelter—the safe harbor.
People were counting on him.
He couldn’t let them down.
ONE
The world was prettiest when it was dark. Shrouded in silence, all distractions sleeping for the moment, a person could finally reflect on everything. Their life, and what had become of it. Their choices, and why they made them.
Anything.
A person could think about anything when it was dark.
Yet, the only thing Lucia Marcello could think about as she watched the dark highway climb ahead of their vehicle was how long they had been driving. She blinked one too many times, pretty sure that the last time she had stared at the highway, there had been a lot fewer trees and more sunlight. The highway had been far more congested, too.
She peered at the clock on the dash, taking in the time before counting back the hours.
“Twenty,” she murmured.
In the driver’s seat, Renzo passed her a look. Despite her confusion, she hadn’t for one second forgot that he was next to her driving like he had been for the last several hours--almost an entire day of driving, now. It was impossible for her to just forget this man was near. Her whole body felt it, like he lit her on fire in the best way possible. All of her little hairs stood on end, and her nerves snapped. Even sitting beside her, he wasn’t nearly close enough.
Or, that’s how she felt.
Strange how that worked …
His brow quirked up, a silent question without him saying anything to her out loud. He wouldn’t want to wake his sleeping brother in the back seat, after all. He’d even turned down the music when it seemed to be making Diego toss and turn more than usual. Always his first concern, Diego took importance.
Lucia didn’t mind.
“What are you mumbling about over there?”
Had she been mumbling?
“We’ve been driving for twenty hours,” she told him quietly.
Renzo nodded, and his grip on the SUV’s steering wheel tightened. “Yeah, I know.”
If he’d been keeping track, too, he hadn’t said anything to Lucia about it. Then again, they had just taken off … they were basically on the run in a stolen vehicle after burning another stolen vehicle. She didn’t blame him for being distracted, and focusing on the things he needed his attention to be on.
How many hours they had been driving probably wasn’t even a blip on his radar. But it was on hers, now. The more she watched Renzo from the side, the easier it was for her to see what he was trying to suppress. His gaze dropped every so often, darting to the clock before going back to the road. His eyes were dimmed with tiredness even if it was hard to see in the low lighting of the vehicle. He kept that tight grip on the steering wheel no matter what, though, but Lucia was wondering how much effort that was taking him to do exactly that.
“Ren?”
“Hmm, what, baby?”
She smiled.
He’d said it so absently, like she wasn’t far from his mind now, but he was still worrying about other things. He needed to sleep. They needed to stop and rest, or she needed to drive. Either one would be fine for Lucia as long as it meant Renzo was going to relax for a couple of hours, and close his eyes.
“I can drive,” she said.
“I know you can drive.”
“So let me do that for a while. Pull over, let me drive.”
His gaze drifted to her again, and the edges of his lips quirked up in a smile. “I’m good.”
“But—”
“Lucia, I don’t even know where I’m going. How are you going to know, huh?”
He did have a good point even if she didn’t want to admit it. What good would it do them if she ended up getting lost while he was sleeping?
“Still haven’t figured that out, then?” she asked.
“Where we’re going?”
“Yeah.”
Renzo let out a sigh, and one of his hands finally left the steering wheel to snake across the middle of the seats. His fingers wrapped tightly around her thigh, and squeezed. It wasn’t much. He wasn’t even looking at her then what with his attention back on the road ahead of them, and the darkness stretching across miles and miles of highway. It didn’t have to be a lot, though.
That touch was enough. It sent sparks shooting across her skin, and heated her blood up like nothing else. His touch grounded her. And really, she hadn’t realized how much she needed that feeling until he did it.
He was still in that mindset, she realized. The same mindset he’d been thrust into the moment his mother let the threat to take Diego away from him slip out of her dirty mouth. Self-preservation kicked in for Renzo; his need to take care and protect his brother came first before anything else. It was like nothing else mattered to him for the moment.
Just that.
His brother.
He was determined to put as many miles between himself and Diego and the threat as he could. Maybe once he felt like they had gone far enough, that part of his brain would shut off. He would come back—be Ren again. Relax, and realize things were as fine as they were going to get. Until he got to that point, though, he was going to be like this. Distracted, and distant. Quiet, and stuck inside his head.
He was still hers like this.
Just a little different.
Lucia blinked at the sign that they passed by in the darkness, lit up only by their headlights. Had she missed an entire state? Because the last time she realized where they were, it had not been Iowa. “I fell asleep?”
Renzo chuckled, and his smile deepened into something sexier. “Might have.”
She passed him a look. “What does that mean?”
“Means sometimes you talk in your sleep. Mumble, and go on, you know.”
Lucia might have felt embarrassed about that, but it was Renzo, and the last thing he ever did was make her feel ashamed. Oh, he made her feel a hell of a lot of things. Most, she didn’t even know what to do with.
The most prominent was love.
God, she loved him.
She loved him enough to do this—to get in a vehicle, and just drive. To go without looking back, as long as she was with him while she did it. To say fuck the rest because she was following him.
To forget where she came from because where she was going would always be better.
It would have to be better.
She was going with him, after all.
“I was thinking Vegas, actually,” Renzo said, his thumb stroking her inner thigh. “I know somebody there—an old friend, you could say.”
“Vegas.”
“What do you think?”
The city of sin.
Yet another city that never slept.
Too many people to count. They’d blend in well, the same way everyone else did. Lucia had been to a lot of places in her life, but Las Vegas was not one of them. Her aunt, Kim, came from Vegas and her family tried to keep a healthy distance for the sake of peace. Or, that’s what she had always been told.
Some mafia families simply didn’t play well together.
“Well?” Renzo asked, giving her another look.
It was still his eyes, she knew. Whatever it was he was feeling or thinking, but especially when it came to her, she could always find the truth shining in his eyes. There, nothing was hidden. At least, not from her.
Like now.
Anticipation.
Fear.
Love.
All that stared back at her, waiting.
“I’m going wherever you go,” she said.
Did he need her to keep saying that?
How many times would she say it before he finally believed it?
It was true—no matter what he thought, or how it made him feel, it was still going to be true. She didn’t doubt this would cause trouble. Mostly her taking off with him … everything else was just everything else. But couldn’t they climb that hill when it came? It wasn’t here yet, and so, Lucia didn’t want to deal with it yet.
Silly, yes.
Ignorant, sure.
What else could she do?
Lucia was where she wanted to be. Nothing was going to make that any less true.
“All right,” Renzo murmured. “We’ll stop on the other side of Iowa, grab some food, and switch some shit out.”
She didn’t know what that meant.
She didn’t care, either.
“You should still let me drive for a while,” Lucia said. “You could use some sleep, Ren.”
Renzo chuckled. “I’ll sleep when I’m dead, baby.”
Yeah, that’s what she was scared of the most.
• • •
Diego sat in the opened hatch of the back of the SUV eating a kid’s meal and chattering on in the afternoon light. Lucia opened the toy that came with his meal, and handed it over to the smiling four-year-old. It wasn’t like the toy was very much—a small writing pad and a pack of mini pencil crayons to draw with. She supposed that was better than a cheap piece of plastic that would either break before he could play with it, or would get thrown in the garbage when he had no interest in it anymore.
He took the pad and pencil crayons, happy with whatever.
“Thanks, Lucia,” Diego said around a half-full mouth of the cheeseburger.
She grinned. “You’re welcome. Draw me something pretty, okay?”
“Okay!”
Diego went back to his food—distracted and pleased. Like usual. Lucia took that chance to lean backward on her heels, and peer around the side of the SUV. She found Renzo kneeling against the back of a white car, and just removing the final screw for the license plate. He’d already taken the one off the SUV, too.
He hadn’t explained why he was switching license plates yet again. However, they were sitting in a fucking fast food restaurant’s parking lot, and while they were parked in the back where no one could see them, it still made her nervous.
“Are you almost done?” she asked.
“Almost. Diego just about finished?”
Lucia gave the boy a look, and found he was still working on his cheeseburger and had half of his fries left. “Almost, but not really.”
Renzo chuckled as he stood up, and came around the back of their SUV. He moved to the side of Lucia where he could bend down to the ground, put the license plate on, and still keep out of view with her mostly blocking what he was doing. Diego moved to the edge of the hatch, and watched his older brother with a curious eye.
“What are you doing, Ren?” Diego asked.
“Making us harder to find again, that’s all.”
“Oh, okay. Like Hide and Seek?”
Renzo glanced up, and smiled at his brother. “Sure, just like that.”
Seemingly satisfied with his brother’s answer, Diego scooted back inside the hatch and bit into his burger again while scribbling on the notepad with a red pencil crayon. He wasn’t paying Lucia and Renzo any attention, now. Renzo quickly finished up his work of switching the license plates on the vehicles—well, he didn’t put their original stolen plates on the white car. Instead, he tossed it inside the SUV to keep it before coming to stand next to Lucia. That left the white car with no plate but it was unlikely the owner would even notice that until they got off their shift later in the day.
“You sure you don’t want some food?” he asked.
She shook her head. “Not really.”
“We’re not going to stop for a while.”
“I’ll be fine.”
“If you’re—”
“Why did you switch the license plates again?” she asked. “No, sorry … took the license plate from that car and also kept ours.”
“I told Diego why.”
Turning her back to the hatch, Renzo did the same. Lucia lowered her voice as she replied, “Yeah, but maybe I don’t believe that’s why.”
Renzo snuck an arm around her waist, pulled her in close, and pressed a kiss to the top of her head. Murmuring, he admitted, “You’re right. I was thinking it’d be better to switch the plates back to the old one after we cross over into Nebraska.”
“But why—”
“We need more money.”
Lucia stilled. “We have money, Ren.”
“Not enough. Not enough for Vegas.” His hand tightened on her waist, squeezing just hard enough to take her breath away but ground her all over again. Without a word, he tugged her around the SUV where Diego couldn’t see them. Renzo backed Lucia against the SUV, and came close enough that his nose brushed against hers. All she could see was him clouding her vision, and for a moment, the rest of the world just disappeared. She sucked in a quick breath a second before his lips grazed hers. “Vegas is the most expensive place to live—and we have to stay underground, so that’s going to make it worse. We’re gonna need shit, Lucia.”
“I know.”
“Fake IDs. A place to stay. That’s going to eat up a lot of cash all at once right there.”
Would it?
Lucia didn’t know.
“We need to eat, to sleep, to get dressed every day … more. Okay? So let me take care of it. Let me handle getting cash to do something with. You just keep Diego in the car, and keep him down out of sight until I get out of here. Then, we’re on the road again. No looking back, baby, right?”
“No looking back.”
He let her go then only to pull the gun he’d kept tucked in his waistband out of his jeans. Pulling out the mag, he checked the gun, and then quickly tucked it away once more. Passing the fast food restaurant a look, his attention came back to her in a blink. “I’ll hit somewhere as we head out of Nebraska.”
She knew, then.
He was going to rob a place.
Not this place, she didn’t think. He’d said elsewhere. Plus, it wouldn’t be smart for them to be seen going inside a place, and then one of them coming back in to rob it. That felt crazy.
Like all the rest of this wasn’t crazy, too.
Lucia could tell him no. She could have stopped him, but she didn’t. She only nodded.
Whatever he needed, she was going to do.
That’s why she came.
That’s why she was here.
For him.