by CD Reiss
Copyright © 2021 by Flip City Media Inc.
All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the author, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.
This book is a work of fiction. I made up the characters, situations, and sex acts. Brand names, businesses, and places are used to make it all seem like your best real life. Any similarities to places, situations or persons living or dead is the result of coincidence or wish fulfillment.
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Paige Press
Leander, TX 78641
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Ebook:
ISBN: 978-1-953520-20-3
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Print:
ISBN: 978-1-953520-21-0
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Editor: Erica Edits
Cover: CD Reiss
Contents
About The Book
Prologue
1. VIOLETTA
2. VIOLETTA
3. VIOLETTA
4. VIOLETTA
5. VIOLETTA
6. VIOLETTA
7. VIOLETTA
8. VIOLETTA
9. VIOLETTA
10. VIOLETTA
11. SANTINO
12. VIOLETTA
13. VIOLETTA
14. VIOLETTA
15. SANTINO
16. VIOLETTA
17. VIOLETTA
18. VIOLETTA
19. SANTINO
20. VIOLETTA
21. VIOLETTA
22. VIOLETTA
23. VIOLETTA
24. VIOLETTA
25. VIOLETTA
26. VIOLETTA
27. VIOLETTA
28. VIOLETTA
29. VIOLETTA
30. SANTINO
31. VIOLETTA
Also by CD Reiss
Paige Press
About the Author
About The Book
An epic mafia romance trilogy that sets a new bar for just how dark a hero can get, from NY Times Bestselling author CD Reiss.
Some girls dream of marrying a prince, but I never imagined I’d be sold to a king.
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Santino DiLustro.
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The king.
The monster.
The keeper of secrets.
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When he forced me to marry him, I cried for love I’d never know.
When he locked me away, I cried for the freedom I lost forever.
Every other tear I’ve shed is for my soul, because I’m falling for the devil himself.
Prologue
VIOLETTA
The first time I see Santino, I don’t know how old he is, but I am 12, and he is a man. Though I expect him to carry all the subtle and seductive dangers of men, his menace is controlled, with the direction and force of gravity.
He comes to my uncle’s house, where I’ve lived since I was a child, after my parents were shot in the streets of Naples.
He stands at the door. Sunlight behind him. Silhouette of a god. Perfect. Michelangelo’s David, saying my uncle’s name—Guglielmo—with an accent that sounds like the wind in the grape vines and the voice of a volcano consciously choosing not to erupt.
My Zia Madeline hustles me into the kitchen, but he’s already let himself in, and for the moment he’s in the doorframe, daylight is shut out. The shadows become the light, and I see him with eyes still tightly closed against the sun.
A girl cannot cry hard enough to summon a devil like him. All her pain won’t be enough to drive him out of hell.
I’m different.
When he lays eyes on me, Zia pulls me away, but a part of me stays where his attention pins me. He’s powerful enough to separate me from my ghost. So even though I’m behind a closed door with Zia, I’m also in the hallway with him, in that moment forever, when the darkness in his eyes recognized the darkness in mine.
1
VIOLETTA
“Incoming!”
The deep voice echoes off the library’s high ceiling just as a paper airplane whizzes over Scarlett’s shoulder and drops on my anatomy book. Scarlett yips in surprise, looking behind her at a group of backwards-cap-wearing, goatee-sporting frat boys in shirts with arm holes bigger than their IQs. One jogs toward us under the pretense of retrieving his projectile. The librarian abandons her desk and strides to them like a woman ready to single-handedly tear down the patriarchy.
“Hey,” Goatee greets me with a smile. His teeth must have cost his parents a fortune, but no amount of money can hide eyes dulled by entitlement. “You wanna keep that?” He juts his chin to the plane that is perched on my textbook. The name RANDY is scrawled on a wing over ten digits.
“You can keep it if you want,” his friend says with a wink.
Casually, I pass the plane back. Goatee takes the hint with the grace of a newborn Labrador and turns his attention to Scarlett. Before he can offer her his number, the librarian’s heels click over.
“Back to your seats,” she whispers sotto, shouting and hissing at the same time, which they must teach you in library school. “Or go.” Her arm juts to the side, one long red nail directed to the door. Between the heels and the nails, I suspect she has an exciting life outside the university library.
“This?” I wave my hand at the entirety of the library and the boorish douchebags swaggering out of it. “I won’t miss.”
“You don’t like being interrupted by a couple of keggerheads?” Scarlett sniffs. She’s never been the one to care about the frat boys, but give her a brooding loner, and she falls down swooning. “Maybe rethink your summer in Greece, then. I mean, fraternities are Greek. It’s probably in their blood.”
Our summer plans were always varied, but I hadn’t left the United States since I arrived from Italy as an orphaned five-year-old, so I could barely wait to get to my trip to Santorini and Malta.
“They’re European,” I reply, totally invested in my daydream of relaxing train rides from beach to pristine beach, where all the boys wear caps frontward and their facial hair commits fully to either a beard or skin. “Different.”
“Men are the same everywhere.” Scarlett flips her own page. “Be careful you’ll get…you know?”
“Sunburned?”
“Is that what you call it in Italian?”
A hard shush comes from the librarian’s desk.
“This is my leap into adulthood.” I straighten myself up as tall as possible. “Not a leap into kissing my way across southern Europe.”
Mostly. Kind of. My hopes and fears were pretty similar.
“Well,” Scarlett whispers. “Summer can’t happen until we pass this trauma unit final.” She flips to chapter five.
An old familiar itch settles between my shoulder blades, one that chases me during every study session imagining myself faced with true bodily trauma, and knowing exactly what to do about it.
Prevent further injury, stabilize, transport if necessary. That’s it. Everything else feeds into those steps, and nothing else matters in an emergency.
All I’ve ever wanted to do was be a nurse, and learning about minimizing shock and stopping bleeding never feels like studying. It’s natural, like an extension of my body.
“I think I’m just going to go home.” I shoulder my satchel. “You’ll be okay without me?”
“Will you be okay without me?” She waggles her brows, and I smile. We’re talking about two completely different things, and we’re both going to be just fine.
The exam that evening is less a breeze and more a light wind, but I finish early an
d get on the bus home over the river to Secondo Vasto—Little Vasto, after the part of Naples we’re all from—where I have lived since being brought to America when I was five.
My friends roll their eyes at my poor study habits, so I was good and double-checked my work even though I knew I got them all right. Some things are serious enough to stick the first time you hear them. The difference between life and death isn’t something you should forget.
I love Scarlett and all my friends, but they don’t know the real me, anyway. Not really. They accept I’m reserved about my family and life across the river and leave it at that. They stopped asking why I don’t date or hit all the parties a long time ago, because they couldn’t understand why—in this day and age—I’d be so invested in keeping my virginity indefinitely for a man I didn’t even know yet.
Americans just don’t get the old world. Napoli. How different things are there. Zio and Zia—Italian for aunt and uncle—have high expectations for me, and I can’t let them down. Families don’t work that way where I’m from. My sister died of pneumonia in a southern Italian backwater because the hospitals are too far away. I’m all my Z’s have left. Disappointing them isn’t an option. Besides, they pay for my schooling and are sending me off on the most amazing summer vacation.
So, even though I feel more American than Italian, I keep the customs of my forefathers. If I didn’t have to please my Z’s, I’m pretty sure I’d become a boy-crazy, party-loving, Miss Apple Pie faster than a bald eagle dives for prey.
It’s perfect today. Mild weather, bright sunny skies, a cool breeze. Sounds just like my summer plans in Greece, except maybe hotter and with more tanning oil. A place where I can find a beautiful man, one real man, to whisk me away from here. Not like these slobs on the bus, but someone romantic and cultured and rough all the same. Impassioned and intelligent. A man who can’t take his eyes off me.
If such a man exists in Europe, I’m going to find him. It’s my summer of summers, where I’ll be swept off my feet by a beautiful stranger. And then we’ll part ways, tragically, in the heat of August. He’ll beg me to marry him and I’ll tearfully put him off to finish school, and one day, he’ll show up in Secondo Vasto because he couldn’t live without me another minute. I’ll get my nursing degree while he works, then we’ll get married in a traditional Italian wedding with all the trimmings and have babies.
It’s not so much a fantasy as a plan. Now all I need is the man to help me pull it off.
Sometimes I think living on campus would be worth it just to not have to switch buses three times and walk a mile and a half twice, every single day. But Zio and Zia are paying for tuition already. Adding a dorm room would be too much to ask, even if it does feel like I’m stepping through a time portal every time the last bus crosses the river. Secondo Vasto is frozen in time, into something clean out of Italy in the 1940s.
Every piece of timber and every slab of brick pulses in the rhythms of home. The house I grew up in with my sister is more a part of me than the country I was born in. The concrete stoop has my handprint at ten embossed into it next to the choppy printing of my name.
Violetta Moretti. The letters are worn down but ever present.
And next to it, forever immortalized by the size of a fifteen-year-old’s hand and the name, Rosetta Moretti, is my sister.
She was always the romantic dreamer, Rosetta. She said I’d understand one day, when I was a woman. She was almost five years older—now she’s over five years deader, and I’m still no closer to understanding how pneumonia could steal her so completely.
I step on my handprint, leaving Rosetta’s exposed and beautiful. Her name still stands brightly in the sun. I don’t think I’m the only one who gets out of the way so as not to cover her name. One tiny piece of my sister still standing in this cruel world.
“I’m home!” I drop my bag on the old worn couch and kick off my shoes. Normally, my aunt and uncle are bustling around, cooking or reading, waiting to grill me about my day. Especially on test days. “Zia? Zio?”
In the kitchen, a bottle of wine sits open next to a simmering pot of sauce. I turn down the temperature on the stove and keep moving. Eventually, my ears pick up sounds of life and I follow them to Zio’s office.
He’s crying. My zio, who started building houses with his bare hands, and now runs a contracting company with a hundred employees, isn’t just crying. He’s sobbing.
I knock gently on the door as I open it, almost afraid to see. “Zio?”
I do not see my uncle. Instead, I see a ghost of my past. Someone I never thought I’d see again. Someone who haunted my dreams for years until I purged them from my veins and my eyes and my memories.
Santino.
He’s standing over my collapsed, sobbing uncle with a frightening amount of dominance. Thick eyebrows shade onyx black eyes. Brown hair sweeps back across his intense forehead, so not even the fullness of his lips can soften the brutal angles of his cheeks and powerful jaw. He’s angular, sharp, powerful. And etched into every line is something intensely unforgiving.
“Zio?” I say softly, because it’s the only thing my brain can snap together, and speaking more loudly could break some fine membrane between him and sanity.
“Go,” Santino says, his hand up between us as if he can’t bear to look in my direction.
I’m transported back to the day I was 12 and he walked into my life. The same terrifying power. The same dark shroud covering daylight. The same black hole sucking the life out of the room until the only thing standing is him. Santino.
I can feel my heart in my throat. Every emotion I thought I’d erased comes roaring back. He’s better looking than I remember him; time has been exceptionally kind.
But he’s standing over my zio, the strongest man I know, who’s sobbing on the floor underneath the heat of this man who’s put his hand up to block me. I’m too terrified to walk into the room, and too angry to keep my mouth shut.
“What are you—?”
Santino closes the door with the flick of his powerful wrist. The lock snaps shut from the inside.
This is not okay. Zia Madeline has to know this is going on. Where the hell is she?
Not in the kitchen. Not in the bedroom. A dark cloud hovers over my heart and fear pricks at my skin.
This doesn’t feel right.
I find her in the basement, sorting piles of laundry. She hums an old song, one that she says her mother used to sing to her back home.
“You said you were going to be late,” Zia snaps like an accusation, crow’s feet tugging on her eyes that somehow make her more beautiful than the old photos of her around the living room. Or the one of her sunbathing in Zio’s office. “How was your test?”
“Fine.” I join her at the big farm table, the one Zio made for her years ago, with his own hands. “What’s going on with Zio and that man?”
I don’t utter his name aloud for fear of invoking the devil.
“Nothing you need to worry about.” She cups my face gently, smelling of basil and bleach.
Her gentle words warm the iciest places inside me and temporarily extinguish all the other budding questions. She obviously doesn’t want to talk about it. Prying would be the worst thing to do. Even if I wanted to.
The dryer sounds and I grab a basket to unload it. We fall into our usual routine of laundry, dancing around the basement.
“What did Scarlett say about going to Malta with you?”
“She said, ‘next year,’ but I’m not going next year, and she was just being nice anyway.”
“If I were younger, I’d grab my passport and tour with you, patatina. But your uncle needs me.” Zia sighs at the incapacities of men and piles the clothes in a wicker basket.
My life often feels like it’s split into two pieces: one in the modern world, at school with my friends and cell phones and technology everything, and one in the old world, where we wear full skirts and dance in circles until we’re dizzy to songs from hundreds of years ago. Where
the women do the laundry and the men smoke pipes and everyone is offended if you eat out at a restaurant because…don’t you know Zia’s osso buco is better than anything you can find in some half-rate commercial kitchen?
So I do chores with her, getting lost in the routines that define our lives into the orderly and disorderly. I don’t forget about Santino upstairs. I feel his presence when the floor above creaks and the office door opens and shuts, but I fold as if I’m hell-bent on controlling what’s in my grasp, and no more.
Upstairs, the front door closes.
We can pretend we have control, but something far outside our power is about to shatter the illusion. Every thought in my brain turns away from distraction and toward the inevitable unknown.
“Was that…” I find I can’t say the name. “Who was in the office with Zio? Was it the one they call the king.”
She frowns slightly. “How would you know that, patatina?”
“I’ve seen him before.”
“You’ve seen lots of people, Violetta.” Zia waves me off and picks up an empty basket. “Would you mind getting the clothes from the dryer?”
I swallow the lump of relentless questions and snap open the dryer. That’s twice she’s changed the subject. Third time’s a charm, but I have to be careful about when I ask. The Moretti family thrives on secrecy and respecting boundaries.