Total pages in book: 102
Estimated words: 98583 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 493(@200wpm)___ 394(@250wpm)___ 329(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 98583 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 493(@200wpm)___ 394(@250wpm)___ 329(@300wpm)
Before then, I could pretend. He was a sharp man before this ugly disease took him. I remember watching him when I was young and marveling at how he seemed to know everyone’s name. He could navigate a room like a shark through water, telling jokes that made violent mafioso laugh and blush at the same time while charming the hell out of their wives.
My father took the Marino Famiglia from a provincial little group known mostly for local bookmaking and turned it into a regional powerhouse.
“I met a girl last night.” He’s half listening, half trying to tie his shoes. He mumbles something, and I think he’s speaking Italian, but it’s hard to follow. “You would’ve liked her. Very pretty. Bold too. She thought she was being clever, but I saw right through her tricks.” I smile to myself, reliving that first moment when Lucille Willing-Morris appeared in my office looking like she just saw a ghost.
Or worse, like she just saw a bunch of kinky BDSM sex without the proper mental preparation.
“Women will be your downfall,” Dad suddenly says. It’s clear and sharp, and he’s looking at me with narrowed eyes.
I sit up straight and turn to him. “Papa, do you know me right now?”
“I always say it. Women, Bruno, women.” Then he mumbles something in Italian and frowns at his shirt, trying to unbutton one of the buttons.
I sigh and slump back. Bruno is his brother’s name.
And he’s wrong about women.
I have my vices. I’m a flawed, cold, ruthless man. But messing around with too many women isn’t one of them.
No, ever since my father took a turn, I learned an important lesson.
Life is fleeting.
Relationships will fail.
One day I’ll be just like my old man, stuck in a chair, unable to fasten a simple button.
There’s no reason to ever get attached to anyone—much less to let them get attached to me.
I turn to my briefing again, distracting myself with the Famiglia’s work. Though my father’s technically still the Don, I’ve taken over all his duties. Only the most trusted and important members of the Famiglia hierarchy know, and I suspect most of them don’t realize just how far my father has slid in recent months.
It would break their hearts, seeing him like this. And he’d hate me if I ever let them.
Which is why I spend half my days taking care of him and protecting him the best I can.
There’s a knock at the door. Dad’s nurse is waiting on the threshold. “How is he today?” she asks, wheeling in a cart with his breakfast: soft scrambled eggs, a little bit of coffee, some yogurt, and a smoothie in case he has trouble eating.
“He thought I was Bruno again. Mostly, I can’t tell what he’s saying though.”
She pats my arm. Donatella’s a good Italian woman with connections to the Famiglia. She knows how to keep a secret, but more than that, she cares about my father. I’d never trust anyone else to take care of him.
“It comes and goes,” she comments, sighing as she turns and bustles around him. “How are we today, Salvatore?” She talks to him in both English and Italian, but he only mumbles in response. It’s unclear if he’s following her or if he even knows who she is.
I linger a little while longer, but it breaks my heart watching Donatella help my father eat. I turn away as the darkness in my chest threatens to overwhelm me.
That’s my fate. That’s my future. The chair is waiting for me, the fog, the mists that rise around him. One day I’ll be just like my father. All men fall, and I’ll fall harder than most.
I’m in an ugly mood as I head through the house. The Marino Mansion is in the heart of South Philadelphia, right in the middle of the most Italian section of the city. This is the birthplace of crime, mummers, and hoagies.
Luca’s waiting for me at the table downstairs. “You’ve got a busy day,” he says, walking me through the afternoon’s schedule. Meetings with some of my Capos, visits to some of my businesses, and an evening at Velvet Echo cleaning up after the most recent orgy.
“I meant to say you.” I pretend like it doesn’t matter as I pour myself some coffee. “Did that girl get home safely?”
Luca grunts and looks away. “She called her own car. Insisted on it, actually. But we followed her and made sure she was fine.”
“And it was the Willing-Morris girl like I thought?”
“Went to the Willing-Morris house, so yeah, I’ve got to assume it was her.”
“That’s good.” I take a sip and glance toward the window. How many more sunny mornings does my father have? How many more do I? “Did she take the card?”
“I doubt she’ll call, if that’s what you’re wondering.”
“I’m not too worried about that. I’m marrying the girl soon enough.”