Read ROMANCING THE MOB BOSS Online
Authors: Mallory Monroe
wonderful.
Reno felt even more serene, as he
worked hard to make this feeling last as long as
he could, prodding slowly, careful y, moving in
and out, going deeper and deeper down every
time he moved back in. Tears were in his eyes
as he sexed her, because he was beginning to
love this woman with a love that was so beyond
his own understanding of what love was. And
because of it he was terrified of bringing her
into his world. A world that she may not want to
accept. A world where she may think less of
him. But he had to let her know who he was
now, before he got in any deeper than he
already was. Because he was already, if truth
be told, in way too deep.
And his family. She had to meet his
family in the raw, right smack in the middle of
family in the raw, right smack in the middle of
their latest crisis, whatever it was. Because he
knew his family, and he knew that their trouble
was not like everybody else’s trouble, but was
usual y a matter of life and death. Trina, his
woman, had to understand that and, in time he
hoped, come to accept it. That was why he kept
it relaxed with her right now, kept it slow and
serene and calm.
It would be the calm, he knew, before the
storm.
The Gabrini family compound was west of
the Las Vegas Strip on the outskirts of Spring
Val ey, Nevada. It was nearly three a.m. when
Reno drove his Bentley up to the manned
security gate. Within seconds the gate was
opened and they were driving up the steep hil
that led to the big, white, mansion-sized family
home.
“This your childhood home?” Trina
asked as the ful ness of the home came into
view.
“This is the place.”
“But Reno, it’s big as the PaLargio!”
Reno laughed. “Not quite,” he said as
he stopped in front of the massive steps that led
up to the home’s entrance. Another man,
Carmine Rossi, and Joey, were waiting for their
arrival. And as soon as Reno stepped out, and
held the door for Trina to step out, too, the
fireworks began.
“What you bring her here for?” Joey
wanted to know. “This about family, Reno. This
family business here.”
“I told you to remind me to kick your ass,
didn’t I?” Reno said to his chubbier, but younger
brother. Joey literal y backed up, and off, then.
Reno looked at Carmine. “Carmine,
what’s up?” he said as he and Carmine gave
one of those manly pat-on-the-back, half hug
with a handshake gestures. “This my cousin
Carmine Rossi, babe,” Reno said to Trina.
“Carmine, this my lady, Katrina Hathaway.”
“Oh, you struck it rich this time, Reno,”
Carmine said, kissing Trina’s extended hand.
“Solid gold lady you got right here.”
Trina smiled. Carmine was one of those
burly Italians, not chubby like Joey, but compact
and muscular. And almost as charming as
Reno.
“So where’s Pop,” Reno asked. “What’s
going on?”
“Trouble,” Carmine said. “Of the major
league variety. He’s inside, come on.”
They walked up the steep steps that led
They walked up the steep steps that led
to the double front doors, and entered a home
whose entrance could rival the PaLargio’s.
Cathedral ceilings, white marbled floors, Roman
columns, a spiral staircase. Trina could not
picture any child, let alone Reno and Joey,
running around a place like this. But it was a
stark reminder to Trina that she was a far cry
from Dale. Maybe, she began to wonder, too
far.
They entered another set of double
doors near the back of the front of the house,
and this led into a huge living room area, with
what Trina could only describe as comfort
furnishings. From big, Herculean couches, to
oversized ottomans, to wide, arched top chairs.
Inside the room was a man that had to be either
Reno’s brother or father, he favored Reno just
that much. Since Trina already knew Reno only
had the one brother, she assumed this tal , wel
built, handsome man with a ful head of salt and
pepper hair, was the patriarch. The man she
had seen described in an article on Jazz’s
Blackberry as a “reputed mob boss.”
He was standing at the curtained
window, but looking directly at them as they
entered, his suit coat gapped opened, revealing
a flat, ribbed stomach, his hands in both
pockets. Also in the room was an older woman,
two younger women who favored her, and
another man, this one tal and rail-thin. Trina felt
the tension in the room as soon as she stepped
into it.
Reno had his hand on the smal of
Trina’s back, which she was grateful for, but that
did little to ease her anxiety. Coming to
someone’s home at three in the morning during
a family crisis just didn’t seem right to her. But
Reno had insisted. He even said on the ride
coming over that if she planned to be with him,
which he added he prayed was the case, she
needed to meet his family. But this seemed
more like a trial by fire to Trina, than a meeting.
Reno handled the introductions and
Trina put on her best smile, although not one of
the ladies, not one of them, smiled back.
He first introduced the two younger
ladies, his “baby” sisters he said. There was
Marbeth, who was married to Carmine, and
Francine, who was married to Richie, better
known as Dirty, who was seated on the arm of
the couch beside her. Both of the young ladies
were pretty twenty-somethings, with long, jet-
black hair and smal , anxious-looking faces.
Although they spoke to Trina and were civil to
her, they almost seemed disinterested in her.
One of the sisters, MarBeth, even said, “what
happened to the other one,” after Reno had
introduced Trina.
Reno frowned. “What other one?” he
asked.
“You know.,”
MarBeth
said.
“Whatshername.”
“Stop making trouble, MarBeth,”
Carmine said.
“What trouble?” Marbeth wanted to
know.
“Don’t mind her,” Carmine said. “She
loves to stir up the pot, loves to make trouble.”
Reno then turned to the woman he said
was his mother. She was seated on the center
cushion of the sofa, sandwiched between her
two daughters. Her name was Bel e Gabrini
and “to know her is to love her,” according to
Reno, as he kissed his mother on the cheek.
When she spoke, she spoke with a
rough, heavy edge to her voice, a voice that
seemed ravaged by too many cigarettes and
too much screaming, hol ering, and possibly
crying. Although Reno’s father looked like an
Adonis of a man, this woman, who was on the
verge of plumpness, looked almost plain.
“Katrina,” she said. “Good, strong, solid name.
You part Italian?”
Trina smiled. “No ma’am.”
“Part what then?”
“No, I’m not part anything. I’m al black.
I’m African-American.”
“Then what’s with the hazel eyes?”
“My father has hazel eyes.”
“Then his father, or mother, is Italian?”
This was getting to be uncomfortable,
Trina thought. “No, ma’am. They were both
black, too.”
“You sure? Not Italian? But what’s with
the hazel eyes?”
the hazel eyes?”
“Hazel eyes,” the father yel ed out, his
impatience with his wife gone, “what hazel eyes
got to do with Italian? She’s black, damn you
woman! Black!”
And that one outcry shut up the mother.
Trina had jumped at the sound of the
father’s thundering voice, and Reno even
seemed to wince, his hand pinching into the
smal of her back. “And that,” he said, “is my
father. Paulo Gabrini. Pop, this is Katrina
Hathaway. My lady.”
Trina almost expected the father to say
something like, “she don’t look like a lady to
me,” he seemed just that mean, but he didn’t go
there. He, instead, walked toward them and
extended his hand.
“Hel o, Katrina,” he said as they shook.
No smile, but no frown, either. “You want
something to drink? Some hot chocolate or
something?”
Some in the room giggled. When Mr.
Gabrini and Reno looked at them, they
immediately turned stoned-faced. “What’s
funny?” Gabrini asked them. “Did I say
something funny here?”
Not a sound. He looked at Trina again.
“Have a seat, you and Dominic, sit down.”
They sat on the big sofa that was across
from the sofa occupied by the females in the
room and Gabrini took a seat in the flanking
chair. Carmine sat in the second chair, and
Joey sat beside Reno.
“I don’t know why they cal ed you here,”
Gabrini said to Reno. “There’s nothing nobody
can do. I told these knuckleheads that.”
“What’s the trouble?”
Gabrini hesitated. “Joey, why don’t you
take Katrina and show her around the place.”
“No,” Reno said, although Trina could
have used a break from this intense crowd.
“She stays with me. She hears what I hear. I
told you she’s my lady.”
“Your lady,” Joey said snidely. “You just
met this woman. She could be an FBI plant for
al you know.”
Trina looked at Joey. “An FBI plant?”
she asked, astounded that he would even think
such a thing.
“Who’s making trouble, Pop?” Reno
asked his father, ignoring Joey’s snide remark.
“Frank,” Gabrini said.
“Frank?” Reno asked. “As in Frank
Partanna? Please don’t tel me you’re talking
Frank Partanna.”
“I’m talking Frank Partanna.”
“Geez, Pop,” Reno said angrily, “how you
get mixed up with that character?”
“What you mean mixed up with him?” his
father roared. “I didn’t get mixed up with him.
He got mixed up with me. He has his territory
and I have mine. Now he wants mine, too.”
“But you’re east coast and he’s west.
He rules the west. Why he bothering you?”
“He wants to rule the east now, too.”
“But you only own a slice of the east.
Why he bothering you? Why he ain’t bothering
al those other wise guys?”
Gabrini looked at his oldest child with
what Trina detected was pure bitterness in his
eyes. “They start with the weakest link,” he said,
“why you think? I’m the only boss this side of
living with no back-up. It’s just me. My son,
who’s more than capable, wants to play hotel
magnet, riverboat gambler, while his father is
sinking over here! They get rid of me, my
empire crumbles, it’s as simple as that. And
they know it!”
Reno let out an exhale that Trina could
just tel was laced with his own bitterness. She
was terrified for him. It was a fact now. This
family was a mob family. But what was Reno’s
role?
“That’s nonsense, Pop,” Reno said, his
voice a little deflated. “You got back-up. You
got Carmine here, and Dirty. And Joey if you’re
kick his ass a little and straighten him up.”
“Hey,” Joey said, offended, “I’m sittin’
over here!”
“Dominic, do you hear yourself?” Gabrini
asked him. “Carmine and Dirty to run my
empire? Carmine and Dirty? With Joey thrown
in for the hel of it? No offense, boys, but al
three of them together won’t make half of you! I
need you, Dominic. You get in this game, they
leave me alone. I know this as a fact. You stay
leave me alone. I know this as a fact. You stay
out, I’m dead.”
“Don’t say that, Pop.”
“I’m dead. It’s the truth! We’re talking
Frank Partanna here! He don’t fuck around.
He’s been linked to that massacre in South
Central, tangling with the crips and bloods, the
Mexican mafia, al of it, geez. This man is
dangerous.” Then he exhaled, tried to calm
himself back down.
Trina looked at Reno. If he gets in the
game? What game? The mob? Her heart was
in her shoe.
Reno saw Trina’s stare through his
periphery, and he could just feel her fear. But he
dared not look at her. Not yet. This was the