Read ROMANCING THE MOB BOSS Online
Authors: Mallory Monroe
into the room, wasn’t saying much.
But the state of the room wasn’t an issue
for them. Because they were kissing, and
fal ing onto the bed, before they could even
inspect the place. It had been their first time
since Paris, since al those romantic Paris
nights when they made love so often that Trina
once joked that they were becoming freaks
about it. Reno had joked back, “becoming my
foot, we’re already there,” and banged her
mercilessly.
And now, in Dale, Mississippi, he
wanted her just as desperately. He removed
her blouse, thril ed to see she was wearing no
bra, and began kissing her chest and breasts.
As he did, Trina was undressing him, his shirt
and his pants, and then lifting herself up so that
her remaining clothes could be removed,
rendering them both completely naked.
But Reno couldn’t stop kissing her.
He’d move down, from her breasts to her
stomach, but kept moving back up to her lips.
He loved the way she tasted. So much so, that
he moved al the way down, to her thighs, to
between her legs, and tasted her so long, and
so expertly that Trina was having an orgasm by
the time he entered her.
He entered slow and easy, total y in
control, his rod throbbing for her before he got
halfway in. But when she began to throb back,
from her orgasm, his control broke, and he
pounded.
For what seemed like hours, but were
actual y good, long minutes, he pounded. The
bed began squeaking as if the springs were
going to pop, as the sound of the silence was
enveloped with the sound of flesh pounding on a
bed that might not be able to take it much
longer.
They were so explosive that they nearly
ended up off of the bed from the intensity, as
Trina’s smal body kept arching to take him in
ful y, kept moving as the feel of him so deep
ful y, kept moving as the feel of him so deep
within her caused her to want to scream. She
wasn’t giving this up, not for anybody else this
world had to offer, and she knew it now like she
knew her name.
When they final y stopped, when the bed
squeaking final y eased, he let out a long,
exhausted exhale, kissed her on the lips again,
and rol ed off of her. Now they were laying side
by side, both amazed at how right they were for
each other, although they appeared, to the
world, to be so wrong. Reno took Trina’s hand,
and held it against him.
After laying there longer, both
embracing the power of harmonious love, Trina
looked at him. “Are you plotting to kil Frank
Partanna?” She asked him this without blinking,
without stuttering, without any signs of outward
distress.
Reno sighed. His distress was more
readily seen. “I cannot al ow that asshole to
think that he can kil my father, that he can kil my
brother, that he can just take what my father took
a lifetime to build and claim it as his own, and
expect me to just turn my back and walk away.”
Trina looked away. “It’l be like a
betrayal,” she said and Reno, amazed, looked
at her.
“That’s right, Tree,” he said. “I’l be
betraying my father’s memory if I walk away.”
“But what about the moral point, Reno?
How can you say you love God, and take a life
he put on this earth?”
“I understand what you’re saying, I do.
And I know that a part of me, a moral part of me,
may be lost forever if I go down this particular
road. But they bought this fight to me, Tree. I
wasn’t bothering nobody. My old man wasn’t
botheri ng nobody. Goodness knows Joey
wasn’t bothering nobody. But they bothered
us.” He looked at Trina, his blue eyes stormy
and drained. “I can’t let that stand or it’l be
open season on the east coast, on men like my
father. And Carmine and Dirty wil be sitting
ducks. I can’t al ow that, Tree. The east coast
families, my father’s friends, can’t al ow it.
That’s why we were meeting. To plan this with
precision. I wish this wasn’t my fate, I wish I
wasn’t put in this position. But I’m in this
position. I hate it, but I’m in it.” Then he added,
to make certain she understood: “I’m no saint,
Tree. I’m tel ing you I’m not.”
Trina seemed to take it al in. Already
Reno was seeing a change in her. “When’s the
hit?” she asked him.
He stared at her longer, and then looked
at the Cartier watch on his wrist. “In exactly two
hours and eight minutes.”
“When it al goes down, you wil be
questioned, you know that?”
“I know.”
Another kind of
taking it all in
pause
from her. “Okay,” she final y said, getting out of
bed, “let’s give you an alibi they can’t refuse.”
Reno looked at her, was happy and
saddened that she now was completely
onboard, but took her lead and got out of bed,
too.
***
restaurant in south central LA, drinking with his
men and laughing at this cockeyed female he
once fel in love with. It’s eight in the evening,
the sun is just beginning to set, and Frank is at
peace with the world.
“I didn’t know if she was looking at the
wal or at me, but it didn’t matter,” he says.
“That dame was a wildcat in bed, she was even
growling when I fucked her.” The men laugh.
“Growl, growl,” he says, gesturing like a cat.
Back in Dale, Mississippi, just after ten
at night, and Trina and Dale are standing at the
altar in Cecil Hathaway’s smal church.
Earnestine is the witness, although it’s obvious
she’d rather not participate. Cecil is standing
before the couple, the Bible in his hands.
“Dearly beloved,” he says, “we are
gathered here today, in the sight of God, to join
this man and this woman in holy matrimony.”
Back in LA, while Frank is laughing his
head off, Gooch, one of his lieutenants, comes
running into the private room. “We got trouble,
time to boogie!”
There’s no hesitation. These men know
how to respond to trouble. Frank is immediately
grabbed and ushered down a long, narrow
grabbed and ushered down a long, narrow
hal way.
In Dale, Reno looks at Trina. Although
she’s in pants and blouse, and even he’s in a
wrinkled suit that had seen better days, she
couldn’t look more beautiful to him.
“Do you, Katrina Marie Hathaway, take
this man, Dominic Gabrini, to be your lawful y
wedded husband, to have and to hold, to love,
honor and obey, in sickness and in health, til
death do you part?”
Trina looks at Reno. She isn’t smiling,
she isn’t doubtful, she’s dead serious. “I do,”
she says.
LA: Frank’s smile is stil plastered on his
face, he knows danger is lurking or he wouldn’t
be running out through this back hal specifical y
built for getaways like this, but he also knows
it’s going to be al right. It always is. That’s why,
when the back door is busted open, and he and
al of his men come crashing out, certain they
had escaped any looming disaster, and saw the
guns drawn as soon as they saw the light of day,
he stil didn’t get the message.
Dale: Reno squeezes Trina’s hand
tighter, when she says I do.
“And do you,” Cecil says, turning now to
Reno, “take this woman, Katrina Hathaway, to
be your lawful y wedded wife, to have and to
hold, to love and to obey, in sickness and in
health, til death do you part?”
In LA: Not until the bul ets begin ripping
through his chest, not until his lieutenants don’t
even have a chance to point their weapons, not
until he sees his men dropping like flies, not until
he sees the blood gushing out of his own body
like a faucet leak, does he final y see the
danger. But he sees it too late.
Frank Partanna, the mighty man, fal s.
Not with a bang, but with a thump. With blood
spewing from his mouth as his face, his once
smiling face, hits the ground hard.
“I do,” Reno says in Dale, Mississippi,
and they, he and Trina, are pronounced
husband and wife.
“You may kiss the bride,” Cecil says
proudly, but they’re already doing that.
Once the kissing stops, they lean their
foreheads against each other, staring at each
other.
“You sure you wanna take on this
adventure,” he asks her.
She smiles. “I need this adventure like I
need a hole in the head,” she says, causing him
to laugh. “For real, though. But I need you like I
need air to breathe.”
This stops him short. He stares at her.
“Yes, Dominic Gabrini,” she says. “I’m
ready to take it on.” Then she adds, with a grin,
“Bring it on, baby,” and he laughs.
“I love this girl!” he proclaims to her
father and mother, and proudly walks her out of
the church and into the quiet darkness of a
breezy, but hopeful Mississippi night.