Read ROMANCING THE MOB BOSS Online
Authors: Mallory Monroe
was stunned.
Reno, who hated to lose his temper,
although he often did, pul ed out a handkerchief
and began to wipe his manicured hands. He
looked at Trina. “You ready?” he said to her.
Trina could see the regret in his eyes. “I’l walk
you out.”
+++
Outside of Boyzie’s and Trina was stil
reeling from what she’d just seen. Not just the
fact that Reno had come to her defense, she
appreciated that part, but that he had come with
such ferocity, with such violence. The kid
needed to be taught a lesson, it was true, but he
didn’t need to be nearly kil ed.
She looked at Reno, who was buttoning
up his suit coat against the chil of the fal
evening. “Where’s your car?” he asked her.
“My . . .
what
?”
Reno looked at her. “Your car. What,
you deaf? Your ride, where is it?” He was
impatient now. Didn’t mean to be, but he
always was after losing his cool.
“I don’t have a car.”
“Don’t have a car? Whadda you mean
you don’t have a car?”
“I don’t have a car yet.”
“How you get around? How you get
home from work?”
“I catch the bus if it’s not too late, or
catch a ride from a co-worker if it is.”
“That’s a problem.”
“That’s a problem?”
“That’s a problem. Young lady walking
around the streets at night al alone, what you
around the streets at night al alone, what you
some kind of superwoman? Think nobody’s
gonna mess with you? They rape you, knock
you over the head, put you in the ditch, then
where are you?”
It was almost nonsensical to Trina, but
he looked so serious.
“Hun?” he said. “Then where are you?”
“Raped, unconscious, and in a ditch?”
“There ya’ go,” Reno said as if that said
it al , and then began walking toward his car.
“Come on, I’l give you a lift.”
Trina wasn’t the type to accept rides
from strangers, especial y from customers, but
to her own surprise she bent the rule this time.
The man did, after al , come to her rescue. He
was, after al , annoyed that she would even
consider walking home alone. What harm could
it do, she wondered, as she walked over to his
car, a shiny gray Bentley convertible, and got on
in. Of course if they found her raped,
unconscious, and in a ditch, it would have done
her considerable harm, but she was nobody’s
fool. She was keeping her eyes on him.
His car smel ed like him, Trina thought
as she sat down, like his expensive cologne
mixed up with new leather, and he slung that
stick shift and drove like he was a speedster
from way back. This was Las Vegas, loaded
with red lights, and she wasn’t above jumping
out if he turned out to be some kind of maniac.
“So what’s your name?” he asked as he
drove, his eyes glancing down at her bare legs
underneath her short skirt.
“Katrina Marie Hathaway,” she said.
“What’s yours?”
“Dominic. Dominic Gabrini.”
“But everybody cal s you?”
“Mr. Gabrini,” he said and then laughed.
“Reno. Everybody cal s me Reno.”
“Reno. Why Reno?”
“I don’t know. Has something to do with
my style or something, my flashiness, I don’t
know. But I’ve been cal ed that name since I
was a kid. Now nobody real y knows why, or
who started it.”
“Everybody cal s me Trina,” she said.
“Or Tree.”
Reno glanced down at her legs again.
“Funny, you don’t look like no tree.”
“Funny, Boyzie doesn’t seem like your
kind of club.”
“Very perceptive, Tree. It’s not. I was
thinking about buying it, but I don’t think so.”
Trina looked at him. “So that’s it.
That’s why you’ve been coming around so
much.”
“Correct.” Then he glanced at her. “You
disappointed I’m not buying it?”
“Me? No way. That ain’t my stop.”
Reno smiled. “You’re a girl with
dreams. With ambitions.”
She was, but she wasn’t about to get
into that with him.
His car stopped at the curb in front of
Trina’s apartment building. To say it was in the
heart of the hood would be an understatement.
Young men were hanging out on the stoop
laying lines on the females passing by, hustlers
and crack dealers were sel ing t-shirts, DVDs,
and crack not fifteen feet away, drunks were
drinking a quart of liquor straight from the
bottles, rap music was blaring, conversations
were numerous and muddled, and older men
were sitting around gambling and tel ing stale
jokes. It was too festive for a dwel ing place, a
kind of ghetto hang-out corner, to Reno.
He stared at the Dodge-like
surroundings and then looked at Trina. “You
joking right? You live here?”
Trina’s heart dropped. She knew she
was poor and lived in poor circumstances, but it
always hurt a little when somebody else knew it
too. “Yes, this is my home.”
Reno saw the change in her expression,
the embarrassment, and he immediately felt like
a prick. “Look, I didn’t mean it that way.”
“I know,” Trina said. “You’re just stunned
by the view.” She was too, when she first
moved there, but now it didn’t even faze her.
“Wel , see you later.”
But he refused. He insisted on walking
her to her front door, a door on the fifth floor of
the apartment building, and when she unlocked
the door, he stil didn’t want to just leave.
“Could I use the bathroom, please?” he
“Could I use the bathroom, please?” he
asked her.
Trina was hoping he didn’t ask to come
in, her thrift store furnishings would only amplify
her state of poverty in his eyes, but she couldn’t
let the man pee in his pants, either. Although,
she also knew, that was his lame excuse to get
in.
But she liked him, what could she say?
“Sure,” she said, and opened the door
wider to let him in.
The only bathroom was the one inside the
only bedroom, and she lifted the bedroom
window while he did his thing. The fal breeze
was just what she needed after a hard day at
Boyzie’s, and she stood at the window, soaking
up the breeze, longer than she had planned.
When she suddenly felt a presence behind her,
she jumped and turned.
“It’s okay,” Reno’s soft, melodic voice
said. “I was just enjoying the view, too.”
The view was of the backside of the
apartment complex, an open field littered with
trash, but if you looked beyond the immediate
area, there was a magnificent sight of the bright
lights of the Las Vegas skyline.
“Vegas at night,” Reno said. “Ain’t
nothing like it.”
“That’s why I got the place. Sometimes,
at night, I pul up a chair and just look out this
window for hours.”
“I believe it. It’s beautiful. It’s Vegas.”
“Yeah. A long way from Dale.”
“Dale? What’s Dale?”
Trina smiled. “Dale, Mississippi. My
hometown.”
Reno laughed. “Mississippi? A
Mississippi girl.” He looked down the length of
her, at her long, smooth legs, her tight ass, her
bone-thin back and swan-like neck, at her black,
silky hair. “I don’t see Mississippi when I see
you.”
Trina smiled. “I’l bet you don’t see
Vegas when you see me, either.”
“No, not Vegas. More like Paris in the
Spring, or Rome in the Fal .”
Paris? Rome? Trina smiled. Your boy
was smooth. She moved away from the window
and headed for the living room. “Would you like
something to drink?” she asked as she walked.
Reno smiled, and then began to fol ow
her. He was losing his touch. “Sure, why not,”
he said. “What you got?”
“Water,” Trina said with a grin.
“Water? What I look like a kid to you?
You can hold your water.”
You can hold your water.”
Trina laughed. “And wine,” she said.
“Now you’re talking,” he said as she
continued to laugh and made her way to the
kitchen.
Reno walked around the smal living
room. It was neat, clean, and with only the bare
minimum of furnishings that let him know not
only was she poor, she was also very thrifty.
Very smart with the little money she did have,
very efficient.
Then he thought about her. Probably
never got a break in her life. Probably always
had to take a backseat to females who weren’t
as smart, weren’t as kind, didn’t have an ounce
of the talent, of the ingenuity he just knew she
had. Kid like her shouldn’t have to live like this.
He looked out of the living room
window. And talk about a contrasting view.
This was a view of the front side of the
apartment building, the street side, and man
was it loud and raucous and, Reno thought with
some degree of anxiety, dangerous. Very
dangerous, he thought, as he surveyed the drug
dealers and crack heads, the prostitutes and
pimps. This was no place for a lady like her.
Trina returned with two glasses of wine
and the bottle too, to make it clear to him he
was not about to consume any Cristal or
Courvoisier or Cognac or whatever the hel he
drank. Because whatever he was accustomed
to drinking, she was certain it wasn’t what she
was about to give him.
She sat the bottle on the table, and
would not be at al embarrassed if he checked
the label. But he didn’t even look at it.
She gave him his glass of wine, kept her
own, and they both sat side by side on the sofa.
She tucked one of her legs underneath her butt,
and he turned toward her and crossed his legs
as he unbuttoned his suit coat. He definitely
was a distinguished looking gentleman, Trina
thought, with everything about him screaming
power and success.
And he also had a magnetism about
him, a kind of supercharged sexual energy that
Trina couldn’t ignore. She tried to, she tried to
just sit back and enjoy a drink with this man, but
her eyes kept betraying her, and kept glancing
down at his bulge.
And they talked. For hours they talked.
Trina liked the fact that she had company
tonight, somebody interesting to talk to for a
change. She was usual y home alone most
nights, unless Jazz, her only friend in town,
would come over.
And she was glad that it wasn’t just any
company. She could grab some dude off the
street, or out of Boyzie’s, if any company would
do. In the couple years since she’d been in
Vegas, she’d had a few dates with that
any
company
type where she was horny as hel and
gave this guy or that one a chance.
But they’d usual y end up so boring to
her, so cookie-cutter ready to wham, bam,
thank-you ma’am her, that she didn’t even give it
up to many of them. They weren’t worth the
effort it took to take off her clothes, she would
decide, and would bid them goodnight. They
didn’t like it, they had thought it was understood
that their date was strictly for getting laid
purposes, but they had no choice in the matter.
She’d kick them out. It wasn’t a debatable
point.
But say what you want about Dominic
Gabrini, she thought, smiling as he talked on
and on about growing up in Jersey and
eventual y moving to Vegas, this guy was a long
way from boring.
“So it was your mother, your father, and
your baby brother Joey,” she said. “That’s it? I
thought Italian families were supposed to be
massive.”
“Wel , and two sisters, don’t forget my
sisters,” Reno said. “But I know what you’re
saying. And I wish our family was bursting at the
seams. Especial y with boys. I wish pops had a
truckload of boys, two truckloads. Then he
wouldn’t be bugging me so much about taking .
. .”
Reno didn’t finish. He, instead,
exhaled. “But forget about me. I’m tired of
talking about me. Tel me about you. Tel me
about Tree Hathaway.”
By now Trina was a little buzzed by her
numerous shots of wine and was leaned back
numerous shots of wine and was leaned back