Read ROMANCING THE MOB BOSS Online
Authors: Mallory Monroe
to tel me what I got?” He looked at Trina. “Can
you believe this guy? He’s tel ing me what I
got.” Then he talked into his cel phone again.
“Just cal me a cab wise guy, don’t worry about
what I’ve got.” He slammed shut his phone.
“Sometimes I think I’m surrounded by
imbeciles.”
“Either that, or they’re surrounded by
“Either that, or they’re surrounded by
one,” Trina said with a laugh and immediately
began to run back toward Boyzie’s.
“Oh no she didn’t say that,” Reno said
with a smile. “No you didn’t say that,” he said to
her when he realized she was running away. He
told the driver to shove off, he’s off for the night,
and then he ran, too.
+++
He had planned to talk to her. That was the
plan. Al the way on the plane back from Jersey,
al the way in the limo from the airport, he was
working out in his mind just how he was going to
explain everything about his life, his family, to
her. She was no fly-by-night, no booty cal or
friend with benefits. He wouldn’t leave Jersey
early, canceling the remaining meetings, for just
anybody. This woman had him jacked up, had
him constantly thinking about her, even to the
point of turning down al kinds of offers from
females he almost never used to turn down. But
their sex couldn’t touch hers, and their
personalities couldn’t compare to hers. She
had the inside track at this point in the game,
big time advantages over any other, and he
knew he had to cue her in eventual y on just what
she was getting herself into.
And he thought he had a plan. Thought
he’d get her alone and just lay it out, tel her al
there was to know about him and his life.
Especial y now that she soon would be working
right under his nose, on his turf. He was going
to lay it al on the line. That was the plan,
anyway.
But as soon as they entered her
apartment, and the door shut, and he pul ed her
into his arms, al plans were off. He kissed her,
his lips slowly circled hers, remembering how
she tasted and wanting to taste her even more.
And soon they were tongue to tongue, teeth to
teeth, kissing as if it were going out of style if
they weren’t careful. And it was on from there.
They ended up naked in bed as quickly as their
feet could carry them, and he was al over her,
kissing her, fondling her, entering her, before
either one of them could get a word in
edgewise.
Trina closed her eyes as he entered her,
as she could feel the sheer power of his
manhood poke and prod and slide around deep
within her. And when his gyrations began to
quicken, she held onto him as if she were
upside down on a monkey bar. He pounded,
and she held on, al the way until they both were
lifting up in elation, and then crashing down in
satiation.
They laid there, both drained, and
eventual y fel asleep in each other’s arms. They
would have stayed that way probably til
morning, as they were both bone tired, but Reno
eventual y woke up.
He stayed in bed, however, staring at
Trina. He was fal ing for her, for her laughter
and her uniqueness, for her beauty and the fact
that she didn’t realize just how beautiful she
real y was, for the unyielding sense that this
woman was the catch of the century. And the
idea of losing that, of losing her when he barely
had her to begin with, terrified him. He couldn’t
tel her, not yet. He had to secure her first. He
had to make sure that she was his, and that she
wanted him as badly as he wanted her.
Over the next week, Trina and Reno were
inseparable. He was spending al of his free
time with her, and she was spending al of her
free time with him. They were, in fact, growing
closer every day. And Trina, to her own
surprise, was enjoying every moment of their
time together.
But one night at work, she thought she
saw a ghost. She was heading to the kitchen,
and she saw something in her peripheral
vision. When she walked back into the kitchen
to wait for Louie to plate the food, and then
returned to the dining hal with her tray, she
looked again. And to her shock, to her
amazement, Scotty Labaray, the ex-boyfriend
she once fled, was seated at a table in
Boyzie’s. She almost dropped her tray.
He was at table eleven, looking
gorgeous in his expensive suit, a pair of
prescription glasses on his tanned, handsome
face. She would have ignored him, would have
pretended like she didn’t see him after serving
the food to table five, but he was staring at her
the entire time; staring with those magnetic soft
blue eyes that made her fal for him in the first
place, one of the biggest mistakes of her life.
She walked over to his table.
“Hey,” he said, with a smile on his face.
“Hey yourself,” Trina replied.
“You are not an easy girl to track, you
know that?” he said. “I went al over Reno
looking for you.”
This concerned Trina. She
remembered how control ing he used to be, how
violent. “And why exactly were you looking for
me?”
He smiled again. There was a time she
actual y loved his smile, though he had a
kindness, a sweetness about him, thought he
wouldn’t be as hard, as rough as her ex-
boyfriend sometimes could be. She was wrong
on al counts. “You know why I’m looking for
you.”
“If I knew, Scotty, I wouldn’t be asking
you. Why were you looking for me?”
you. Why were you looking for me?”
Again, he smiled. “I want you back.
There ain’t no two ways about this, sister. I want
you back in my life, in my bed, as my woman.
You the only one knows how to do me, and I
want that back. How’s that for bluntness?”
Trina could not believe the nerve of him.
After how he treated her, he wanted her back?
He couldn’t be that far gone. “And how’s this for
bluntness,” she said: “You must be out of your
gotdamn mind.”
His smile left then. And the true Scotty
was revealed, every inch of his anger, his
bitterness, his out of control violent streak. “You
left me in the middle of the night, like I was
some monster you was sneaking away from,
and I don’t appreciate that.”
She lowered her voice, leaned over to
him, both of her hands on the table. “I didn’t
appreciate your body blows, either. I didn’t
appreciate that black eye, either. I didn’t
appreciate that I had hooked up, not with a man,
but with a pimp who thought he was going to
prostitute me for income, either. There’s a lot of
things we don’t appreciate. But appreciate this:
I don’t give a good gotdamn what you don’t
appreciate.”
It came so quickly, Trina could barely
react. Scotty took his glass of wine and threw
the liquid contents into her face. Then he stood
and slapped her hard across the face. Although
the wine had her dazed, the slap reinvigorated
her. And she slapped him back even harder
than he had slapped her. He was about to
come at her again, he was that kind of bul y, but
two waiters pul ed him back.
“Are you crazy?” she could hear Boyzie,
the owner, running toward Scotty. “Get the fuck
out of my establishment!”
“You messed up now, chick,” Scotty was
saying as the two waiters drug him out. “You
messed up now!”
Jazz had run over to Trina’s side as she
wiped her face with a napkin. “Are you al right,
girl?”
Trina couldn’t speak. Her anger was stil
too raw. She began to head in the back, in the
kitchen.
Jazz fol owed her. “I didn’t see when he
threw the wine on you, but I saw when he
slapped you.” She grinned. “I said, oh, boy, he
fooling with the wrong one this time. ‘Cause
every fool from around here knows you don’t
play.”
“He’s not from around here,” Trina said,
sitting in a chair to calm her nerves, stil wiping
off the wine.
“What happened to you?” Louie the
cook wanted to know.
“None of your business,” Jazz said,
sitting beside Trina. “Just cook, cook.” Then
Jazz looked at Trina. “What you mean he’s not
from around here? You know him?”
Trina nodded. “That’s Scotty Labaray.”
“Get
out
! He’s the dude from Reno?
The pimp?”
Trina nodded.
“Wow,” Jazz said. “I don’t know why I
just assumed this Scotty person was a black
dude. But he white too, hun?”
Trina looked at Jazz. “Why you say it
like that?”
“I’m just sayin’. Dang, girl. You got
these white men fal ing out of trees wanting
you.” Then she paused, leaned back in the
chair. “And speaking of white men, are you
going to tel Mr. Hot Temper Gabrini about this
little incident?”
“I am not.”
“And why the hel not?”
“Because of exactly what you just cal ed
him. His hot temper. You saw what Reno did to
that acne-faced kid. He broke that kid’s nose
for just pinching me, something that happens to
us every day of the week in a joint like this. You
think I’m gonna tel him about this incident,
which means I’l have to tel him about my
relationship with Scotty? That I’m gonna say,
oh, by the way, this guy here also beat the crap
out of me one night to where I was throwing up
blood. And he beat me because I told him I’d
rather eat nails than prostitute my body for
money. I got away from him that same night, but
you think Reno gonna just say good, great job
getting away, kid, and forget about it? Come
on, Jazz. Even your old man Nathan, who
on, Jazz. Even your old man Nathan, who
idolizes you, would say you’re nuts if you think
that.”
Jazz exhaled. “I get your point,” she
said.
“Reno would probably be locked up for
murder before the night is out,” Trina added.
“Okay, I get it.” Then she looked at
Trina. “You can pick’em, can’t you?”
Trina looked at her friend. She didn’t
know if she was talking about Scotty only, or
both Scotty and Reno. “What’s that supposed
to mean?” she asked.
“You can pick’em. I mean, Reno with his
temper is bad enough. But at least he owns a
hotel and gave you a job and is helping you out.”
This bothered Trina. Ever since she told
Jazz about Reno, and how they’d been
spending time together, there had been a kind
of snide attitude in Jazz, a kind of bitterness
there. “You think I’m seeing Reno because he
owns the PaLargio?” she asked her friend.
Jazz frowned, as if nothing could be
further from the truth. “Why would you say
something like that?”
“The same reason you implied it.”
“That not what I mean. But it is a fact
that he gave you a job, a job you start next
week. He’s your friend and friends look out for
each other like that. They get ahead, they pul
their friends along with them.”
So that was it. Jazz figured that Trina
should be, in her words, pul ing her along, too. “I
am gonna help you out, Jazz,” Trina said. “But
my feet ain’t even in the door yet. You saw how
Reno wouldn’t even let me be a manager there.
He’s creating some apprentice job for me, so I
can shadow seasoned managers and learn the
tricks of the trade. I can’t hire nobody, I’m not
even in the door myself yet.”
“But your boyfriend is. He owns the joint,
Tree, come on. Al you got to do is say the word
and he’l hire me as an apprentice, too.”
Trina shook her head. “It doesn’t work
that way.”
“Oh, I see. You can ask him to take you on,
but you can’t ask him about me.”
“I didn’t ask him to take me on, Jazz,
what are you talking about? I didn’t know that
man existed when I applied to work at the
PaLargio, something, by the way, that you said I
was crazy to even attempt.”
“Okay, okay,” Jazz said, smiling now, “I
didn’t mean to make a federal case out of it.