Read ROMANCING THE MOB BOSS Online
Authors: Mallory Monroe
“Is who him?” Trina wanted to know as
she looked where Reno was looking, at the
parked Buick in front of them. When she saw
that Scotty was behind the wheel, she looked at
Reno. “I didn’t even see him over here.”
“That’s him then?”
The thought of Scotty waiting out here
for her spooked her. “Yeah,” she admitted.
“That’s him.”
Reno began unbuckling his seatbelt and
moved to get out of his car.
“Reno, what you gonna do?” Trina
asked him.
“I wanna talk to him.”
“Talk about what?” But he was already
getting out of the car. “Be careful.”
Reno got out of the car and walked
slowly toward Scotty’s Buick. He pul ed out a
revolver, kept it to his side.
Scotty didn’t know anyone was even
there until his car window was busted in with the
butt of the revolver and his door was being slung
open.
Trina nearly jumped out of her skin when
she saw the glass crash and Reno grab Scotty
by the catch of his col ar and sling him out
against the car.
“You know me?” Reno asked Scotty.
Scotty, who was terrified, could only
shake his hand. “No, I don’t know you. Who the
hel are you?”
“But you know my woman, right? You
know Tree?”
Scotty didn’t respond.
“You know Tree?” Reno said this louder,
slung him harder against the car.
“Yes,” Scotty admitted. “I know Trina.”
“If you ever,” Reno said, slamming him
even harder against the car, “even think about
coming anywhere near her again, anywhere
within eyeshot again, I’l kil you.” He put the gun
to Scotty’s temple. “Understand that, pal? I
don’t want no misunderstanding. I wil fucking
kil you!”
kil you!”
“I don’t wanna have nothing to do with
her,” Scotty pleaded. “I declare I don’t.”
“What you doing here then? What you
doing here?”
“I was, nothing man, I was just playing
around.”
“You don’t play with her. Not ever, you
understand me? She’s not play material.” Then
Reno attempted to calm himself down. He
released Scotty and stood back an inch. “I want
you out of Vegas as fast as this bucket can take
you. Got that, pal?”
“Yeah, sure,” Scotty said, glad to be let
go. “That’s what I was doing. Getting out now.”
“You get out now or you won’t be able to
later.” Then Reno motioned toward a car
parked on the opposite side of the street. “You
see that automobile over there?’
Scotty nervously looked.
“You see that automobile over there?”
Reno asked this with a raised voice.
“Yes, I see it, I see it.”
“The gentleman in that particular
automobile works for me. He wil personal y
see to you leaving Vegas and he and every
wise guy this side of the Pacific Ocean wil see
to you staying away from Vegas and, most
importantly of al , Trina Hathaway. Do I make
myself clear?”
“Yes, loud and clear.”
Without any warning, Reno rammed his
knee into Scotty’s midsection, causing Trina to
jump again. Then Reno slapped him across the
face with the butt of his gun, creating an
immediate gush of blood. Scotty bent over in
pain.
“What you waiting for?” Reno decried.
“Get the hel outta here!”
Scotty couldn’t get in his car fast
enough. Even with the glass stil on his seat
from his scattered window. He cranked up and
took off, caring less about the condition of his
car, or of his face. Blackmailing Trina to gain
money from some rich sugar daddy was one
thing. But up close and personal that sugar
daddy had mob written al over him. And Scotty
was no fool. Blackmailing the mob was
something completely different. Like suicide,
he thought, as he sped away from Trina and
Vegas forever, breaking every speeding record,
constantly looking back at the man tailing him.
“I thought you said you was just gonna
talk to him,” Trina said when Reno hid his gun
inside his jacket and got back into the car.
“I did talk to him.”
“You nearly kil ed him.”
“What, you love this guy or something?”
“Of course I don’t love him, what are you
talking about?”
“Then who is he?” Reno asked her.
“He’s an ex, al right?”
“Not the dude from Dale?”
“No. After him. We stayed together al
of one month. When I found out he wanted me
to turn tricks for him, I took off. End of story.”
Reno glanced at her breasts. “You slept
with him before?”
“He was my boyfriend.”
“Your boyfriend?”
“Yes,” Trina said, wondering why that
seemed surprising to him.
But Reno only shook his head. “You
sure can pick’em,” he said as he cranked up,
and then drove off.
Trina couldn’t believe he had said that.
Because it was the same thing Jazz had said.
Because her picking skil s pertained to him too.
And that, more than any rebound relationship
she ever had with Scotty Labaray, was what
was worrying her.
+++
The next morning, when Jazz dropped by
and Trina clued her in on what happened with
Scotty last night, they both agreed that
something wasn’t adding up.
“You would think the owner of the
PaLargio would be a button-down, straight-as-
an-arrow dude,” Jazz said. “Not some badass
with an attitude.”
They were in Trina’s living room,
drinking coffee and seated on the sofa. Jazz
had just taken her old man to work and decided
to drop by Trina’s place before heading back
across town.
“I hear ya’, girl,” Trina said, stil in her
“I hear ya’, girl,” Trina said, stil in her
robe, stil wet between her legs from Reno’s
pounding less than an hour before Jazz
dropped by. He was dressed and ready to
leave at the time, but he took another look at
Trina’s naked body and was on her again.
“And I mean badass,” Jazz continued.
“That man of yours, that Reno, he seems like a
badass from way back.”
“But what’s strange,” Trina said, “is that
when you see him at the PaLargio he’s al
business. He’s almost a different person. But
I’ve seen him lose his cool twice, J, away from
the PaLargio, and it was kind of scary.”
“Especial y since both times had to do
with men bothering you,” Jazz reminded her.
“Maybe it’s not so much that he’s just violent, but
that it’s al about defending you in his mind.”
Trina shook her head. “I don’t know
about al that. It just seems like he can’t help
himself.” Then she exhaled.
“Does he,” Jazz started and then
stopped. She tried again. “I mean, has he,
have y’al , you know?”
Trina frowned. She knew what Jazz was
hinting at but she wasn’t at al sure if she wanted
to go down that road with her. “Have we what?”
“Fucked, okay? Is that clear enough for
you?” Trina laughed. “I was trying to be
delicate,” Jazz added, laughing too.
“I’m not about to let you get al up in my
business that deep,” Trina said. “But what
difference would that make, anyway?”
“It’l explain why he beats up on men for
you. He done tasted that brown sugar.”
“I been thinking about researching him,”
Trina said, ignoring Jazz’s conclusion. “Maybe
Google him or something.”
“Now we’re talking,” Jazz said, rubbing
her hands together like some mad scientist.
“Let’s Google his ass!” Then her smal eyes
began to scan the room. “Where your computer
at?” she asked.
“What computer?” Trina asked.
“What computer? Girl, don’t tel me you
ain’t got no
computer
! What Negro ain’t got no
computer in this day and age? No car, no
computer? You sure you black?”
Trina smiled. “It’s not that serious, Jazz.”
“It’s criminal is what it is. When are you
gonna join the modern world, child?”
“When the modern world starts paying
me a fair wage.”
“You start working at the PaLargio on
Monday. You gonna make the big bucks then.”
“Child, please. No I’m not. At least not
while I’m an apprentice. They starting me off at
12 bucks an hour.”
“That’s al ?”
“Until I learn the ropes and take on more
responsibility, yup. Of course once I’m a
manager, my salary wil be slammin’. But not
before then.”
“And Reno knows this?”
“Yeah, he knows. That’s what I mean
how he’s al business at the PaLargio. That’s
why I told you you gotta let me get my feet in the
door first. Reno might care about me and be
around me and al that, but when it comes to his
business? Reno don’t play that.”
Jazz laughed. Pul ed out her Blackberry
smartphone. “Wel ,” she said, “there’s more
than one way to skin a cat.”
And on Jazz’s Blackberry they did
Google Reno. They sat side by side on the
sofa, staring at al of the information. At first, it
was al about his business interests, al about
the PaLargio. But then there were articles
insinuating his connection to organized crime
types, nothing concrete, but a lot of
known to be
associated with
, or
has been rumored to have
a friendship with
, and on and on. Until they
happened upon a reference to his father,
describing him as “reputed mob boss Paulo
Gabrini.” Jazz looked at Trina when she saw
that reference.
“Mob boss, Tree,” she said. “Dang!
This says his father’s a mob boss! You see
that, girl?”
“I see it,” Trina said, her heart pounding.
“You done got yourself hooked up with
the mob, girl. The mob! This shit ain’t funny
anymore.”
“But they ain’t saying Reno involved in
the mob. Where do you see anywhere that says
Reno is a mob boss?”
Reno is a mob boss?”
“But they saying his daddy is. His own
daddy! Ain’t that enough for you?”
Trina didn’t respond to that. Because
she didn’t know if it was enough or not. It was
easy for Jazz to say get out now, quit while
you’re ahead, leave his ass in the dust. But she
wasn’t the one sleeping with Reno. She wasn’t
the one fal ing hard for a man like him. She
wasn’t the one who had a feeling that she had
herself a real man, a good man who wasn’t
perfect, but was perfect for her. It was easy for
Jazz and anybody else on the outside looking
in. But for Trina, who was on the inside, deep
down inside, it couldn’t have been any harder.
She saw Reno again that Friday night, when
he took her to dinner. After a lovely meal, where
he actual y tried to serenade her by singing
some tired Tony Bennett song, they ended up
back at her place. And, eventual y, in bed.
Oddly, they didn’t make love when they
got into bed. Odd for them because they never
ended up in bed without making love. But this
time he just wanted to hold her. He had had a
tough day, he said as they lay there, both naked
and in each other’s arms, and this “whole thing”
was beginning to get to him.
“What ‘whole thing,’?” Trina asked him,
her mind moving in many directions. Was he
talking about the PaLargio, the mob life,
them
?
“The renovations,” he said, “the new
construction, the grand opening of the west wing
coming up.”
Trina relaxed. It was al about the
PaLargio. But it did afford her an opening.
“You’ve always been in the hotel and casino
business?” she asked him.
“Not always, no,” he said, wrapping his
arm tighter around her. They were both on their
backs, staring up, and he had one of his hands
constantly flicking her nipple and squeezing her
breast, which let her know that they hadn’t had
sex yet, but they would.
“What made you go into this line of
work?” she asked him.
“It beat any other line of work. I saw an
opportunity, so I took it.” This line of questioning
was beginning to bother Reno. He knew he had
some explaining to do, but not here, not now.
“You said your father owned a
restaurant, right?”
“Trina!”
“I’m just asking.”
“Yeah, he owned a restaurant, al right?