Read Lucian Online

Authors: Bethany-Kris

Lucian (23 page)

“Lucian?”

“No, someone tried to kill me.”

 

• • •

 

“I thought you were going to the gym today?” Antony asked, turning fast on Dante with his narrowing gaze.

“Change of plans.”

Antony scoffed. “Change of plans, Dante. What would have happened if you were in that car, son?”

“We wouldn’t be having this discussion, I imagine,” Dante replied indifferently.

Wrong answer. Lucian groaned internally.

“Wouldn’t be having this—” Antony pinched the bridge of his nose, huffing out air like a pissed off bull. Lucian knew what was coming next and moved slightly in front of Jordyn to block her from it. A glass went flying into the wall and shattered as Antony’s anger exploded. “Get out of my face right now before I make you wish you were in that fucking car!”

Oddly, Jordyn didn’t seem to react a bit to Antony’s show of rage. She simply continued staring down at her hands resting in her lap while Dante left his father’s home office with a flip of his middle finger and muttering about needing a drink, anyway.

“Lucian—”

“Hey, don’t turn this on me again,” Lucian interrupted his father sharply. “He’s twenty-six, almost twenty-seven. I can’t control him. Besides, this wasn’t an issue two years ago when the three of us were running together like a pack of dogs.”

“I didn’t say this was your fault!”

“It was ten minutes ago when you were yelling at me.”

Antony glared at the wall where the paint scratched from the glass hitting it. “And I was yelling at Gio an hour ago for not remembering to make his bed last Sunday morning before church. I yell. That’s what I do when I’m frustrated.”

“Gio’s twenty-five,” Lucian grumbled under his breath. “He doesn’t need parenting about his messy bed.”

“He does when he sleeps over in my goddamn house and your mother refuses to let me hire her another maid and then complains about the state of his bed.”

“Listen, I handled the cops,” Lucian started. “Quick statement, number to contact, the usual. I didn’t have anything to say, didn’t see anything, and that was that. They can call my lawyer if they want something else.”

“Oh, I know.” Antony shook his head and grimaced. “I hate them picking around, though. They don’t need to be too close to any of us for any reason. It unsettles me. It’s unnatural for us to be communicating with police unless I’m paying them for information.”

“They were interested in why I was in the area,” Lucian added as an afterthought.

“And?”

“And nothing. I said I was visiting a friend. They wanted to know who, and I told them it didn’t make a difference as to why my car was involved in a drive by shooting. They couldn’t exactly disagree. Like I said, they have my lawyer’s number.”

“Was this about me?” Jordyn asked softly from the couch. “Or The Sons of Hell again?”

“Yes,” Lucian said immediately, because that’s what he assumed.

“No,” Antony stated at the same time.

Lucian spun on his heel. “What?”

Antony shrugged. “I don’t think it was about the MC.”

“That’s a joke, right?” Lucian asked. “After our little show with the strip club, you can’t expect them not to try something.”

“Well, unless I’ve heard wrong, it’s not them, Lucian.”

Lucian didn’t like how uncharacteristically quiet Jordyn was behind him. She’d been that way ever since the private car picked her and Antony up from Marcello Industries shortly after the shooting and brought them both to the home in Tuxedo Park. According to his mother and father, anyway.

Maybe she was frightened. Lucian didn’t know. Considering she wouldn’t talk to him.

“What have you heard?” Lucian asked, trying to distance himself from his inner worry.

Antony took his sweet time pulling out his office chair and sitting down, pulling up to his desk. Opening a drawer, he pulled out a manila file and tossed it down uncaringly. Lucian didn’t make a move to grab the file because he wasn’t sure if he was supposed to.

“That better not be some crap like you pulled on me the last time I was shown a folder,” Lucian said, tempering his tone. “Not right now.”

By the last time, he meant the bullshit about Jordyn’s past and life.

“Once was enough,” Antony replied dully.  “You know why I did that, so don’t start chewing my ass off again.”

“What, then?”

Antony sighed heavily. “Will Vetta is deceased.”

Lucian’s spine cracked as he straightened, hearing the words but not quite believing he understood them correctly. The quiet, whimpered noise behind him didn’t escape his notice, either. It was almost like he could feel Jordyn’s shock and confusion radiating straight into his own veins.

“Excuse me?” Lucian asked thickly.

“Will is dead,” Antony repeated. “His body was found under a Brooklyn bridge by a jogger early last week.”

Lucian’s mind raced to do the math. “But, wait … No, that doesn’t work.”

“It does. I have the reports, son. I paid a pretty dime to get them before they were released as public record, considering there’s an active investigation going on around the club right now. By the Coroner’s estimation, he died at least two days after we hit Legs and Leather. That’s a long time before today, Lucian.”

“One of his guys, then. Maybe following out orders before he died.”

“No, I don’t think so,” Antony murmured. “We made our point. Three men walked into their club and cleared it for business. We barely needed to do a thing. They didn’t expect us. They couldn’t even fight back. It was only a small taste of what we’re capable of, and I think they knew it.”

“Yeah, I get that,” Lucian replied.

“No offence, but one woman isn’t worth taking down an entire criminal enterprise for. At least not for them. They have three dozen more to replace her. Smart men, even if they are criminals, know when they’ve been bested and when to step back. I taught you that lesson myself, son.”

Lucian agreed, but he was still racing to catch up. “So, this means …”

No, he couldn’t even finish the thought.

Jordyn stood from the couch and walked across the room to pick up the file. “Dead?”

Antony nodded. “Yes.”

“How?” she asked.

“Initial reports say it looked like a drug overdose. Heroin, to be specific. However, the body was moved under the bridge after death. That certainly wouldn’t be uncommon for people who don’t want to be caught with drugs because of needing to call an emergency service for someone. However, it wasn’t the only suspicious thing.”

“What else?” Jordyn demanded.

Lucian wanted to tell her to stop and ask her to give herself a moment to breathe and consider what all this meant, but he couldn’t. He was just as frozen as Jordyn seemed to be, stuck in a time that didn’t feel real or right.

When Antony didn’t answer straightaway, Jordyn picked up the file and opened it. Lucian watched as her eyes scanned the report, wetness gathering along her lower lashes the further down she read.

Then, she flipped to the next thing in the file.

It wasn’t a report. It was a picture.

Will Vetta dead on an autopsy table. A sheet covered him from the chest down. The obvious signs of a drug overdose were evident in the yellowed whites of his eyes, and the dried, bubbled fluid around his mouth.

“They found it in his mouth?” Jordyn asked.

“Yes,” Antony confirmed.

“Found what?” Lucian had no idea what they were talking about.

“His patch, the one that signified his rank. It had been ripped off his vest, along with the club patch, and was bunched up and forced into his mouth and halfway down his throat. He might have died of an overdose, but the act afterwards was intentional and a very clear message,” Antony explained, keeping his exterior calm. “That is why I said it’s over between us and The Sons of Hell.”

“He’s … dead. Just like that,” Jordyn whispered. “Gone.”

Lucian didn’t get the chance to say anything or comfort Jordyn, if that’s what she needed, because in the next second, she was flying from the office. He stared at the empty, opened doorway for what felt like an eternity, unsure of what to do.

“Her mother died of a heroin overdose. She didn’t need to see that picture.”

“Jordyn picked it up herself, Lucian. I didn’t tell her to.”

“But you could have warned her!”

“No,” Antony responded coldly. “She needs to see, to have proof. She’s safe. That was what she needed, Lucian. You gave her that. Now, give her a moment to let her mind catch up to the information.”

Lucian’s was only now starting to. “It wasn’t about her today. The shooter wasn’t making a point or trying to catch Jordyn.”

“No, son.”

It was about Lucian. Someone
was
trying to kill him.

Chapter Nineteen

 

 

“Hey, sweetheart.”

Jordyn waved her hand above her face as a reply to Lucian. Reclining back on the leather couch in the bedroom that once was his in the Marcello family home was the only way she felt like she could control the rushing waves of shock and nausea.

“What are you doing in here?” Lucian asked.

“This is your room, isn’t it?”

“It is. This home also sports a guest house, small gym, mini library, two entertainment rooms, the indoor pool, and way too much space elsewhere. You could get lost in the hallways alone. Just curious as to why you picked here to hide.”

Jordyn shrugged. “Feels like you.”

“Oh. Well, okay.” Lucian shifted on his feet before stepping into the room and closing the door behind him. “You ran out of there pretty quick, so I didn’t get the chance to see how you were feeling.”

“Not particularly well,” Jordyn mumbled into the crook of her arm.

“Yeah,” Lucian drawled lowly. “I didn’t think so. Want to talk?”

“Not really.”

With her eyes covered, Jordyn relied on her hearing to know what Lucian was doing. It was only the sound of the bed shifting that told her he was sitting just a few feet away. She wanted to curl deeper into the hoodie she found in his closet earlier and get lost in the couch. Screw the rest of the world, it didn’t need her right now.

“Jordyn?”

“Hmm?”

“Did you go through my stuff in here?”

“Yes.”

Lucian chuckled. “You can keep the hoodie.”

“Too late. You weren’t getting it back anyway.”

“Great.”

“Also, the weed hidden in the box on the back shelf of your closet is pretty dried out. You should get rid of it. I don’t think it’d be a very good smoke.”

Lucian’s laughter was a balm to her overworked nerves. “Will do. It’s probably been there for ten years now.”

“I thought you slept here on Saturday nights to do the whole breakfast and church thing on Sundays?” Jordyn asked.

“Before you came along, sure. I’ve been a little distracted lately.”

“Family is important, Lucian. Don’t use me as an excuse to skip out on your responsibilities.”

“You sound like my mother,” Lucian replied, sounding entirely disturbed. “I don’t like that. It does nothing but creep me out. Quit before it becomes a habit and I’m stuck with it. If you want to ruin our sex life, that’s a great way to start.”

“She has a point,” Jordyn said with a sigh. “I wouldn’t mind being here on Saturday nights.”

“If that’s what you want, sweetheart. I don’t want to hear a thing when you’re regaled with discussions on sleeping in the same bed, sex before marriage, and sin. It will happen, I promise you that. Before you know it, Cecelia will have you convinced the only way you’re going to heaven is if you walk down the aisle in an ivory dress as soon as humanly possible. She can arrange a wedding in a week, including paying off the priest to forget about the required six month couple’s counseling. Do not underestimate the manipulative powers of that woman.” 

“I’ll deal with it,” she muttered. “Besides, she’ll probably just bother you.”

“True.”

Finally, Jordyn moved her arm so she could see Lucian. A faint smile played at the edge of his mouth, but the concern in his heady gaze was all too clear.

“He’s really dead, huh?” Jordyn asked in a whisper.

Lucian nodded. “Yeah,
bella
. Will’s dead. And may he rot in hell where he belongs.”

“You sound angry.”

“I am.”

“Why, isn’t this a good thing? I mean, it should be.”

“Sure it is. Except I didn’t get to do a thing to him that I wanted to. I didn’t get to make him bleed for marking your face, or break his bones for him breaking your skin. He didn’t have to hurt or cry or beg …
nothing
. I feel like it was left hanging. That was too easy for him, Jordyn. It was nothing like what I would have done to him for what he did to you.”

Jordyn felt the shiver crawling up her spine from Lucian’s anger and darkness. Occasionally, the treacherous nature of his soul flashed harsh and bright, reminding her that beneath his sweet and gentle hands was a dangerous man. She loved it as much as she worried about it.

“Sometimes revenge leaves us nowhere but cold, Lucian.”

He bared his teeth, sneering. “No, I think it would have left me sky-high.”

“It’s just hard to believe,” Jordyn said softly, melting into Lucian’s warm palm as he moved to stroke her cheek. “After everything, that’s how it ends for me and him. I’m never going to know what I did to make that man hate me, or why I deserved his bitterness and abuse.”

“Maybe it wasn’t what you did,” Lucian offered, shrugging, “… but what someone else wouldn’t give him.”

“My mom, you mean.”

“That’s the first place I’d start looking.”

“I think he loved her once,” Jordyn murmured. “She didn’t love him.”

“Bad men made monsters, sweetheart.”

Jordyn sniffed away emotions. They felt useless now. “I guess I just don’t understand the mindset.”

“I think it’s likely he went after the next best thing to hurt her. The closest thing he could stand tossing out his cruelty to, and unfortunately, that happened to be you.”

“Is that what you would do, too, if you couldn’t have what you loved?” she asked.

Lucian blew out a harsh breath. “No. I’d eat my gun before I would ever hurt someone I loved, especially you.”

“It seems too easy, and I don’t know where to go from here. What do I do now?”

“With me?”

“Who else would I do it with?” Jordyn asked, giving him a look. “Yes, with you.”

“We live.”

Jordyn’s lips cracked with a smile that matched Lucian’s, but it faded all too quickly. “Except someone shot up your Lexus this morning hoping you’d be inside.”

Without saying a thing, Lucian urged her up to a sitting position on the couch. Kneeling between her knees, he traced the contours of her cheeks and lips with his thumbs softly. As his digit rolled over her plump bottom lip again, Jordyn kissed it.

“I was hoping you hadn’t put that together, yet,” Lucian said.

“Of course I did.”

“You’re anything but stupid, I know. I suppose asking you to trust us and let us handle it without you worrying is pointless, right?”

Jordyn shrugged weakly. “I love you, Lucian. I can’t just ignore it.”

“Being who I am, I’m always on some kind of a block, Jordyn. We all are.”

“But it is always so blatant?” she shot right back.

“No,” he admitted low. “Nothing is going to happen.”

Jordyn wanted to believe him more than anything. “If you’d been in the car—”

“I wasn’t.”

“I hate how this works sometimes between you and me,” Jordyn told him as his hand cupped her jaw. “I get a phone call, some car shows up, I’m told I have to leave, and that’s it. I’m left to wonder and worry until I see your face, and even that really doesn’t help by the end of it.”

“Better to get you to a safe place than waste time with information.”

Jordyn stared him down, frustration rising. “It’s not for me!”

“I’m sorry, but that’s how it works.”

“What do we do now?” Jordyn asked, waving at nothing.

“About the threat on me, we wait until next time.”

Something awful lodged in her throat. “Wait for the next time?”

Lucian didn’t bother to avert his gaze from hers as he replied, “Wait and hope the next time, it’s not so vague, and someone messes up. There will be next time, and it limits down the people every time.”

“I don’t like that,” Jordyn mumbled. “Just play dumb and wait to be killed.”

“No one’s killing me. Quit it.”

Jordyn sighed, knowing she wasn’t going to get anywhere with him on this. “Thank you.”

Lucian’s dark brow rose. “For what?”

“Keeping your promise and giving me safety. Taking me out of something I couldn’t escape myself. Being you, I guess.”

“Only for you,
bella mia
.” Then, Lucian grinned, his teasing manner back in a flash. “Besides, something good came from this.”

“Oh?” Jordyn snorted and rolled her eyes. “I doubt that.”

“Sure. I get to go car shopping next week. What man doesn’t want a reason to buy a new car? You can help me pick.”

Jesus Christ.

“That’s awful,” she told him seriously. “It’s not even funny. Frankly, it’s pretty damn close to being worthy of you sleeping somewhere else besides with me tonight.”

“Car shopping is serious business, Jordyn. I would never joke about it.” Lucian stood, leaning down to kiss her forehead. “Speaking of tonight, you don’t mind staying here, do you? It’s late, and I’m not in the mood to have a car drive us back to Manhattan. Antony already called about the Mercedes in storage for me to use until I get another vehicle, but that won’t be here until morning.”

“His Mercedes? How many cars does he have?”

Lucian shrugged, looking uncomfortable. “I collect guns, he collects cars. Besides, it’s the only vehicle in his fleet with bulletproof glass.”

Great
, Jordyn thought.
Because he needs that, now.

“I want to go to sleep,” she said instead of voicing her thoughts. “This day needs to end already.”

Lucian chuckled. “Okay, we can do that. Big day tomorrow, after all.”

Damn it. Jordyn barely hid her groan. In the excitement over the day, she’d completely forgotten the party tomorrow evening. Dante and Lucian both happened to have birthdays within days of one another. Lucian would be turning twenty-eight in a week, and Dante was turning twenty-seven that coming Wednesday. Apparently the men often shared one party together as they were just a year apart in age and had the same interest when it came to a proper celebration.

Up until earlier, she’d been looking forward to the party. It would be the first time they all went out together and had fun just to have fun. Jordyn wasn’t sure this was the right time for a party after what happened.

“Are you sure it’s the best time for this?”

“Gio’s gift to us was the VIP section of his club for Saturday. He’s got it booked up for the next six months. Other than that, Marcellos don’t hide, Jordyn. We’re not fearful men.”

“Maybe that’s the problem, Lucian. You have no fear.”

He didn’t argue.

Sometime later, after Jordyn had long fallen asleep and the large home was quiet, Lucian’s quiet murmurs in her ear, his kiss on her cheek, and his hand skimming her side woke her back up.

Jordyn groaned in the darkness, turning to her other side. “Stop it. We’re not having sex in your parents’ house. You’re the one who warned me of discussions to come.”

“That wasn’t exactly the plan, but thanks for a rejection before I even get that far,” Lucian groused.

“What is it?”

“I wanted to tell you the day is over, now.”

Jordyn smiled, seeing the time blinking past midnight on the bedside table alarm clock. “Good. Can we go back to sleep?”

“No, get up.”


Lucian
.”

If this was one of his stunts, she was going to disembowel him come morning.

“Seriously, Jordyn, get up. I want to show you something.”

Glaring and grumbling the entire time, Jordyn did as he demanded. Lucian wouldn’t even let her slip on a pair of sleep pants from his old clothes, instead saying she wouldn’t need them and the T-shirt and panties she wore were fine. Sure they were. He took her through the silent, dark house until they were on the bottom floor and at the very back where it led to the connecting building for the indoor pool. Quietly, Lucian keyed in numbers to the security pad at the French doors and opened it up.

Underwater lights glimmered under the water of the pool, the colors rapidly changing from one to another. Jordyn was almost too busy admiring the sight to notice Lucian was tugging off his T-shirt and kicking off his sleep pants. He didn’t have a thing on underneath.

“Lucian, what are you—”

Jordyn’s words were cut off when he dove into the pool without warning.

Not two seconds later, he popped back up, hazel eyes watching her like a predator wanting its prey. “Get in the water, Jordyn.”

“What? No. You’re insane.”

“I am not. Take off your clothes and get in this water with me. It’s warm, I promise.”

“I don’t care! I told you, not in this house.”

Lucian grinned. “We’re technically not in the house, sweetheart. Get in the water and don’t make me tell you again, or I will come and get you myself.”

Knowing he didn’t make idle threats, Jordyn tossed a look back at the dark home. Everyone was sleeping. No one would know.

She decided she didn’t even care.

Jordyn’s clothes followed the same path Lucian’s had before she slipped into the water much quieter than what he did. The pool was warm, but it was still cold enough to be a shock. She didn’t even get the chance to take a breath when she came back up for air before Lucian was in front of her, taking her under the water again.

Other books

The Price of Blood by Patricia Bracewell
It's Only Make Believe by Dowell, Roseanne
Night Prey by John Sandford
The Christmas Party by Carole Matthews
Laura's Secret by Lucy Kelly
The Night Before Thirty by Tajuana Butler
Eastern Approaches by Fitzroy MacLean
Lady Hawk's Folly by Scott, Amanda