Heavy Crown Page 31

“I’ve been dating him,” I say coolly. “Just like you told me to.”

“Not just like I told you . . .” he says.

Adrian looks back and forth between us, confused. I haven’t told him that I slept with Sebastian. He doesn’t understand the tension freezing the room.

The smile has dropped off my father’s face. He’s lowering his chin, getting that look like a bull about to charge. I have to head him off, immediately.

“He wants to marry me!” I blurt. “He wants to make a formal agreement between our families. This could be good for us, father. Instead of fighting the Gallos, we could align ourselves with them. Like the Griffins did. Like the Polish mafia. They don’t have to be our enemies. It would be so much more profitable to—”

“Do you think you can school me on how the Bratva should operate in this city?” my father interrupts. He hasn’t raised his voice, but his furious tone cuts through my words like a scythe through dry grass.

“No, of course not. I—”

“Quiet!” he barks.

I fall silent, and Adrian finds my knee under the table, squeezing my leg in sympathy.

“This is why you can barely be trusted with the simplest of tasks,” he says, his blue eyes boring into mine. “You’re weak, as all women are weak. I send you out hunting, and not only can you barely secure your prey, now you’re developing feelings for him.”

I press my lips together, knowing that I’m supposed to deny this, but unable to even pretend. I have a lot more than feelings for Sebastian.

“And worse,” my father hisses. “You’ve destroyed the only value you had to me.”

Adrian’s hand tightens on my knee. I’m sure he can guess what our father is referring to. He’s flinching not out of disgust, but out of fear for me.

“Oh yes,” my father hisses, his eyes drilling into me. “You can’t keep any secrets from me, Yelena. I know everything you think, and everything you do. You will be punished, at a time of my choosing.”

This is something new. Usually our punishments come at once, in the most painful and upsetting way possible. The fact that he’s delaying his discipline . . . that’s the worst torture of all.

“I’ve tried to teach you two,” our father says, including Adrian in his anger now. “I’ve tried to ready you for this world we inhabit. I’ve tried to harden you. You may think I’ve been cruel or demanding, but the world is infinitely more cruel than I could ever be. If you can’t make your skin into steel and your soul into iron, you’ll be torn to shreds.”

He takes a long drink of his wine, looking us up and down. This time there’s no pride in his expression, only disgust for how we disappoint him.

“There is no stasis in crime,” he says. “Your fortune is rising, or it’s falling. There’s no middle ground. The Gallos believe they can transition from mafia dons to wealthy citizens. They are FOOLS!”

He bellows that word so loudly that Adrian and I jump in our seats, almost knocking over our wine.

“They think they’ve moved up a rung on the ladder with that South Shore Development . . . but all they’ve done is announce their weakness to the world. Dante Gallo is gone—the heir of the family, and their enforcer. Nero Gallo, that filthy thief, has ensconced himself in the world of so-called legitimate business. He thinks he’s above OUR rules, above OUR laws. But he’ll pay for what he did, stealing our crown jewel. And the youngest brother, the cripple,” my father scoffs. “He has never been trained to take their place. He knows nothing about being a don.”

I notice he doesn’t mention Aida Gallo. She’s only a girl, and therefore of no interest or importance.

“There’s blood in the water . . .” my father says coldly. “The sharks will come, whether it’s us, or someone else. The Gallos are bleeding freely, an invitation to all. They will be torn apart.”

I don’t understand any of this. I can’t tell if he’s being hyperbolic, or if he actually has a plan. He wanted me to date Sebastian, but if he expected me to learn the Gallos’ secrets and spill them to the Bratva, I haven’t done that. I haven’t met Sebastian’s family. We don’t talk about the Gallos’ business. And even if we did . . . I wouldn’t tell my father.

Actually, I do know one piece of information he’d love to have.

I could tell my father that Enzo Gallo lives all alone in that huge house, without any security besides the housekeeper. It would be child’s play to send Rodion to that house to strangle them both in their sleep.

But I would NEVER do that. Papa can’t actually read my mind—that secret is safe with me.

Maybe he sees the look of defiance on my face.

He stares at me from the head of the table, his steak knife clenched in his fist and juice from the bloody meat gleaming on his lips. I can tell that he’s simmering with anger—at me, at the Gallos, maybe at Adrian, too. Papa has never been a happy man. The more he tries to squeeze out of the world, the less satisfied he seems.

He looks like he’s about to explode into one of his rages.

Desperately, I try to think of a way to convince him that we don’t have to fight the Gallos.

I blurt out, “To surprise the enemy is to defeat him. The Gallos know we have a grudge against them. They know our brutality and our fury. We could surprise them with magnanimity. They’re in an unstable position—it’s an advantageous time to make an agreement.”

My father narrows his eyes at me.

To surprise the enemy is to defeat him—that’s a quote from Generalissimo Suvorov. My father’s idol. He’ll listen to those words, if not to mine.

To my shock and relief, he nods his head slowly.

“Maybe you’re right.”

Even Adrian looks surprised to hear that.

My father sets down his knife and dabs his lips with his napkin.

“This is what you want, Yelena? You want to align yourself with those Italian dogs?”

I don’t know how he wants me to answer that.

All I can say is the truth.

“Yes,” I whisper. “I want to marry Sebastian.”

My father shakes his head in disgust. “He can have you,” he says. “You’re no good to me anymore.”

With that, he pushes away his plate and stands up from the table, leaving Adrian and me alone in the dining room.

Of course, I don’t actually trust him. Not for a second.

I turn to Adrian, whispering out of fear that my father is still lurking around, or one of his men. “What is he doing? Tell me, Adrian. What is he planning?”

Adrian just shakes his head at me. He’s not touching my knee anymore. He’s looking at me with an expression I’ve never seen before.

“Did you actually sleep with the Italian?” he asks.

“He’s not an Italian,” I say in irritation. “He was born right here in Chicago.”

Adrian looks at me like I’m speaking gibberish. “He’s our enemy, Yelena.”

“Why? Because our father says so?”

Adrian frowns. What I’m saying is absolute treason. Our father’s word is law. Loyalty to our family is supposed to be our highest priority.

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