
The Pact Book 2
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Jessica Morel
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Chapter 1
Book 2: The Wrong Brother
THREE YEARS EARLIER
ALEXANDRIA
âI canât thank you enough.â
âNo need for thanks, Allie,â Christian, my cousin, says with a sigh. âYouâre family. Youâre always welcome here.â
âAnd we adore our handsome little man!â Frankie gives my five-year-old son Noah a squeeze, making him giggle.
Weâve been staying with them in New York for the past two months.
Christian and Francesca De Luca, along with their two daughters, Claudia and Ellena, split their time between New York and Sicily, living six months in each place.
Itâs a lifestyle thatâs easy to maintain when youâre billionaires.
âMama, do we have to go home?â Noah asks, his Italian accent making his words sound even more endearing.
âYes, my love. Your grandpa needs us back at the restaurant.â
I look down at my beautiful boy. Heâs my joy. Noah is my world. He wasnât planned, but that doesnât make me love him any less.
I wonât let him suffer for my poor choices. Choices that include a one-night stand with a hot stranger on New Yearâs Eve, a man whose name I donât even remember.
I do recall his captivating green eyes, but now I see them everywhere in Sicily, including in my Noah.
âYou look deep in thought,â Christian observes, a worried look on his face.
âAm I doing the right thing for him?â I ask, and Christian sighs.
âAbsolutely. His father was a fool who wanted a one-night standââ
âI didnât exactlyââ
âLet me finish. Heâs a fool because he didnât see how wonderful you are. Youâre incredible, Allie. The fact that youâre raising Noah on your own proves that.â
TWO YEARS EARLIER
After leaving Noah with Christian and Frankie, I head to the one place I need to be right now. Our family restaurant, the Romano familyâs pride and joy.
âOh, Papa.â I sigh, resting my head in my hands on the bar. I thought my father would live foreverâhe was stubborn enoughâbut here I am, holding back tears after his funeral.
I glance around the quiet, empty restaurantâmy quiet, empty restaurant. With a sigh, I rest my forehead on the bar.
The front door chimes, but I donât bother to look up.
âWeâre closed,â I say in Italian.
âAlexandria Romano?â a manâs voice asks.
âI said weâreââ
âClosed. I heard.â I snap my head up to face the intruder. âAre you Alexandria Romano?â
âWho wants to know?â
âIâm Sylvester Ferraro,â he extends his hand, but I donât take it. Iâve heard of the Ferraros, and not just because of their multimillion-dollar business or their luxury hotels.
âLeave.â
Sylvester raises his hands in surrender, a small smirk playing on his lips.
âI mean no harm. Your father and mine had an agreement, and, well, itâs that time of the month.â
âMy father is dead.â
âThat means our agreement now falls to you.â
âNo.â
âExcuse me?â
âLeave,â I repeat, but Sylvester just smiles.
âIâll be back in a few days, Ms. Romano.â
He leaves without another word, and I lock the front door in a daze, hoping to avoid any more surprises.
âWhat have you done, Papa?â
***
âDid you sleep here?â Christianâs voice startles me awake, and I nearly fall off my barstool.
âSeems like it,â I mumble.
âWhat happened, Allie?â he asks, eyeing the empty scotch bottle in front of me.
âDid you know Dad was having financial problems?â
âHe didnât mention anything.â
âMe neither. Thatâs why I was surprised when Sylvester Ferraro showed up last night.â
âDid he harm you?â
âNo. He just said heâd be back in a few days.â
I lead Christian into my fatherâs office, and we start going through the books. The restaurant isnât just strugglingâitâs failing.
I hold back a sob, and Christian sighs.
âYou didnât know?â
âNo, he never said anything.â
âMaybe he was too proud.â
âWell, look where that got him,â I snap. âYou idiot, Papa!â I yell at the ceiling, letting my emotions take over.
âYou need some real sleep, Allie, not just drunken sleep.â
âBut I need toââ
âSleep. The restaurant isnât going anywhere. Open tomorrow night. Right now, you need to sleep.â
âWhat about the Ferraros?â
âIâll handle it.â
I let Christian guide me into the town car that takes me back to the De Lucaâs Italian mansion. My family home could fit inside it a hundred times over.
âHave a good day, Ms. Romano,â Christianâs driver says as he opens my door.
âThank you,â I reply softly, and I head toward the house. Itâs quiet inside, which makes me think everyone is still asleep.
âChristian told me to send you straight to bed when you arrived.â Frankieâs voice startles me.
âI should check on Noah.â
âHeâs fine.â
âButââ
âBed.â
âYou remind me of my grandmother.â
âYouâre welcome.â Frankie winks before pointing upstairs one more time. I sigh and follow her directions.
Maybe I do need sleep.
SYLVESTER
Alexandria Romano was a surprise. I hadnât even known old man Romano had a daughter until he passed away.
I couldâve turned my back, I shouldâve turned my back. The debt the Romanos owed was chump change, but I was looking for any reason to be near someone so breathtakingly beautiful.
The moment I said my name, her face said it all. She knew exactly who I was, who my family was. She knew what we represented, and she hated it.
Her face twisted, her nose crinkling just a bit; it wouldâve been adorable if her disgust wasnât directed at me.
âDid the Romano girl pay up?â my brother Jonathan asks as I walk in.
âNope. She gave me an earful.â
My other brother, Maximus, chuckles.
âDonât sweat it. We donât need it. His debt was almost cleared,â Jonathan says, shrugging it off.
âNo,â I counter. âWhat kind of message does that send? You die and your debt just disappears? Thatâs a bad precedent.â My brothers give me a curious look.
âSo, how turned on were you?â Max asks.
âWhat?â
âJust curious if youâre thinking with your dick.â Max smirks, and before I can smack him, Jonathanâs phone rings, cutting the tension. We all recognize that ringtone.
The boss.
Marcello Morretti was born the head of his own faction, and when he married our cousin Anna, the operations merged.
âFerraro,â Jonathan answers. He nods along with whatever Marcello is saying before switching his phone to speaker.
âWeâre all here,â Jonathan says in English.
âWhich one of you just cost me a billion dollars?â Marcello bellows over the line, and the three of us exchange confused glances.
âUhâŠwe have no clue what youâre talking about,â Max says softly.
âChristian De Luca just withdrew a billion dollars from a new Sparrow Industries resort because we, to quote him, âmessed with his family.â Whoâs responsible?â
Again, we exchange glances.
âNone of us have messed with the De Lucas,â I say.
âI didnât know they were in town,â Jonathan adds.
âNo, not the De Lucas. His motherâs family, Romano.â
âShit,â I mutter as my brothers glare at me.
âWell?â
âI just went to collect. The old man borrowed and it was time to pay,â I explain.
âHow much?â
âA few thousand.â
âYou cost me a billion for a few thousand? Are you fucking kidding me, Sly?â
âI was just doing my job.â
âWell, Iâm giving you a new one. Your top priority is to make nice with Alexandria Romano and get her to convince Christian to reinvest. I donât care how you do it. Treat her like a damn queen!â
Marcello hangs up before I can argue.
âTold you,â Jonathan says, and Max laughs.
âBoth of you can fuck off.â
***
The Romano is bustling when I arrive. After being closed for a few days, it seems the locals are rallying behind the family business. A young hostess greets me as I walk in.
âGood evening, sir, do you have a reservation?â
âNo, but I was hoping to speak with Ms. Romano?â
âAllie?â she clarifies, and I nod. âIs she expecting you?â
âNo.â
She hesitates for a moment before pulling out her phone. Her fingers fly across the screen, and about a minute later she looks up.
âSheâs on her way.â
âThank you.â I step aside, allowing her to greet the next customer.
I watch as Alexandria emerges from the back of the restaurant. She glides through the room, smiling at the customers. Her smile vanishes the moment she sees me.
âYouâre not welcome here,â she hisses quietly.
âI just want to talk, Alexandria.â
âMs. Romano,â she corrects me. I ignore her.
âCan we talk in your office?â Her brow furrows.
âOutside.â Without warning, her small, cold hand wraps around my wrist, and sheâs pulling me out of the restaurant.
The cold air hits us, and I see her shiver. I start to offer her my jacket, but she holds up her hands, stopping me.
âDonât.â
âYouâre cold.â
âIâll survive.â
âI was trying to be a gentleman.â
âGood for you.â
âYou donât like me.â
âYouâre a quick one. What do you want?â
âYour debts have been cleared.â
âExcuse me?â
âYou donât owe my family anymore.â
She nods, and I see the corners of her mouth twitch upward slightly.
âGood. Well, goodbye then.â She starts toward the door, but I grab her hand.
âWait.â
She looks back at me, curiosity in her eyes. She doesnât move, but she pulls her hand from mine and raises an eyebrow, waiting for me to speak.
âDinner.â
âWhat about it?â
âLet me take you to dinner.â
âNo.â
âLunch?â
âNo.â
âCoffee?â
âNo.â
âI want to make it up to you, Alexandria. I want to make things right.â
âMs. Romano,â she corrects again. âAnd thereâs no need. No hard feelings.â
âFriends?â I ask, offering a genuine smile, and she gives me a small one in return.
âSure.â
âAre you saying that just to get rid of me?â
âYes.â
âWell, at least youâre honest.â
âThat makes one of us,â she retorts, and it stings more than I let on.
âMy friends call me Sly.â
âHow fitting.â
We stand in silence before Alexandria shivers again. âI should get back to work.â
âDo you have a table available?â
âWhy?â
âSo, what else would I do at a restaurant if not eat?â
Alexandria rolls her eyes, and I can tell sheâs biting back her irritation. Without uttering a word, she spins around and strides back through the entrance.
Not knowing what else to do, I trail behind her.
By the time I step through the door, I see her engaged in conversation with the young hostess.
âLucy, make sure Mr. Ferraro gets to pick his table.â
âSure thing, Allie.â
I stand there, stunned, as Alexandria disappears into her office, leaving me with Lucy, the young hostess, whoâs batting her eyelashes at me.
âWould you like to follow me?â She picks up a menu, and like a good boy, I follow her onto the restaurant floor. I glance back over my shoulder in the direction Alexandria disappeared and let out a sigh.
Why am I so rattled by a woman?







































