
A Mafia Royals Romance Book 4
Autore
Rachel Van Dyken
Letto da
61,8K
Capitoli
34
Prologue
Destructive King
âDo not stand at my grave and weep, I am not there; I do not sleep. I am a thousand winds that blow. I am the diamond glints on snow. I am the sun on ripened grain, I am the gentle autumn rain. When you awaken in the morningâs hush, I am the swift uplifting rush of quiet birds in circled flight. I am the soft stars that shine at night. Do not stand at my grave and cry. I am not there; I did not die.â â Mary Elizabeth Fyre
***
âDeath is not the opposite of life, but a part of it.â â Haruki Murakami
Annie
Iâd been living at the Abandonato compound, aka house, for two days, and already I felt like I was going to go crazy.
It was huge. Like a mausoleum.
The only thing that helped was Ashâs mom Lucâs amazing cooking and the fact that Chase, underboss to the Abandonato Family and current U.S. Senator from Illinois, reserved his terrifying mafia face for his children. But me?
It was like he saw past the sweaters I couldnât help but button all the way up to my chin. He saw past the shyness. He saw it all. So when he looked at me, it was with respect.
If only that trickled down into his one and only son, Ash.
The same son whoâd been spiraling since the death of his fiancĂ©e.
A chill wracked my body as I shot up from the bed in search of a sweatshirt I could put on.
Why did they always keep the house so frigid? It was like they didnât believe in heat or somethingânot that I wasnât thankful for having a roof over my head after my adoptive parentsâ death.
I blocked out the memories.
Just like I blocked out the blood that seemed to still be staining my hands even though I hadnât done anything.
No, that had all been Ash.
Iâd never seen another person so full of rage, so full of uncontrollable sadness that you couldnât help but feel it every time you were in their presence.
Thunder boomed outside my window as the late fall rain pounded against the rooftop. Iâd always loved storms, even more so now that I had a ginormous room with a balcony that overlooked the poolâincluding the pool house where Ash was currently brooding.
Memories of kissing him in that pool assaulted me until my feet took me over to the doorâuntil I was opening it and peeking my head out to get a glance at the shallow end where heâd pushed me up against the wall and kissed the hell out of me.
To the footsteps Iâd taken from the pool in a stupid immature move that probably could have ended with my blood on his fingertipsâheâd been that angry.
I stared at his door and willed it to open. And when it did, I nearly dropped to the ground so he couldnât see me.
Instead, he just looked up at the sky, swaying on his feet as a bottle of pills fell from his hands onto the cement; he barked out a laugh and tilted back whatever was left of the fifth heâd chosen that night.
His full lips were pulled back into an amused smile as the rain attacked whatever shreds of good sense he still possessed.
âAre you happy now?â he roared up at the sky, then threw the bottle against the side of the pool house as the pills on the ground washed away. âAnswer me!â He grabbed a chair and threw it into the pool. âAre you fucking happy?â
His screams were going to wake up the only neighbors we hadâtwo miles away.
As it was, he was one more mistake away from getting chained in the dungeon.
I knew this because Chase had said so during dinner the night before, and when I laughed and nobody else did, I realized they did, in fact, actually have a soundproof room in the basement.
Something told me people didnât exactly come back from that.
It was his own child, but it was also the mafia, and even though nobody ever explained the rulesâI knew one thing: they were killers. All of them. So chaining your son to a chair in the basement?
Probable.
I hesitated for a minute, but when he grabbed another chair and threw it, I snatched my sweatshirt, told myself that Iâd faced anger before and knew how to calm it, and ran down the stairs and out the kitchen door.
Rain pelted my gray hoodie as I jogged over to Ash and yelled, âStop!â
He was holding the chair midair as he turned to me, his icy blue eyes void of all emotion.
Lost. He was so lost my heart cracked bit by bit as his chest heaved with more rage than a human was capable of holdingâcapable of coming back from.
A tear slid down my cheek, mixing with the raindrops.
He had everything. And yet, he focused on the one thing he had lost.
I didnât want to judge his mourning, but thatâs not what this wasâthis was devastation pure and simple. This was carnage in its rarest formâthis was death while still living.
A damned purgatory I wasnât sure anyone would come back from, especially since he chose to punish himself because he was left behind.
And Claire? In Heaven with their unborn child.
âGo. Away,â he said through clenched teeth, but at least he lowered the chair to the ground.
I took a deep breath and then a step forward. âYouâre drunk and, from the looks of the pills you spilled, high. Just sleep it off, Ashââ
âWhy the fuck does everyone suggest I sleep it off? Like I could just go to bed, close my eyes, and when I wake up in a blanket of fucking sunshine, Iâll have her back? Iâll have our baby back? Thatâs not how life works, ClaireâŠâ
He stumbled toward me, then swayed on his feet as he rubbed his eyes with his right hand.
Heâd called me Claire. The knife twisted deeper into my chest as I took the second step, raising my hand to put it on his shoulder.
âIt wonât be better. I never said it would be better; I just think itâs best that you go inside so you donât die from pneumonia or force your dadâs hand any more than you already have.â He flinched a bit.
He worshiped his dad.
He was, after all, a carbon copy of Chase right down to the tattoos, good looks, and an insanely out-of-control temper when he had no outlet for his feelings.
Luc calmed Chase the way Claire had calmed Ash. And now⊠Destruction.
âAsh.â I squeezed his shoulder; his full weight collapsed against me. Thank God I was stronger than I looked as I helped him walk back into the pool house, completely soaked.
We made it as far as the couch before he fell against it. I decided to use gravity to shove him down.
He groaned and flipped onto his side, eyes empty as he stared straight ahead; droplets of water slid down his sculpted jaw onto the black leather.
I cleared my throat. âLet me just get you some dry clothes and some waterâŠâ
He squeezed his eyes shut. At least he wasnât yelling anymore.
It took me at least ten minutes to grab some clean clothes from the chaos that was his room.
I finally located a dry shirt that didnât smell like whiskey and a pair of Nike sweats that looked clean enough. By the time I made it downstairs with one of the bottles of water he always kept by his bed, along with his clothes, he was nowhere to be found.
Seriously? Ugh, I so did not sign up to play babysitter tonight. I had class in the morningâearly. And my only shot at survival was keeping my scholarships and actually graduating so I could get a job and get away from killers.
Not that I wasnât thankful. At this point, I would have agreed to be their live-in cook full time if it got me a place to stayâplus, they protected me from the outside.
And I knew it was only a matter of time before someone came after me, mistook me for someone else, tried to hurt me, or just found out what pain I was hiding.
Better to keep your enemies close even if they are terrifying.
âAsh,â I called.
A light flickered from the bathroom.
I sighed in relief, then went over and knocked. The door creaked open, and there he was, sitting in the bathtub completely naked.
It was impossible not to notice his perfect physique; even drunk out of his mind, he was beautifulâlike a fallen angel that forgot his place was in Heavenânot his own personal hell.
âYou knowâŠâ He held out a giant knife and thumbed the blade, studying the point as a trickle of blood trailed down his thumb. âMost people do it wrongâŠâ
I froze. âYouâre drunk, Ash. Letâs just get you some clothesââ
âFucking idiots.â His pupils were pinpoints as he looked at me over the blade of the knife. âThey cut against the vein forgetting that youâre supposed to cut with it. But there are other ways, Claireâother ways to join youâŠâ
He was out of his mind. My chest heaved with panic as I weighed my options. He was an expert at killing things, even drunk. I was a college nerd on scholarship who had zero hand-to-hand combat skills.
Let alone against a proven killer.
âThree seconds,â he rasped as he lowered the knife to the inside of his right thigh, cutting the side like he was testing the sharpness of the knife. âThree seconds, and Iâll see you, sweetheart.
Three seconds and youâll be real again, three seconds, and weâll be a family.â Tears streamed down his face. âThatâs all, Claire. Thatâs all it would take.â
The knife was so dangerously close to his femoral artery that I had no time to call Chase or the ambulance.
No time but to figure out a way to save his life. No other way.
âDonât,â I whispered. âAsh, please⊠donât.â
âI have to.â He sobbed. âI have to!â
âPlease!â I choked on my tears. âPlease donât, Ash, please! Just stay, stay with me, right here, right nowâhand me the knife.â
âThree seconds, Claire.â
âAsh, Claire would want you to live.â
âI killed youâŠâ He grabbed the blade with his other hand and squeezed as blood spurted all over the bathtub.
âThis may as well be your blood. You were my soul, and I spilled it, I spilled it all. I didnât see, I didnâtââ The knife slipped out of his bloody hand.
I lunged for it and barely grabbed it in time before he did; he was thankfully too slow.
I threw the knife away from us; it clattered against the bathroom floor as I tripped against his legs as they dangled out of the tub.
With a grunt, I fell on top of him. He held me thereâbleeding on me, sobbing.
His arms came around me. âYouâre gone, youâre gone!â
I squeezed my eyes shut as he held me close, and then he was kissing the back of my neck.
âItâs AnnieâŠâ I moved away from him. âIâm not Claireââ
âClaireâŠâ He moaned. âPleaseâŠâ
âAsh,â I said it more firmly that time. âItâs Annie.â
I finally broke free from him, but he was fast; he grabbed me again, this time shoving up from the bathtub and reaching for me, jerking me against his chest as he pressed a hungry kiss to my mouth.
Every time I tried to pull away, he pulled me back.
And then he was turning the shower on. My sweatshirt was coming off. Escape was futile.
âClaireââ
âAsh.â My heart cracked in half.
He stole it then. He stomped on it. He wrecked it like he wrecked everything. And I let him because I was too afraid heâd kill himself.
Too afraid that heâd snap. Iâd always been too afraid. And half in love with a man who loved a ghost and would do anything to follow her into Heaven.
âUntil the sky fallsâŠâ he whispered as he kissed me again and again, so I said the only thing I could say back.
The only thing Iâd ever heard Claire repeat over and over again.
âUntil,â I whispered, âif the sky falls, Ash.â
âYouâre hereâŠâ He smiled for the first time. âFinally⊠finallyâŠâ
A tear slid down my cheek and joined the blood, and whatever was left of my broken heart as I swore to take this to my grave.
Right along with any feelings Iâd ever had for Ash Abandonato. He may as well be dead.
I may as well have let him do the digging.
âGoodbye, Ash,â I whispered under my breath.
This time I kissed him. This time I pulled him. This time I gave him what heâd been wanting since yelling into the dark night skyâClaire.
I gave him Claire.














































