Free Read Novels Online Home

Mating Needs by Milly Taiden (1)

Chapter One

“Do you know who I am?” Amerella Capone stomped her foot on the floor of the First National Bank of Las Vegas. Several people standing in line for a teller looked at her. A few pointed and laughed. She lifted her chin and ignored them.

The bank attendant’s face paled. She was not waiting any longer to get into her safe deposit box. “I am the great-great-grandniece of Alphonse Capone. You know? Al Capone.” Even though Al hadn’t taken much interest in Vegas, some of the Capone family did, moving down when other Mob families began paying attention to the city.

“Y-yes, Ms. Capone. I’m s-sorry, Ms. Capone.” The poor kid sweated bullets. He couldn’t be a day over twenty. “I’m sure the senator will be done talking with the manager any second now, and he will let you into the vault. In fact, let me go check.” The young man dashed away as quickly as he could without drawing attention to himself.

Amerella plopped onto a hard wooden chair in front of a desk next to the side door that led to the room with the safe deposit boxes. It was already six o’clock and she hadn’t done any shopping yet. She hated that she had to go to the bank every time she dipped into her personal savings. Being a trust fund baby wasn’t all it seemed to be. She had a chain tightly wrapped around her neck, controlled by her guardian, Uncle Giuseppe. Soon, when she turned twenty-six, she would come into her inheritance and do whatever she wanted.

Like buy an island on the equator and disappear.

The glass doors in the lobby swung open and several men wearing ski masks ran in. The first robber fired machine-gun ammo at the ceiling.

“All right. Everyone on the floor, now!”

On the floor? Was he shitting her? She was in a snug short skirt and high heels. She’d never get up if she got down. With full breasts, hips, and thighs, she had a lot to get back up. Luckily, being so far to the side of the tellers’ central location, she was hard to see from the lobby. Maybe she could just scoot farther to the side.

She slowly rose from the chair and turned to quietly shuffle toward the door. Right behind her came a squeaky voice. “He said everyone on the floor, lady.” A very familiar squeaky voice. She swiveled on the ball of her foot to face the robber behind her. The robber’s eyes grew large. Hers narrowed.

“Joseph Albert Lanzia. I’m so telling your mother.”

The slim young robber lowered his handgun. “No, you can’t, Aunt Amerella. She’d be so mad at me.”

“And so she should be.” Amerella slapped her fists on her hips, careful not to mess up the mani/pedi she had before this. “What do you think you’re doing, Joey, robbing a bank?” she whispered. “Do you know how much trouble you can get into?” Even though Joey wasn’t her biological nephew, she’d spent so much of his childhood with him that he’d grown up calling her “Aunt.”

Joey glanced over his shoulder then back to his aunt. “I know, Aunt Amerella. But I didn’t have much choice.”

“What do you mean?”

The leader screamed more commands and handed bags to the tellers behind the booth. Joey moved in front of her so she couldn’t see what was going on. Or to keep the others from seeing her.

“I don’t mean nothing, Aunt Amerella. Just stay hidden—” Joey was younger than the attendant who tried to calm her a few minutes ago. Oy vey. Kids these days. Ha, listen to her—thinking like an old woman when she was practically a kid herself. She’d grown up fast in the last four years.

The main robber’s voice rang in her head. She gasped. “No. Is that Cousin Tony?”

Joey’s released a sigh and his narrow shoulders slumped. “You can’t tell anyone. He’ll kill you if he sees you.”

She harrumphed. “I’ll show him kill when I tell his father. Uncle Giuseppe is not going to like this. Not one bit, I tell you.” Her uncle, Las Vegas’s Mafia king, took everything his family did personally. It wasn’t a good idea to piss off Uncle Giuseppe. And a simple thing like a bank robbery would shame him. Now, the three-million-dollar jewel heist last year by another cousin, that he was proud of.

Tony’s loud voice echoed to their side of the lobby. “Little Dick, everything okay over there?”

Amerella’s eyes widened. “He calls you Little Dick? How dare he insult you like that.” She took a step toward Joey. He put his hand up.

“No, Aunt Amerella. You can’t.”

“Joey, he’s being a big dick. I won’t put up with big dicks.”

The voice came over again. “Little Dick?”

“Yeah, Big Dick. I mean, Big Dog,” he stammered.

Amerella rolled her eyes. “Big Dog? Seriously?” Joey shushed her from further replying.

Joey continued louder. “Everything’s fine. Just keeping the crowd quiet over here.”

Fine. She’d stand there until she could think of something to do. Amerella could not believe her only “nephew” had gone to the dark side. His momma had raised him right. She would know. Even though she was only six years older than he was, she’d partially raised the boy, babysitting for free while his momma worked two jobs on the Vegas Strip.

On the other side of the tellers’ stations, the side door opened. Out walked a distinguished-looking man in a suit and tie followed by the bank manager. Surprise registered on both their faces.

“What is going on—”

Two shots echoed and the man fell out of her sight. Shouts of “Senator” and “Call an ambulance” were almost drowned out by more automatic gunfire. Sirens finally sounded in the distance. The leader backed away, only a gun in his hand. Tony wasn’t taking any money? What kind of idiot robbed a bank and didn’t take the money? Joey moved to follow him.

“No, Joey,” she called out. “Stay with me.”

Her pseudo-nephew turned to her. His eyes, the only part of his face showing, reflected a torn soul: a kid trying to fit in and be accepted versus doing the right thing. He glanced back at Cousin Tony watching him. She read Tony’s look. His instant recognition of her was obvious. As was the emanating hate. His eyes glowed red, then he pointed his gun at her and fired.

Her shock at his garish action stunned her, keeping her brain from reacting. Then Joey spun his body between her and the shooter. He jerked twice. Once from firing a bullet and a second from being hit in the chest.

Then Joey was gone from her sight, and her vision locked on a bloody splotch on the glass entrance door. Cradling one arm against his chest, Cousin Tony dragged himself through the door.

Amerella’s eyes drifted down to the body crumpled at her feet. Blood flowed onto the shiny white tile floor. Barely registering her actions, she fell to her knees and ripped the mask off Joey’s face. His face was beyond pale.

“Oh my god, Joey.” She scooped his head into her lap. “Hang on, baby. I got you.” She smoothed back hair from his face. “Aunt Amerella won’t let you go.”

The boy’s eyes rolled to her wet gaze on him. “I want . . . right thing . . .” he breathed out. She shushed him, telling him to save his energy, tears falling on his baby face. But he went on. “Promise me . . . you . . . stop him.”

She pulled him closer, rocking him. “I swear to you, Joey. I will do everything in my power to make sure he gets what he deserves.”

“He’s . . . demo . . .” Joey breathed out. No breath raised his chest. Demo what? Democrat? No, she couldn’t see that.

Amerella didn’t know how long she sat holding her beloved friend’s son in her arms. At some point, paramedics pried the boy from her. Through the glass door, she glimpsed Cousin Tony placed on an ambulance gurney. The emotional turmoil spinning through her rocketed her out the door.

She slipped off one high-heel shoe and chased after the rolling bed, her body bobbing up and down depending which foot she was on.

“You goddamned, motherfucking, piece-of-shit, shit-headed, gangrene-infested, coke-whore bastard!” She reached around the dumbfounded paramedic pushing the gurney and repeatedly beat Cousin Tony upside the head with her shoe.

But that still wasn’t enough for her. No. Joey was gone because of him, and she wouldn’t be happy until the same was done to him.

Tony shielded himself the best he could with his arm in a sling. “Somebody get this crazy bitch away from me!”

The EMT grabbed at her flinging arm, but she slapped him with her purse hooked over her arm. “Don’t even think it, buddy. He’s my family and I can beat him to death if I want to.” Onlookers gathering on the other side of the parked police cars laughed and pointed at her. She didn’t care. Over the past three, almost four years now, she lived for two purposes: to show how much she loved her son and how much she hated her family.

With renewed vigor, she swung at the bastard strapped to the gurney, but someone stopped her arm. “Ms. Capone, please.” An older, rougher voice came from over her head. She looked up and back to see who the hell stopped her rampage.

His face was familiar. He needed a shave, though. The beard seemed to be the rage lately for men. Her opinion of men with hairy faces was they shouldn’t mind women with hairy legs. She was all in favor of the sexy five-o’clock shadow, but the scraggly pubic-looking hair on the chin she could do without.

He snatched the shoe from her hand and dropped it next to her foot.

“Hey, these shoes cost six hundred dollars. Don’t scuff them.”

“Then keep them on your feet, Ms. Capone,” he said.

She frowned and slipped her foot into the shoe, now standing at the same height on both legs. The paramedics quickly took away their patient while she was distracted. She turned and yelled toward the ambulance, “I hope they get stuck in traffic and you die, bastard.” Cousin Tony flipped her off. She returned two birds to him.

“Can’t do that, can you, crip asshole,” she hollered.

The man beside her sighed. “Ms. Capone, please.”

Irritated, she pivoted. “Who the hell are you, and why are you bothering me?”

That drew an unhappy face from him. “I’m Detective Freeman with the Las Vegas PD.”

“Oh,” she said. “Sorry.”

“Ms. Capone,” he asked, “were you witness to the bank robbery and shootings inside?”

“Front and center,” she said. “Well, more like back and side, but I did see it all. Well, most of it. I know it was Tony who shot the senator.”

“Tony shot Senator Sherman?”

“Good god, Detective. He’s the only senator I know. The man came out a side door in the bank and Tony shot him. Then the dipshit started backing out—”

“Which dipshit?” he asked.

“My cousin Tony. That dipshit was going to leave without any money.”

“Was your cousin there to rob a bank or shoot the senator?” he asked.

That was a very good question. One she didn’t care about at the moment as the bank door opened and another gurney, this one carrying a black zipped body bag, rolled out. After all the years in a Mafia family, black body bags seemed almost a cliché. What other family kept a stock of them in the closet at home?

A hand touched her shoulder. “Ms. Capone?”

She turned to the detective. “Yes.”

“Are you willing to testify as an eyewitness?” Detective Freeman asked. She noted a smile in his eyes. Taking down the son of the local Mafia boss would be a dream of any law enforcement official. This was his chance.

Amerella looked around at the growing crowd, roaming officers in dark blue uniforms, and what looked to be reporters trying to get past the uniforms. Would she testify against her family? She thought back to a few years ago, right when she was about to graduate college, and remembered what her uncle made her do. Her decision was made.

“In a heartbeat.”

Search

Search

Friend:

Popular Free Online Books

Read books online free novels

Hot Authors

Sam Crescent, Zoe Chant, Mia Madison, Flora Ferrari, Lexy Timms, Alexa Riley, Claire Adams, Sophie Stern, Amy Brent, Elizabeth Lennox, Leslie North, C.M. Steele, Frankie Love, Madison Faye, Jenika Snow, Mia Ford, Kathi S. Barton, Michelle Love, Jordan Silver, Delilah Devlin, Bella Forrest, Alexis Angel, Piper Davenport, Eve Langlais, Dale Mayer,

Random Novels

Mob Justice by Kelley, Morgan

21 (The List Series) by Rhonda James

Finding Passion (Colorado Veterans Book 3) by Tiffani Lynn

Snowbound Seduction: A Dark Warrior Alliance Novella by Brenda Trim, Tami Julka

North (History Interrupted Book 3) by Lizzy Ford

Double The Alpha: A Paranormal Menage Romance by Amira Rain, Simply Shifters

The Shadow Weave (Spell Weaver Book 2) by Annette Marie

All I Want for Christmas by Jerry Cole

The Return of Lady Jane by Michaels, Jess

Somewhere (Sawtooth Mountains Stories Book 1) by Susan Fanetti

Whiskey: Ruthless Bastards (RBMC Book 1) by Chelsea Handcock

Dallas Fire & Rescue: Smoke & Marines (Kindle Worlds Novella) (Always a Marine Book 23) by Heather Long

Hope Falls: If I Fall (Kindle Worlds Novella) by SJ McCoy

Whiskey and Serendipity (Hemlock Creek Book 1) by Josie Kerr

Finding Your Heart by McBride, Bess

by Cherry Kay, Simply BWWM

If Only for the Summer by Alexandra Warren

The State of Grace by Rachael Lucas

Down South (Southern Hospitality Book 1) by C.M. Steele

Dangerously Yours: A Sci-Fi Alien Mated Romance (Loving Dangerously Book 2) by A.M. Griffin