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MOBSTER’S BABY: Esposito Family Mafia by Nicole Fox (17)


Tony

 

I woke up to the smell of something cooking. I rolled over, finding the other half of my bed empty.

 

“Evie?”

 

I got no answer and rubbed my hands in my eyes. I was sore and still damn tired, to be honest. I rolled over after a moment, groaned, and got out of the bed. I made my way down the creaky, old stairs and stood in the entryway to the kitchen.

 

Evie stood there, humming and swaying a little to the tune that she hummed. Her hair was still a mess from sleep, but she was beautiful nonetheless. She was frying something on the stove, and I tilted my head before I went to her, wrapping my arms around her, and settling my chin on her shoulder.

 

“Eggs?” I raised a brow. “Where’d you get those?”

 

“There’s chickens outside,” she said, sounding pleased with herself. “There were a few eggs, and I figured the worst that would happen was that I would crack one open and it would have a chick in it. I lucked out, clearly.”

 

“Clearly.”

 

I snuggled against her back, pressed to it gently. My hands settled on her stomach as she flipped the eggs and eventually put them onto a plate.

 

“Breakfast is served!” she said cutely. “No milk. Or toast. Or meat of any kind. But it’s something.”

 

I smiled and we sat down at the small, round table in the dining area. She’d cooked up four eggs, two for herself and two for me. We started eating, silent for a little while before she spoke up again.

 

“Any word from anyone at the compound?” she asked. I shook my head.

 

“Not yet. We might need to give it a couple of hours.”

 

“Hmm.”

 

I reached across the table and rubbed my fingers over her hand.

 

“It’ll be okay,” I told her, like I’d told her last night to reassure her. “There’s not a whole lot we can do right now, but I know that it’s not going to be the end of the world or anything like that. Push comes to shove, we’ll need to go into town and get more food supplies and maybe some other necessities. I can’t imagine that anything else will happen today.”

 

She nodded, seeming to accept that.

 

We finished eating up, and after I’d cleaned, Evie went to take a shower. While she was in there, I checked around the house, figuring I could see if there was anything that needed to be done to it while we were there, as well as making a mental list of food items to buy, just in case. I was just settling into the couch when my phone buzzed in my pocket.

 

Allan.

 

I answered immediately.

 

“What’s up.”

 

“A whole lot of shit, that’s what’s up.”

 

“How is everything? What happened?”

 

Allan sighed. I heard other sounds from the other side and listened as it seemed like he was moving from one place to another. He got back to me.

 

“Someone hired them to come bust up shit looking for Evie,” he said. “Like, dude. They sent a whole fuck-ton of cops. We ended up moving into the house, and they ended up coming in. There was gonna be a lot of shooting—a few people got clipped—”

 

“Anyone dead?”

 

“Nah, but a lot of unhappy people with bullets in them in some capacity. Anyway. Papa G eventually called us off and told us to let them search, because it wasn’t like they were going to find anything that they were looking for here. And heh. They didn’t. Pissed them right off, too, and they tried to make arrests.”

 

“I’m sure that went well.”

 

“Not for them. You know Papa G don’t keep nothing incriminating on the compound grounds. All the guns were clean, no drugs, no nothing. Cops left empty-handed, but they did leave an interesting message behind.”

 

“Oh?”

 

“One of ‘em said, and I quote, ‘He knows that it was you. You violated the agreement, and this is your fault. You brought this on yourself.’ To Papa G.”

 

My brows furrowed and I rubbed my hand on my chin.

 

“What the hell is that supposed to mean.”

 

“No idea. Papa G been up in his office all morning. I bet it has something to do with all those pictures from the news, though. They were saying that they came in from an anonymous source. And I mean …”

 

I knew exactly what he meant.

 

“You think dad had those pictures leaked? The ones that Brown said were proof that we’d kidnapped and raped Evie.”

 

“Listen, man, I don’t wanna be bringing no bad blood—”

 

“It wouldn’t be you who was bringing the bad blood, Allan.”

 

“Yeah, well. It’s just a thought. Anyway. You and Evie can come back, yanno? Whenever. I’d make it soon, though. Shit’s probably gonna keep hitting the fan until something or another happens, and you know it.”

 

We hung up.

 

Shortly after, Evie came trotting down the stairs.

 

“Was someone here?” she asked. “I thought I heard you talking to someone?”

 

“Nah. Was on the phone with Allan.”

 

“Oh? Is everything okay?”

 

“Relatively speaking.”

 

She sat down beside me, putting her hands in mine. She smoothed them over, just like I had done with her before.

 

“Hey. You can tell me. We’re in this together, remember?”

 

I nodded.

 

“Yeah …ugh. Everyone is okay. A few people got shot, but no one was killed, and otherwise, there was nothing really serious, either. What did happen was they apparently went through the house looking for you. I guess they tried to arrest people, but what the hell were they gonna arrest on? They had no warrants and no probable cause, either. But it was …shit, Evie.” I ran my hand through my hair. “It was implied that those pictures came from my father. That it was his fault that all of this was happening because he broke the agreement.”

 

“The agreement that people wouldn’t know about us or the pregnancy.”

 

Tony nodded.

 

“Exactly.”

 

“Why would your father do something like that, though? I thought he understood that …this was what was best for everyone. To keep the peace between us and my father?”

 

I shrugged.

 

“Honestly? I don’t fucking know. Maybe it was a power play. Maybe he thought that this was going to put him ahead of the game or something. There’s only one way to find out, though. The house is safe, and we’re going back to talk to my father.”

 

# # #

 

The drive back home was quiet. Evie was as much in her own thoughts as I was in mine. Only difference was, I think she was worried. Me? I was livid. My own father …I couldn’t even begin to explain why what he did was fucked up.

 

Allan greeted us when we came up the front. There were bullet holes all over the place and glass on the ground. Tire tracks in the ground. Shit. This place was a literal and metaphorical clusterfuck of a mess.

 

“Hey, man.” He nodded to me and Evie.

 

“Glad to see you’re good.”

 

“Same to you. Same to you.”

 

“My father still in his office?”

 

“Yeah, man. Just go on right up.”

 

I turned to Evie.

 

“Let me talk to him on my own.”

 

She looked at me, shocked.

 

“Why? This has to do with both of us—”

 

“I have to be the one that questions him,” I said. “I’m his son, and when he’s gone, I’m going to be the one running all of this. So this has to be a me and him thing. You understand that, right? I’ll tell you everything when I get out.”

 

I knew that she wanted to be a part of this, but she knew that I was right, too. She nodded her head, and I turned to Allan.

 

“Keep an eye on her. We don’t want any crazier shit going down and happening, you know.”

 

With that, I went to my father’s office. I didn’t bother to knock before I pushed in. The air was full of cigar smoke, and I had to squint and blink a little before a lot of it got in my eyes.

 

“How rude of you not to knock.”

 

“That’s rich, coming from you.”

 

“So, I assume you figured it out, did you?”

 

I sneered at him.

 

“Yeah. Yeah, I figured it out. I just don’t know why you did it. Why would you release pictures like that to the public, knowing what Evie and I were trying to do? Knowing that her father would be forced to retaliate? I thought you understood what this was.”

 

Annoyingly, he laughed.

 

“You thought I knew what this was. Ha. And I thought you knew that sometimes you had to make bold moves in order to get what you wanted.”

 

“Was having the house shot up and Evie almost taken away something that you wanted?”

 

There, my father was silent. He stared at me. He took another deep puff of his cigar and blew out the smoke before answering.

 

“I’ll admit, I miscalculated how much of Rick Brown’s shit would be lost, seeing his daughter’s photos plastered all over the news in the midst of his … extensive investigations.”

 

“You fucked up is what you did.”

 

My father shrugged.

 

“It happens.”

 

“That still doesn’t answer why you did it.”

 

There, my father sighed. He let out a large, annoyed sort of huff.

 

“When I agreed to take in your pregnant …side piece,” he said slowly, “I did so understanding that there would always be some sort of play that would go on between us and them. You honestly expected all of this to go smoothly, like some sort of romance—like a child who’s gotten his first taste of pussy and thinks it’s made of gold.” My father scoffed. “I did it because I knew Evie and that baby that’s growing in her belly would be useful in more ways than one. I did it to rattle Rick’s cage and to remind him who truly runs things—to remind him of what I hold in my grasp now. The man is close to washing up. I could easily help him out of it … I have power and means. I wanted to remind him, though, that just as much as I could help him, I could destroy him.”

 

My jaw clenched.

 

“You did this for a power play?”

 

Again, my father shrugged.

 

“I assumed that he would do what he always does—pay off people in order to make the bad ilk run away.”

 

“He told the public that we kidnapped and raped Evie! This allowed the cops to be set on us—”

 

“And nothing permanently damaging happened.”

 

“You gambled with people’s lives, assuming that things would go your way. That’s sick. That’s insane—”

 

“That’s business, my boy,” my father said. “And if you want to take my place one day, you will learn that this is all a part of the game. Do you think that, if the roles were reversed—if your pretty girl was a pretty boy instead and you, my idiot son, were instead an idiot daughter who had laid on her back and taken cock that she shouldn’t have, getting herself fat with a bastard child—that he wouldn’t do the same? That he wouldn’t use the two of you, that unborn baby, and this power struggle against me? I made the first move—”

 

“And he’s made his. You’ve put us in danger.”

 

My father smirked.

 

“If you think this is danger, boy, perhaps you’re not as cut out to watch over your little lamb as you think. Now. Leave. I won’t be questioned by you anymore. Not when I need to plan our next move.”

 

“Not until you answer me about what you promised Rick in return for us meeting,” I said. “You remember, right? A couple months back? I knew something was sneaky back then, but I didn’t think to look too much into it. Maybe you were looking out for me. Obviously, you weren’t.”

 

My father smiled.

 

“I promised him his grandchild if he poked at you a little. Naturally, I wasn’t going to give into such a thing, but it was nice making him feel like he had the upper hand. Certainly you had fun with him, no? You can’t tell me you didn’t enjoy seeing the man riled. You can’t claim to be holier than thou, Tony, when you’re my son and I know just how you operate. You don’t fool me anymore than you’d be able to fool a man like Rick Brown.”

 

I walked to the desk. Each step was deliberate. I could have choked him, beat him, and bashed in his head. I could have killed him.

 

I didn’t.

 

Instead, I leaned forward, putting my hands on his desk. I got in his face. I looked in his eyes and made damn sure that he saw the fury there—and oh, there was fury. Lots of it.

 

“One day,” I said levelly. “One day, you’re going to be old and decrepit, and you’re going to need me to take care of you. And on that day that you look at me, thinking that I’m gonna wipe your ass, coddle you, and, tell you everything is gonna be okay, I’m going to remember this moment and tell you that you can rot in hell.”

 

Instead of being angry, my father laughed. His head tilted back and his belly rolled. It was the most amused I’d heard of him in years.

 

“For once, you act like my son. I remember saying the exact same thing to my father when I was your age. Careful now, Tony; we’re more similar than you think.”

 

I scoffed. “I’m nothing like you,” I told him. “Nothing. You claim that you’re all about family and protecting what’s yours—what’s ours. How was this protecting? How?”

 

“You’ll understand one day, when you’re actually running this business and you have a family of your own that you have to keep track of. Until then, my boy,” my father said, continuing to smile at me. “Try not to bite off more than you can chew. Remember who’s in charge here.”