Before Page 10
Wrinkle-free.
At least, some shit was simple.
Or so he thought.
“What in the fuck?”
Lev knew something was very wrong with his load of shirts the second he opened the top of the washer. His cursing became more and more severe as he pulled the hot shirts from the washer to inspect. What should have been white was now pink. It didn’t take him very long to figure out why exactly that was, either.
The offending garment that came out in his next handful explained everything. The deep red panties that he recognized instantly. The same ones he’d pulled off Gigi the last night they spent together at his place. He hadn’t realized she left them behind, and when packing up his place, he probably didn’t even notice when he shoved them into a box.
“Jesus Christ,” he muttered, clenching the panties in his fist in the same manner he had when he practically ripped them off the woman.
Yeah.
Couldn’t forget that.
Or her.
His mind had just been ... preoccupied lately with other things. More important things, and he was sure she would understand that if the two of them ever met up again. Not that he figured they would.
Nessa had been helping unpack his boxes the last couple weeks while she babysat—maybe she shoved the panties into the hamper with his shirts thinking something like that shouldn’t be washed with the baby’s clothes. She wouldn’t be wrong considering the tag said to wash with like items but in cold water.
Fuck.
Fuck, fuck ... fuck!
Sometimes, there was no better word.
And Lev didn’t have time to fix his mistake when he still needed a dry, clean shirt to wear under his black blazer for work. None of his t-shirts would work because God forbid, he take the blazer off and there not be a button-down underneath.
That shit didn’t fly with Andino. It took him very little time working with the man to know the guy was particular. About literally everything.
“Screw it,” Lev ground out, his jaw aching from how hard he’d been clenching his teeth. He shoved the shirts—and hell, even the panties—into the dryer before putting coins in the slot to turn it on. In twenty minutes when he was out of the shower, he would have clean button-downs.
They would just be pink.
Perfect.
• • •
“Cutting it really close, man,” Petey said when he opened the rear door of the Manhattan restaurant for Lev to slip inside. “Boss was asking where the fuck you were—not good.”
Right.
Like Lev needed a reminder.
“Well, here I am. Move.”
If the other enforcer had an issue with Lev’s attitude, he didn’t show it. Then again, Lev realized quite early on in his work with Andino that when it came to the other men he employed ... well, they only understood one fucking language at the end of the day.
The promise of violence.
As long as Lev behaved the way he looked—large, intimidating, and not in the damn mood for anybody’s shit—then everyone else acted accordingly. If he had a problem, then he said so. Did somebody want beef? He was down for it.
It couldn’t hurt Andino’s business. That was the main rule to keep in mind on the daily grind as he worked alongside men who had been doing this very thing for years while he’d only agreed to step into it a couple of short weeks ago.
Lev still wouldn’t take anybody’s shit. He couldn’t afford to, but especially not with guys like Petey. They wouldn’t let him forget it if he did. Simple as that.
“What the fuck is up with that?” Petey asked when Lev passed him by in the doorway.
“What?”
“Your shirt, man. It’s ... pink.”
Goddammit.
He should have known better than to think no one would mention his bright pink button-down under the black blazer that was his new standard. Most of the guys preferred white or black dress shirts, including Andino although he rarely wore anything but silk. That Lev seriously doubted the man ever had to wash because he had been sent on a dry cleaner’s trip twice since he started working for the Capo.
“Shut up. Don’t say a word.” When Petey opened his mouth, Lev pointed a single finger in the man’s face as one more warning when he said, “Not a single fucking one.”
“But—”
“Fuck off, Petey, or you’ll eat my fucking fist after we’re done here.”
That shut the guy up.
Thankfully.
Lev liked to follow through on his threats, after all. He found that was the best motivator to ensure everybody knew where he stood when he made the next one.
Not surprisingly, Petey didn’t follow Lev into the private dining section of the restaurant where Andino liked to hold his business meetings. Not that Lev knew what was happening—or if it was a business meeting today—because he’d simply been told to show up, and Andino rarely offered any information about his dealings. All that information, Lev learned by keeping silent and listening while he worked.
Nonetheless, Petey headed for the front of the business where he would likely wait for ... whatever. Or whoever. It’s what Andino liked for him to do.
Lev, on the other hand, went into where his boss waited. Andino didn’t even bother to glance up at his arrival, more interested in the cute brunette currently pouring what looked to be whiskey into a lowball glass.
“Less ice next time,” Andino told the girl.
“Sure,” she replied with a smile.
She headed out of the section and gave Lev a nod on her way by that he returned in kind. While some of the people he had to work with being a man of Andino’s constantly got on his nerves, the more normal ones weren’t so bad.
“New girl?” he asked Andino when the chick was gone.
“Moved her over from another restaurant—people liked her there, and she didn’t shy away from my attitude. All good things, yeah? She was wasting her time over there when she can make far more in this place, and it’s a better fit. Studying ... something. Anyway, she needs the money. I figured what did it hurt?”
Huh.
As much as Andino seemed like an asshole to most—and he was, let’s be real—there was also a side of the man that ... was considerate of those around him. He didn’t show it in truly obvious ways, but when someone paid attention to what was beyond the cold, gruff exterior, they could find the softer soul of a man who did have a heart that cared.
Sometimes.
“Is the vehicle I provided for you to use to travel not suitable, or ...?” Andino peered up from the open folder on the table to meet Lev’s gaze, unbothered and chilled. “Because you’re very close to being late today and that would have promised you didn’t get another call to work, Lev.”
“The Jeep works just fine. Thank you, again.”
Really.
It was another investment, as Andino called it. The Jeep Wrangler had to set the guy back several tens of thousands of dollars, all of which Lev was expected to repay at some unknown time, and he hadn’t known what to say when the keys were handed over. Andino quickly fixed that by telling him to say thank you and nothing fucking more. Especially not no.
So, he didn’t.
Andino smirked and gave a little shake of his head. “See, you think you’re being smart by avoiding my unspoken question, but I’m not stupid, am I?”
Lev sighed. “No, boss. Just ... traffic. Other shit. I’m here—won’t be late ever, you have my word.”
A noise of consideration echoed from across the room but otherwise, Andino offered nothing else. That was until he took another look at Lev.
“Is your shirt ... pink?”
Fucking hell.
Lev held in his irritation. “Yep.”
“Why?”
“Laundry error.”
“That’s unfortunate,” Andino said in a chuckle.
“Tell me about it.”
His boss didn’t have the opportunity to say more on the shirt topic because footsteps approached f
rom behind followed by a loud, “Andino! Your uncle always knows how to make a trip to New York worth it when I get to do my business with you.”
Lev didn’t even bother to glance over his shoulder before he stepped aside to let the approaching men pass him by without any issue on his part. Really, he tried not to be a bother at all when Andino did business—simply a presence people understood was always there. Either because they couldn’t look away once they did notice him, or because he was impressionable in size and one tended to notice those things.
Otherwise, he didn’t invite attention or conversation. Not by joining or pretending like he might or even that he wanted to be—people seemed to get the hint. Andino liked that just fine. So did Lev.
“DeLuca,” Andino replied, his tone as kind as Lev had ever heard it when he spoke to another human inside the walls of this restaurant. Or outside of it, for that matter.
Chicago.
DeLuca.
It sounded familiar to Lev as he sized up the guy who greeted Andino in the middle of the room. It wasn’t often he witnessed Andino actually stand and shake someone’s hand because he always seemed to like to let people know they weren’t even worth his time to get up and say hello. Not this man, though.
He stood up for him.
They offered hands at the same time to shake, too.
“And we both know,” Andino said, grinning, “the only reason I entertain your business is that you’re one of the very few people in Chicago that my father gives a fuck about, Theo. How’s the wife?”
“Beautiful.”
“Good to hear it.”
“Speaking of Gio, how is he?” the man asked Andino. “Been a while since I sat down for dinner with him.”
“Sends his regards to his old friend but he’s busy with my mother this weekend, so we won’t be seeing him while you’re here.”
“Shame.” Then, the man named Theo turned a bit on his heels to face Lev standing against the wall. While he hadn’t moved to acknowledge the newcomer or the two men who followed him into the room and took posts at both sides, not interfering with his position at all, the man from Chicago clearly took note of him. “And this is—he’s new, isn’t he?”
“He is,” Andino said.
“You have a name?” Theo asked Lev.
“He has a job to do,” Andino replied before Lev could say anything. “And we have business to discuss, right?”
Theo gave Lev a second look, as though he were giving him the chance to deny Andino and tell him his name. He didn’t. Instead, he stared the man in the eye and shrugged, offering no words at all.
If the man who signed his check said he didn’t have a name to give, then he didn’t have a fucking name. Simple as that.
“Next time, Mr. ...” Theo trailed off, giving him another look though his gaze lingered on the pop of color under his blazer. He gave a grin and a light laugh, “Mr. Pink—yeah, that’ll work for now. Next time, though, you’ll have to tell me your name.”
Lev couldn’t help but give a sigh. Mostly because laughter echoed around the room. He even heard Petey’s muffled laughter from outside the space. Some days, these guys could be real pricks. He had to admit, though ...
He kind of respected it.
Pretty typical.
Another day at work.
Even if now, typical meant everything had changed.
• • •
Want more Lev and Gigi (and little Arely, too!)? Before is a free preview of the first part of BK’s upcoming standalone mafia romance, Pink. Finish the love story between the mob enforcer and his supermodel today – GRAB YOURS NOW, releasing May 8th, 2020.
• • •
He’s Pink, the personal enforcer for the boss of the New York mafia. She’s Gigi Rey, a supermodel known across the globe.
They live two entirely different lives but before the mob and the fame, they were Lev Arsov and Gigi Parker. Two people struggling to make it—who met by chance—before life got in the way.
Five years have passed since the nights they shared together, but Fashion Week brings Gigi back to New York and straight into Lev’s path once more, when her work obligations tangles with the mafia’s business. In this world, that’s never a good thing.
They aren’t the same people now. He’s a single dad doing whatever he can for his daughter. Gigi can’t walk down the street without the world watching. A lot has changed. The one thing that didn’t? How they keep finding their way into each other’s heads ... and beds.
If only it was that simple.
If only the tabloids didn’t back them into a wall.
If only they saw it coming.
If only they could go back to the time before he was ... Pink.
If only.
• • •
Pink is a 112k standalone Mafia Romance set in Bethany-Kris’s Commission World.
XO,
BK.
About the Author
Bethany-Kris is a Canadian author, lover of much, and mother to four young sons, three cats, and four dogs. A small town in Eastern Canada where she was born and raised is where she has always called home. With her boys under her feet, a snuggling cat, barking dogs, and a spouse calling over his shoulder, she is nearly always writing something ... when she can find the time.
Find Bethany-Kris at her:
WEBSITE
Other Books
The Guzzi Legacy
Corrado
Alessio
Chris
Beni
Bene
Marcus
Renzo + Lucia
Privilege
Harbor
Contempt
Forever
Andino + Haven
Duty
Vow
John + Siena
Loyalty
Disgrace
John + Siena: The Complete Duet
John + Siena: Extended
Cross + Catherine
Always
Revere
Unruly
The Companion
Naz & Roz
Guzzi Duet
Unraveled, Book One
Entangled, Book Two
Cara & Gian: The Complete Duet
DeLuca Duet
Waste of Worth: Part One
Worth of Waste: Part Two
Standalone Titles
Pretty Lies
Dirty Pool
Effortless
Inflict
Cozen
Captivated
Dishonored
Donati Bloodlines
Thin Lies
Thin Lines
Thin Lives
Behind the Bloodlines
The Complete Trilogy
Filthy Marcellos
Antony
Lucian
Giovanni
Dante
Legacy
A Very Marcello Christmas
The Complete Collection
Seasons of Betrayal
Where the Sun Hides
Where the Snow Falls
Where the Wind Whispers
Seasons: The Complete Seasons of Betrayal Series
Gun Moll Trilogy
Gun Moll
Gangster Moll
Madame Moll
The Chicago War
Deathless & Divided
Reckless & Ruined
Scarless & Sacred
Breathless & Bloodstained
The Complete Series
Maldives & Mistletoe
The Russian Guns
The Arrangement
The Life
The Score
Demyan & Ana
Shattered
The Jersey Vignettes
FANTASY ROMANCE
The Hunted: A 9INE REALMS Novel
Find more on Bethany-Kris’s website at www.bethanykris.com.
Copyright © 2020 by Bethany-Kris. All Rights Reserved.
WARNING: The unauthorized reproduction or distribution of this copyrighted material is
illegal and punishable by law. No parts of this work may be reproduced, copied, used, or printed without expressed written consent from the publisher/author. Exceptions are made for brief excerpts used in reviews.
eISBN 13: 978-1-989658-17-8
Editor: Elizabeth Peters
Proofreaders: Tracy A., Mia B., Tori W. and Felicia F.
Cover Design © Dee Garcia from Black Widow Designs
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, organizations, corporations, locales and so forth are a product of the author’s imagination, or if real, used fictitiously. Any resemblance to a person, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.