Deathless & Divided (The Chicago War #1) (37 page)

BOOK: Deathless & Divided (The Chicago War #1)
5.52Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Lily felt like she couldn’t breathe. “Thank you.”

“Better for you to have them, Lily. Theo and I, we’re going to the same place no matter how much we pray. You’re not quite the same.”

Lily didn’t think so. She wouldn’t argue it with Dino.

“You’re not giving me away today,” Lily said, tugging on Dino’s arm firmly to bring him closer to her side. “You’re just—”

“Setting you free,” Dino said as the doors opened a final time to let Lily and Dino step forward into view. “Because that’s what you do with the things you raise and love, Lily. You set them free and you pray they’re strong enough that they don’t need to come back to you, but you still hope that they do.”

Dino turned as the sound of three hundred or more people standing from the pews echoed through the church. Lily let her brother kiss her cheek before he fixed her veil.

“You’re going to be just fine,” Dino said.

“Will I?”

“DeLucas don’t know how to fail, Lily. We never have.”

Lily willed away her tears as Dino took his spot beside her again. He fixed her hand tucked into his elbow and then moved them forward. Through the sheerness of her veil trimmed with a delicate lace, Lily ignored the faces of people she didn’t know and even those she did recognize. Instead, she focused on the man waiting for her at the front, standing at the bottom of the altar with his hands clasped behind his back.

Damian’s smile grew the closer she came. For a man that usually kept his emotions hidden from view, the happiness and joy on his face was written as clear as day. The wedding march reverberated through the church from the organ, hitting every note perfectly.

Lily barely heard it at all.

“Who gives this woman today in marriage?” she heard the priest ask as they came to a stop at the bottom of the altar.

Theo stepped down from his spot on the altar with Tommas to stand beside Dino.

“We do,” her brothers said together.

Words exchanged between the priest and the men before Damian took Dino’s place. Dino kissed Lily’s hand softly before he passed it to Damian. Theo took his place back on the altar without a word. Lily smiled as Damian gave her hand a slight squeeze.

In that one action, she was grounded to his side again.

Right where she was meant to be.

Lily glanced up at the waiting priest.

“Do you come into this union willingly, child?” the man asked her.

That was the million dollar question, wasn’t it?

“Yes,” Lily said. “I absolutely do.”

 

CHAPTER SEVENTEEN

 

D
amian twirled a smiling, laughing Lily out from his embrace before bringing her in close again. Her back tucked into his chest as he kissed the soft skin of her neck. She smelled like roses and sex.

And she was happy.

He couldn’t wait for this night to be over so he could take her back to the five-star presidential suite he’d booked for them. Their honeymoon wouldn’t be so much of a vacation, not a real one. But they did have a week of nothing but them and quiet love in a beautiful suite with champagne on ice and chocolate covered fruit just waiting to be eaten.

“You look terribly sexy tonight,” Lily said, pressing her backside into his groin.

If she kept that up, Damian made no excuses for them leaving early.

“Shouldn’t I be the one telling you that?”

“You already have. Several times. There are a lot of people here,” Lily said, turning in Damian’s arms.

“There are,” he agreed. “At least three-hundred.”

“I know maybe twenty.”

Damian shrugged, keeping their slow dance moving across the floor as the guests watched on. “I know maybe one-hundred.”

Lily’s laughter was like a balm to his dark soul. He’d long since decided that Lily was the light to his darkness. Maybe it was true that every person had a better half. Lily was surely his if he considered everything.

Damian caught Lily’s cheek in his palm and swept his fingers over her cheekbone. Her painted red lips and dark eyes demanded attention and praise. Lily didn’t need the makeup and gorgeous dress to make her perfect, but he loved seeing her all done up just the same.

“Goddamn, you’re beautiful tonight, sweetheart.”

Lily’s smile was anything but innocent. “Oh?”

“So much.”

“I spent all morning getting pampered.”

Damian smirked. “Did you?”

“Yes. I had my nails, makeup, and hair done. But before that, I went to the massage place and this very good-looking—”

He drove Lily’s smaller frame into his body hard, quieting whatever she was going to say instantly. Lily glanced up at him with wide eyes glittering. She damn well knew what she was doing teasing him like that.

“Playing with fire, Lily Rossi.”

Lily’s tongue peeked out to wet her lips. Damian held back from biting the spot just to teach her a lesson about teasing him. “Just getting you ready for the after party, Damian.”

“Isn’t this the after party?”

“Nope. The private after party.”

Ah.

Fuck.

Damian tried to ignore the way her suggestive words and demure tone had his cock twitching to life under his tux pants, but he couldn’t. Hell, if she wanted to play those games, he was up for that.

“You know what my biggest problem was today, Lily?”

Lily frowned. “What was wrong today?”

“I could barely pay attention to the priest at all.”

“Why?”

“Because I was too busy thinking about the last time I wore these pants. You know, when you were on your knees with my cock in your mouth and you practically sucked me—”

Lily squeaked the cutest sound before she covered his mouth with her hand. Even with the blush on her cheeks, he could plainly see them redden further. Damian roared with laughter, shaking them both. His loudness drew the attention of several guests close by, but they only seemed to chuckle at his amusement. They probably didn’t have the slightest clue what Damian was laughing about.

Lily glowered at him playfully before poking his chest. “Oh, my God, you are awful.”

“Hey, I did penance today. I’ve been sin free for several hours. I have to make up for lost time.”

“Damian!”

“What?”

Lily snickered. “Awful, I said.”

“You married me.”

“I did,” Lily murmured. “Thank you for being there at the end.”

Damian matched her smile with his own. “Thanks for walking down to meet me.”

“I really can’t believe how many people showed up,” Lily said.

Interweaving their fingers together, Damian glanced around the ballroom. It was bursting at the seams with guests. He’d been ignoring the people for the better part of the day. Sure, Damian did the respectful thing when he needed to by saying hello to the guests, thanking them for coming at the large dinner reception, and all that other nonsense, but he wasn’t going out of his way to spend time with people he didn’t know.

Frankly, they hadn’t come because they knew him, either. No, most of the people came because the Outfit’s boss was there and Terrance had made a big deal out of the wedding. Plus, Dino and Theo both had their own motives for inviting whoever they could to the wedding. But none of that mattered to Damian.

Nothing was more important to Damian than keeping his wife smiling and joyful on their wedding day.

Wife
.

He was
married
.

“What is that all about?” Lily asked, pointing at Damian’s face.

“Hmm?”

“You went all glassy-eyed there for a second.”

“Did I?” he asked.

“Yes.”

Damian stopped their dance, drew Lily in close, and kissed her. She tasted just the same as she always did on his tongue—life, love, and sweetness on her lips. He took his time loving her mouth with his own, brushing his lips along the seam of hers over and over, and flicking his tongue out to taste her silky skin.

“You’re my wife.”

Lily’s smile was brilliant and bright. “I am.”

Before Damian could get Lily dancing again, the lightest tap on his shoulder interrupted them. Turning to see who had cut in on him and his new bride, Damian came face to face with Terrance Trentini.

“You two look lovely,” Terrance said.

Lily offered the man a smile that was nothing like the one she graced Damian with five seconds before. Damian had to give her the credit where it was due though, because she never once gave Terrance the slightest inclination that she disliked the man.

“Thank you,” Lily replied.

“May I cut in?” Terrance asked.

Damian shrugged. To refuse would be rude even if he hadn’t wanted to part with Lily just yet. “Sure.”

“Thank you,” Terrance said, taking Lily’s hand when she held it out. “I’ll be leaving soon as I’m not as young as I once was. Abriella, Alessa, and Joel are staying, but I just can’t keep up with you younger ones anymore.”

“Well, I’ll end your night off right with a dance,” Lily said.

“Yes, let’s do that.”

Damian winked at Lily. “Chances are now that someone’s cut in on me, the people won’t stop, Lily.”

“We’ve done all the important things.”

They had. From cake cutting to tossing the garter and bouquet. Everything had gone off smoothly. Mostly, the couple had just been enjoying the last bit of their reception together. In fact, they’d barely spent any time apart. But the night still had hours and hours to go before it could be officially over and the couple could say goodbye.

“I’ll be back,” Damian told Lily.

He would be … eventually. Damian had things to do. His wedding didn’t stop business from being finished. Terrance, without even knowing it, had given Damian an opening. Damian planned on taking it. If he was lucky and quick, he’d get the job done and be back before anyone really noticed his absence for long.

“Will you?” Lily asked.

“Soon,” he promised. “Let your brothers dance with you after the boss has his turn.”

“Yes,” Terrance said. “You must dance with your brothers, Lily.”

Damian smirked. “But don’t get too tired smiling and dazzling the crowd, sweetheart.”

 

 

The soft sound of squeaky footsteps padding down the hallway outside of the office broke Damian from his daze. Italian leather always gave off a certain sound when it hit hardwood floors. No matter how quiet you tried to be, the shoes gave a man away every single time.

Not a second later, the office door opened, followed by the sounds of familiar grumbling. The decorative lights above turned on, illuminating the space in a warm yellow tone. Damian didn’t turn the large office chair around as Terrance Trentini closed his door.

“You may spin around,” Terrance said quietly.

Damian was surprised the man knew someone was in his office. He’d parked his car a couple of blocks away from the home, sneaked in the back under the old willow that was unprotected by security cameras, and got inside the house with little to no problems.

Terrance trusted Damian too much. Maybe that was the problem. In fact, he trusted him enough to give him the keypad passcode to shut the security system off and get inside without anyone knowing.

“I said turn around,” Terrance ordered, firmer the second time.

Damian spun the office chair slowly, facing his boss. A brief flicker of shock passed over Terrance’s features before the Outfit boss turned stone cold again.

“I should have known,” Terrance muttered.

“Probably,” Damian replied quietly.

Terrance waved at the chair. “I always push my chair in before leaving my office. Anyone who is smart knows better than to come inside here without my permission. I didn’t think it would be you in that chair, Damian.”

“Yes, well …”

“I wondered, though,” Terrance said softly.

Damian fiddled with the tip of the barrel on his gun. “Wondered what?”

“Ben’s unfortunate death seemed a little too suspicious for me. He was nearly cleared after being put into the coma. The way he died … something felt off. Was it?”

“Completely,” Damian admitted.

“Why?”

“I owed someone something.”

Terrance stared at Damian, but never once did he give the gun and silencer any attention. An understanding dawned on the older man’s features as he said, “Dino DeLuca.”

Other books

The Steel Spring by Per Wahlöö
Sita's Ascent by Naidu, Vayu
Last Man to Die by Michael Dobbs
Beautiful Chaos by Whitten, Chandin
Hot Ink by Ranae Rose
Star of Wonder by JoAnn S. Dawson
Red Star over China by Edgar Snow