Uncontrollable Temptations (The Tempted Series Book 3) (21 page)

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Authors: Janine Infante Bosco

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BOOK: Uncontrollable Temptations (The Tempted Series Book 3)
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Not today.

I slammed the draw shut as another knock sounded on the door. I moved quickly so whoever was on the other end wouldn’t wake Reina. Pulling open the door I came face to face with Blackie

“We need to talk,” he announced.

I brought my finger to my lips, silencing him as I glanced over my shoulder, looking at the woman in my bed one last time, fighting the urge to wake her and lose myself in her again. I stepped outside the bedroom and closed the door behind me.

Blackie’s eyes narrowed as they traveled the length of me.

“Not going to do this with you, Blackie. I suggest you quit while you’re ahead,” I threatened.

He held his hands up in mock defeat, his bloodshot eyes dull as they glared into mine.

“Got bigger fish than that,” he said, tipping his chin toward the door. “Jimmy called,” he sneered. “It’s show time motherfucker. Get your saddle ready.”

I grabbed him by the back of the neck and pulled him away from the hallway, not wanting to risk Reina waking and overhearing anything.

“Downstairs,” I growled.

He mumbled something inaudible but did as he was told and I followed him down the stairs into the common room.

“He called you?” I questioned.

“Tried calling you but your phone was off,” he accused, pausing for a beat as I poured myself a cup of coffee. “He wants to meet today,” he added.

I took a sip of my coffee, placed the cup down on the bar and pierced him with a look.

“Not today,” I said, leaving no room for argument.

He took a seat at the bar, leaning back against the stool as he crossed his arms against his chest.

“That’s not an option and you know that. He’s on the heels of his visit with Vic. We reschedule now and that’s giving him a chance to think.
You don’t want him thinking, you don’t want him guessing or questioning why we’re suddenly in the drug business.
If this shit is going to work, we need to move when we’re told to move and he’s pushing. You heard Vic with your own ears, he told Jimmy we’ve always been trying to move shit but Vic’s been a road block. Now that he’s playing the desperation card and crying poverty, it’s okay for us to supply their organization with the drugs, just as long as Grace keeps her house,” he stated, shaking his head. “He wants the meeting today; we need to oblige. So do you man, you take today because you need to and I’ll set the meet with Jimmy.”

Blackie knew the significance of today, been with me long enough to know this day was mine, the only day I’m not president of the Satan’s Knights. It’s a day when the rest of the world fades away and all that is left is my son.

I didn’t like him going into this shit with Jimmy without me. It was my duty to bring this bastard to his knees. And here Blackie was, sweeping in and cleaning up after me as he always did. But he was right, it was unethical to keep Jimmy waiting and a major mistake giving him an opportunity to second guess forming an alliance with us.

“Are you sure?” I questioned. “You’ve stayed out of any dealings I’ve had with Pastore, you don’t have Jimmy pegged which leaves you vulnerable. You like being one step ahead of everyone, like knowing what a person’s gonna do before he does it. You don’t have that advantage with Gold. He’s a sick fuck disguised as an eccentric joke,” I reminded him.

“I might not have him where I want him but there’s one advantage I have over him, over you, over everyone in this goddamn club. I know drugs, Man. I know their worth and their consequence. I know how to make them desirable and I know how to make them your enemy. I will have Jimmy Gold high on my promise before he or his streets are high on the product,” he said, his voice full of conviction.

There was a fire in his eyes, something rare for a man who walked through life like he was lost. Nailing Jimmy to the cross gave Blackie purpose.

I pushed my coffee aside and leaned over the bar to meet his gaze. “Keep it simple. Be safe, brother,” I chastised. “Need you breathing, remember that,” I added.

He shrugged his shoulders as if to say what he was about to do was no sweat off his back.

“Piece of cake,” he claimed.

I nodded and hoped like hell he was right.

“I’ve got someplace I need to be,” I said after a beat, lifting my eyes back to his.

“What about that?” He asked, tipping his chin toward the stairs.

“Yeah, about that…” I started. “Reina.” I threaded my hands through my hair, thinking of her waking up alone in my bed. “When she wakes up, take her over to Pipe’s lot and get her in a car,” I told him, watching as he raised an eyebrow at me. “Something safe. Tell Pipe I’ll square away with him tomorrow or the day after.”

“You want me to babysit your girl?” He asked incredulously. “Take her fucking car shopping? You really lost your mind this time, huh? No coming back from this shit,” he grunted.

“She deserves more,” I claimed.

“Then give it to her,” he said, surprising me. The shock must’ve taken presence over my features because he sighed and attempted to explain himself. “Instead of going off on your mission to hell, take her for the car. Honor your kid by enjoying life and not running from it.”

“Hard to enjoy life when you’re the reason your kid can’t blow out the candles on a birthday cake, Blackie,” I said hoarsely as I looked away. “Take care of Reina? Make sure she gets home safe.”

“And you? You going to stay safe?”

“All good, brother. All good.” I lied.

“Bullshit,” he countered, but didn’t press. “I’ll take her to the yard, get the wheels and send her on her merry way.”

“Then you’ll meet with Gold.”

“Then I’ll meet with Gold,” he confirmed.

I nodded in agreement. “She’s going to ask questions.”

“Not my place to answer them,” he assured me.

“Thank you.”

“You get your head right, Bulldog. Shit’s going to get heavy around here, going to need our leader,” he reiterated.

I walked around the bar, cupped his shoulder with my hand before I patted him on the back. I didn’t respond, not willing to lie to the man who cared about my sorry ass. “If Lacey comes around or calls…”

“Shit,” he mumbled. “Buying her an ice cream cone and pretending the world is a giant playground don’t work no more for her.”

I smiled. “Girl’s all grown up.”

“Yeah,” he whispered. “I’ll tell her you went up to visit Cain’s old man.”

“What would I do without you?”

“Don’t fucking know, hire a nanny to lie to all the women in your life?” He offered.

I laughed as I walked toward the door, shoving my hands in my pockets and pulling out my fingerless gloves.

“Where’s your cut?” Blackie called out.

I pulled the door open, worked my hands into the gloves, flexing my fingers and cracked my knuckles before I glanced over my shoulder at him.

“Where it belongs,” I replied.

 

I stared at the historic chapel for a moment, bowing my head. Despite my beliefs that God didn’t exist, I made the sign of the cross. If by some miracle there was a God, then I hoped he was the comforting soul taking care of Jack. So I did it for him.

Green-Wood cemetery was huge, over six hundred thousand graves spanned across the land. In the early years after Jack’s passing I got lost trying to find his grave, made more trips to the office than one ever should. Thirteen years later, I knew exactly where my boy was, and I used the chapel as my guide since he was resting close to it.

I strode across the grass, the leaves crunching under my boots until I found the gray headstone that marked Jack’s home. It didn’t matter how many years had passed or how many times I had been there, each time I saw my name on that stone, the name we shared, I relived the pain of holding his lifeless body.

I crouched down, brushing the leaves away from his stone, and removed the wilted flowers from the last visitor. I ran my fingertips over his name, the year he was born, the year he died and the role he’d forever hold, “Beloved Son.”

“Hi, son,” I whispered hoarsely, “Happy birthday.”

I bowed my head and wiped viciously at the tears that fell from my eyes. I had no right to cry, not in front of him. At first I didn’t cry because I never wanted him to see my tears. He was all alone, no mommy to dry his tears or daddy to ease his fears. The last thing he needed was to see me cry when I was supposed to be the one who told him it was all going to be all right. It was my job to tell him he was in a better place. He was safe. He was in God’s hands and there was no one better off to protect him than he.

Lies.

Every single word.

He wasn’t better off. Nothing would ever be all right. He shouldn’t be in this place and the only hands that should’ve kept him safe were mine.

I reached behind me and pulled the Yankee cap from my back pocket and brought it around, tracing the famous symbol with my finger and bending the rim of the hat. I gripped the hat in my hand as I lifted my head and stared at the stone.

“I had a dream of you last night,” I started. “You were calling out to me but I didn’t recognize your voice at first. It wasn’t the high pitched sound of a baby calling ‘dada,’ or even ‘daddy.’ I think I only heard you say daddy a few times before I didn’t anymore. Is it horrible I don’t remember? I’ve tried for the last thirteen years to remember every day of the two years you lived but your dad’s mind isn’t always on his side. Things get fuzzy for me every once in a while and you slip away from me,” I said, my words catching in my throat. I took a deep breath and tried to gain control over myself. “Anyway, I didn’t recognize your voice because for the first time, I didn’t dream of the boy I lost but instead I dreamt of the young man you never became,” I cried, not able to stop the tears as the reality of my words hit me.

“You weren’t the chubby baby wobbling around getting into everything, looking to explore, you were a young man, a teenager. Today would’ve been your fifteenth birthday and I know now what you would’ve looked like. Handsome little devil, just like your old man,” I tried to tease, like I imagine I would’ve had he lived. These were the years a boy turned more to his father when he learned what it was to become a man and when he noticed there were other women in this world besides his mother. I bet we would’ve had fun with that.

“You know, we may never have had the chance to do all the things a father and son get to do, but you should know in my dreams we’ve done it all. I’ve taught you how to ride your bike. I’ve watched you fall down and I’ve picked you up. We’ve had a catch and we’ve played games where I’ve let you win. And as you got older I didn’t let you win, I made you earn the title of champion. I’ve taught you it’s okay to lose sometimes. I’ve taught you the value of a dollar. I’ve taught you respect. You’ve climbed on my bike and pretended to ride it and I’ve made you drive my car while sitting on my lap. We’ve joked around, we’ve teased your sister, and we even pissed your mother off a time or two. We’ve done it all,” I whispered. “And in all those dreams I’ve never seen your face. Not until last night.”

I lifted my head and looked up at the sky, taking a moment to reign myself in before continuing.

“You told me you missed me,” I cried, bowing my head and succumbing to the grief. “And you should know that there isn’t a day that goes by that I don’t miss you too. I wish it was me, it should’ve been me and I’m so sorry, Jack. I’m sorry that it’s not me visiting you in your dreams. I’m sorry you ran outside. I’m sorry I wasn’t paying attention to you. I’m sorry my mind got the best of me and I let my pride take your life.”

“I’m on medicine now, I got help, and I try to be better. I try not to let my mind win anymore. An old friend made me realize your sister still needs a dad. I know you do too, I know you’re alone and I’m always torn between the two of you. But the truth is, your old man isn’t the greatest of guys. I’ve done a lot of bad shit, hurt a lot of good people, still hurting people, and even if I lay down and die I’m not sure I’d be reunited with someone as pure as you. So I stay here, I stay for Lacey because as long as I’m here at least I know I have one of you, I can do right by one of you. I don’t know if that’s right or wrong but then again the difference between the two is lost on me.”

I glanced down at the hat, remembering it was in my hand and that when he appeared in my dream he was wearing one similar.

“This was mine when I was a kid,” I said, placing the hat gently on the ground before the stone. “My old man bought it for me before he surprised me and took me to my first real ball game. In my dream you were wearing a Yankee hat and when you turned the hat backward it was like looking at you for the very first time. I’m sorry I never got to take you to a real baseball game but I’m glad you’re a Yankee fan. Always knew you’d be a smart boy.”

I slowly rose to my feet, running my hand along the stone.

“Happy birthday, Jack. I love you and I’m so proud that someone thought enough of me to make me the man you called dad, even if it was only for a little while, and only in my dreams,” I whispered. Taking a step back, my eyes focused on the words engraved in his headstone before I turned and walked away, leaving my boy behind, along with another piece of my soul.

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