Brazilian Nights. Sandra Marton
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Gabriella Reyes—amazing how he could remember her name and not the name of a woman he’d been with last night, especially since it was a year since he’d seen Gabriella.
One year and two months. And, yeah, okay, twenty-four days…
Dante snorted.
That was what came of having a thing for numbers, he thought as he dumped the towel on the marble vanity. It made him good at what he did at Orsini’s but it also made the damnedest nonsense stick in his head.
He dressed quickly in a beat-up New York University T-shirt, the sleeves long since torn out, and a pair of equally disreputable NYU gym shorts, and went down the circular staircase to the lower level of his penthouse, hurrying past the big, high-ceilinged rooms until he reached his gym. It wasn’t an elaborate setup. He had only a Nautilus, some free weights, an old treadmill. He only used the stuff when the weather was bad enough to keep him from running in Central Park, but this morning, despite the sunshine, he knew he needed more than a five-mile run if he was going to sweat a couple of old ghosts out of his system. It was a Saturday; he could afford the extra time.
When he was done, he spent a couple of hours online looking at auction sites that dealt in vintage Ferraris, checking to see if there was anything out there that came close to the 1958 Ferrari 250GT Berlinetta “Tour de France” he’d been searching for. There’d been word one had been coming on the market about a year ago in Gstaad; he’d thought about flying over to check it out, but something—he couldn’t recall what—had come up just then…
His hands stilled on the keyboard.
Gabriella Reyes. That was what had come up. He’d met her and everything else had flown straight out of his head.
“Dammit,” Dante said tightly. That was twice today he’d thought about the woman, and it made no sense. She was history.
Okay. Enough sitting around. He closed his computer, changed into another pair of shorts and a T-shirt and went out for a run.
Getting all those endorphins pumping did it. He came home feeling good and felt even better when Rafe phoned to say he’d just put away the French bank deal they’d been after. He’d already called Falco and Nick. How about meeting for a couple of drinks to celebrate at their favorite hangout, The Bar down in Chelsea?
By the time the brothers parted, it was hard to remember the day had started badly, but his good mood evaporated when his mother called. Dante loved her with all his heart and even her usual questions—was he keeping good hours? Was he eating properly? Had he found a nice Italian girl to bring to dinner?—even those things couldn’t dim his pleasure at hearing her voice.
The message she delivered from his father did.
“Dante, mio figlio, Papa wishes you and Raffaele to come for breakfast tomorrow.”
He knew what that meant. His father was in a strange mood lately, talking of age and death as if the grim reaper was knocking at the door. This would be another endless litany about attorneys and accountants and bank vaults…as if his sons would touch a dollar of his after he was gone.
His mother knew how he felt. How all her sons felt. Only she and their sisters, Anna and Isabella, persisted in believing the fiction that the old man was a legitimate businessman instead of the don he was.
“Dante?” Sofia’s tone lightened. “I will make you that pesto frittata you adore. Si?”
Dante rolled his eyes. He despised the sight, the smell, the taste of pesto but how could a man ever say such a thing to his mother without hurting her feelings? Which, he thought grimly, was exactly why Cesare sent these invitations through his wife.
So he sighed and said yes, sure, he’d be there.
“With Raffaele. Eight o’clock. You will call him, si?”
That, at least, made him grin. “Absolutely, Mama. I know Rafe will be delighted.”
All of which was why Sunday morning, when the rest of Manhattan was undoubtedly still asleep, Dante sauntered into the Orsini town house in what had once been Little Italy but was now an increasingly fashionable part of Greenwich Village.
Rafe had arrived before him.
Sofia had already seated him at the big kitchen table where they’d had so many meals a famiglia. The table groaned under the weight of endless platters of food, and Rafe, looking not too bad for a man who’d spent last night partying with Dante, the redhead and a blonde Red had come up with after Dante had called and told her his brother needed something to cheer him up—considering all that, Rafe looked pretty good.
Rafe looked up, met Dante’s eyes and grunted something Dante figured was “good morning.”
Dante grunted back.
He’d danced the night away with Red, first at a club in the meatpacking district, then in her bed. It had been a long night, a great night, lots of laughter, lots of sex…lots and lots of sex during which his body had done its thing but his head had been elsewhere. He’d awakened in his own bed—he made it a point never to spend the night in a woman’s bed—with a headache, a bad attitude and no desire whatsoever for conversation or his old man.
Or for the frittata his mother placed in front of him.
“Mangia,” she said.
It was an order, not a suggestion. He shuddered slightly—food was not supposed to be green—and picked up his fork.
The brothers were on their second cups of espresso when Cesare’s capo, Felipe, stepped into the room.
“Your father will see you now.”
Dante and Rafe rose to their feet. Felipe shook his head.
“No, not together. One at a time. Raffaele, you are first.”
Rafe smiled tightly and muttered something about the privileges of popes and kings. Dante grinned and told him to have fun.
When he looked back at his plate, there was another frittata on it.
He ate it, got it down with another cup of coffee, then fended off his mother’s offerings. Some cheese? Some biscotti? She had that round wheel of bread he liked, from Celini’s.
Dante assured her he was not hungry, surreptitiously checked his watch and grew more and more annoyed. After forty minutes he shoved back his chair and got to his feet.
“Mama, I’m afraid I have things to do. Please tell my father that—”
The capo appeared in the doorway. “Your father will see you now.”
“So well trained,” Dante said pleasantly. “Just like a nice little lap dog.”
His father’s second in command said nothing, but the look in his eyes was easy to read. Dante showed his teeth in a grin.
“Same to you, too, pal,” he said as he pushed past him to the old man’s study.