Under his watch, p.1

Under His Watch, page 1

 

Under His Watch
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Under His Watch


  UNDER HIS WATCH

  LEONA WHITE

  Copyright © 2024 by Leona White

  All rights reserved.

  No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the author, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.

  Created with Vellum

  ALSO BY LEONA WHITE

  Mafia Bosses Series

  The Irish Arrangement || The Last Vendetta

  The Constella Family

  Under His Protection

  CONTENTS

  Also by Leona White

  Blurb

  1. Romeo

  2. Tessa

  3. Romeo

  4. Tessa

  5. Romeo

  6. Tessa

  7. Romeo

  8. Tessa

  9. Romeo

  10. Tessa

  11. Romeo

  12. Tessa

  13. Romeo

  14. Tessa

  15. Romeo

  16. Tessa

  17. Romeo

  18. Tessa

  19. Romeo

  20. Tessa

  21. Romeo

  22. Tessa

  23. Romeo

  24. Tessa

  25. Romeo

  26. Tessa

  27. Romeo

  28. Tessa

  29. Romeo

  30. Tessa

  31. Romeo

  32. Tessa

  BLURB

  Attacked. Saved. Falling...

  For the deadliest man in the city.

  One night. One alley. One hell of a plot twist.

  I was supposed to marry a creepy lawyer.

  (Thanks, Mom and Dad. Really.)

  Instead, I'm claimed by a tattooed Adonis with a body count.

  Romeo Constella. 30. Mafia royalty.

  He saved me from a fate worse than death.

  Now he's offering protection.

  In his world of Gucci and gunshots.

  His touch? Electric.

  His kiss? Addictive.

  His promise? Absolute.

  "No one will ever hurt you again, bella."

  But as rival families circle like sharks...

  I realize I'm not the only one with a target on my back.

  With every heated glance, every stolen caress,

  The line between protector and lover vanishes.

  Until one truth remains:

  This isn't just about survival anymore.

  It's about a love that could burn down empires.

  Or get us both killed.

  Under His Watch: Where danger meets desire and age gaps sizzle. Buckle up, buttercup – this steamy mafia romance is going to be a wild ride.

  1

  ROMEO

  Istrode through the main foyer of the guest house, grimacing at how much more work needed to be done. Wallpaper had to be removed. All this nasty old carpet had to go, and then the sanding and polishing of the old hardwood floors would follow. Updating appliances.

  Franco set down another box of debris to haul out. Dust rose up, and we both sneezed.

  “You’re sure you want to deal with this place?” he asked.

  He was more than the high-ranking capo in my family’s organization. Franco Constella was a distant cousin, too, but at times like this, he resembled the brother I never had.

  Never say never. I bit my tongue and refrained from groaning. In seven months, I might very well have a brother.

  “Yeah, I’m sure,” I lied.

  I wanted something to keep me busy, busier than I already was as my father’s right-hand man in the Constella Family. I was his second-in-command, and I handled a variety of responsibilities in that position.

  “This old property needed work, and I want to put my blood, sweat, and tears into fixing it up.”

  “Oh.” Franco nodded, looking around the house that was part of the extensive Constella real estate portfolio. “Sure. So you can, what? Purge out the guilt you shouldn’t have?”

  I shot him a hard look. I wasn’t in the mood for him to tell me to get over the guilt. I was the only survivor in a fight three months ago. The lone man who lived. Three of our fine soldiers hadn’t made it in a fight that Mario, a rat in the family, set up.

  They shouldn’t have died, not like that. And I would never “get over” it. That would be a dishonor to their memory.

  He knew he'd crossed a line, being that harsh about this topic. Holding up his hands in a truce, he sighed and shook his head. “Hey, you know what? I don’t blame you for wanting to move out of the main house while Dante and Nina are acting like lovebirds.”

  I chuckled, wiping the sweat from my brow. Fall was coming soon, but right now, the humidity of the late summer was sticking. We’d been moving junk and debris toward the door for hours. It seemed Franco wanted the empty-mindedness of manual labor too.

  “I’m not coming here to renovate this place only to get away from them,” I argued.

  He scoffed. “You’re not?”

  “All right.” I shrugged. “Maybe that is a factor in it.” But I wasn’t hiding. I’d always resided in multiple places. My “home” was the guest house behind the mansion my father, Dante, now shared with his fiancée, Nina. My cousin Eva lived in another such guest house. Franco, too. We all had our rooms and quarters in the big mansion, and we always would.

  My father understood that I liked to diversify with my time and residence. I wasn’t married. I wasn’t shackled to anything but my job in the family, so why not have multiple options?

  “But this place does need some attention.” I gestured at the derelict surroundings, evidence of decades of wear and tear and even more of them with grave neglect. The house was something in the family and nothing we’d want to sell. My father never bothered with it except to discipline the new recruits, soldiers who came here one night and got a little too drunk and broke some old shit.

  “That doesn’t mean you need to be the one acting like some handyman contractor.”

  I shrugged. He wouldn’t talk me out of it. “I wanted a project.” I needed something to help me ignore how happy my father looked with Nina. I was glad for them both. He deserved love and loyalty after my mother died over thirty years ago. But this creeping sensation of jealousy was not something I wanted to endure any longer. I was sure it would fade. My father and Nina got together so quickly, and everything happened so fast between them that I hadn’t really had any time to get used to my father no longer being only a workaholic and always accessible.

  Eventually, it would be the new norm. My father would be a husband to someone again, and a father to their baby soon, my potential half-brother.

  I was confident that a little space from them would help me get used to it. And maybe with that separation and not seeing them so wildly in love, this envy would loosen its grip on me.

  “Hell, I wouldn’t mind a project myself,” Franco quipped, nudging his foot at a pile of busted wood in a heap from furniture that hadn’t lasted the test of time. “I know they’re not trying to rub it in our faces, being so all over each other all the time…”

  I watched him, feeling like I’d recently grimaced just like he was doing now. “But it makes you realize what you don’t have,” I finished for him.

  He smirked. “Yeah. Exactly.”

  Franco wasn’t much better than me in terms of meeting and holding on to a woman for more than one night. He slept around here and there, but he was more focused on his work for the family than his own sex life. We were all like that. We had to be when so many lives were on our shoulders.

  Years ago, Franco was serious about someone, but she was a distant memory now. I couldn’t even remember her name if anyone were to ask.

  “Don’t tell me that we’re going to suffer now that he’s found his woman,” Franco joked. “Like a contagion.”

  I rolled my eyes. “What, that we’re all going to want to settle down since my father has?”

  He furrowed his brow. “Nah, it won’t happen. Not to me. I thought about it so long ago that it feels like another lifetime has passed.” Catching a broom as he slid along the wall, he shook his head. “Besides, this isn’t an ideal time to settle down. Or start projects.”

  I stuck my hands in my pockets. “Until something happens with this war my father declared on the Giovannis and the Devil’s Brothers, I want something to busy myself with.” It felt like an epic waiting game, watching our rival Mafia men and those bikers who’d recently come onto the scene.

  He huffed. “Eh. You just need to get laid or something. Not start a fucking renovation.”

  “This is a project,” I reminded him. “Something to fill my downtime. I’m not changing careers.”

  “And I’m not suggesting you are.”

  I wanted to groan. He was like a damn sibling, a brother. We always bickered like this. “Then what the fuck are you suggesting?”

  He ran his hand through his hair. “I don’t know. I’ve inhaled so much dust and shit in here helping you that my brain is fucked.”

  I laughed, walking toward the back to appreciate the fresher air breezing in through the open window.

  “I’m suggesting,” he said, following me, “that you get laid.”

  “Like that’s a solution.” It wouldn’t be. Finding an easy piece of ass might have entertained me for a few hours, but that was it. Afterward, I’d be right back to my usual brooding self.

  “I’m not saying it’s a solution, but hel

l, maybe finding a woman to fuck could remind you that being a bachelor isn’t always that bad.”

  I smirked at him, not buying it.

  “Well, maybe getting laid would help you get your head out of your ass.”

  I stared out the window, watching the sun set further. All my life, I’d been a serious sort of person. A brooder. An introvert. A watcher and daydreamer, more comfortable in my own head than with others. Being “moody” wasn’t just a phase I went through as a teenager. I wasn’t emo or gothic in my adolescent years for the hell of it. I was a Mafia prince, born and raised with the laws of violence and corruption reigning supreme. No one was sane and lighthearted with an upbringing like I had.

  Lately, though, my guilt about not preventing those three soldiers from dying had dragged me even lower. It wasn’t depression, but deep-seated regret. It wasn’t some sort of manic pit or any other psychological nonsense. It was hating that I couldn’t have saved those good men.

  “Romeo.” He sighed. “You have got to stop beating yourself up for not being able to control those men dying. For not being able to control everything.”

  That was my most consistent flaw. I was a control freak, and that extended to the bedroom. Crossing my arms, I leaned against the window frame and stared at him. “Which is why giving me advice to ‘just go get laid’ is a joke.”

  He rolled his eyes, setting his hands on the open window frame. I didn’t miss the slight flinch as he locked the muscles in his left arm. He was shot trying to defend Nina and Eva at a spa the night the MC men kidnapped Nina, and the muscles that the bullet pierced were still healing.

  “I’m a hard lover,” I reminded him. We didn’t talk about this shit. We didn’t deal with chitchats about women, sex, or marital goals. It was common knowledge, though, that I wasn’t the ordinary man who could get off with just any easy pussy available. Franco knew. Back when we were younger and stupider, he accompanied me to the sex clubs where I acquired, then fine-tuned, my preference for the kinkier side of fucking.

  “I’m sure there’s got to be a seasoned whore around here somewhere who could handle you.”

  I raised my brows at him.

  “For a price,” he added hastily.

  Buying sex no longer appealed. After witnessing the miracle of how much my father had changed since meeting his other half and falling so swiftly and seriously in love, it seemed like a cop-out to want anything else.

  Who am I kidding? I’m not in any position to go looking for someone. Someone who likely doesn’t exist. I’d need a patient and equally hard lover, and I wasn’t sure she was real.

  Besides, it was dumb to try to start something with anyone when I needed to start caring about myself more. Regardless of how often I was told to get over my guilt and move on, I struggled. If and when I could open up to letting a woman in my life, I had to do so knowing I was the best version of myself as possible.

  I didn’t love myself anymore. Not after failing my Mafia brothers.

  In my darkest—and usually drunkest—moments, I got hooked on the idea that being loved again would make me feel whole. That finding a real match in a woman would help me accept that I was worthy of love. I wouldn’t achieve that with some random hooker. Not even a skilled escort. It wasn’t only sex that would make me change, but a real connection. A bonding experience of decent companionship. That was what I needed.

  “Seriously,” Franco said. “You’re the Mafia prince of the Constella Family. Many women would be willing to entertain you. They’d volunteer to be your ‘project’ and keep you busy.”

  I deadpanned at him. “What women? The ones like Vanessa Giovanni?”

  He winced at the mention of the woman who’d pursued my father so relentlessly since the beginning of the year. While seeing my father and Nina so sickeningly in love was an adjustment, I was very glad that I wouldn’t have to put up with telling Stefan Giovanni’s clingy daughter to get lost.

  “Yeah, it’s a bunch of stupid nonsense.” He sighed as he stood and backed up, stretching his spine and arms. “We don’t need a woman.”

  I shrugged. It’d be nice, though.

  “We need to stay on guard. Keep our eyes open.” He glanced at me, somber and serious. “With Dante focusing on Nina and the arrival of their baby, he won’t be one hundred percent focused on the war with Stefan and Reaper.”

  I cringed at the mention of the Devil’s Brothers MC’s leader. Reaper was as nasty as they came.

  “Which means we—you and I—need to handle the due diligence for him.”

  I held out my hand for him to smack it in our custom shake. “And we will.”

  My loyalty to my father and my family would always take precedence over any projects I might take on and any daydreams I might create about a fantasy woman who’d accept and love me for the twisted, dark bastard I was.

  2

  TESSA

  My supervisor thought he was just “doing his job”, but it came across more like he wanted to hold me hostage. I deadpanned at him as he flirted with my coworker, another waitress at the sports bar I’d picked up as a second job. The Hound and Tea was still my first job, but to make ends meet—or, in other words, to hand over money to my lazy father who claimed he couldn’t work—I recently started waitressing at the bar on the edge of town. Waitressing was a universal service, and I appreciated the ease of being able to land another part-time job.

  But this supervisor’s policy to keep me waiting until he checked my section and approved my end-of-the-shift tasks was bullshit. If he’d stop flirting with my coworker and just check off the crap on my list, I could’ve left a half hour ago.

  But noooo. He’s gotta take his sweet-ass time trying to get in her pants and waste the rest of my night.

  I sat up, frowning at my phone. It no longer was night. Nearing one thirty in the morning, it was way too late to be stuck here, waiting for permission to leave. He made me clock out already. I wasn’t waiting and getting paid for my time, but I wasn’t okayed to go.

  As if I summoned the device to buzz, my phone rang before I could stick it back into my pocket. Spotting my father’s name on the caller ID didn’t make me smile. I grimaced. Then I considered letting it go to voicemail. When it did, I sighed in relief. Speaking with my parents was always a trying endeavor, and I preferred to avoid them as much as I could. With the many hours I worked, it wasn’t too hard. They slept in, and I went to work. Rinse and repeat.

  He called again, and I growled as I answered. “Hello?”

  “Where the hell are you?”

  I pulled my lips in, bottling in a scream of frustration. He knew damn well where I was. Where I always was. I had no life—social or otherwise. I was stuck in this hamster-wheel race of life, always slaving away for crappy pay and never getting ahead. “I haven’t gotten off work yet.”

  Spying my supervisor leaning in toward the smiling waitress, I sighed and wondered if I should just leave and excuse my disobedience of not waiting for his dismissal for wanting to give them privacy.

  “I need the car. You know this.”

  I rolled my eyes, then zoned out at the dark ceiling. They’d painted it black to make the bar look dimmer, but it looked tacky with chips and marks showing the white drywall underneath.

  “You’re getting really spoiled, you know that?” he snarled.

  I laughed, choking on the irony of what he claimed. “Me? Spoiled?”

  “Yes. You’re a spoiled brat, expecting to just go where you please whenever you want, using my car.”

  “Oh.” Anger rose up swiftly. “You mean your car that I use to go to work, both the jobs I hold down to give you my money? Because you’re”—I cleared my throat—“fucking lazy, claiming you’re too disabled to hold down a job?”

  “Don’t talk to me like that.”

  I shook my head, not feeling guilty in the slightest. “You sprained the joint of your pinky. Your pinky finger! Ten years ago!” It was the lamest excuse for disability ever, and his so-called handicap status was a goddamn lie because he was fully capable of playing his video games, drinking and smoking, and doing everything anyone with ten working fingers could manage as a fully functioning adult. He’d only realized that I could work for him, and that was the start of his stay-at-home, do-nothing existence.

 

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