Tempting My Mafia Ex (Temptation #3)

Tempting My Mafia Ex (Temptation #3)

By Aura Rose

Chapter 1

Chapter one

Present Day

“Finn.” Fabi, our underboss, poked his head around the door of my office. “He’s here.”

I stopped typing and stared at the words on the screen.

For a moment, I forgot to breathe. But despite my body’s reaction, I kept my face expressionless, void of any emotion.

This was just a typical business meeting.

This was what I did, what I was good at.

Meeting with mafia bosses who worked under our regime to offer them solutions to their problems. I had meetings like this every fucking week. It would be exactly the same.

Except it wouldn’t. Because it was him.

“Okay,” I said with a deep exhale, flexing my fingers over the keyboard. “Send him in.” I continued to type, though I had no idea what I was writing.

When Fabi hesitated at the door, I looked up, noticing how his dark eyebrows twitched into the bridge of his nose.

“Shall I stay?” he asked in a low whisper.

Only three people on Earth knew about the history between Enzo Aiani and me: Alessio, Elenora and Fabi. But that was all it was. History.

Ten years ago, I walked away from the only man I’d ever loved.

From the man who didn’t just own my heart but crushed it in his fist and forced me to live with its fractured remains.

It wasn’t as if we hadn’t crossed paths since.

We’d stood in expensive suits in swanky halls at galas, exchanging clipped nods.

We’d sat shoulder to shoulder in negotiation meetings with all the mafia bosses watching, pretending to be strangers.

I suppose ‘strangers’ would be a better description of us now.

But we’d never been alone. Not since I told him I’d no longer be his dirty secret in the dark.

That was the past, and I refused to live in it.

“No, I’m good. Send him in.”

Fabi nodded and left. I closed my laptop, pushed down the sudden unease in my stomach, and walked over to the window, quickly fixing my dark brown hair in my reflection. Stop it. Why the fuck should I care? This was a business meeting, not a date.

I forced my gaze past my reflection and looked down at the swimming pool below.

The squeals of delight and splashes of water from the three most adorable bambinos in the world made me smile.

Elenora was trying to calm the chaos and failing terribly.

Her six-year-old twins, Siro and Isotta, were in the middle of a water fight, while my little Nerina stood on the steps, clapping her chubby hands together as her armbands flapped around her arms. She was my reason for everything.

Becoming a single dad wasn’t an easy decision, but it was the best one I ever made.

I sensed the moment he entered the room behind me. The air shifted, and my spine straightened. I kept watching the children, pretending not to notice his presence, buying myself a few moments to secure my fortress and face him.

“Consigliere Rossetti.” His voice, deeper and rougher than I remembered, licked at my skin like fire, but the formality and coldness were like a dagger between the ribs. This man used to moan my name. Now he couldn’t even say it.

“Don Aiani,” I replied before forcing myself to turn around and place my hands behind my back.

My fortress cracked. The late Sicilian sun streamed through the window, catching the sharp contours of his striking face.

A face that time had hardened, but that had somehow only made him more attractive.

The softness and boyish features he’d once possessed had been chipped away, leaving behind a ruthless, edgy, but no doubt beautiful man in his prime.

Those crystal blue eyes met mine. The silence stretched between us, loaded and heavy with the weight of the years that had passed. I gestured to the chair in front of my desk as I walked towards my own.

“You flew all the way to Sicily to meet with me. It must be urgent,” I said, steadying my breath and my expression.

He dropped into the chair as if he owned it.

His broad shoulders swallowed the space, and his massive biceps strained against his shirt as he leaned back, stretching out his long legs.

It was an effort to keep my gaze from wandering all over his body, taking in the way the expensive material of his clothes hugged every defined muscle.

My pulse raced at the memory of what lay beneath.

Back then, he was slimmer, more athletic.

But the man before me… he looked as if he were forged from steel.

Solid. A unit you’d think twice about challenging.

Every inch of him radiated the man he’d become. A man I barely recognised.

“It is. You must have heard by now that the Americans killed my consigliere. My cousin, Corrado,” he growled, his lip curling over his teeth.

I exhaled, leaning back in my chair to match his pose. “I heard. I’m sorry for your loss. I only met Corrado a handful of times, but he seemed like a decent man.”

“He wasn’t,” Enzo interrupted, holding my gaze.

“He was a testa di cazzo. But he was still my cousin. They chased him and my men through Padua, dragged him out of his car, beat him to death, and left his battered body in the street. In broad fucking daylight. In my city. They also took out three of my men to get to him.”

My hackles rose. That wasn’t just a message the Americans were sending us; it was an insult.

Making an example of a man who held power in a city and stripping him of it for all to see.

This ongoing battle between the Americans and us had started ten years ago.

Even though there was no evidence (we’d made sure of it), they were convinced that Alessio, the Mafia king of Italy, my best friend and boss, had murdered their don, Anthony Galiz and his high-ranking soldiers.

He did, but they had no proof. Yet, they started a war over it anyway.

They were trying to take everything we had worked so hard for.

Capturing and torturing our soldiers, targeting our shipments, and blowing up our warehouses—that was one thing.

But killing a consigliere, a man almost as important and respected as a boss, on our streets in the light of day? That was an act of war.

“You want permission to retaliate,” I responded, knowing how any boss in this situation would react. They’d be out for blood. And from the darkness in Enzo’s eyes, he was ready for a massacre.

“I will retaliate,” Enzo said, his jaw clenching. I narrowed my eyes in warning.

We allowed bosses the freedom to run their families as they saw fit under a unified mafia regime.

All we asked was that they keep us informed about their illegal dealings and negotiations with other crime lords.

If disagreements arose, we expected them to bring it to us first, allowing us to mediate without resorting to bloodshed.

But the Americans were different. This was different.

There was no negotiating or mediating. We’d tried.

They wouldn’t listen. So we had no choice but to respond to violence with violence.

But every attack had to be approved by Alessio himself or me.

Enzo knew this, but he was also hot-headed and sometimes reckless.

His raw emotions and inability to think through his actions or see the consequences of his choices were reasons our relationship had been doomed from the start.

“Don’t make any impulsive decisions. This is a war we are winning. They are growing desperate, which is why they are putting on the pressure. Any provoking moves now will cost us.”

His cold, composed mask of a mafia boss slipped as his blue eyes filled with frustration and his frown lines deepened. He inhaled, rubbing his chin. For a moment, I glimpsed the man I once loved peeking through. Then he was gone. The anger was back in place.

“That’s why I’m here. I know I’m not the best strategist. That’s always been you.

” His eyes cut into mine. My next breath stuttered.

He was referring to the fact I’d been undercover as a Buccini soldier when we met.

I didn’t think it was supposed to be a hurtful jab, but it sure felt like one.

His voice softened slightly with his next words.

“You are the smartest person I know. You see three steps ahead. You keep your head when everyone else loses theirs. If we don’t cut the Americans down, who will be next? Giovanni? Alessio? You? Me?”

My chest tightened. I glanced away from him. “I’ll speak with Alessio and we will draw up a plan to—”

“No. I don’t want him doing my dirty work.

I’m not hiding behind his protection. I want the Americans to know they fucked with me, so it’s my wrath they’ll face.

You think I don’t know they targeted my family first because I’m the youngest boss in Italy?

They think I must be weak. They’re wrong.

I’ll show them exactly what kind of man I’ve become. ”

I stared at him. He’d changed so much. No longer unsure of himself or his role. Yet he still carried that fiery spirit that had drawn me to him, only now it burned with brutality. And I hated the way my body still responded to it.

“I have the resources. I have the money. I have the men. All I need is…” he paused, those blue eyes demanding my attention. My heart beat a little faster as he licked his lower lip. “...you.”

My blood rushed through my veins with every pound of my heart.

My dick twitched. Then I remembered myself.

This was what Enzo Aiani did to me. Made me fucking soft.

Manipulated me with those eyes and his pretty words.

He didn’t fly out here and demand a private meeting with me after ten years of silence because he needed me.

He needed a strategy. A plan. He’d lost his consigliere, his voice of reason. He needed revenge.

Not me. Never me.

I pushed those thoughts away and sighed, tapping my fingers on the desk. I glanced at the framed photo of my daughter. He was right. The Americans would keep coming unless we put an end to this. They were losing patience and hitting us where it hurt—our families.

“Finn.”

My attention snapped back to him. My whole body went up in flames. I swallowed. Ten years, and still the sound of my name from his lips awoke a deeply buried flood of desire I’d been chasing ever since.

“You’re the only one I trust.”

Cazzo. I broke our eye contact, gazing beyond his shoulder at the wall because I couldn’t stand drowning in that sea of blue even for a second longer.

Not when those words tore open an old wound I’d thought had healed.

I set my face into marble, refusing to acknowledge the trickle of old emotions that tried to fight through.

“Fine,” I said once I knew my voice wouldn’t reveal how much he was affecting me. “You’ll get your revenge, but on my terms. I’ll draw up a plan, and I’ll be in touch.”

A smile curved his lips. A smile I had spent so many years trying to forget.

We both stood up, knowing there was nothing more to say.

Not about this, anyway. Unspoken words hung between us, but neither of us was willing to go there.

The past was best left in the past. That’s what I had to keep reminding myself.

He turned and walked towards the door but paused with his fingers on the handle. He peered at me over his shoulder.

“It was good seeing you, Finn. I’m staying in Sicily tonight. So, I’ll come by tomorrow, and we can talk more.”

I nodded, not trusting myself to say anything else because all I heard was, ‘I’m staying in Sicily tonight’. Did he tell me that on purpose? To torture me?

The moment the door shut behind him, I slumped into my chair, the tension in my body finally subsiding.

I closed my eyes. The worst was over. Yes, it fucking sucked that after ten years, that man still made my heart race.

My mind and body betrayed me. All it took was being alone in the same room with him again, and it dredged up dangerous memories and desires I thought I was over.

But they would fade. I’d become numb to him, eventually.

I had to prepare for battle, not only against the Americans but also against Enzo himself. I would build my walls higher, put on my armour, and shield my heart because I had more to lose now.

He broke me once. I wouldn’t let him do it again.

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