Read Don't Read in the Closet: Volume Four Online
Authors: Various Authors
Tags: #Don't Read in the Closet, #mm romance, #gay
I don’t believe in fear I believe in the power of love.
Fear has the power to stop me, to control me and lead me to
failure.
Love has the power to guide me over the most difficult of
mountains with a smile on my face and a rush of warmth in my heart.
I’m a writer at heart, I love to tell stories and though most of what
comes out of my imagination can appear a little off the beaten path,
that’s because it is.
I am bringing something different to the table with my stories and
I hope you enjoy them.
Michele L. Montgomery
www.michelelmontgomery.com
http://www.facebook.com/michelelmontgome…
http://top2bottomreviews.wordpress.com/
Don’t Read in the Closet – volume four 544
Zahra Owens – TRUST (Organized Crime)
Genre:
contemporary
Tags:
suits, tattoos, organized crime, casual
threesome
I’m really a cop who’s
Warnings:
mention of organized crime and
infiltrated a notorious gang.
drug dealing, prostitution, sex with strangers,
This evil mob boss thinks he
some consensual power play
owns me. I’ve been under
cover for so long I’ve
Words:
15,499
forgotten who I really am.
There’s a new guy in the
TRUST
gang who’s always
by Zahra Owens
watching me but for some
reason I think I can trust
I look in the dirty mirror as I wipe my hand
him. Maybe we can bring
through my hair. Everything around me is
down this gang together and
get out with our lives and a
grubby and my reflection is smudged and only
HEA?
visible through a layer of grime. The baths are
[PHOTO: A dark-haired
never the most hygienic place, but the uptown
lightly-bearded man in
ones at least have showers and clean towels. I
business clothes gazes
don’t have the luxury to go there. The chance of
forward confidently, almost
discovery is greater where there’s more light
ignoring intense attention of
the man standing close
and people actually look at you. Here contact is
manhandling him. His dark
purposely limited, so I know I’m fairly safe
eyes shine and a smile
from discovery. There’s little speaking and no
curves his lips, despite the
niceties. It’s all very basic.
ringed and tattooed hands
that grip his neck and turn
I’d come to get fucked so I’d found an
his face. The other man
empty room and lay on the table. It hadn’t taken
frowns, mouth cold and
cruel. From the shadows, a
long for a guy to come in and do his business.
third man watches.]
After he left I’d gotten up and did a cursory
Thanks!
cleanup at the wash basin, wiping my hands on
Love,
a paper towel before getting dressed.
Mandy
I was lucky this time. My top used one of
the condoms I’d laid out like an unspoken
question. He was considerate, yet forceful
enough to get me off. He’d been just what I
needed. Simple physical pleasure. Oblivion.
Don’t Read in the Closet – volume four 545
Twenty minutes to forget how my boss chewed me a new one because
my minion made a mistake. Twenty minutes to forget why I was
doing all the things I would never have done six years ago.
Just before I put on my shirt, I wipe my hand over the Medusa
tattoo on my upper arm and remember the ‘Semper Fi’ that used to be
underneath it. That life is such a distant memory now it might as well
never have happened.
My car will arrive shortly and then life will resume as normal. Or
as close to normal as it can be for a closet case like me.
It’s a two block walk to where I told the driver to pick me up.
Even Family drivers can’t be trusted to pick me up outside the baths,
no matter how much the outside looks like a derelict building. I’m
early so I take my time, although this is not the neighborhood to walk
around in a fancy suit. I try to look like I belong, like I’m supposed to
be there, but I’m hyperaware of my surroundings and any sounds out
of the ordinary. So I’m not taken by surprise when a car stops next to
me and the door opens.
“Get in, Gianetti,” an unfamiliar voice says.
I stop and cautiously look at the nondescript black car with the
tinted windows. Instead of the window rolling down, the back door
nearest to me opens. The hand that holds the door open is a hand I’d
recognize across a crowded room. Elaborate and colorfully tattooed
swirls and letters along with oversized silver rings adorn the fingers.
As his head sticks out of the back door, I see similar ink along his
neck and recognize the face I’d seen the day before at a Family
meeting. At the time he was hovering around Giancarlo Benedetti, our
second-in-command and younger brother to the big cheese, and I
remember thinking he definitely stood out, not just by his tattoos, but
by his flamboyant comportment. Last night I’d been attracted to his
self-confidence, the ease with which he moved among people who
were familiar to me but must have been strangers to him because it
was the first time I’d laid eyes on him, and although I’m not a part of
Don’t Read in the Closet – volume four 546
Giancarlo’s inner circle, I certainly spend enough time among his
entourage to know who belongs and who is new to the troop.
“Are you going to grow roots, or are you coming with me?” He
must read my doubtful face pretty well since he continues, “Your
driver isn’t coming and I sent Carmine to do the drop. Giancarlo
asked me to spend some time with you. Get to know you.”
“Carmine won’t be able to shake down the dealers. He’ll come up
short,” I say in an attempt to make it clear that I don’t appreciate him
telling me what to do or sending my men out to do work they never do
on their own. I leave out the fact that Freddy, who is allowed to call
himself my boss but who’s small fry in the Family himself, won’t
hesitate to make life very hard for me if Carmine screws up again. I
also try to hide how worried I am about my minion. He’s young and
brash and thinks he can handle the drug dealers, but he’s all bravado,
and I’ve kept him from getting killed more times than I care to
remember. Still, I can’t show this big shot how anxious I am, because
in the greater scheme of things, Carmine is expendable. And only
mildly less, so am I.
The occupant of the car smiles at me. “I’ll make sure he doesn’t
get into trouble. I know he’s your pup.”
Although this doesn’t soothe me, I feign disinterest by gazing out
over the deserted street while I weigh my chances. I can either walk
and risk being robbed before I find a cab, or get into the car with
Mister Tattoo and hope he wasn’t ordered to get rid of me. It’s not
like I haven’t taken my chances these past six years working for the
Family. There’s nothing to suggest the man inside has bad intentions,
so I get into the car. He scoots over to the far side to give me space.
“You’re a cautious man, and that’s a good thing,” he says after I
close the door. He turns to his driver. “Marty, take us to the
warehouse. And close the partition.”
I think it’s pretty fancy to have a partition in a car that isn’t a limo,
but I ignore it as he looks at me and doesn’t say anything until he’s
sure the driver can’t hear us. I try not to let his scrutiny worry me and
Don’t Read in the Closet – volume four 547
resume my air of disinterest by looking through the tinted windows at
the deserted streets outside. It’s not easy, though. Although I’m not a
big tattoo fan, he’s the physical type that makes my blood rush south.
Even sitting down, I can tell he’s taller than me and the way he’s
sitting – straight back and his head slightly elevated – gives him a
certain arrogance, as if he’s untouchable. Inwardly I kick myself for
my inability to resist the challenge, but being a closeted gay man with
only occasional chances to get some release makes me weak when an
opportunity presents itself. He also sends out the right vibes,
especially because straight men don’t look at other men that way
unless they’re trying to stare a guy down, and that only works if the
other man doesn’t look away.
From the corner of my eye I see him shift in his seat. My
imagination runs with it and I wonder if he needs to adjust himself,
but then he inhales deliberately and I’m brought back to the present.
“I wanted a word with you, Matteo.”
“It’s Matt,” I reply. “Nobody but my old world grandmother calls
me Matteo.” He doesn’t respond so I turn toward him, using my
smuggest face. “And what do I call you?”
“Nick Castro,” he answers. “But
my
old world grandmother calls
me Nicola.”
I swear he’s flirting with me, so I give him a half-smile. I don’t
want to dismiss him because he’s got the right connections and the
closer I can get to the powers that be the better, but I don’t want to
encourage him either. Keeping people at arm’s length has proven
valuable in these last six years, not least because if they ever found
out what I did in the baths, I’d be given the equivalent of the
Inquisition and my carefully acquired position in the Family would be
more than a little compromised.
“Does your grandmother know what you do in that part of town,
Matt?” Nick asks me casually.
Don’t Read in the Closet – volume four 548
I’m used to staying on my toes, knowing there are always people
yanking my chain for all sorts of reasons, so although there are
warning bells going off in my head, I try to appear calm, as if I have
nothing whatsoever to hide.
“She knows I work for the Family,” I say, purposely staying
vague.
“Only you weren’t working. You were there on your own time.”
I want to swallow, fidget, bite my lip, but I resist all of those
behaviors, knowing I’d give away how uneasy his casual questioning
is making me. So I scratch my goatee, raise an eyebrow, and look at
him sideways. “I didn’t realize I was on the clock.” He doesn’t take
the bait. “You know what it’s like, Nicky,” I say with mock bravado.
“My ass belongs to Daddy and I do what he says. If he tells me to
jump, all I ask is ‘How high?’ So I’m always working, even when I’m
not.”
Nick smiles at my clichéd words, but he seems to mellow a bit.
We’re not at a point where we’ve started to trust each other yet, but at
least he’s taken the knife off the table.
“Giancarlo asked me to pick you up,” he admits. “He wants to talk
to you, so he had me ask your driver where you were. That’s how I
found you. Wandering around the streets. Was your driver late? When
I talked to him, he wasn’t in any hurry to come pick you up.”
“No, I was early. And I like going for a walk. Get some fresh air.”
So the second-in-command wants to talk to me? I wonder what I did