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Revere

Revere

Author:BethanyKris

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Introduction
She was once his liar. He was once her savior. Cross Donati fills his days with the mafia, family, and responsibility. The wild boy is a distant memory. A waiting prince now sits in his place. An old debt puts the gunrunner right back into the path of his past, but he only sees his future. Every king needs a queen. Catherine Marcello learned how to stand on her own, and she no longer needs saving. The sly girl is far more dangerous now. A broken promise taught her how to live again. One conversation puts the hustler face to face with her first love, but she only sees heartache. Every God needs a prayer. The scars of their history runs deep. Every lie told, and each secret spilled hurts a little bit more. Love does not care. Love will not wait. So, why does life keep standing in the way? Cross + Catherine, 2
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Chapter

“It’s Catherine, right? Catherine Marcello.”

The click-clack of heels on hardwood floor echoed to Catherine’s spot on the floor of the sitting room. She continued her staring contest with the ceiling. It seemed to be the only thing lately that wasn’t constantly hovering, asking questions, or demanding answers.

“You were aware I was coming to chat with you today, weren’t you?”

Catherine’s gaze slid to the side, but the rest of her didn’t move an inch. It was just enough for her to discern a tall woman, likely in her mid-forties or slightly older, with wild red curls and warm blue eyes. She was dressed in black skinny jeans, sky-high heels, and a flowy red blouse. The woman must have been who Catherine’s father meant when he said they would have a guest, and she should get her ass up off the floor.

Clearly, Catherine didn’t follow that advice.

“Aren’t people like you required to wear … I don’t know, pant suits or something?”

The woman glanced down at her attire. “What’s wrong with what I’m wearing?”

“Doesn’t seem very therapist-ish to me in skinny jeans and stiletto heels, that’s all.”

“Ah, I see.” She smiled lightly, and took a seat on the end of the chaise near Catherine’s head. “Well, I wouldn’t call this dressing down, but since you’re a special case, I figured I could dress how I was comfortable.”

“Is that what we’re going to call this? A special case?”

“What would you call it, Catherine?”

“My father thinks I’m crazy, and here you are.”

“Okay, let’s start with that, for one. Your father doesn’t think you’re crazy. He’s very concerned about you, and for good reason, considering what he told me.”

“You know I’m not going to talk about what happened, right?” Catherine asked.

The woman looked at her watch. “That’s a shame because I’ve got the next two hours cleared to sit here and chat with you. Your house is empty. I asked your parents to leave, and it doesn’t seem like you have anything else better to do except stare at the ceiling. That’s a bore, by the way, but if that’s what you want to do this session, we’ll do it.”

Catherine’s gaze narrowed. “This session.”

“Expect there to be a few more.”

Awesome.

“You actually got them to leave?” Catherine dared to ask.

The woman’s lips quirked up at the edges, and she nodded. “I don’t think they’ve gone far, likely for a walk around the property. It’s a beautiful home. Next time, pick a new room for me to see.”

Again with the more sessions thing.

“They have this house on lockdown,” Catherine pointed out. “I’m not allowed to leave. You can see why I would be surprised that they actually left while you are here, even if it is just to walk around the property.”

“What would you do if you could leave?”

“Is that your thing? You ignore what I say, except for one thing, latch onto it, and shoot me a question based on that?”

“My name is Cara Guzzi. Your father asked me to come speak with you for several reasons. Would you like to know what they are?”

“I’m eighteen, Cara. Can we speak like adults, and not like one adult talking to a child?”

Cara lifted a single brow. “Perhaps if one of us wasn’t lounging on a ten thousand dollar rug, staring at the ceiling, and ignoring the very expensive therapist their father called in for them, we could absolutely do that, Catherine.”

Damn.

Catherine liked this woman. She was kind of bitchy, and Catherine tended to like that in a person. That was bad. She preferred it when she didn’t have to talk at all lately.

“How do you know this rug costs ten thousand dollars?” Catherine asked.

“I have expensive taste.”

“Oh?”

“My husband likes to indulge me,” Cara added with a smirk. “Now, answer some of my questions, Catherine.”

“No, but thanks.” Catherine sighed. “You don’t sound like any New Yorker I’ve met.”

“I grew up in Chicago, actually. I moved to Ontario, Canada when I was fresh out of high school, and that’s where I have lived ever since.”

Catherine’s brow furrowed. “So wait—you still live there?”

“With my husband and sons, yes.” Cara peered down at Catherine when she stayed silent. “What is it, Catherine?”

“You flew here from Canada to speak to me?”

“I flew this time, yes. I may drive through the Niagara Falls border next time, depending on how I feel.”

“And you’re a therapist?”

Cara leaned forward, and rested her arms over her knees to fold her hands together. “For the last decade, yes. I went back to school a few years after graduating to further what I had already taken. Then went on to finish a three-year residency, and my focus is now on young women, children, and those struggling with addiction. Again, though, mostly women.”

“Huh.”

“Do you feel like getting up to talk to me?”

“Not really.”

“Shame,” Cara murmured.

“Sorry my father wasted your time.”

“Dante wasted nothing, Catherine. It’s you who is wasting my time. Never blame others for problems you cause or your own shortcomings; that isn’t any way to fix something that is wrong.”

Ouch.

“Why would my father call you to come here and talk to me? Why not someone from the city?”

Cara smiled. “Would an answer entice you to get up off the floor?”

“Not really.”

“How long have you been down there?”

Catherine had to think about that one. “Last night around ten. My room was too quiet.”

“Have you slept at all?”

“I don’t like the things I dream.”

Wordlessly, Cara moved from the couch, kicked off her heels, and rested down on the rug alongside Catherine. The woman didn’t turn to look at her, but rather, stared at the ceiling, too.

“Your father called me,” Cara said, “because you are a special case, and I am a special woman.”

“How so?”

“I may understand whatever your situation is better than someone else might. I also may have an inside look at what your life has been like up until this moment, given where you come from, and where I came from. You may not feel as though you can talk openly with someone else about your family and the things in your life as you can with me.”

Catherine frowned.

She was doing that a lot lately.

That was … when she did anything at all.

“Why is that?”

“My husband is a lot like your father,” Cara said. “Involved with things that put us women into situations where outsiders are not as welcome, and our life is not up for discussion. I grew up in a famiglia much like yours with my twin sister and older brother. You may know my brother, actually. I know he occasionally has meetings or dinners with your father and his brothers. Does Tommas Rossi ring any bells?”

Catherine stilled.

Tommas Rossi was the boss of the Chicago Outfit. An Italian-based, criminal organization that was much like the one Catherine’s father controlled in New York.

“And your husband is also like my father?” Catherine asked.

“Gian is, although a bit more French, I would say.”

Catherine nodded to herself.

“Now does it make more sense why I would be the one to come?” Cara asked.

“I suppose.”

“You’ve had a rough couple of months, haven’t you?”

Catherine let out a shaky exhale. “You could say that.”

“You told me they have the house on lockdown, and you can’t leave.”

“I would go to the beach,” Catherine murmured. “If they let me leave, that’s where I would go.”

“Why?”

“Better memories.”

“I see,” Cara said.

“I like the floor because they don’t ask me questions when I’m like this. They don’t hover, or stay too long. They don’t look at me too hard, or wonder what I’m doing now. They see me here. They don’t know what to do, so they leave. I don’t have to talk, or answer questions, or go back over what happened and why I did it. I don’t have to pretend or lie. The walls have to be built up somehow, right? So, I started mine from the ground. Nobody is getting over these walls now.”

Catherine’s chest had progressively gotten tighter and tighter the longer she spoke. She wasn’t used to doing that lately—talking a lot. Her hands balled into such tight fists that her fingernails dug into the skin of her palms, likely leaving behind crescent shaped marks. She found it was harder to breathe all of the sudden, and despite being on her back on the floor, the room almost tilted.