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Chapter Twenty-Nine

Garnet County

May 2012

Getting off the blow had mellowed Chuito a lot.

He’d been short-tempered and wired when he was in Miami. Always looking for the next fight. The next car to steal. The next dangerous thing to help him forget that his sins left his brother and aunt in early graves and his cousin with a criminal record.

Then he spent three years in his Garnet prison, and his life was basically training, eating, working out, and spending time with Alaine. That was the extent of his existence. Sometimes he’d show up in Vegas or some other big city, win a fight, party for a few days, and then he went back to his Garnet prison.

He’d done three publicity tours.

Those were all right. He liked seeing different places. He liked talking to the fans, especially other Latinos.

But for the most part life had gone from high-speed to crazy slow.

Being friends with Tino taught Chuito that drugs really did affect people differently and getting clean did too, because there was nothing chill about Tino Moretti.

He was full throttle from morning to night after it took him exactly one week to crash from a powerful blow addiction. He slept through the whole fucking thing. His depression was minimal, and nothing about him seemed altered or worse for the wear when he simply upped his caffeine consumption and started to train to be a fighter as effortlessly as he did everything else.

As much as Chuito loved being Boricua, he decided if he could have chosen, he would’ve been born Italian.

If one was inclined to be a gangster, Italian was definitely the way to go. They had generations to hone that shit. They picked their women to make better mafiosi offspring. They actually bred to be as pure and hard-core as possible. Chuito knew that Tino’s mother had been his father’s mistress rather than his wife, but he also knew she’d been a pure Sicilian, Italian-speaking daughter of immigrants from the Old Country, and his father knocked her up not once, but twice. It was almost as if he had planned on making an heir and a spare in Nova and Tino.

That was highly fucked-up.

Especially knowing how well he’d succeeded at it.

Though Chuito did have to wonder if Tino was this amped up naturally, what he’d been like on blow—probably scary as fuck—not that anyone here would notice.

Everyone liked Tino. He was a fun, easy guy to be around and was one of those people who could say whatever the hell he wanted and people thought it was part of his charm. Women flocked to him like they did to Marcos, as if they were completely oblivious to the undercurrent of danger that surrounded them.

Even Romeo seemed to largely dismiss anything hard about Tino, and he was his brother. Though Chuito had noticed Romeo was also a sort of father figure, which was the reason Tino had been willing to tell off Nova when he was crashing, but answered the phone in a fucking heartbeat if Romeo was calling.

It was the strangest shit Chuito had ever seen in his life.

No one saw the gangster in Tino.

No one.

Not even Jules, and she saw everything.

Chuito was alone in knowing one of the scariest motherfuckers out of New York had landed in Garnet.

“The fucking Russians, man,” Tino was ranting as he bench-pressed after hours at the Cellar because he was a night owl too. He looked up at Chuito, who was spotting him. “I know that’s why Nova is tense every time I talk to him. Before I left, he was up to his ass in comrades. I don’t know why the old man keeps getting in bed with them over and over again. Their rules are jacked.”

“Are you supposed to be telling me your shit?” Chuito asked him. “Nova said—”

“Nova hates the Russian mafia more than I do,” Tino went on as if he hadn’t heard Chuito. “Did you know they aren’t supposed to get married? What I can’t figure out is if they aren’t getting married, where the fuck do they keep coming from?”

“They don’t have kids?” Chuito asked in surprise.

Most of the gangsters he knew had kids, and the Italians were worse than Latinos. Never underestimate a predominantly Catholic group of people’s abilities to reproduce more of the same.

“Half those fuckers are ex-KGB. Nothing scares them,” Tino assured him. “That’s why they don’t let them have kids. They make sure their associates got nothing to lose, but you would think the basic law of survival would make them bend to intimidation tactics. It doesn’t. We had this comrade in deep with the old man. A quarter of a million in arms that he didn’t deliver on. Madonn’, I tried everything, and I’mverygood at my job. Ended up having to sink him. He didn’t even cry on the way down. Now here we are, back in bed with more Russians. Oobatz.”

“Tino,” Chuito warned. “This sounds very internal.”