Salvatore's POV
I didn't look back.
But I felt her gaze burning into my shoulder blades as I walked away from that hallway.
I walked into a door frame.
The lie had been delivered perfectly.
The slight quaver in her voice, the embarrassed hand brushing her cheek, almost believable.
If I were a different man, I might have accepted it.
But I wasn't a different man.
I was the son of Antonio Esposito.
The man who'd been ordering hits since he was fifteen years old. Who'd sat in back rooms while men screamed. Who knew exactly what sound a fist made when it connected with bone.
I knew violence.
And that mark on her face wasn't the shape of a doorframe.
It was knuckles. A right-handed strike thrown with mass behind it. T
he angle wrong for an accident. The placement too precise for clumsiness.
Massimo.
.
Roberto was waiting with the car. He saw my expression and opened the door without a word.
"Cefalù," I said.
