Roman (Men of the Falls #2) Read Online Melanie Moreland

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Billionaire, Contemporary, Dark, Mafia, Suspense, Virgin Tags Authors: Series: Men of the Falls Series by Melanie Moreland
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Total pages in book: 96
Estimated words: 93203 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 466(@200wpm)___ 373(@250wpm)___ 311(@300wpm)
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“Boss, that woman is on the phone for you. She says if she doesn’t talk to you, you’ll kill her and it’ll be on my head. She’s called five times.”

I didn’t have to ask who. No doubt, Marianne was calling to beg. Nonna picked up the bag and carried it into the kitchen.

“Patch her through.” I waited until I heard the line click. “Ms. Warner.”

“Finally,” she snapped. “I’ll have your money—all of it—tonight by nine. I’ll bring it to your office.”

I was surprised at her words, and I wondered who she had hoodwinked this time.

“Your sister came through?” I questioned.

“In a manner of speaking. She gave me an idea.”

I furrowed my brow. “I will text you a number. You call it when you’re at the casino. Someone will come out and get the money. You wait while we count it.”

“I’m not going to stiff you. I have a plane to catch. I’m leaving this country. I got a chance at a new start.”

I pitied the man she’d talked into helping her. His life was about to become a nightmare.

“You have until nine. Be grateful I’m being lenient.”

I hung up.

At nine fifteen, Franco came into my office. “Counted, boss. It’s all there. I put it in the vault in your office downstairs. I cleared her marker.”

“Not counterfeit?” I asked.

“No.”

“Was anyone with her?”

“Some goon. I didn’t recognize him.”

“Did we get the exchange on surveillance?”

He looked at me like I was crazy. “Of course.”

“Get it for me.”

I sat at my desk, waiting for the feed. I watched it closely. Marianne got out of a nondescript car, waiting beside it. A man came from the passenger side, holding an overnight bag. I zoomed in, studying his face. I didn’t recognize him at all. His expression was dour, he was dressed in black, and he didn’t look any happier about being with Marianne than she was with him. He hardly looked like a new lover, but maybe he had simply sent her protection. I zoomed out and watched the rest of the exchange.

Franco came on to the screen, and he took the bag and Marianne’s arm. She appeared to argue with him, but her escort said something and she walked with Franco, who handed the bag to another one of my staff. Ten minutes later, he answered his phone and said something to Marianne. She tossed her hair and threw her hands up in the air, talking and gesturing. I doubted anything she had to say was complimentary. She looked at the camera and flipped the bird with both hands, then marched to the car and got in, slamming the door. They drove off.

I sat back, rubbing my chin. Something felt off. Where did she get the money? Who bankrolled her?

Then I shook my head. It didn’t matter. She’d paid her debt, she’d been banned from my casinos, and I’d had my security head send her photo and information to other owners I knew. She was going to have to find a new way to feed her addiction.

I reached into my pocket, my fingers encountering the small, plastic-wrapped item. I pulled out the cookie, looking at it. Before I’d left, I helped Nonna wrap her bagels. She liked them cut in half and would freeze them so she could toast them whenever she wanted to. She loved the dense bread for breakfast. We finished, and she reached into the bag, holding up the cookie.

“What is this?” She frowned. “It seems strange to put a cookie in a bag of bagels.”

I took the cookie from her hand. “Must have been a mistake.”

I distracted her and slipped the cookie into my pocket. I was certain a pretty violet-eyed woman had purposely put it in there.

And the thought of her doing so brought a smile to my mouth that didn’t belong there.

I returned to my desk, clicking on a program, and checked the location of the tracker I had in the card I gave Effie Warner. It blinked, slow and steady, at the location where her diner and home was located. She was there. Safe.

Then suddenly, it stopped. Vanished. I refreshed the program and got nothing. I picked up the phone. “Bring me that bag. Now.”

Franco arrived a few moments later, handing me the bag. I snatched it from his hands, opening the zipper. I grabbed a stack of the cash, pulling a hundred from it. I held it under the light, examining it. There was nothing. I breathed out a sigh of relief, then tried another. My heart dropped when I saw it. The tiny mark in the bottom right corner. I looked at another. Pulled stacks from the bag, checking them. Most of them were marked. It was a mark I recognized. Loathed beyond anything else.

“Get my car. Now!” I roared.

Moments later, we were driving toward the Bagels and Bites shop. It was dark, but I headed up the stairs I had noticed the other day at the side of the building. The door at the top was ajar, and I pushed it open, stepping inside, my worries confirmed. The place was a mess, indicating a struggle had happened.


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