I’d made Benny a promise. Stick with him. Minute by minute.
I was going to keep it.
I didn’t know if it was right.
I did know that day we threw a lot of garbage out there and none of it fazed Ben, not in the slightest.
I also knew that pretty much everybody—from Cindy the nurse, who had no real idea of the history; to Cal, who totally did; to Theresa and Vinnie, who were intimately involved; to old lady Zambino, a not-so-casual observer—didn’t think it was wrong.
It was only me who did.
So I was going to stick with Benny, take this minute by minute and ride it out, God help me.
Which meant, even though I was tired and a bit achy, I was tricked out to extremes in order to go to arguably the most romantic restaurant in Chicago with Benny Bianchi.
I turned to the door, opened it, switched off the light, walked out, and stopped dead.
This was because Ben had his neck bent forward, his side to me, and he was shrugging on the jacket of a black suit. Shrugging it on over a shirt so deep blue it was midnight, that had subtle dark gray, deep burgundy, and navy stripes. His hair was partially tamed, and once he got the jacket settled, the ends brushed the collar.
My stomach dipped and my mouth went dry.
His eyes came to me and he went completely still.
Then those eyes got dark in a way that made my legs start trembling and my clit pulse.
I braced for him to rush me.
He didn’t. We just stood there staring at each other. Benny’s look was carnal. I had a feeling mine was the same.
After this lasted awhile, Ben whispered, “Crazy-beautiful.”
My heart squeezed, and when it did, it felt fucking good.
“Always were,” he went on quietly.
I forced myself to find my voice, but when the words came out, they sounded husky. “You look good too.”
Some of the dark went out of his eyes as sweet settled in and he ordered, “Come here, Frankie.”
For once, I did as I was told and walked to him.
The instant I got close, he pulled me gently into his arms, holding me loosely, and dipped his head to touch his mouth to mine.
When he lifted it, he asked, “You ready to go?”
I nodded.
He grinned, gave me a light squeeze, then let me go. He did the rounds to turn the lights off on the nightstands, then came to me and took my hand. He held it all the way down to the kitchen and only dropped it when he nabbed his cell off the counter and tucked it into the inside pocket of his jacket.
We were at the door when he asked, “You want your purse?”
I looked up at him. “It doesn’t go with my outfit and I didn’t think to grab one when I was at my place.”
“You need me to carry anything for you?”
I went silent and stared up at him, wondering if he was for real.
It was strange and unsettling to compare him to his brother, but even so, the fact remained that Vinnie not only never offered to carry anything for me, there were times he bitched when I asked.
Though, it was more. As my experience with men was limited, my girlfriends had reported the same thing.
“Babe?” he prompted.
Again in unchartered female territory, I cautiously answered, “My lip gloss.”
His eyes dropped to my dress and he asked with more than mild incredulity, “You got it on you?”
I shook my head. “I left it in the bathroom.”
“I’ll get it,” he muttered and moved that way.
“Ben, you wanna know which one to grab?” I called to his back.
He turned and looked at me. “Babe, you think I don’t have that shade committed to memory, you’d be thinkin’ wrong.”
My heart squeezed again.
Ben disappeared.
He returned, got close, and waved the tube of lip gloss at me. “This it?”
He was a miracle man.
“Yep.”
He shoved it in his inside jacket pocket and asked, “Anything else?”
“Nope.”
He grinned, grabbed my hand, and pulled me out the door.
We were in his truck on our way to Giuseppe’s when something occurred to me.
“Do you know where my car is?”
“What?”
I turned to look at him. “I left my car in front of Daniel Hart’s house.”
“Yeah, right. Manny went to get it.”
I stared at him. “What?”
“Man,” Ben stated. “Police gave us your purse at the hospital, told us where your car was and that it was okay to move it. Gave Man your keys, he took it to your pad. It’s parked in the spot with your apartment number on it in the parking garage.”
That was nice.
“Said you need a tune up,” Ben continued. “Sweet ride, babe, 280Z with a T-top. But you gotta take care of it.” He made a turn and finished on a mutter, “I’ll get it in my garage, get under the hood.”
“You don’t have to do that,” I told him, turning to face forward. “Got a guy who specializes. With things crazy because of the new job and the move, I haven’t gotten it to him. I was gonna do that before I went to Indy.”
“I’ll do it,” Benny said.
“He specializes, Ben,” I replied.
“Know my way around a Z, Frankie.”
I shut my mouth because I knew he did. Not because he’d owned one, but because he’d had a girlfriend once who owned one.
This brought me to remember something I forgot that I’d always thought was sweet about Benny, actually about all the Bianchis. When he’d had her, he’d taken care of that car for her. Vinnie had done the same for me. You had a Bianchi man, mechanics and oil change shops were a memory.
I also remembered more.
I remembered that she’d lasted longer than any of the other women Benny was with, over two years. It was when I was with Vinnie so I knew her. Her name was Connie. She was very beautiful and very sweet. The whole family was hoping it would go somewhere, including me.
It didn’t and Vinnie, as Benny told it true, had a big mouth, so I knew why it didn’t.
She was too sweet. A pushover.
“My brother’s a man who needs a challenge, babe,” Vinnie had said. “A woman’s gotta stir his blood in more ways than one. You dig?”
At the time, I didn’t dig. I’d liked Connie and I’d thought Benny was crazy for letting her go.
I knew now Connie would come right there when Benny demanded it. And I knew now that might be okay, for a while. Then it would bore him stupid.
These thoughts made me feel warm and weird at the same time.
I didn’t know if it was right, if it would make me feel less weird or more, or make Benny feel weird at all, but I still asked, “How is Connie?”
“Married to Tommy Lasco. Two kids, another on the way. They moved to Calumet City three years ago,” he stated indifferently.
As he was talking, my eyes got big and I turned to him again. “Tommy Lasco?”
“Yep.”
“Oh my God,” I breathed.
“Yep,” Benny agreed.
Tommy Lasco was a bully in school who turned into an asshole out of it. He was good-looking, not as good-looking as any of the Bianchis, including Manny. Vinnie and Benny were strikingly handsome in a way that caught your attention and did not let go. Manny was hot and had it going on, but he was not quite that.
But being an asshole always made a man less attractive.
I turned my head and told the windshield, “I don’t like that for her.”
“She’s happy.”
Again, I looked at him. “You’re sure?”
I saw his shoulders shrug. “They fit. Makes no sense to me, but he loves her. Treats her like gold. He’s a massive dick to everybody else, no exception, but thinks the world of her, their kids. Somehow, she saw her way past the dick he was to the guy he could be with her, and somehow, he found his way not to be a dick to her.”
At least that was something.
I looked back to the road, murmuring, “How did I not hear of this?”
“They live quiet. She likes it like that. He gives it to her.”
Another shocker about Tommy Lasco. He was the kind of asshole who liked to spread his asshole-ness around, loud and proud.
“That’s nice,” I remarked.
“Yep,” Benny agreed.
I rubbed my lips together, thinking about it, then I went for it. “Does that make you feel weird? You guys were together for a while.”
“Nope,” Benny replied immediately. “Glad she’s happy. She wasn’t for me. I burned her bad and that sucked. Didn’t like doin’ it to her ’cause she was sweet, but she wasn’t for me. Sayin’ that, she found what she needed in the end and nothin’ to feel about that but happy for her that she got what she needed.”
He did burn her bad. She was devastated when Ben broke it off.
But it was coming clear that shit happened, and when it was done, Benny put it behind him. He did that firm and he moved on, leaving it there and not looking back.
And this was something to consider.
Ben made a turn and we were on the street that led to the alley that held Giuseppe’s.
“Gonna drop you at the door, honey,” he said. “May have to park at a distance and don’t want you walkin’ that.”
And more good from Benny.
“Okay,” I said softly. “But I need a refresh of lip gloss.”
He dug into his jacket and handed me the tube. I flipped down the visor and did my swiping as Ben made the turn into the alley. I flipped the visor up, watched as Ben drove down the alley, and I saw it.
Two scrolled, wrought-iron railings coming up from a short stairwell that led to the bowels of the building. A sign dimly lit by two arched lights over it that said only Giuseppe’s. Planters attached to the brick of the building from street level all the way up and over the recessed door to the restaurant, dripping with flowers and greenery, same with two tall, attractive planters on either side of the railings. Deep-seated benches on each side of the door beyond the planters where people could sit and wait for tables or go out and have a smoke and not stand around loitering. The benches were lit with more of the arched lights, two for each bench.
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