The sun is descending when, two hours later, Rafa returns. I can see right away from the look on his face that he isn’t happy. I watch the guards who stood by the door walk away as he comes toward me.
“Ready?” he asks, and he can’t even muster a fake smile. “We need to head back. I’ll take you to Taormina another time.”
“That’s fine.” I don’t much feel like seeing the town anyway. I gather up my things and force a smile. “Are you okay?”
“Fine,” he says as we turn to go.
We walk out over the beach, not bothering to go into the restaurant and I can see the men who’d just been guarding the entrance flanking another man, a shorter, fatter one, for whom they open the back door of an SUV with windows tinted black.
When the SUV drives away, I find Rafa watching it and when the valet pulls up with our vehicle, Rafa snaps at the man.
I follow him to the passenger side, and he opens the door for me. I climb in and fasten my seatbelt.
Before he gets in, he takes off his jacket and tosses it into the backseat. He then takes the gun out of its holster and puts it somewhere in the side of the door.
“You have a gun,” I say, realizing that’s why he’d put the jacket on.
He looks at me like it’s the most natural thing.
“Why do you have a gun?”
“Don’t be naïve, Gabriela. You know what I am. What Stefan is.”
“But—”
“You also know what your father is.”
“My father isn’t the Sicilian mafia.”
“No,” he says, just glancing at me with a sardonic look before shifting his gaze to the road to merge with traffic. “He’s a saint.”
“I didn’t say he was a saint. I just…he never carries a gun when I’m around.”
“You think.”
It’s not true, what I said. I’ve never seen my dad hold one, not in a way that suggested he intended on using it, but he did pack one in my duffel, didn’t he? And even if I didn’t see it, I know he has fired at least one shot.
“Besides, how am I supposed to protect Stefan’s fiancée without one?” He spits the words.
When his phone rings, he checks the screen. He declines the call and mutters a curse.
“Did something happen?” I ask, not liking this other side of him, this reckless, almost angry side and feeling more than a little uncomfortable.
My mind drifts to Stefan. To how he took care of me the other night. But I give it a shake.
It’s fine. I’m fine. I’m perfectly safe with Rafa.
I watch the turquoise sea as we drive, and he’s right that it is beautiful. Pristine, because somehow, when the rest of Italy was being overrun by tourists, Sicily has managed to remain unspoiled.
Rafa again plays with the radio but he doesn’t sing along this time.
The next time his phone rings, I see who it is before he snatches it up.
Clara.
Rafa gives me a strange look, swiping the screen and answering. Their conversation is short, like she’s annoyed and I already know he’s annoyed. I keep my gaze forward, pretending not to listen or at least pretending not to understand.
They talk for a few more minutes before he tells her he’ll come by next week and to be patient. Everything will work out. And that he misses her too.
I don’t know why I think it’s a strange conversation. I wonder where she is. I thought the three of them were like the Three Musketeers. At least that’s the impression I’d gotten.
When he hangs up, he turns to me. “She’s bored. Stefan shipped her off.”
“Shipped her off? Where to?”
“Syracuse.”
“New York?”
He shakes his head. “Sicily.”
“Why?”
Rafa glances at me, gives me a strange look. “Don’t you know?”
I shake my head.
“You,” he says one corner of his mouth curving upward.
“Me? Why me?”
He opens his mouth to answer when he shifts his gaze to the rear-view mirror and a look of alarm flashes across his face.
“Assholes!” he curses, and I hold on when he hits the gas as two cars pull up, one on either side of our SUV. I don’t recognize the cars or the men from the restaurant. These aren’t SUVs, which is all Stefan seems to have, and these vehicles are not in the best shape. The drivers are also younger, dirtier looking. Like if you ran into one on a dark street, you’d get the hell out of there.
Music plays loudly, spilling through their open windows and penetrating our closed ones.
“Rafa?” I ask, panic in my voice when the driver of the car next to mine meets my eyes and gives me a smirk before hitting the gas hard as he steers his car into ours. Metal screams against metal, and I scream too as my door dents and we drive like this, the two cars sandwiching us as Rafa speeds up too, cursing up a storm.
“Hold on!” he yells, simultaneous to slamming his breaks.
I scream again.
My seatbelt catches me as my head rolls forward, then crashes down against the dashboard as the SUV swerves, cars honking their horns at us and Rafa spitting curses at the two driving off. One of them flips us off as they disappear and, a moment later, Rafa picks up speed again, turning the car back onto the road.
“You all right?” he asks as we resume our drive.
“What was that? Who were they?”
“Just a couple of punks,” he says, but I know they’re not punks and I know he knows it too. “Shit,” he says, shifting his gaze to my forehead where I feel something warm.
I reach up, touch it and my fingers come away bloody. I pull down the visor and look in the mirror at the cut that’s bleeding heavily.
“It’s all right,” he says, eyes shifting from me to the road and back. “It looks worse than it is. Heads bleed a lot.”
I guess he’d know.
“Here,” he says. He reaches over, opens the glove compartment. He pulls out a handful of tissues and hands them to me.
I take them, put them to the cut to stop the bleeding.
“Are you okay?” he asks again.
I turn to him “Who were they, Rafa?”
“Punks. I told you. I’ll keep you safe, don’t worry.”
“We could have been killed.”
“That wasn’t meant to kill us.”
“Then what was it meant to do?”
He looks over at me and just then, his phone rings. I see it’s Stefan.
His forehead furrows, the worried expression making him look older. He declines the call, rubbing the back of his neck with one hand.
When I open my mouth to ask a question, he turns up the radio and I shut up, shifting my gaze out the window, trying to calm my heartbeat as I keep pressure on the cut to stop the bleeding.
I spend the rest of the ride watching the sun set, then the sky darken. He takes a different road home and it takes us longer to get back. We finally pull through the gates of Stefan’s house two long, silent hours later. Well, silent except for when Rafa was making angry phone calls.
I never thought I’d be glad to be back here, and I can feel the panic quelled just beneath the surface. I need to process what just happened because the longer I sit here, the more I know those guys weren’t just punks. They meant business. And they did target us.
When we pull up to the front doors, Rafa kills the engine, but when I reach to open my door, he captures my arm.
His grip is surprisingly hard. He must realize it when I meet his gaze because he softens his hold.
“Gabriela,” he says, looking like he did that first morning when he’d taken me jogging.
I don’t say anything but wait for him to continue.
“I need you to do something for me. Or, more precisely, not do something.”
“What?”
“I need you to not mention what happened to Stefan.”
I study him, wonder about his motives, wonder how I can not mention this to Stefan.
“Actually,” he laughs almost nervously. “It may be better not to tell him I took you at all.”
“You want me to lie to him?”
“Just don’t talk about it. You won’t have to lie.”
“Why?”
“Because he’ll be pissed I took you without protection. And he’d be right.” He gestures to my forehead.
I touch it, feel how some tissue has stuck to the dried blood.
“And he probably won’t let you out of his sight. Or at least not with me.”
“He’ll want to know how I got this.”
“You tripped. Walked into a wall maybe.” He touches it gently. “It’s not too bad. Once you clean it, it’ll barely be noticeable.”
“He doesn’t miss anything, Rafa. Don’t you know that about him?”
“Listen, it’s up to you. I’m just asking for both our sakes.”
Is he afraid of Stefan? Do I care? I know I don’t want to be a prisoner here. And I could use an ally even if that ally is Rafa. My options are limited.
“I won’t say anything.”
He smiles, seeming relaxed again. “Thank you. I’ll see you later.”
“See you,” I say, and climb out of the car to head inside.