Page 12 of Vicious Behaviors

Page List

Font Size:

But I’ve made up my mind. Whatever job DeLuca is offering, it’s as good as mine.

I glance at the rearview mirror and start pumping myself out and mutter, “Okay, Izzie, let’s get our stories straight. You’re a Southie native who just moved back from overseas, looking for work. Play on your military experience as your qualifications to get the job. Remember, you also need to have flexible hours since you can’t exactly tail Marcello if you’re working full time in the gym. Say that you’re taking your master’s degree in psychology during the day and prefer to make up your own schedule.”

Not exactly the truth, but close enough to pass.

If I play this right and land the job, I’ll need Haynes to pull some strings and get me into a January-start program at UChicago, DePaul, Loyola, or Adler. Any of those schools should have a solid online program, with maybe just a few mandatory in-person classes required.

I’ve always wanted to go back for my master’s, and if doing it gives me the perfect cover to get close to Marcello, getting the degree will just be the cherry on top when I finally take him down.

I check the fake résumé on my phone one last time. It’s stitched together with just enough credibility to hold up, but not enough to draw attention. Then I take a breath, shove my nerves down, and get out of the car.

The instant I step inside and head up the flight of stairs, the gym’s atmosphere hits me like a punch, thick with the smell of metal and men. The pungent scent of sweat-soaked gloves and towels, chalk, testosterone, and old ghosts takes a moment to acclimate to.

DeLuca’s Gym isn’t just a place to train. It’s a monument to legacy. The kind that hasn’t changed much since the eighties. Every photo on the wall bleeds with history. Outfit history. Tough men. Broken men. Dead men.

A couple of guys are sparring in the ring while others limit their time to punching bags that swing on their chains like lazy pendulums. The clang of weights echoes off the concrete like a heartbeat, though you might miss the sound due to the heavy metal blaring through the gym’s speakers.

A shaved-head brute manning the counter looks up, towel slung over his shoulder, eyeing me as if I were a question he can’t quite grasp the answer to. He’s all muscle and no neck. The kind of guy who looks like he was built by protein powder and bad decisions. His thick neck struggles to balance a head that’salmost too comically small, and his biceps look as if they have their own zip codes. He’s the perfect cliché of a gym rat, and right now, the last hurdle I must clear to get to DeLuca.

“Um… Miss? You lost or somethin’?” he finally asks once he’s managed to string a sentence together.

“Not at all. I’d like to see the owner of this fine establishment, please. Is he here?” I ask, tugging off my winter gloves and parka. The place is a damn furnace—eighty degrees, maybe more. I’m sweating already, and all I’ve done is walk through the door.

“You mean ol’ man Carmine?” he asks, surprised.

“If that’s his name, then that’s exactly who I’m here to see,” I retort, feigning ignorance, since I’m not supposed to know anything about DeLuca beyond his last name displayed on the neon sign outside.

The desk clerk continues to glare at me, his forehead creasing as if he were sure I’ve lost all my marbles just by stepping inside this gym.

Part of me gets where he’s coming from. After a quick perusal of the place, it’s safe to say that I’m the only woman here. No wonder he thinks I’m in the wrong place. I would, too, if I were in his shoes.

“So is he in? Can I see him?” I insist. Otherwise, we’ll be here all day.

“Yeah… okay,” he mutters, clearly not sold on the idea of bringing me to his boss. However, he turns and leads me toward the back of the gym anyway, past punching bags and weight benches, down a hallway that smells like sweat and old tape. At the end of it, he knocks once on a closed door, then pushes it open without waiting for a reply, and asks, “Boss? You busy?”

From behind the desk, a voice grumbles, “What is it, Rico?” He doesn’t even look up, too focused on the paperwork spread out in front of him.

“It’s… uh… this lady… um… says she’s here to see you.”

DeLuca’s office is bigger than I expected, but strictly no-frills. A steel desk dominates the center, while filing cabinets crowd the corners. The walls are lined with yellowed fight posters and a few old medals that look like they haven’t been touched since the Reagan administration.

When DeLuca finally glances up, we both take stock of the other. However, it seems like I’m more impressed by him than he is by me. Forearms like tree trunks, DeLuca has his shirt sleeves rolled to the elbows to showcase his muscled form. For a man who is at least a couple of years into his seventies, he still has a full head of hair, all silver and slicked back tight, and the frame of a man who not only owns a gym but also uses it on the daily.

When his eyes land on my face and pause for a brief moment, I first see suspicion flit across his face and then curiosity.

“Good afternoon, Mr. DeLuca. I promise I won’t take up much of your time,” I greet, stepping into the room and extending my hand for him to shake. “My name is Isobel Graham, but please feel free to call me Izzie. Everyone does.”

“Carmine DeLuca,” he retorts, giving my hand a quick shake. “And how may I help you today, Miss Graham?”

“Izzie. Please.” I give him my best winning smile. “I saw the sign out front and figured I’d come inside to enquire more about the job.”

His brow lifts in surprise, and for a second, I think he might laugh me out of his office. Thankfully, he’s smart enough not to.

“I’m short a trainer,” he explains, voice rough like sandpaper. “Last guy quit on me without a word. Took his gear and vanished. I don’t get young people today. They just up and quit without being decent enough to say it to a man’s face,” hegrumbles, obviously still ticked at his last trainer for leaving in such a lurch.

This sounds promising.

“Then maybe the timing’s perfect. He doesn’t want a job, and I need one.”