Dante had told me once that one person didn’t have to be only one thing.
And I was learning the hard way that I was no saint.
Only Dante’s words about being too much of one thing still resonated in my head.
I was done being boring, done trying to fit into this box I’d let society make for me.
With Dante, in Italy of all places, at the house of the capo I’d rued in my childhood, I found myself.
And I was starting to like her.
“Grip it higher.” Dante’s voice was like smoke, dark and sinuous as he stood behind me and studied my stance. “It will give you better leverage.”
I adjusted my right-handed grasp on the butt of the gun and let my left hand find the grooves in the hand already wrapped around the tang, so they felt locked into place on the weapon.
“Molto bene, lottatrice mia,” Dante practically purred. “You look like a warrior goddess like this. Maybe you should lose the clothes, hmm?”
“Dante,” I said on a laugh. “Don’t distract me. I want to hit them all this time.”
“I’ll make you a wager,” he offered in that same sexy tone, definitely trying to distract me. “If you hit all six wine bottles, you can do whatever you want with me.” He chuckled when I shivered lightly. “And if you don’t…I get to do the same to you.”
“Deal,” I agreed instantly, my pulse already moving down between my legs.
“You two are sick,” Frankie deadpanned, but I knew without looking at him that he was joking, so I didn’t take it personally the way I might have before.
“I’ve overheard you FaceTiming with your wife, Frankie,” I pointed out with an arched brow. “Pot meet kettle.”
The men laughed, the sound of it calming me even further. Their friendship was what preoccupied me and kept me from thinking about Dante’s upcoming wedding to Mirabella or the war raging without us in New York.
I took a deep breath, my hands sweating lightly on the gun because of the high noon sun. Fifteen yards away, Dante and Frankie had set up makeshift targets, a collection of old olive oil, Limoncello, and wine bottles they’d pilfered from Tore’s stores. They were staggered across a crumbling stone wall that had once been a sheep enclosure.
There was a light breeze, but nothing to worry about as I focused on the targets. I ran through the instructions Dante had given me the past four days of practice and calmly squeezed the trigger.
There was a loud snapping noise as the bullet discharged and then the crashing tinkle as it impacted with the olive oil bottle on the far right, glass shattering everywhere.
Faintly, I heard Frankie let out a little whoop.
But I had my eye on the prize.
Snap, crack, tinkle.
I fired the gun, cocked to reload, and fired again.
Again.
Again.
I only had one bottle left, a squat Limoncello bottle on the far left.
Behind me, the air shifted, and the heat of Dante’s body fired the air between us.
“In boca al lupo,” he whispered.
Good luck.
Or more aptly,in the mouth of the wolf.
Only Dante was the wolf who wanted me in his mouth if I failed, and I refused to have that happen.