Lucca 2 (Made Men #10) Read Online Sarah Brianne

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Dark, Mafia, Romance Tags Authors: Series: Made Men Series by Sarah Brianne
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Total pages in book: 53
Estimated words: 49562 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 248(@200wpm)___ 198(@250wpm)___ 165(@300wpm)
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“That’s enough,” Lucca’s sharp voice cut over the chanting. It was the fact that it wasn’t much of a fight and more like a beating that had Lucca pulling Cass off him. “Show’s over.”

Cass fought being pulled off, but once he realized who was pulling him up, he finally got off the kid’s chest and that crazed look in his eyes disappeared.

“He called me a little Luciano bitch, and then he went to steal my candy after he said he wasn’t afraid of me or my father.” He spoke a bit too evenly after just having been in an altercation.

It wasn’t until the boy who had been mauled managed to stand up that Lucca noticed how much bigger he was than ten-year-old Cassius. This kid was around thirteen years old, so he had to have a few years on Cass, at least.

“Well”—Lucca looked at the older kid, who was now holding his bloody, broken nose—“how do you feel now?”

“I-I’m sorry,” he cried through his tears. It was clear the kid had had a change of heart as he ran away in fear.

When he watched the boy trip over his shoes and fall flat on his face, both Lucca and Cass laughed.

“Who taught you to fight like that?” Lucca asked with a smile still on his face.

Cassius picked up the plastic bag that was full of candy as they headed for their spot on the swings. “Dom.”

“Oh.” Lucca stared at the candy that Cassius started to take out of the bag once they sat down. Most of them were the exact same ones Dominic had held in the gas station before the robbery had taken place.

“He got us this candy to share, too.”

“Really?” Lucca should have known all that must’ve been for his siblings. He wiped the smile off his face. “Does he know about me?”

“I talk about you all the time to my brothers and sister, but I’m pretty sure they still think you’re imaginary,” Cassius revealed, opening a bag of gummy worms. “Want one?”

“No, thanks.” He shook his head, craving only one thing. Pulling out the pack of cigarettes, he put his second-to-last stick to his lips before he lit the end with a match.

“How long have you smoked?”

It was the first time Cassius had ever asked about his smoking habits.

“A long time.”

The kid seemed more disinterested in his gummy worms by the second. “Can I have on—”

“No.” Lucca’s firm voice stopped him from asking. Then he wondered what had garnered such a strong reaction out of him, knowing he hadn’t been much older than Cass when he had put his first cigarette to his lips. He should be giving the kid a hit and hoped he died of lung cancer at a young age, but he decided that it was only the fact he only had one cigarette left as to why he didn’t.

“Sorry, jeez.” Cassius’s interest returned to his gummies.

“Has your brother taught you anything else?” Lucca asked, changing the subject back to the reason why he ever crossed those train tracks.

“Yeah, he’s going to teach me to shoot soon. I can’t wait.” Cass popped a worm into his mouth. “It’s not fair I’ve had to wait so long, ’cause Dad taught him how to start shooting when he was five.”

“Five, huh?” Lucca’s brow rose. “So, he must be pretty good, then.”

“Pssht, he’s better than good. He can shoot through the middle of an O in a Coke can from like here to”—he looked around until he pointed at a dirty, old shoe far, far in the distance—“there.”

Lucca laughed. “That’s impossib—”

“No, it ain’t. I’ve seen it with my own eyes,” Cass told him dead serious, and Lucca knew he was telling the truth.

His brows furrowed as he checked his watch.

“You need to go?” Cass asked with a hint of disappointment.

“No, I can stay a bit longer.” Lucca got back to their conversation, no matter how badly he wanted to leave to go see something. “So, why did your dad teach Dom to shoot so young but not you?”

“Well, he always said he wanted an army, so he taught us different things. Dom got to learn how to shoot, and then Angel, he taught how to use a knife, which made Matthias beg to learn the same thing Angel was doing.”

“And you?” Lucca asked.

“Dad wanted me to learn everything off the bat,” Cass said proudly at first. “But Dom somehow talked him out of it.”

I can’t imagine why.

“That’s a shame,” Lucca lied through his teeth, sure Dominic knew the same thing he did—that this city didn’t need two Lucifers running around armed.

“Dom said I needed to focus on one skill at a time, so we’re working on fighting first.”

“Clearly,” Lucca complimented, staring at Cass’s still bloody knuckles.

Cassius ripped a head off a gummy worm with his teeth. “Soon, he’ll teach me how to shoot, though, I’m sure of it.”



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