De Rossi takes me to an office and shuts the door.
âWho the fuck is Polo?â De Rossi demands as soon as we sit down. âMartina wouldnât say anything until you got here.â
I run my tongue over my teeth.
âHeâs my half-brother.â
De Rossi scowls. âAnd why would he want to betray you? Donât make me interrogate you, Napoletano. I want the full story.
.â
I lean back against the chair and wrap my palms over the arm rests. âIâll tell you everything. I have no reason to hide this part of my history anymore. Polo and I have the same father.â
âThe submarine.â
I give shake of my head. âSal Gallo.â
De Rossiâs eyes widen, and a moment later, heâs out of his seat and whipping out his gun. âYouâre Salâs kid?â
I stare down the barrel. âI am.â
He disengages the safety. âYou have thirty seconds to explain yourself before my bullet meets your skull.â
There used to be a time when having a gun pointed at me would at least raise the hairs on the back of my neck, but that was a long time ago. I crack my neck. âSal raped my mother. Youâre looking at the result.â
De Rossiâs forehead creases. âWhat the fuck.â
âMy mother kept me, and her husbandâthe man you know as my fatherâagreed to not make a fuss and claim me as his own in exchange for a promotion. Thatâs how he became a submarine. That might have been the end of Salâs involvement in my life, but someone up there-â I point my finger to the ceiling, â-decided he wasnât done with me. Sal heard about a hacker working for the Secondigliano Alliance and discovered it was meâhis kid.â
Comprehension slowly crisscrosses over his face. âThatâs why they traded you to the Casalesi.â
I nod. âBlood ties run deep in the . Even though Iâd never met Sal until then, he was my father, so in some way, I belonged to him.â
De Rossi cocks his head. âDo you?â
âIâve spent my entire life thinking about how Iâm going to kill him.â
He huffs out a sardonic breath and lowers the gun. âYou should have done less thinking and more doing. And Polo?â
âAnother bastard. Heâs never met Sal, but heâs built him up in his head. He wants to join the clan and get a taste of the life of a made man. He betrayed me. Heâll die for it.â That cross in my pocket? Iâm going to shove it down Poloâs throat as he dies.
De Rossi takes a seat again and asks, âWhy the fuck didnât you tell me this earlier?â
âYou never wouldâve trusted me if you knew.â
âAnd Iâm supposed to trust you now?â
âI did everything you asked of me.â
âYou allowed your half-brother to assault my sister. She barely got away,â he snaps.
Yeah, I fucked up, but I canât admit it. I need to bluff so that he gives me what I want. âI helped Martina. Your sister was a shell of a person when I picked her up, but I snapped her out of it. She used the skills I taught her to defend herself against Polo. Sheâs a brave woman. It was Polo this time, but it could have been anyone. At least now sheâs not a sitting duck. She needed someone to look out for her, and thatâs exactly what I did. Donât tell me you havenât noticed the difference already.â
His chest rises and falls as he scowls at me, but when he doesnât answer right away, I know my point landed.
âShe does seem better,â he finally admits. âBut Iâm not happy, Napoletano. I want you here until this over. Sal knows youâre on my side now, so thereâs no point in sending you away. This needs to end soon.â
I meet his gaze. âFirst, Iâd like to collect my favor.â
âYou donât waste any time.â
âI want to be the one to kill Sal.â
Thereâs a long, drawn-out silence, and then he laughs, but itâs humorless. âYou either have a fucked-up sense of humor, or youâre not as smart as everyone says you are. If you wanted to challenge me, the smart time to do it wouldâve been when you still had my sister.â
âI donât want to be don. I only want to be the one who ends him.â
De Rossi shakes his head. âYou know thatâs not how it works. I have to be the one who does it for my claim to be uncontested. We donât have time for a protracted struggle for the throne.â
âWe put you, me, and Sal in one room and lock the door. When the door opens, heâs dead, and we tell everyone you killed him. No one will question it.â
He scoffs. âYou make it sound so easy. Youâve got it all figured out, huh? But it seems youâve forgotten that Sal isnât just anyone to me either.â His eyes darken. âHe killed my father. Exiled me from my home. Repeatedly put Mari in danger. Itâs personal for me too, and thereâs no way in hell Iâm going to give up the pleasure of choking that fat throat.â
I realize then that he wonât do it. âI thought you were a man of your word.â
âYou know what youâre asking for is beyond unreasonable. If you wanted to kill him so badly, you should have done it by now. Why didnât you?â
âLike I said, I have no interest in running the clan.â
âYou could have killed him and left the clan behind. Let someone else deal with the consequences.â
âIâm not the kind of man who makes a mess and expects someone to clean it for him. Enough people have already died because of Sal. If Iâd killed him and left behind a power vacuum, a war far bloodier than the one you caused would break out.â
De Rossi scoffs. âWhen did you become such a fucking humanitarian? Donât tell me you give a shit about the men we do business with.â
âI donât. But I give a shit about people like Martinaâinnocent people who were born into this life. I donât want those deaths on my conscience, De Rossi. I waited for an opportunity that would allow me to do this cleanly, and reasonable or not, Iâm getting what I want.â
He looks at me like Iâve lost it. âI already saidââ
I would push him harder on keeping his word, but it wonât be enough. I need to add more to the bargain. âWhatâs your plan? Have you gathered the support you need?â
He considers me with narrowed eyes and then stands up and walks over to a pour us some whiskey. âNot yet.â
âI know now why Moretti and De Rosa backed out of the meetings. Sal told them he had a lead on Martina. This must have happened after Polo got in touch with him.â
âYeah, well, heâs definitely not getting her now. But our progress has slowed, no matter how we try to push it along. Thereâs hesitation.â
I take a glass from him and take a sip. âYou need me, De Rossi. Things arenât going the way you thought they would. Salâs managing to hang onto his support because you havenât been a presence in Casal for many years. Salâs got a lot of flaws, but at least everyone knows what those flaws are. You, on the other hand, are a mystery. No one likes the unknown.â
âThatâs why Iâm negotiating with all of these people in person,â he argues.
âYes, but building a relationship takes time, and youâre running out of it. You canât afford to play the diplomat any longer. This situation calls for a dictator.â
He sits down across from me and scratches his chin, appearing to think it over. âBend the knee or else⦠I didnât want to involve mercenaries in internal clan business, but I donât have enough firepower without them to make do on that kind of threat.â
âYou donât need to threaten their lives, just their money.â
His eyes flash with intrigue. âWhat are you proposing?â
Something I told myself Iâd never do.
I can reveal to him all of the secret stashes Iâve put in place for the families.
If I do this, my reputation is done.
No one will ever trust me again, but⦠Fuck. Itâs worth it. If I was willing to give Mari away for this, whatâs another sacrifice?
âMost of the families keep a large portion of their personal cash and valuables in secured storage facilities I designed. I know where theyâre located, and Iâve built backdoors into the security systems.â
The slackening in De Rossiâs expression tells me he understands the implications of this. âSo you have access to the clanâs riches,â De Rossi mutters.
âNot everything, but a lot of it. Say the word, and I can lock it all down. Thereâll be panic, and it will be enough to turn the tide in your favor.â
He sinks backward into his chair. âAnd all you want in exchange isâ¦â
âTo be the one to kill Sal.â
He swirls his whiskey inside his glass, and then looks up and meets my eyes.
âDeal.â