Shattered Vows: Chapter 34
Shattered Vows: An Arranged Marriage Standalone Romance (Tarnished Empire)
Morina and I went to our own bedrooms quietly that night. I waited to see if sheâd invited me to hers but she didnât.
Rightfully so, too. I was the man that had locked her in a cage and marked her.
Rising before the sun, I got dressed quickly and left to start my day. I needed to fly to Texas and meet with an oil refinery that wanted to push more oil our way. We could handle it for the time being but I was set to propose funding from the government soon.
âYou tell Morina yet?â Cade asked over the phone.
âTell her what?â I asked as I stared out the window on my flight to the meeting. My mind wasnât focused on business. Instead, it was thinking of a girl with hurt blue eyes that handed me a part of her heart the night before. I think, at this point, she had all of mine even if she didnât know it.
âThat youâre looking to partner with the refinery until you get the green light from the government.â
âWhy would I tell her that? She doesnât care about all this. She wants whatâs best for the town and is happy to hand the decision making over to me.â
âIf you told her about the clean energy push, I just thought you would tell her about this too.â
I straightened my cufflinks and brushed off his assessment of the situation. âIâm not starting an argument with her for no reason.â Our relationship was too fragile at this point to do anything of the sort. âThe refineryâs proposal wonât last long. Itâs not something that will even be brought up until sheâs gone and then Iâll be nixing the idea as we move forward with reconstructing the oil terminals.â
âIâm just saying these guys are who Dad partnered with in the past. We need to walk a fine line with everyone and them.â
âAgreed.â My brother knew his shit and he was just looking out. Still, his advice had me coiling up in defense as I got to the meeting.
Quinton sat at the round table along with Ronald and a few others. The head of the refinery, Mr. Crow, shook my, his sweaty in mine. A gold ring on his finger glinted. We all wore them. Irish, Italian, Armenian, Russian, and more. They had different markings but they meant the same thing.
Family. Filth. And money. The families came to this table because the money was at it.
Even the presidentâif he could have called in, he would have.
âIâm wondering if we start this now or wait until Bastian is a permanent shareholder of Tropical Oil.â Mr. Crow chuckled.
Ronald sneered. âThatâs not set in stone. I have it on good authority that thereâs a prenup involved and she doesnât have to sell to you at all.â
âRonald, donât pout.â I cracked my knuckles. âLosing never suited you, but I intend to keep our business thriving even if it isnât the way you want it to be.â
âWeâll see if I donât outbid you with her first.â He hmphed but sat down in one of the plush leather chairs around the large wooden conference table.
John, another shareholder of the refinery, waved us to our seats. âNow, now. This shouldnât take long. Letâs discuss other matters and make sure our alliances are in order. Iâve had a few of my guys mining digital currency and I want to make sure we cover that too.â
A few of them grumbled but it led to a heated debate about who was monopolizing what and if they were scamming the others.
Ruthless sharks sat at this table. We were the heads of our families and we wanted to make sure they had enough food to eat.
One man raised his voice about how the Armanellis mustâve been doing something I wasnât sharing with regard to mining. Weâd pulled in much more than most of them.
I shrugged. âThere isnât a trick to it other than hiring the best of the best. Cade grew up doing this.â
âYou canât be the best and have the best of everything, Bastian,â Mr. Crow said. He sat there in a checkered suit and wire glasses, eyes narrowed at me. He was the one at the table we cared about. He owned the refinery Iâd have to break ties with at some point.
âIâm just here to work with everyone, Mr. Crow. That includes you.â
âAh, so youâve come to agree to more oil at the ports then? I canât have Tropical Oil under performing.â
The room went quiet. Most knew my stance on this business and they knew I didnât want any more to do with it than necessary. âWhat does that do for me?â
He leaned forward and twisted his mustache like there was really something to consider. âWell, I can pay you more.â
âI donât need money, Mr. Crow.â
âOh, now, everyone needs more money.â He scoffed and then straightened his bow tie. âWhat more do you want? The terminals donât mean much to you. Let us have our fun. Go back up north where itâs cold. We know how to handle our gulf.â
âWell, you seeââI leaned back in the leather chair and took them all inââI have a wife there now. She loves the ocean and she loves that company. Iâm invested.â
Around the table, grumbling ensued.
âAre you importing anything else?â I didnât break eye contact. I held his with a grip so strong he wouldnât look away either. If he did, Iâd have my answer.
âIf you want part of importsââ
I cut him off. âI want any illegal imports to stop.â
âTheyâre essential to myââ
I stood. âThey stop or I walk right now.â This was where I wouldnât bend. Every single person in the room knew that.
âFine.â Mr. Crow straightened, jumping at his chance. âYou increase our limits on the terminals receiving the oil, and Iâll stop the imports.â
His hand stuck out over the table. I stared at it. Sometimes a handshake carried a lot of weight. Here, it would carry millions. Iâd have to hold off on clean energy for months and I didnât even have the shares to do that yet.
And yet, the imports had to stop. The last piece of my fatherâs legacy had to be torn apart.
Weâd have a clean family business, one my brother and my mother always wanted.
âDone.â I shook his hand.
Iâd have to tell Morina later. Sheâd understand.