âAnything on that Felix fucker yet?â I ask Nolan as our convoy pulls up to its final destination.
âHe seems to have escaped with Ciro during the warehouse fire. Weâve accounted for most of the other men, but those two are still like ghosts. No oneâs seen them around. Not one person out of all my contacts, above and below ground.â
That worries me. Iâve slowly been able to convince myself that Ciro might just be callous enough to forget about Elisa, but the way my princess talks about this Felix bastard makes me think that he is actually like some protective uncle to her. If thatâs true, then thereâs no way heâs just hiding out, trying to save his own skin. Heâll be planning to rescue her, and while Iâm not too worried about him getting past my defences, someone as experienced as him could probably do some serious damage.
âKeep looking,â I mumble, staring out at the ratty storefront outside.
Dad and I didnât get our idea to stuff some of our most valuable security equipment inside a seemingly grimy warehouse out of thin air. The Italians have been employing grubby facades for decades and this meeting spot is no exception. From the outside, it looks like a run-down deli from the 1950âs. Inside, thoughâ¦
We wait in the car while our men do their initial sweep of the premise. When we get the thumbs up, I straighten my tie and head inside.
Just past the worn-down entrance is another door. This one leads to the ballroom. A cavernous space lined with velvet red drapes as tall as skyscrapers. There are no windows. All the lightning comes from the gaudy chandeliers that drip down from the sky-high ceiling above.
Ahead, members of The Family chat around a forty-foot oakwood table. Those not standing do so when our arrival is announced.
âAll hail the new king!â Adriano Sabatino is the first one who dares speak. He lifts a glass and everyone else follows.
âSalute!â
The grandiose gesture immediately rubs me the wrong way. This isnât a celebration. Itâs a reconvening. Iâm here to tell them the direction weâre going in, not get fawned over.
Despite being at the head of the table, Iâm not actually part of The Family. After the whole fiasco with Dad, the Italians decided that some changes were in order. At Ciroâs behest, they codified their racket into writing, and part of that new law included a strict policy of never letting any more non-Italians into the syndicate.
Itâs part of the reason my plan to marry Ciroâs daughter was so deliciously enticing. After the marriage, Iâll be able to sneak my own Italian figurehead into the syndicate. Elisa. Sheâll be my pawn so that I can keep an even tighter grip over the assholes who went along with Ciroâs betrayal and ruined my father.
Right now, Iâm not privy to their inner-most workings. They have their own meetings, but Iâm still boss, king of the underworld. No one has more power than me, and they know it.
To survive, theyâve had to suck up to Dad. And now, they have to suck up to me. Soon though, Iâll have corrupted the purity of their organization, and it will be because Iâve managed to corrupt the daughter of one of their former members.
See what happens when you double-cross my family?
Everyone gets fucked.
They know whatâs happening, but they canât stop it. Iâm sure theyâve already convened and decided that the best route forward is to lie down and take it and hope that I donât fuck them over too badly. Thatâs definitely their best option. My lenience as their ruler depends on how well they comply going forward. We both know that I need their underworld connections to keep things stable, but itâs also no secret that I could wipe them out with a snap of my fingers.
Itâs a fine line, and itâs one Iâm trying especially hard to balance gracefully right now.
âPlease, sit,â I say when the cheers have died down. My family and I move towards the head of the table. There, I sit in the empty throne. Dad stands to my left. Nolan and Shane to my right.
Everybody does as I say. Silence follows as the heads of the Four Families sit in their respective chairs, surrounded by their closest advisors and family.
Nobody speaks until I do.
âThere has been treachery.â
My first words have a very specific purpose. Nolan, Shane and Dad all have their eyes peeled on a particular part of the table. Dad is to gauge the reaction of the Camporese family. Nolan the Gallis. Shane the Sabatinos. Iâm keeping my gaze fixed on Manuel Vignotto and his crew. Out of all of these scumbags, I trust him the least.
Weâre looking for any unusual reactions that might give our traitors away.
But no one from Manuelâs camp budges at my announcement. Similarly, no one from my camp gives me the signal that their target has broken face.
Oh well, it was merely a simple trick that might have sped things up.
âWho here has good news for me?â
After a little hesitation, Leo Camporese rises to his feet. The fat bald Italian man has been Don of the Camporese family for forty years. As little as I truly trust anyone in this room, I at least have some grudging respect for anyone who can survive in this business for that long.
âI think we would all agree that the good news of your ascension is all the excuse any of us needed to gather here for the first time in all these years.â The table mumbles in agreement. My bullshit detector is beeping like crazy. I hardly believe that this is the first time theyâve congregated in years. âBut my men also did come across some information on the preparators of your warehouse fire.â
âAnd?â I ask, not expecting much. We may have put word out that whoever could lead me to the Russians responsible for the fire would be rewarded, but if my men canât find anything, I have a hard time believing that any of these neutered families would have much luck.
âThe Cheryshev Bratva.â
âHa!â The simple-minded fool. My guffaw echoes around the silent cavern as I stand up from my seat. Leo looks taken aback by my bluntness, but I donât care. âIâve already been fed those lies,â I say. âThe Cheryshev Bratva is nothing but a loose conglomerate of petty criminals with hardly enough direction and leadership to steal a car, let alone burn down one of my warehouses.â
â⦠But they confessed under torture,â Leo adds.
âAye, as they did to me when I interrogated them. But we have more than empty words from dead mouths to go on.â I raise my index finger and Shane gets to work distributing the still shots Nolan recovered from the fire. He places them face down in front of each Don. I wait for my brother to return to my side before I give them all the go ahead to look.
Their reactions are all the same. Slow recognition and then disbelief.
âDmitry Gazin.â Vincenzo Galli is closest to me. I can hear the fear in his voice. Twenty years ago, The Family might not have been so terrified of a possible encounter with the Black Delphi, but after we castrated them in response to their betrayals, they became more vulnerable than ever. To defend against this possible threat, theyâll need us just as much as we might need them.
âWhat the hell is he doing here?â Adriano Sabatino stands up, picture in hand. I can see his fingers shaking, but that might be more from his oncoming Parkinsonâs than from fear. Though I wouldnât be surprise if it was a bit of both.
âThatâs what weâre here to find out.â
The room grumbles and I let them vent for a little while before I raise my hand again. None of them weâre expecting this.
Our meeting here was supposed to be tantamount to my first declaration, the signal of a smooth transition of power from Dad to me. Not the start of a potential war.
âNone of you fine folks would so happen to be harboring any of these Black Delphi members, would you?â
âHow dare you!â Adriano shouts, fear overriding any front of decorum. âWe were the ones who stamped the Russians out of New York in the first place. Years before you were even born! We would never work with such beasts.â
âI seem to remember you saying the same thing about us Irish, Adriano,â for the first time, Dad steps in.
We share a look and I let him know that I have it under control. With a nod, he steps back. Still, his interjection is enough to shut Adriano right the hell up. The self-righteous bastard.
âDon Kilpatrick, weâll need your help to fight off Dmitry Gazin and his people. Surely, if theyâve come after you, weâre next.â Leo Camporese gives me exactly what I wanted. Subservience.
âI will give you my help. Just as you will give me yours,â I respond. âYour old friend, Ciro DâIgnoti. I suspect he is playing a part in all this. I also suspect he has had some of your help escaping my surveillance. Give me his audience and I will make sure no harm comes to you.â As if I can truly promise that.
The Black Delphi, as well as Ciro, have escaped my grasp so far. Still, we all know our real power lies in working together, and the only way that any of us are going to work together is if I command it.
âWhat could Ciro possibly have to say that could help us?â Vincenzo sneers.
âMy instincts tell me heâs working with the Black Delphi.â
âBut you donât know?â
I donât respond. The raucous is getting too loud again. Once more, I raise my hand and the room reluctantly settles.
This is when Manuel Vignotto finally decides to speak up. âDon Kilpatrick, if I may?â
He gets a curt nod.
The middle-aged Italian took over the Vignotto family when his aging father died four years ago. Despite not being privy to all the past betrayal in this room, heâs the one I trust the least. Manuelâs relative youth compared to the other Dons means he has a different way of approaching matters. His way doesnât disguise itself as civilized. Much as Iâm accused of being savage, so too is Manuel. He just doesnât dress it up. It makes him quicker than these other fools.
âCiro DâIgnoti is harmless. A neutered dog with no home and no allies. He is not our enemy. If what you say is true, and I believe it is. The Russians are who we should be focusing on. If anything, Ciro could be of help. After all, he was one of the main forces behind The Familyâs eradication efforts of the Bratva threat all those years ago.â
I donât like the way heâs angling this away from Ciro. It makes me even more suspicious of him. Every man here knows the history between me and Ciro. Similarly, they all should know that I have his daughter. The DâIgnoti princess is mine. What I really should be asking right now is why none of them had the guts to bid on her before I came along.
âIt sounds like youâre arguing for mercy on Ciroâs behalf,â I accuse.
Manuel shakes his head. âIâll let him do that for himself.â He raises his index finger in the air and the crew that surrounds him turns. âPlease believe me, Don Kilpatrick, when I tell you I was only waiting for the right moment. There is no disrespect intended.â
My gut tightens and my hands draw into fists. Something is wrong. Manuelâs men stop their march at a back door not far away from the table. With a click, the door opens.
Out of the shadows steps Ciro DâIgnoti.
My first reaction is to reach for my gun. But I donât have it on me. There have never been weapons allowed in these meetings, and as little as I trust these fuckers, I do have a certain amount of honor. Right now, I regret having that honor.
âWhat the fuck is the meaning of this?â Dad booms from behind me, before I can ask the exact same fucking thing. All four of us are in attack position.
Ciro glides forward, surrounded by four of Manuelâs men. The big goons look like theyâd put up a good fight. Iâm ready to give it to them. But it wouldnât be smart. How many others here are in on this? We could be overwhelmed if we jumped in too soon.
âYou bastard, Manuel. Youâd betray us again!?â Instead, I turn my attention towards the Vignotto Don. I can barely even look at Ciro, Iâm so disgusted.
âThere is no betrayal here, Don Kilpatrick. I thought that you might want to see Ciro, so I brought him to you.â
I hardly believe that story. âHe is your prisoner?â
âNo.â
âWhy the fuck not?â
âIt is not my place.â Manuel raises his index finger again and his fleet stops in their tracks. Through the Vignotto shield, I can see Ciro glaring at me. Those beady black eyes burn with rage. Heâs pissed off. I wonder if heâs thinking about what Iâm doing to his daughter. God, I hope so. Still, he stays silent and letâs Manuel do the talking for him.
âCiro came to me the other day, desperate and pleading for my help. He says the Russians took him. They burned down your warehouse to keep you from stopping them. But heâs escaped. And now he wants to tell us what heâs learned from them.â
âBullshit,â I growl, not even bothering to cover up my revulsion.
âWe should let him speak!â Leo Camporese interjects.
âWe need to know what the Russians want,â Adriano Sabatino adds.
âHow else are we going to stop them?â Even Vincenzo Gallis is in on it.
So, itâs a fucking mutiny. Or theyâre just such cowards that theyâd rather accept the word of a proven liar just to give themselves some comfort in the upcoming fight.
Either way, Iâm repulsed.
âEnough!â I command. My voice carries through the cavernous ballroom like thunder and everyone shuts the fuck up. âCiro has been expelled from The Family. His words have no credence. For all you know, heâs working with the Black Delphi to spite you all for getting rid of him. Who here would put it past him?â
Iâm answered with silence.
That is, until the devil himself finally decides to speak for himself. âYou fool.â Ciroâs voice is more hoarse than I remember. With any luck, itâs because heâs been suffering greatly.
âWhy donât you come here and say that,â I growl. There is little more in the world I want right now than to snap him in half. I donât buy his sob story for a second. But if I donât convince The Family to think the same way, then that could mean serious trouble for me.
âIâll stay right here, thank you very much,â Ciro glares. He coughs the cough of a man whoâs been through hell and back. You canât fake a cough like that, but you sure can misattribute it. Heâs worried about his daughter. Thatâs all. Iâm still in control here.
âCoward,â I taunt, my fists clenching into balls of fire.
âNo. Smart. Iâm smart. And you would all be smart to stay away from the Kilpatricks too.â Ciro speaks to the entire table. They all listen. The traitorous fools.
âWhat would you know about who to stay close to?â I lash. âThose at this table have prospered by staying close to me and my family, while those close to you have only ever met their dooms. Youâre cursed, Ciro. Youâre an idiot and a weakling and so incompetent you canât even protect your own daughter.â I make sure to say that last word louder than the rest.
Itâs enough to get a reaction out of the previously demur Ciro. In the blink of an eye, he lunges for me. But Manuelâs men block his way. It takes four of them to hold him back. Ciro may be a cruel idiot, but no oneâs ever accused him of being weak before. No one except for me.
âYou fucking bastard,â Ciro hisses, tangled in the arms of Manuelâs men like a gargoyle in vines. Heâs given up the calm façade he walked in here with. Fury seethes from his bared teeth. âIf you touch her, I swear to godâ¦â
âToo late,â I taunt him, stepping forwards. The way Manuelâs guards are handling Ciro makes me think that maybe Manuel and the other members of The Family arenât actually vying up to betray me. Theyâre just cowards. Scared dogs who allowed themselves to be declawed in exchange for wealth and continued relevance. âYou have nothing. You are nothing. What do I have to fear from you? Your daughter is mine, and I do what I want with what is mine, whether she likes it or not. Lucky for her, she so happens to like it. Love it. Understand?â
Iâm close enough now that the spit from Ciroâs mouth falls at my shoes. âIdiot. Sheâs playing you. Elisa knows how to survive. She will never break for you,â he rasps. âShe will never want you or care for you. I know thatâs what you desire. And I know that you will never get it. She was raised right. She knows that youâre nothing but an animal. You can try all you want. She will never truly be yours.â
Something about that last line makes me go berserk. I lose control. Even Manuelâs men give way as I lunge forward and take Ciro by the collar.
His putrid breath smacks against my face as I rail him into the wall. âLet go of me!â He demands, clawing at my arms. I just push harder. Ciro is almost the same height as me, but physically, heâs no match. The old man has lost most of his strength. I hold him like a rag doll, completely at my mercy.
But heâs the one who taught me not to have any mercy.
âYouâre dead, you motherfucker. Youâre fucking dead. You hear me? I donât care what you have to say. The second I catch you outside of these walls, Iâm putting a bullet through your thick skull.â Really, I should gouge his eyes out right now and set an example in front of The Family. But as the blood rushes back away from my ears, I hear the voices pleading from behind me.
âDon Kilpatrick! At least let him tell us what he has to say about the Russians before you do him in.â
That sentiment seems to get far more traction that I fucking appreciate. But theyâre not entirely wrong. Even if Ciro is lying, there may be clues in his lies.
The last straw is when I feel Dadâs reassuring hand on my shoulder. With one last hard push into the wall, I let Ciro go.
He falls to his knees, gasping for air. Pathetic. To think I was ever scared of such a man.
âTell us your lies, Ciro. Tell us what you learned while you betrayed us all for the Russians.â
âIâm not working with them,â he coughs. Looking up at me, I see the rage in his eyes again. It infuriates me to know that I havenât stomped it out of him yet. I want those eyes to go cold and dead and defeated. I need him to know that I won. That Iâm not that scared little boy he locked away and terrorized all those years ago.
Dad gently pulls me back and I let Ciro scramble to his own feet. Everybody watches as he painfully clears the phlegm from his throat and looks around for allies. I watch him carefully, trying to gauge whether or not he believes he has any in this room.
âIâm not working with those savages,â he reiterates, hopelessly trying to fix his crooked tie. âThe fools took me because they thought I would talk. They thought I had nothing left to live for. They thought I would spill every secret I ever knew and help them bring you downââ
âWhy the hell do they want to bring us down!?â I hear from behind me.
Ciro spits blood onto the red carpet below. âThey could care less about you. They donât give a shit about the Italians. They only want to destroy you so that itâs easier to get to them.â
He points a shaky hand at me and my family.
âThey want the Kilpatricks. They want to burn you all to the ground.â
A cold shiver runs over my skin.
âWhy?â Someone else asks.
Ciro meets my gaze. His eyes are less furious now, but thereâs something else dancing behind them. Something cruel and calculating.
I swear I catch the faintest glimpse of a smirk crawling across his weathered face. âThey say you have something of theirs,â he says. âAnd you wonât give it back.â
Fuck. My spine steels. I try to hide the dread wrapping around my heart. Thatâs exactly what Vladimir said when we interrogated him.
âWhat?â I demand, stepping forward again. This time, Ciro doesnât even flinch. Heâs back in demon form. I doubt he can even feel the bruise I left around his neck. âWhat do we have of theirs?â
âThey didnât say,â Ciro announces, loud and clear so that everyone can hear. âI escaped before I could overhear that.â
âHow the fuck did you escape?â The feeble old man couldnât even fight back.
âI had some help.â
âFrom who?â
âThe only man in my organization who you couldnât buy.â For some reason, I know exactly who heâs talking about. âFelix Difrancesco.â
A bolt of jealousy flashes across my chest. That bastard. Elisaâs hero. Working with the very man who sold her like a cheap trick.
Ciro seems delighted by my reaction. That cruel smirk of his isnât so subtle anymore. He leans in a little closer, so that only I can hear this next part. âMaybe, Iâll give him another rescue mission sometime soon.â
âIf you want to live, youâll hand him over,â I growl, holding myself back. Ciro will get whatâs coming to him.
He pulls away again. âI donât know where he is,â he shrugs.
âThen how the fuck would you give him another mission?â
âHe seems to be able to find me no matter what.â
âThen, Iâll make sure Iâll be there when he finds you.â
Each member of this meeting was allowed to bring four guests. Most brought security, but, as a show of force and power, I chose to only bring my family membersâwell, them and the three-dozen dirty Irish cops that line the surrounding block. With a push of a button, theyâll raid this shithole and take away whoever I tell them to. But Iâm not there yet, and Iâm not about to disrespect my family by ordering any of them to touch Ciro. So, instead, I turn towards Manuelâs men. âTake him,â I command.
Their first reaction is to look back towards their boss. Manuel nods. Ciro doesnât struggle. âWeâll look after him,â the Vignotto Don assures me.
I donât trust him one bit. In fact, during this meeting, what little trust I had left for the entire syndicate has eroded even more than I thought possible. At best, theyâre opportunistic cowards. At worst, theyâre traitors.
Still, thereâs no way Iâm keeping Ciro anywhere near my family. âTake him to Calligastaroâs,â I order. âI have three-dozen cops waiting down the block. Theyâll help escort him there.â
Calligastaroâs is a prison mansion built and owned by the syndicate. When men under our payroll get caught doing a crime in a very public manner, the only way to satiate our crooked cronies in the government is to send them away to do some time. But we donât doom our loyal servants to real prison. Instead, we send them to Calligastaroâs, a converted mansion just outside of the city. We control all of the security there. Guards included.
A decision like this shouldnât be a problem for anyone, except maybe Ciro.
âDid you bring those cops here to protect us from the Russians or to protect you from us?â Manuel Vignotto asks, as his men hold Ciro for me. Suspicion laces his question.
âThey are here for whatever I need them for,â I sneer. I should have made it clear from the moment I saw Ciro that I had cops nearby. Itâs evident from a quick scan around the room that The Familyâs trust in me and my power is already slipping. Thatâs dangerous. Especially at a time like this. I need to maintain control. âNow take him away. This meeting is over.â
And unhappy grumble washes over the table, but Iâm long past caring about the feelings of these grown men.
Followed by my dad and brothers, I escort the Vignotto crew outside and then get into contact with my chief of police around the corner. Everything goes smoothly and soon enough, Iâm watching Ciro being driven away in the back of a police cruiser. Heâs back under my control. But at what cost?
The knot in my gut tightens. I feel chaos on the horizon. If the syndicate doesnât believe the future is with me, then they might try to join those intent on taking me down just to save their own asses.
The mood in that ballroom was palpable. One more wrong move and my entire inherited house of cards could come toppling down. It doesnât even feel like Iâve done anything wrong to cause everything to get so unstable. But I guess Dad said it the best. Sometimes you can do everything right and still get fucked.
That doesnât mean I canât fight back. While we try to figure out how to deal with the Russians, Iâll have to remind The Family whoâs in charge with a show of force.
First up is Ciro. The wedding is only three weeks away, and heâs going to have a front row fucking seat, but first, I think Iâll give him a preview of what Iâm doing to his daughter.
These fuckers will learn what happens when you donât fall in line. The consequences will be merciless.