Kyle sat alone in the vast conference room with Marcello Vescari, the silence between them heavy as lead. The other family heads had departed, their footsteps echoing down distant hallways until even those sounds faded to nothing. No guards stood at the doors. No witnesses remained. Just the two of them, separated by polished wood and years of carefully constructed lies.
Marcelloâs question hung in the air, deceptively simple: "Tell me, Kyle. How much do you know about my daughter?"
Kyle felt his strategy crumbling before it had even begun. Heâd walked in here prepared to defend himself against accusations of being Nakamuraâs plant, ready to spin lies about Viktor and frame jobs and business partnerships gone wrong. But this? This was something else entirely.
Heâd caught onto somethingâsomething important enough for Marcello to clear a room full of the most powerful crime lords in the country. That alone told Kyle volumes. Whatever secret the Don was protecting, it was worth more than appearances, more than maintaining the united front of the families, more than anything Viktorâs evidence had threatened to expose.
Kyle needed to play this carefully. Too aggressive and Marcello would see him as a threat to eliminate. Too passive and heâd look like easy prey. He needed to walk the razorâs edge between valuable and vulnerable.
"Your secret is safe with me," Kyle said quietly, meeting Marcelloâs eyes with steady composure. He kept his voice neutral, reassuring without being obsequious. "Whatever youâre protecting, I have no interest in exposing it."
He deliberately didnât elaborate. Didnât specify what secret he meant, didnât reveal how much he actually knew versus how much he was guessing. Let Marcelloâs own paranoia fill in the gaps. Let him wonder whether Kyle knew everything or nothing.
Marcelloâs expression remained unreadable for a long moment. Then, without warning, his hand movedâsmooth, practiced, faster than Kyle expectedâand suddenly there was a gun pointing directly at Kyleâs forehead.
A golden gun. Ornate, beautiful, custom-made. The kind of weapon that cost more than most peopleâs cars and had probably ended more lives than Kyle could count. It dangled in his face, the barrel absolutely steady despite Marcelloâs age, despite the weight of what he was about to do.
Kyle didnât panic.
His heart rate spikedâhe wasnât superhumanâbut his face remained calm. Because if Marcello wanted him dead, he wouldnât have cleared the room first. Wouldnât have sent away the family heads, the witnesses, the people who could corroborate whatever story he told afterward. No, Marcello had cleared the room because he needed privacy. Because whatever happened next had to stay between them.
Kyle had leverage. For the first time since walking into this nightmare, he had actual, genuine leverage over the most important person in the building.
"If you kill me," Kyle said slowly, his voice remarkably steady for someone staring down a gun barrel, "youâll never know what I know. Youâll spend the rest of your life wondering who else knows your secret, who else might expose it, whether the threat dies with me or if itâs already out there waiting to destroy everything youâve built."
Marcelloâs jaw tightened. For the second time that day, Kyle watched the Donâs perfect composure crackâjust for an instant, just enough to show the man beneath the mask. Frustration, anger, fear, all flashing across his features in a microsecond before the mask slammed back into place.
He kissed his teethâa gesture of profound irritationâand slowly lowered the gun.
Kyle had him. The realization sent a thrill of adrenaline through his system. Heâd walked into this meeting as prey and somehow, impossibly, heâd become the one holding cards.
But he needed to be smart. Needed to take this gamble carefully. Because there was one thing that didnât make sense: if that girl was really Marcelloâs daughter, what was she doing here? She was supposed to be in England. Nakamura had been very specific about that. Which meant...
Kyle took a breath and made his play.
"I know sheâs not your daughter," he said quietly.
Marcello went very still. Not the stillness of surprise, but the stillness of a predator deciding whether to strike. His eyes bored into Kyleâs, searching for the lie, the bluff, the angle.
"How?" Marcello asked, his voice low and dangerous. Not a denial. Not even an attempt at one. Just that single word, loaded with lethal curiosity.
Kyle was surprised Marcello didnât even try to deny it. But then, why would he? The Don had already drawn his gun, already made clear what happened next. What did it matter if Kyle knew the truth? Dead men told no tales.
Marcelloâs shoulders sagged slightlyâthe first real sign of weariness Kyle had seen from him. He set the golden gun on the table between them but didnât push it away, keeping it within easy reach. When he spoke again, his voice carried a weight of grief, years of burden finally given voice.
"My daughter died seventeen years ago," Marcello said quietly. "During the attack that killed my father. She was four years old. Had her whole life ahead of her." He paused, staring at something only he could see. "That girl you saw... sheâs an actress. Looks enough like what Angelica might have grown into. Acts the part well enough. Itâs..." He struggled for words. "Itâs my way of holding onto her. Of pretending, even for a moment, that I didnât lose everything that day."
The confession hung in the air between them. Kyle could see the relief in Marcelloâs eyesâthe unburdening of a secret carried for too long, shared with someone who would take it to the grave. Because that was the price of knowing.
Marcello picked up the gun again, weighing it in his hand.
"Iâm sorry, Kyle," he said, and there was genuine regret in his voice. "Iâm sorry you figured it out. Iâm sorry youâre clever enough to be dangerous. But most of all, Iâm sorry for what comes next."
Kyleâs mouth went dry. "Why?"
Marcello stood, the gun rising with him, pointed once more at Kyleâs chest. At this range, he wouldnât miss. Couldnât miss.
"Because now I have to kill you."