Kyle looked Marcello directly in the eyes, searching for hesitation, for doubt, for any sign that this was a bluff or a test. He found none. The Donâs gaze was steady, resolved, carrying the weight of a man whoâd killed before and would kill again without losing sleep. This wasnât a threat. This was a statement of fact. Marcello Vescari was going to put a bullet in Kyleâs brain, and nothing Kyle said or did would change that calculation.
Except Kyle was surprisingly calm about it.
Internally, his mind was screaming. Every survival instinct he possessed shrieked at him to run, to beg, to fight, to do somethingâanythingâto avoid the bullet with his name on it. His heart hammered against his ribs hard enough to hurt. Sweat beaded at his temples despite the roomâs controlled temperature. But on the outside? He remained still, expression neutral, meeting Marcelloâs eyes without flinching.
Marcello noticed. His eyebrows raised fractionally, genuine surprise flickering across his features. "Youâre not scared," he said, and it wasnât a question. It was an observation tinged with curiosity. Most men, faced with imminent death at his hands, begged or broke down or tried desperately to bargain. This young man just... sat there.
Kyle shrugged, the gesture casual despite the gun aimed at his chest. "Should I be?"
"Most people are."
"Death is just another form of life," Kyle said quietly, channeling a philosophical calm he didnât actually feel. "It comes for all of us eventually. Rich, poor, powerful, weakâdoesnât matter. The moment weâre born, we start dying. I came here today knowing I might not leave. If this is how it ends..." He paused, letting the silence stretch. "Then this is how it ends."
Marcello studied him for a long moment, gun unwavering. Then, surprisingly, he lowered it slightlyânot putting it away, but no longer aimed directly at Kyleâs heart. "Youâre a strange one."
"Probably," Kyle admitted.
"Tell me something," Marcello said, his tone shifting from executioner to interrogator. "Why did you think lying about Viktor being the mole was a good idea? Did you really believe I kept him by my side because heâs some mindless brute? A useful attack dog with no brain?"
Kyle said nothing, letting the Don continue.
"Viktor has a dual personality," Marcello explained, his voice carrying the patience of a teacher correcting a particularly foolish student. "One is the butcher youâve heard stories aboutâviolent, unstable, terrifying. Useful for intimidation and wet work. The other is one of the most brilliant strategic minds Iâve ever encountered. Analytical, meticulous, ruthless in an entirely different way. Each personality serves a purpose. Each has advantages the other lacks." He tilted his head. "Did you really think I wouldnât have contingencies? That I wouldnât know exactly who was loyal and who wasnât?"
Kyle felt the trap closing tighter. He needed to give Marcello something concrete, something valuable enough to buy more time. Even if it meant throwing someone else under the bus.
"Nakamura," Kyle said.
The name hung in the air like a grenade with the pin pulled.
Marcelloâs expression shiftedâsubtle, but Kyle caught it. Recognition. Anger. "Satoshi Nakamura," the Don said slowly, tasting the name. "Now thatâs a name I havenât heard in a long time. What does he have to do with you?"
"Everything," Kyle said. "My relationship with him is both business and personal." He chose his words carefully, staying vague on the personal detailsâno need to mention the kidnapping plot, the manipulation, the way Nakamura had maneuvered him into this entire nightmare. "The movie production, the entertainment industry connections Viktor showed youâthatâs all Nakamura. He approached me, made it impossible to refuse. Said it was just business."
"But it wasnât," Marcello said, understanding dawning.
"No. It wasnât." Kyle leaned forward slightly, choosing his next words carefully. He knew about Isabeauâs alliance with Cleopatra, but that card was too valuable to play now. That was leverage he needed to keep hidden. "I suspect Nakamura was behind the attempted hit on Cleopatra."
Marcelloâs eyes narrowed. "What makes you think that?"
"Because it makes strategic sense," Kyle said. "Cleopatra has resources, connections, influence in the underworld that rivals even the families. Sheâs untouchable for a reasonâtoo many people owe her, too many alliances protect her. But if someone outside your structure wanted to make a move, someone who operates independently..." He let the implication hang.
"Nakamura," Marcello finished, his strategic mind working through the angles. "He has Yakuza heritage. His father is the Oyabun. That gives him access to resources and manpower outside our territory, outside our oversight."
"Exactly," Kyle said. "He doesnât need permission from the families. Doesnât need to worry about stepping on toes or disrupting alliances. He can move against targets you canât touch without starting a war."
Marcelloâs jaw tightened. The golden gun lowered further, resting against his thigh now rather than pointed at Kyle. "Nakamura knows better than to operate in my territory without consultation. Why would he risk that?"
"Because heâs playing a bigger game," Kyle said carefully, keeping his cards about Isabeau close to his chest. "One that involves all of you. The families, Cleopatra, meâweâre all pieces on his board. And I think..." He hesitated. "I think heâs been moving pieces for longer than any of us realize."
Marcello was quiet for a long moment, his eyes taking on a distant quality, as if he were looking back through years of decisions, connections, coincidences that maybe werenât coincidences at all. Kyle could see the wheels turningâthe Don reassessing old interactions, old agreements, seeing patterns heâd missed before.
"There was an attempt on Cleopatra," Marcello said quietly, more to himself than to Kyle. "Days ago. Professional hit team, well-coordinated. She survived, obviously, but it rattled her enough that she went underground for days. We assumed it was a rival from Europe or someone making a play for her territory." His eyes refocused on Kyle. "Youâre saying it was Nakamura."
"Iâm saying the timing lines up," Kyle replied. "When he suddenly became interested in a partnership that makes no financial sense. When he started asking questions about you, about the families, about operations I shouldnât know anything about."
Marcelloâs expression darkened. "Heâs using you as an asset. A way to gather intelligence and create leverage inside my organization." The gun shifted in his hand, rising slightly. "Which means youâre either his willing accomplice or his useful idiot. Either wayâ"
"Thereâs one more thing," Kyle interrupted, his voice barely above a whisper.
Marcelloâs attention snapped back to him, sharp and focused. Something in Kyleâs tone made him pause.
Kyle leaned forward, close enough that his words wouldnât carry beyond their immediate space. Close enough that even if someone had bugged the room, they wouldnât pick up what he was about to say. His lips moved, forming words silently, mouthing something that only Marcello could see.
Marcelloâs eyes went wide with horror. Not fearâhorror. The gun slipped from his fingers, clattering against the table. His mouth opened but no sound came out. His face drained of color, going pale as bone. His hands gripped the edge of the table so hard his knuckles went white, as if the world had tilted and he needed something solid to anchor himself to reality.
"What..." he finally managed, his voice broken, raw. "What did you just say?"