Bennett Mafia(108)
In a sick way, this was riveting.
After all this work, all this planning, bringing everyone together, waiting all those years, and having it all come to fruition now—Kai could never leave this life. This was who he was, how he thought, how he lived, how he breathed. Or was it? Pulling my gaze away, I felt him watching me, and I winced at the pain in his eyes.
Maybe…
I began to pull away from the wall.
Maybe this wasn’t how he wanted to be, but I heard Jonah’s voice in my head again. If he fell, they all fell. Then I thought about what they’d wanted to do, what they’d wanted Levi to do to get at Kai. I didn’t know what to think, how to determine what Kai might possibly think.
Without a word, Kai raised the gun to Levi, his eyes holding mine.
He pulled the trigger.
CHAPTER FIFTY-EIGHT
After the executions concluded and both rooms had been cleaned, Kai faced the council.
“There will be an opening at Bruce Bello’s company. I would like to insert his daughter as CEO. She can be acting or the real deal. We will use Bello’s trucks and his distribution line for the rest of our businesses, and we can expand farther south at a later time.”
Four members were gone from that council.
Tanner hadn’t sat down. He remained in the back, but his eyes were blazing.
“If he has a board?” Cora asked. “If there’s pushback for some reason?”
“Then we push back.” Kai scanned the rest of the members. “All in favor?”
One man chuckled. “As if we’re going to refuse you anything right now, Kai.”
Kai didn’t smile back. “All in favor?”
Four right hands raised.
“I have another proposition, and it’s one you will not like.” He glanced in my direction, though his eyes didn’t quite meet mine. “There is tighter legislation forming against sex trafficking. I would like the council to pull out completely from that trade.”
Cora’s forehead tightened. “It’s good money, Kai. We’re in the business of making money.”
“It’s stupid money. It won’t be worth the risk in the future.”
“But—” She started to argue again.
“We’ll open more casinos. We’ll have added revenue coming in from the Bello line, and that company will give us a foothold in Milwaukee. We can use that, spread out, gain more traction. The ring in Ohio is too strong. I’ve looked into it. I don’t want to go against them, not right away.”
“Kai—”
“We’ll lose,” he spoke over another protesting member. “We lost four members tonight. That’s four families gone and out of business. We will cover the Bello base, move farther south into the States, but each of you can pick up the revenue left behind by those families.”
“Except the Guaranno family. Besides the gun business, their approved trade was sex trafficking. Who’s going to miss out on that money?”
“Whoever that is can be brought in as a new partner with my next business venture. It’s in the future, but I think it will be competitive. I can only extend that offer as a way to make it up to that other family.”
They seemed to mull it over, and then prepared to vote. This time to get out of the world I had asked Kai to help with, and to make the changes he’d proposed.
The vote would go through.
I stopped listening and could only stare at him.
He’d done that for me. There was no new legislation. Sex trafficking was one of the easiest crimes to commit with good money, and he knew that. He’d lied through his teeth. For me.
It wasn’t long before the council members left, looking relieved to be able to do that, but the feed didn’t end. Tanner remained in the room, and so did Kai. He sat at the head of the table, glaring at his brother.
“How long did you know?”
Kai didn’t waste time. “After I killed our father. He had encrypted notes that I deciphered. I figured it out then.”
“You are a fucking piece of shit.”
Kai didn’t respond.
Tanner rubbed the bridge of his nose. “Randall Cordell Ritzo. That’s his full name. Cord. Did she—was Cord—” He exhaled sharply. “You know what I’m fucking asking.”
“Yes, he was Cord’s father. Mom had a diary. She talked about her affairs in there.”
“Jesus Christ.” He pushed back in his chair, his arms folding over his chest. “How’d you get that?”
“That’s a story for another day, but Tanner…” Kai’s voice dropped, almost comforting. “She was unhappy with our dad.”
“But her first kid? I’m surprised he didn’t kill her immediately.” His tone grew hoarse. “Are you his kid? Me? Brooke?” A bitter laugh. “We know Jonah isn’t, but how many others?”
Kai didn’t respond.
“Kai.” Short and curt.
“Brooke and I look like him, but you have a rounder face, so I don’t know. Is that something you care about?”
Tanner stood slowly. “You ever keep me in the dark again, and I will kill you. I don’t give a shit what that means for the rest of us. You got that? I don’t get left in the dark. Ever.”