"Your daughter is alive," Kyle said aloud this ti, his voice steady and clear. "Not the double you have walking around this mansion. Your actual daughter. Angelica."
The words hung in the air between them like a live wire.
Marcello stared at him, his expression frozen for a mont before sothing shifted. His eyebrow raised, skepticism flooding his features. Then he chuckled—a low, disbelieving sound that started in his chest and rumbled out into the quiet room.
"My daughter," Marcello repeated, shaking his head slowly. For a second—just a second—Kyle had seen belief flicker in his eyes. Hope, raw and desperate, had cracked through the Don’s armor. But then reality reasserted itself, and Marcello’s face hardened.
"No. There’s no way. If Angelica were alive, I would have known. I would have felt it. I would have found her."
He set the golden gun on the table between them, his movents deliberate, controlled.
"You’re desperate, Kyle. I understand that. You’re trying to buy yourself ti, to give a reason not to pull this trigger. It’s clever, I’ll give you that. But my daughter died seventeen years ago. I saw the photographs. I buried an empty casket. I mourned—" His voice cracked, just barely. "I mourned her for years."
Kyle remained perfectly calm. He didn’t flinch, didn’t rush to defend himself, didn’t scramble to provide proof he didn’t have on hand. He simply sat there, eting Marcello’s eyes with an unwavering gaze that spoke louder than any protestation could.
"If you don’t believe ," Kyle said quietly, "then put a bullet through my head right now."
The challenge landed like a physical blow.
Marcello’s hand twitched toward the gun, fingers hovering over the ornate tal. His jaw clenched. Kyle watched him wrestle with the decision. This wasn’t a bluff—they both knew it. Kyle wouldn’t gamble everything, wouldn’t stake his entire life on a lie this enormous, this specific if it weren’t true.
There was no way this could be a bluff. And Marcello knew it.
But that knowledge ca with a terrible price: this man sitting across from him, this young unknown man who’d walked into his world barely knowing the rules, couldn’t be trusted. Because if he knew about Angelica—if he’d kept that information close while family heads deliberated his fate, while guns were pointed at his chest, while his execution seed inevitable—then he was more dangerous than anyone had given him credit for.
"I had no interest in telling the other families," Kyle said, breaking the silence. "Which is why I kept it a secret even when my life was on the line. Even when Viktor was building his case against . Even when every instinct scread at to play that card to save myself." He leaned forward slightly. "Because this isn’t about them. This is between you and ."
Marcello said nothing, waiting.
"We have different ideals," Kyle continued. "Different thods, different worlds we operate in. But ultimately, we could be beneficial to each other. I’m not just another pawn in your organization. I’m not so random associate you can order around or dispose of when convenient."
Kyle stood, the movent slow and deliberate. Not aggressive, but assertive. He straightened his jacket—the expensive suit Isabeau had provided—and t Marcello’s eyes from his new vantage point.
"Starting today, I’m no longer under you," he said, his voice carrying quiet authority. "We’re equals who can benefit each other mutually. Partners, if you want to call it that. But not master and servant."
The audacity of it would have been laughable if Kyle hadn’t just revealed he knew Marcello’s deepest secret.
"My association with Nakamura is strictly business," Kyle added. "I won’t pretend otherwise. But I’m also aware of his problematic connections to the Yakuza, his father’s legacy, the shadows he operates in. That’s information I’m willing to share. Context I can provide. Because unlike him, I have no interest in playing gas with you."
Marcello remained seated, his expression unreadable. But Kyle could see the wheels turning, the recalibration happening in real ti. This young man held far more value than initially assud. Not just as a potential threat to be eliminated, but as an asset. A source of information. Possibly—improbably—an ally.
"Is there any way," Marcello asked finally, his voice rough with barely contained emotion, "for to confirm she’s alive? My daughter. Not photographs that could be faked, not stories that could be lies. Proof."
Kyle looked at him, seeing the desperate father beneath the ruthless Don.
"There is," he said carefully. "But first, I need sothing from you."
Marcello’s eyes narrowed. "You’re bargaining with my daughter’s life?"
"I’m establishing terms," Kyle corrected. "The first is simple: disperse the family heads. Send them back to their territories, their countries. This gathering has drawn too much attention. The longer they stay, the more questions get asked, the more eyes turn toward things that should remain hidden."
Marcello’s face darkened. He stood slowly, his full height and presence filling the space between them. When he spoke, his voice carried the weight of decades of absolute authority.
"Who the hell do you think you are?"
Kyle held his ground. He had no idea what this man was truly capable of—the violence he’d ordered, the bodies he’d buried, the empires he’d crushed. But Kyle’s instincts told him sothing important: Marcello’s actions, his willingness to even entertain this conversation, his failure to imdiately pull that trigger—it was all related to his daughter. The reaction when Kyle had first questioned the girl’s identity, the way he’d cleared the room, the crack in his composure when hope had flickered.
What Kyle didn’t know—what he couldn’t have known—was that Marcello had never truly wanted this life to begin with.
The crown had been thrust upon him in blood and fire seventeen years ago. He’d taken it because soone had to. Because his father had died and the families needed a leader. Because his daughter’s death had hollowed him out so completely that violence beca the only language he understood.
But if Angelica was alive? If there was even a chance?
Then everything could change.
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