Total pages in book: 139
Estimated words: 135958 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 680(@200wpm)___ 544(@250wpm)___ 453(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 135958 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 680(@200wpm)___ 544(@250wpm)___ 453(@300wpm)
“What?”
“Jill!”
“This can’t—”
But the spokeswoman was silent, a resigned shudder passing through her. Her head bent down.
“Jillian!” The same woman on the council pounded on the table with her knuckles. “What is going on here?”
But the rest of the council had fallen silent. They were listening for the rest.
“What was your business with the Guaranno family?”
My father hesitated, his side still bleeding. “Gun distribution.”
No reaction from the spokeswoman, but the others seemed to suck in a collective breath. The other woman murmured as she sat down, “Oh, Jill.”
“What were your instructions?” Kai asked.
“To undersell your product. I’d offer yours first at a higher price—higher than you wanted them sold—and if they did sell, I’d pocket the extra money. If they didn’t, I’d offer them the same gun at a cheaper price. Those always sold.”
“What else?” Kai grated out, staring down the spokeswoman.
As he did, a door in the back of the room on the screen opened, and I recognized some of the men going inside. One approached the table, moving silently. Only the members facing his direction saw him, and none gave it away. They looked at him, then looked away.
It was Tanner who came to stand directly behind the spokeswoman. He didn’t say or do anything. He was waiting, as we all were.
My father’s strained voice filled both rooms. “She had me shipping black market products too.”
“What?” This came from the elderly man in the council. But unlike the others, he didn’t ask questions. “You dirty fucking whore!” He shoved back his chair, his voice rising. “None of this was approved. We’re a council. You have to approve this shit. Underselling the Bennetts’ gun distribution, then what? Underselling my trade too? You’re going to die tonight, Guaranno. You’re going to die a horrible and slow death!”
“Mr. Bello,” Kai called for attention again. Still. So. Fucking. Calm. “Do you have anything else to share?”
“No.”
But that was enough.
These were matters that directly impacted the council, and even though I didn’t know them, I knew what Kai had exposed was a lot. One family had gone against two others. Everyone knew what would happen next.
Kai motioned for the guards in our room, and they untied my father. They half-dragged him, half-walked him out the door, and I almost went with them. Was that the end? The big fucking finale?
It couldn’t be, but the door shut before I could go with them, and I felt Kai’s hand at my wrist. He tugged me back. He gave a reassuring pat to my arm and left me back in my spot.
I waited for the gunshot. Half wanting it, half knowing I would hate it.
It never came.
CHAPTER FIFTY-SEVEN
“Jillian.” Kai was speaking to the council again.
She lifted haunted and stricken eyes to him.
“Do you have anything to say?”
“Don’t kill my children. My grandchildren. Please.”
Kai asked the others, “Any objection to the execution of the Guaranno family?”
“What? No!” She was rising, her hand in the air. “I said no! No. Don’t do that. They’re innocents. They aren’t a part of this world. My granddaughter—”
While she’d been talking, one by one the council members held up their right hands. As soon as the last one was done, Kai nodded to Tanner.
Taking out a gun, he pressed the muzzle to the back of her head and—I turned away.
Bang!
Jillian stopped protesting, and I heard a thump.
I held firm, my eyes tightly shut as I heard a soft sniffle. I couldn’t tell if it was in this room, if it was me, or if it was someone on the other side. The chair scraped against the floor, and I heard another hard thud followed by the sounds of a body being dragged across the floor.
A door opening.
A door closing.
And silence.
Another sniffle.
A man coughed.
A second cleared his throat.
Kai still waited.
I couldn’t look. Maybe I should’ve, but why? Why see what I knew had happened?
The door opened and closed again. I didn’t hear footsteps, but I heard the chair moving again, the sounds of something wiping over the table, the floor. This went on for a minute before the door opened and closed one more time.
“None of the Guaranno children will be harmed,” Kai said. “The grandchildren either. Only Jillian, her two brothers, and the two eldest sons will be greenlit. They are the ones involved in their family’s business. I am within my rights as leader of the council to make this order, but are there any objections?”
A beat.
One more.
No one objected.
Finally, the oldest man said, “You do what you need to. We will follow the Bennett family.”
“As of this moment, the Guaranno family is no longer a member of the council, but we need a ninth person to vote on this next matter so there can be a majority. I’d like to request my brother Tanner vote in her place.”
“We have a personal matter?” the third woman spoke, the one who had remained quiet throughout all of this.