Chapter 290
King of the Underworld
Chapter Two Hundred Ninety
Sephie
Viktor took his computer out of one of the bags he brought back. âI still donât understand how Ricardo could be pulling the strings with Armando. What does he have over him?â
âI donât think life is as rosy for Armando as weâve been led to believe. When he first cut my clothes off me, he told me I was going to solve a lot of his problems. He got pi ssed when he saw how bruised I was from them. slamming me into the car when they grabbed us because I wouldnât fetch as much money. Thatâs when I told him about my back. He turned me around and saw my scars and thatâs when he lost it.â
âWhy would Armando be needing money? Heâs worth more than the other bosses,â Andrei said.
âMaybe heâs only worth more on paper. He could be in debt to someone or several people and be struggling to pay them back. Just because he has plenty of assets on paper doesnât mean any of those are actual liquid assets. He might be strapped for cash,â Adrik said.
âThe million-dollar question is why heâd be strapped for cash,â Ivan said. âPrincess, you didnât overhear them. talking at all when they were both there, did you?â
âNo, I only heard the other two guys speaking Italian. Sal and Armando kept their conversations completely private when they were both there. Armando never said anything in Italian in front of me.
Neither did Sal. Only those other two dudes.â I thought about what Iâd said to Armando for a few moments, trying to remember, all the details that the guys mightâve missed. âThe exact moment when you guys came into the chat escapes me. Did you guys hear me asking him about Sal?â
âNo, what did you say?â Stephen asked.
âI was trying to make him angry when he found out that I was damaged goods, basically.â Adrik clicked his tongue, flexing his arms around my waist. I know he wanted to squeeze me, but he didnât want to hurt me. âIt was part of trying to make him mad. I told him he mightâve been able to sell me with just a front picture, but because I was bruised all the angles were just f**ked up. I asked him what Sal was going to do when he found out that I wasnât going to fetch top dollar and what he was going to do when he found out it was Armando that f**ked it up. Thatâs when he snapped. Thereâs something to Sal and thereâs something to Ricardo,â I said. âAnd also f**k him for thinking I was damaged goods. That is all.â
âWhat if weâre looking in the wrong spot?â Stephen asked. âThereâs somebody behind Armando and likely has been for a very long time. Seph thinks Lorenzo is really the brains behind Sal. What if Ricardo and Lorenzo are the connection and weâve missed it?â
I could hear Viktor starting a new search after hearing Stephenâs theory.
âWhat did your father think of Armando?â I asked. Adrik would only speak about his father on rare occasions. Their relationship was strained, but respectful. On some level, Adrik understood what his father did to keep him safe and make sure he could survive this world. On another level, that also meant that Adrik didnât really have a solid father figure in his life. Viktor was more of a father figure to Adrik than Vitaliy. Since handing over the business to Adrik, Vitaliy had basically disappeared. He would resurface from time to time for a few days,
but then he would be gorie for years. Adrik knew how to get in touch with him, if he needed to. He just never needed to.
Adrik sighed. âAs far as I know, he had a good relationship with Armando. Armando was new to being a boss when my father handed everything over to me. I think Armando just did whatever my father told him to do, not many questions asked. He told me when I took over that Armando would never be a problem. He was under the impression that Armando was an idiot.â
âI think I agree. Heâs an idiot, but heâs also a ps ycho. Itâs a very weird combination. You guys heard him confess what he did to his first wife, right?â
âI missed that part. It was hard to hear everything with the guys trying to make me less pretty,â Ivan said, smiling. He motioned like he was flipping his non-existent hair over his shoulder.
âHe told me he beat her to death when she wouldnât shut up. I asked him if heâd gotten her h o oked on coke the same way he did Giana. He didnât know we knew about that, so it stumped him for a minute. I asked him if he knew that coke was a stimulant and told him if he wanted his wife to be quiet that he shouldâve gone with heroin or another opioid. He looked genuinely confused. Thatâs where the idiot part comes in. Thatâs also when I first asked him who was pulling his strings, because he was clearly to o stupid to have stayed in this business for this long without help. He did not like that,â I said.
âDario was right about Armandoâs first wife,â Misha said.
âYeah, I remembered that part too,â I said. âNow Iâm curious to know how Dario knew.â
âIt might be worth having another conversation with Dario. He might tell us more when he sees that we have Armando,â Misha said.
âI agree, but I think Sal is his biggest fear, after Massimo,â I said. âSal is what made him react. Armando just made him angry.â
Viktor, who had been quietly searching for information while we were all talking, got up and brought his computer to me. âDo you feel up to translating this?â he asked.
âFor you? Of course,â I said, winking at him. I scanned over the article. âThis one is old. From before Lorenzo got banished. Itâs talking about how he took over the docks. âInjecting new life into the failing import business, it says. He made a deal with an Italian exporter to bring goods into the city.â I looked up from the computer. âIâll give you guys one guess who the Italian exporter is.â
âRicardo,â they all said.
âWinner winner chicken dinner,â I said. I finished reading the article to make sure there wasnât anything I missed. There was a link to a second article that I clicked to see what else I could find. âHereâs one from a few years later. It says that in the span of 6 months, four boats were found coming into the docks loaded with people.â
âIt appears Lorenzo has been in the flesh trade longer than we thought,â Viktor said.
âThis article doesnât mention Ricardo, but Iâd be willing to bet if we dug a little, those boats belong to him,â I said. Viktor got up and took his computer back, to see what else he could find.
Adrik sighed. âThis is much bigger than the bosses trying to take the city from me.â
âWhich is why you need to teach them a lesson so no one will ever think about trying it again. Thereâs a reason history remembers Vlad the Impalerâs name hundreds of years later. Savagery has its place,â I said. Adrik tightened his hold on me. I grinned at Stephen, asking, âYoden, what was Vlad like in real life? Was he cranky? I feel like he was cranky.â
âAll Romanians come across as cranky, Seph. But Vlad? Surprisingly sarcastic. Liked dad jokes, too.
Odd combination, but it worked with him,â he said with a straight face like it was the Go dâs honest truth.
âWhat about the impaling? I feel like you helped him come up with that idea.â
âNo, that was all Vlad. I just supported his dreams. Itâs called enabling. I invented that,â he said, still completely straight-faced.
I tried to hold it in, but I couldnât help but laugh, which caused me to grab my ribs in pain. âI did this to myself,â I whined as I waited for the pain in my ribs to subside.