His Pretty Little Burden: Chapter 6
His Pretty Little Burden: A Dark Mafia, Age Gap Romance (Kids of The District Book 4)
THE GIRL IS INVALUABLE.
Aurora and I enter the boardroom to find my brothers awaiting the news. Butch, my father, flanks us. The chair at the head of the polished black oak table is empty, waiting for me, while Butch moves straight to the position to the right. Eager to hear the verdict, my youngest brothers, Max and Xander, are already seated.
A meeting of this importance would usually require at least two of our capos, but this is a family issue. I have left my brothers out of most business affairs for the past twelve months, but this⦠this is personal. The other families in the District accept Dustinâs time is up but are staying on the sidelines of this situation.
Dustin is a boss, with his own loyalties and alliances, and they donât need targets on them while we finalise this matter.
Across the room, Bronson is at the bar, helping himself to a coffee, working the machine and harmlessly flirting with Sofia as she offers to prepare it for him.
As is her job.
âI got it, darlinâ,â he says with a wink that is all for show. That is one Butcher who has never been available to women. Heâs been lost in the ocean of Shoshanna since he was a teenager. The coffee is probably to combat the fatigue my nephew Stone is causing him. Knowing my little brother, he probably takes the night feeds so Shosh can sleep.
I hide my own fatigue well.
The memory of what they lost all those years ago, the conversation I had with Bronsonâs woman, assurances I gave her that they would be happy, protected⦠but I didnât keep themâcouldnât. I lock my jaw and smile smoothly at my company. Aurora pulls my chair out slightly, her hands squeezing the leather head, an edgy reaction that displeases me. Offends me, even.
This is her family too.
Being Jimmy Stormâs daughter does not make her any less a Butcher, and she shouldnât be pulling out my goddamn chair. I nod at her, my eyes cutting, delivering a message of disapproval before I take my place as the head of my family. A position twisted with expectation, given to me, burned into my soul the moment I was born.
I lean back, the wing-back declining slightly. Lifting my ankle to my knee, I nod and smile at Max. âWe have Dustinâs daughter and grandson.â
The energy thickens. Max almost smiles, but it is anything but fucking pleasant, vengeance in the subtle curve of his lips. He deserves his revenge, but this was too easy. âIâm not eager to dive into this manhunt yet, mate.â I shake my head. âI raided Dustinâs warehouse and five million dollarsâ worth of weaponry. All from deals Dustin had made with the Indonesian Preman. The exchange of management has not been easy. They left me with crates full of unboxed live rounds to sort. Weapons in pieces. This shipment was a mess.
âSo I now have five senators involved in this corrupt shitshow and thirty members of their party in the District to meet with, to get a better feel for where their loyalties lie. And the same week they arrive, a little deer walks into my house.â Leaning forward, I focus my attention completely on him. âI donât like coincidences.â
Butch sighs roughly. âBefore our rivalry started, Dustin and I had an understanding. He wanted me to arrange a union between one of my boys and one of his daughters. Not having a son of his own weakens him.â
âDustin doesnât know about the girl,â my youngest brother Xander states adamantly. âHe might offer up his daughter as a spy, but he wouldnât risk his grandson.â He shifts his gaze between Max and me. He may be the youngest of us, but that kidâs a damn genius. If only he would spend more time studying and less time in the ring, heâd have taken the bar by now. âIf Dustin does have an alliance with any of the members visiting from Indonesia, then we should make sure they all meet the girl.â
I nod my agreement. âIâll have her attend dinner on Saturday. If they are in alliance with him, we wonât have to go anywhere to get the news to Jakarta. Theyâll take it to him. And then, heâll come to us.â
I glance at my father, a quiet perceptive man who speaks when necessary or not at all. Still, heâs stronger than most men his age, having been raised in the ring. To this day, he could beat the life from any of us with his fists. In that respect, he and Max are basically carbon copies.
Max cups his fist, cracking his knucklesâa Butcher habit that runs innately in us from years of boxing out our frustrations. Before our heads even heat, the fists and jaw prepare, indicating our brewing irritation.
He levels me with a stare. âAnd if they are not safe-housing Dustin, we hunt the bastard down.â
I feel Auroraâs presence behind me, her unsaid advice and whisperings scoring down my neck. Exhaling roughly, I focus on Max, knowing he will understand the need for caution, but hating that I must make him wait longer. If this was Bronsonâs revenge, Iâd have a far harder time encouraging him to see reason. That is one Butcher whose hot head explodes rather than bubbles. âWe watch the girl for a while first. Let her get comfortable. Make damn sure she is here for the reasons she says.â
Bronson settles into the seat beside Max, sipping his coffee, his tattooed fingers a stark contrast to the china teacup in his hand. A shiny Glock flashes from his holster as he shrugs off his jacket.
âThenâ¦â I clasp my hands together on the table, setting my eyes on our father. âYou take some men and the news to the streets. Get the prick out of hiding.â
Auroraâs breath all but demands my attention, but there is still not a word from her beautiful mouth. I spin in my chair to face her, my back to my family. âAurora, speak. What do you have to say on this?â
She squares her shoulders, standing strong like the woman I know she is at her roots, beneath this apprehensive façade. âI agree on all fronts,â she says, her voice even and velvety. âIt is too risky to react hastily and fly to Indonesia with this message. But I think we can move the process along.â She directs her words over my head, eyes trained on my brothers. I swivel in my chair to face them, looking at my hands in contemplation while my wife offers her advice. âThe girl is quite enamoured by you, Clay.â I twist to see her wandering around to meet my rising gaze. A soft smile sets on her lips. âShe blushed when you spoke to her.â
âThatâs not surprising, Aurora, sweetheart. Look at him. Heâs a handsome son-of-a-Butcher,â Bronson says, ever the comedic mask in place to hide his true darkness.
Of course, I noticed her pinkening cheeks. I noticed her pulse in her throat, the heavy beat of her chest, the sparks of her arousal when I made her kneel at my feet, when I held her pretty face in my hand. I enjoyed it a little too much myself. âWhat are you suggesting?â
âI think you should make yourself available to her. Be present. Befriend her. She has daddy issues.â I meet her knowing eyes, and thereâs no hint of jealousy within their whiskey-coloured depths. It is not an emotion that plagues my wife, at least not in relation to me. Our legacy, perhaps, but our relationship doesnât extend to the bedroom, despite us sharing a woman. Aurora has always leaned towards curves, soft lines, and I canât say I blame her, but since her fatherâs death, she has been far more liberal with her delight in the female persuasion.
Her sexual preference means nothing to me, but I feel she favours the dominant role. A role she simply cannot play with me. And Jimmy wouldnât have allowed such behaviour from his eldest daughter, not with the twin pillars of our existenceâthe Cosa Nostra and the churchâa constant shadow.
Reaching up, I rub the short bristles along my jaw as the idea sheâs presenting, one I had already considered, plays in my mind. Befriending an eighteen-year-old girl who undeniably attracts me is riddled with issues. But they are hers, not mine.
I could gain her trust.
Fuck her, maybe.
Use her, and eventually spit her back out into the world that was so brutal to her. One less person to trust. One more betrayal⦠Iâd be the damn catalyst. Sheâll probably end up like dear old mumâbullet sailing through her brain. I donât know why I care so much.
âI donât know who the father is,â sheâd told Jasmine. Flashing in my mind, the image of her across my knee, bare arse and pussy exposed, while I spank her red raw for such behaviour. Teach her a lesson or two. Spank the addiction, the promiscuity, the fragility out of her.
And yet, Iâm not convinced that is her.
Not convinced she wasnât hurt in some way. I have seen a lot of violence, a lot of victim behaviour, and that is exactly what her body language screamed in that witness room, even when her mouth said nothing of the sort.
Nodding slowly, I state, âI have Jasmine to befriend her, but I will be keeping her close.â
âThe girl⦠is she just collateral damage? What happens to her and the child when all is finished? Dustin in the ground. The girl homeless again?â Bronson asks, that demon of his riding each word. A warning that he wonât let me use or hurt her. His heart beats with pure intent for women and babies, despite the mist of pitch-black volatility circling it.
âShe is ultimately a Cosa Nostra princess. And that stands for something. Hopefully, she plays bait and not martyr. If all goes smoothly, we send her on her way with a cheque and an ironclad NDA, but if it doesnâtâ¦â I look at him, noting the pulse of his jaw muscles. âWe kill her before the boy is born and grows up wanting his revenge.â
âNow, now, darling,â Bronson says, that dark smile forming on his lips. âYou know I wonât let you kill them.â
âIâd prefer not to, Bron,â I say, watching his body still, like a mine waiting under the pressure of this conversation. âWe will send her off with a cheque then, shall we? Betrayed. Angry we used her to kill her precious father.â
âAnd if the boy seeks his revenge in years to come, if he comes for his grandfatherâs cut of the diamonds, of the deals he cut with Indonesia, what then?â Xander asks, playing the devilâs advocate, Iâm sure. There is no way he wants me to kill them.
âHe wonât,â Max states, siding with Bronson on this front. The girl is pregnant at eighteen, blonde, sweet, probably reminds him of his wife, although I see nothing of Cassidy in those dual-coloured eyes. This girl hasnât lived a life of luxury nor been offered opportunity. âBut if he does, we deal with the little shit then.â
âDo we agree then?â I ask, locking my gaze on Butch, wanting him to have the last say in this room, every room for that matter. The man has sat by the headâs side for most of his life, earning the right to finalise our agenda. I am here in lieu of him, because I was bred for this role, a singular path crunched beneath my shoes.
A path paved by the Cosa Nostra.
Iâm ruthless with this business. Focused. And well, heâs getting soft in his old age. Heâs not the cutthroat boxer he was in his youth; heâs a man making amends for years of absence. A family man now solely invested in his sons, daughters-in-law, and his grandchildren. Still, I offer him the esteem he deserves.
Butch nods slowly, eyeing us with straight eyebrows cut above a stern blue gaze. âShow her off at the dinner on Saturday. Letâs hope one of the senators takes the news to Nerrock, but if he doesnât, then Iâll have our men spread the word that I have his grandson, and the bastard will come to me.â He looks over at Max. âI will bring him to you, son. Heâs yours, as agreed upon.â
We settle into lighter matters.
While Xander leads the conversation, being my legal aid in this business, I find my attention drifting to the girl who sat on the counter in my kitchen last night, eating cake as though it was her first and last meal. Iâd watched from the camera above; she doesnât have a corner in this house to go undetected.
Something doesnât sit right with me⦠She doesnât seem to want anything for herself, purely here for her child. But what teenage girl doesnât want anything? Doesnât seem likely.
And sheâs pretty.
Dropped to her knees so willingly as though someone schooled her on my preferences, and she has this odd reasoning for being here⦠Why not adoption? Why now? Of all times, months after I took her fatherâs warehouse⦠I donât want to kill her, but if sheâs a spy, if sheâs lying to me about why sheâs here⦠I will.
A little deer.
One grey eye.
One green.
Iâll kill her if I must.