Dimitri (The Italian Cartel Book 1)

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Dimitri (The Italian Cartel Book 1) Page 1

by Shandi Boyes




  Dimitri

  The Italian Cartel #1

  Shandi Boyes

  Copyright

  Copyright © 2020 by Shandi Boyes

  All rights reserved.

  No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the author, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.

  Model: Jonny James

  Photographer: Wander Aguiar

  Cover: SSB Covers and Design

  Editing: Nicky @ Swish Editing and Design

  Beta: Carolyn Wallace

  Proof Reading: Kaylene @ Swish Editing and Design

  Writing: Shandi Boyes

  Created with Vellum

  There's a moment in fighting when strength of muscle ain't everything because the enemy has already given you enough energy to gain the victory.

  — Toba Beta

  Contents

  Want to stay in touch?

  Also by Shandi Boyes

  Prologue

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Also by Shandi Boyes

  Acknowledgments

  Want to stay in touch?

  Facebook: facebook.com/authorshandi

  Instagram: instagram.com/authorshandi

  Email: [email protected]

  Reader’s Group: bit.ly/ShandiBookBabes

  Website: authorshandi.com

  Newsletter: https://www.subscribepage.com/AuthorShandi

  Also by Shandi Boyes

  Perception Series

  Saving Noah (Noah & Emily)

  Fighting Jacob (Jacob & Lola)

  Taming Nick (Nick & Jenni)

  Redeeming Slater (Slater and Kylie)

  Saving Emily (Noah & Emily - Novella)

  Wrapped Up with Rise Up (Perception Novella - should be read after the Bound Series)

  Enigma

  Enigma (Isaac & Isabelle #1)

  Unraveling an Enigma (Isaac & Isabelle #2)

  Enigma The Mystery Unmasked (Isaac & Isabelle #3)

  Enigma: The Final Chapter (Isaac & Isabelle #4)

  Beneath The Secrets (Hugo & Ava #1)

  Beneath The Sheets(Hugo & Ava #2)

  Spy Thy Neighbor (Hunter & Paige)

  The Opposite Effect (Brax & Clara)

  I Married a Mob Boss(Rico & Blaire)

  Second Shot(Hawke & Gemma)

  The Way We Are(Ryan & Savannah #1)

  The Way We Were(Ryan & Savannah #2)

  Sugar and Spice (Cormack & Harlow)

  Lady In Waiting (Regan & Alex #1)

  Man in Queue (Regan & Alex #2)

  Couple on Hold(Regan & Alex #3)

  Enigma: The Wedding (Isaac and Isabelle)

  Silent Vigilante (Brandon and Melody #1)

  Hushed Guardian (Brandon & Melody #2)

  Quiet Protector (Brandon & Melody #3)

  Bound Series

  Chains (Marcus & Cleo #1)

  Links(Marcus & Cleo #2)

  Bound(Marcus & Cleo #3)

  Restrain(Marcus & Cleo #4)

  Psycho (Dexter & ??)

  Russian Mob Chronicles

  Nikolai: A Mafia Prince Romance (Nikolai & Justine #1)

  Nikolai: Taking Back What’s Mine (Nikolai & Justine #2)

  Nikolai: What’s Left of Me(Nikolai & Justine #3)

  Nikolai: Mine to Protect(Nikolai & Justine #4)

  Asher: My Russian Revenge (Asher & Zariah)

  Nikolai: Through the Devil's Eyes(Nikolai & Justine #5)

  Trey (Trey & K)

  The Italian Cartel

  Dimitri

  Roxanne

  Maddox

  Rocco

  RomCom Standalones

  Just Playin’ (Elvis & Willow)

  The Drop Zone (Colby & Jamie)

  Ain't Happenin'(Lorenzo & Skylar)

  Short Stories

  Christmas Trio (Wesley, Andrew & Mallory -- short story)

  Falling For A Stranger (Short Story)

  K (A Trey Sequel)

  Coming Soon

  Skitzo

  Prologue

  Dimitri

  While cracking my knuckles, I peer out a window spanning one wall of my suite. Cabs honk, commuters pepper the sidewalks clouded by ominous skyscrapers blocking out the sun, and pompous pricks in Tom Ford suits weave in and out of buildings similar to the one I’m stationed in, unaware their existence doesn’t depend on the digits in their bank accounts or the nine-to-five investment banking job their daddies secured them straight out of college. It’s wholly dependent on the men who built this city from the ground up.

  I don’t care what you say, New York was built by the Cartel. The Italians, the Greeks, hell, even the Albanians had a hand in making this what it is. Blood, sweat, and tears went into every skyscraper—literally. More bodies are buried under the buildings surrounding my hotel than my hotel caters for guests each night.

  Before the assassination of the boss of all bosses in 1973, every inch of this godforsaken town was the territory of the Italian Cartel. If you worked here, we ran your union. If you lived here, you were living in an apartment built by my ancestors.

  If you ran drugs here without permission, you were a dead man.

  Nothing happened here without the Lucianos, Gambinos, and Petrettis knowing about it. They were the governors of this realm and feared more than they were respected. It was the golden era to be a member of a criminal association, a time I’d give anything to go back to.

  Alas, all good things must come to an end.

  If that ending had been because of criminal prosecution, I would have a different viewpoint of my family’s demise. Regretfully, that isn’t close to the truth. The three families mentioned above operated as one unit. The Lucianos controlled Queens, Staten Island, Brooklyn, and Long Island. The Gambinos influenced the Bronx, New Jersey, and Connecticut regions, and the Petrettis had a stronghold on Manhattan, New York City, Westchester County, and parts of Florida.

  Between 1889 and 1953, these sanctions were untouchable. Law couldn’t catch them, rivals couldn’t compete with them, and money, drugs, and guns were in abundance.

  It all went downhill when Bria Petretti and Eleonora Gambino birthed sons only a month apart.

  If they had followed in their fathers’ footsteps by forging a mutually respected relationship, my grandfather, Giulio Petretti, III, and his best mate, Benito Gambino, were set to become the next boss of all bosses. They worked hard for their greater families, and the Lucianos didn’t have a suitable candidate, so originating a dual-leadership was the fairest option.

  However, as I said earlier, all good things must come to an end.

  My father, Col, and Benito’s son, Matteo, didn’t have the comradery their fathers had. They hated each other. Women, wayward drug shipments, even the sizes of their cocks were constantly bickered about. They didn’t want
to be the boss of the bosses. They wanted to be the boss—point-blank. And that’s precisely what happened when one of my father’s coked-up friends decided he needed some extra coin he wasn’t willing to work for.

  Theft never ends well in this industry. If you cross the Cartel, you die. Can’t explain it any simpler than that. Regardless, your family, friends, and children are supposed to go unharmed.

  My father couldn’t let bygones be bygones. He was only sixteen when Leone was taken out to The Hole, a grisly dumping ground regularly used back in the day, but he massacred the people he believed responsible for his death like the repercussions of his actions wouldn’t have blow on effects for decades to come.

  He should have been dead. The penalty for killing a son of a prominent family member always results in the death of both the person responsible and the hierarchy of his realm. However, my grandfather fell on the knife on the agreement his son would be spared.

  His negotiations were unheard of at the time. I doubt they would have been considered if it weren’t for the friendship he had with Giulio. My father forgot centuries-long relations in an instant. Giulio couldn’t. He didn’t want to kill his best friend, but he had no choice. He had lost a son. His death needed to be avenged.

  The story of my family’s demise grows weary from that point. Some say my father was removed from all Cartel activities and left to fend for himself. Others say he was gifted the Florida chapter with the hopes he’d eventually straighten his life out and resurrect our family name from the grave.

  I say they should have killed him instead of my grandfather. That would mean I wouldn’t be here, but then I also wouldn’t be twiddling my thumbs in a hotel room, waiting for word on if the ransom I paid for my pregnant wife has been received. My family name is tainted with so much disrespect, my rivals think I’m a schmuck to be messed with.

  That is also far from the truth.

  Rimi Castro, leader of a subsidiary criminal entity that branched off the Gambinos two decades ago, was smart when he requested a third-party drop off the 3.8 million-dollar ransom he demanded for the safe return of Audrey. I would have tortured him until he told me where she is, then I would have killed every member of his crew to show him I’m nothing like my father.

  You don’t mess with me and expect to live. I have all the markings of my father. I’m a merciless, heartless motherfucker who kills before thinking. Audrey chipped away some of the decay the past ten months, but it will never be entirely gone. You can untwist the ugliest wreck, however no amount of straightening will smother scars hidden deep within. They’re more hideous than the ones our bodies wear and take longer than a lifetime to fix.

  I learned that the hard way almost a decade ago.

  Rimi will learn it tonight.

  I still can’t understand how he got the upper hand on me. I’m cautious about everything I do, untrusting of anyone, most notably those who share my lineage. My marriage is unknown, the baby growing in my wife’s stomach hasn’t been publicly acknowledged even with our daughter being due in a little over four weeks. I don’t even live in the same state as my wife for fuck’s sake, yet, she still got snared by a life someone as pure as her should have never been invited into.

  I’ll be sure to fix the injustice once she and our daughter are returned safely. It won’t be just the Castros feeling the sting of my wrath, though. It’ll be the industry as a whole. An unspoken rule was broken earlier this week.

  Famiglia prima di tutto. Family first of all.

  Audrey may be excluded from that motto, but our daughter most certainly isn’t. She’s mafia royalty and will be protected accordingly.

  When the beep of an electronic lock sounds through my ears, I spin to face the entryway of my room. The knot in my gut takes on a new meaning when Clover enters the opulent space with the ransom bag he left with. It’s noticeably slimmer, but still, why wouldn’t Rimi’s men take it with them?

  I scoff when Clover pushes out, “They checked the bundles for bugs.” His voice is rough with an Arabian accent. He isn’t called Clover because he shines luck down on anyone who locates him in a patch of weeds, it’s because you’ll be wishing for a lucky charm when he enters your life. The chances of escaping him are similar odds to finding a four-leaf clover in a patch of an overworked field. Basically nonexistent. If he doesn’t kill you before you spot the clover tattoo on his cheek, you’ll beg for a weapon to kill yourself.

  Mercy isn’t something Clover often gives. It’s why I sent him to do the drop. If I couldn’t do it, he was the next best choice. Clover is a hired hitman. He has worked for my family on many occasions, and usually gets the job done without the slightest bow to his brow.

  He isn’t giving me that vibe today. He looks a little undone, like his wish to kill isn’t as strong as mine. I get he’s a killer in every sense of the word, but we have to play the game as Rimi is requesting.

  Once Audrey is returned, all bets will be off.

  My decision has nothing to do with money. Despite my father’s many fuck-ups, I have plenty of it. The wholesale price in the industry is ten percent of its street value. There’s money to be made if you’re willing to get your hands dirty, but that isn’t what this is about. It’s the principle. If I let Rimi play me for a fool, I’ll take it up the ass from my competitors even more than my father has the past fifty-plus years.

  My family name might not be what it once was, but it will take more than a weasel of a man like Rimi Castro to have me cowering from a fight. The older generation started the war, but it’s the younger generation fighting their battles.

  I don’t mind. I was born to fight, and fight I will.

  I battle to keep my anger on the down-low but fail when Clover places the ransom bag onto the entryway table. It’s brimming with the bundles of cash I withdrew at multiple locations earlier this week. I know federal agents are watching every deposit and withdrawal from my account, so I kept the transactions below ten thousand to ward off suspicion.

  “Where’s Audrey?” Nothing but desperation is heard in my voice. Clover follows orders. He’s paid to do precisely that, so why the fuck did he go off script today? His facial expression reveals he drew blood, his itch to kill has been satisfied. That can only mean one thing—he went against direct orders. “You were to hand over the money, get Audrey out, then we were to make our move.”

  “Plans changed when they handed me this.” He tosses a USB stick onto the round table housing a vase of Audrey’s favorite flowers. India, Audrey’s neighbor/best friend, thought they’d lessen Audrey’s anxiety once she was freed from captivity. She’s been at the mercy of a rogue crew for five days. If a hundred-dollar bunch of flowers would weaken the clutch they had on her, I was open to the suggestion.

  “It was supposed to tell me Audrey’s location.” Clover locks his eyes with mine. They’re deadlier than ever. “It was nothing but a snuff film. Those fuckers are playing games, so I played back.”

  I’m not surprised to spot a number of dismembered fingers when he yanks open the ransom bag. Clover’s proof of deaths always arrives with some sort of body part. “I got a majority of your money back, but a few bundles fell through the cracks.”

  Falling through the cracks means he used the money to find marks. It isn’t a negotiation tactic he often uses, so the fact he needed it tonight exposes how dire things are.

  After finding the object he’s seeking in the bag, Clover hands it to me. He doesn’t speak any words, he doesn’t need to. I recognize the ring on the mutilated index finger in my hand. It’s the same one in the bottom right-hand corner of the photo couriered to my office last week. That’s how we unearthed Audrey’s kidnappers’ identity. All Castro ‘family’ members wear the same trademark.

  “Was there any indication Audrey was there?” I know Clover didn’t find her. If he had, we wouldn’t be having this conversation. Clover would be holed up with some hookers and the best cocaine money can’t buy, celebrating his victory, and I’d be at the hospital with
my wife, having her and our daughter checked over.

  My jaw works through a hard grind when Clover shakes his head. “She had been there, though. The room the ransom photo was taken in was at the back of the compound, and I got DNA proof by the bucketloads.”

  “What type of DNA?” I’m shocked I can talk. I’m so fucking angry, I am five seconds from blowing my top. If Clover’s switch-up of the rules has fucked me over, he will be fucked over. No fear.

  “Blood,” Clover answers nonchalantly like his life isn’t in danger. “Lots of it.”

  My blood boils over when he digs his cell phone out of his pocket to show me the photographs he took at the scene. Bodies litter almost every inch of the floor space, but my focus is on one thing and one thing only—the dingy, dirty mattress they had Audrey sit on when they snapped her picture for the ransom request.

  Although she’s missing from Clover’s images, I can still see her ashen face and cracked lips with precise clearness. She has always been the quiet one. Softly spoken and happy for everyone else to steal the attention.

 

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