7. Chapter Seven Hassan

Chapter Seven: Hassan

W e were there.

In Dante Moretti’s New York City penthouse. Our apartment in Brickell was nice, but this was something else. Miami was expensive, obviously, but it was nothing like NYC.

I didn’t like Dante Moretti, and I didn’t understand why we couldn’t have this conversation over the phone, but at least we were here now.

The lights of Manhattan blurred into a kaleidoscope of color beyond the window, their flicker unyielding, unfeeling. The contrast between that vibrant chaos and the suffocating stillness inside Dante’s apartment gnawed at me. I pressed my forehead against the glass, letting the cool pane ground me while my thoughts raced ahead to plans, contingencies, and the million ways this could go wrong.

Behind me, SJ’s voice rang out, bright and pure, a stubborn thread of innocence in a room weighed down by tension.

“Cow go moo!” he declared, holding up a wooden puzzle piece as if he’d discovered a universal truth. His triumphant squeal brought a faint smile to my lips. At least one of us could still find joy in something so simple.

“That’s right, sweetheart,” Jade said, her tone warm but with that firm cadence that came naturally to her. She sat cross-legged on the floor, hands resting protectively over her swollen belly as she watched SJ with a patience I envied. She leaned forward slightly, though her movements were slower now, her condition visibly wearing on her.

I didn’t know much about Jade beyond the fact that she was Dante’s girlfriend, heavily pregnant, and—apparently—willing to babysit during a mafia negotiation. Her calm demeanor didn’t match the chaos we were about to step into, and I wasn’t sure if that reassured or unnerved me.

SJ didn’t notice. He toddled on unsteady legs, gripping the cow puzzle piece tightly in his tiny hand. “Tío!” he squealed, his eyes locking on me like I was his entire world. The nickname hit me square in the chest, a reminder of the bonds we’d built even amidst the chaos.

I turned, just in time to catch him as he barreled toward me, his legs wobbling and his laugh filling the room like a balm. I crouched to meet him, and he collided into my knees with the full force of a two-year-old, his joy uncontainable. “Cow moo!” he shouted, holding the toy high for me to see.

“Yeah, buddy,” I said, scooping him up and settling him on my hip. His tiny hands grabbed fistfuls of my shirt, and he beamed at me, his lopsided grin lighting up his whole face. “The cow says moo.”

“Good job, Sebastian,” Jade said, her smile soft but weary as she shifted to stretch her legs. She pushed herself up carefully, her hands bracing against the floor before she finally stood.

“You can call him SJ,” I said, giving her my hand to help her stand up. Dante was in the bathroom or something, and all four of us were waiting for him. “Jez named him after Bash, but it can get a little confusing.”

She raised an eyebrow at that but didn’t ask questions. I couldn’t tell if she was polite, uninterested, or just smarter than to dig into a mess she didn’t belong in. Either way, she nodded. Jade nodded. “Yeah, tell me about it.”

SJ wriggled in my arms, turning to glance toward the couch where Zane lay propped up. His bandage peeked out from under his shirt, and the tightness in his jaw told me he was in more pain than he’d admit. Still, his eyes were sharp, cutting through the fog that had settled over us.

Zane's gaze flicked from SJ to me, his hazel eyes narrowing with focus despite the sweat beading along his brow. "We need to go over it again," he said, his voice flat but unwavering. He shifted on the couch, wincing slightly as he adjusted his position. "Dante’s not the kind of guy who tolerates half-baked plans."

Before I could respond, SJ squirmed in my arms. “Tío, put me down,” he demanded, his tiny fingers tugging at my shirt. Reluctantly, I set him on the plush rug, watching as he toddled back toward Jade and her collection of puzzles.

Jade gave me a reassuring smile, her hand absently resting on her belly as she leaned against the coffee table. "He’s fine, Hassan. You should focus."

Easy for her to say. She wasn’t juggling a hundred variables with Justice, Bash, and Skylar’s lives hanging in the balance. I exhaled sharply, running a hand through my hair as I turned back to Zane. "Fine. Let’s go through it."

“Dante sets up the meeting,” Zane said, his tone clipped as he outlined the plan for what felt like the hundredth time. “Vito has to believe we’re serious about trading SJ for the others. Jade keeps him here, safe, and we handle the negotiation.”

The word negotiation tasted bitter on my tongue. "And if Vito doesn’t buy it? What then?"

Zane opened his mouth to answer, but the low, deliberate sound of footsteps cut him off. We both turned as Dante entered the room, his presence shifting the air immediately. He moved with the kind of controlled grace that made my muscles tense, his tailored suit immaculate, not a hair out of place. He was the kind of man who could command attention with just a look, and he knew it.

“I’ll tell you what happens if Vito doesn’t buy it,” Dante said, his deep voice carrying an edge of finality. He crossed the room with an ease that belied the tension crackling in the air. “We improvise. But Vito won’t doubt me.”

Zane sat up straighter, his eyes locked on Dante. “You sound awfully sure of yourself.”

Dante’s lips twitched into a faint, humorless smile as he reached for the whiskey decanter on the sideboard. “Confidence isn’t arrogance, Zane. I know Vito. He’s desperate, and he underestimates everyone, especially me. That’s his weakness.”

“Desperate how?” I asked, stepping closer, my arms crossed tight against my chest. The word hung heavy in the room, loaded with implications I wasn’t sure I wanted to unpack.

Dante swirled the whiskey in his glass, his expression unreadable. “Vito’s dying,” he said flatly, as if the words held no weight. “Terminal. A few months left, maybe. He’s clutching at whatever straws he can find to ensure his legacy. Did you know that?”

“Yeah,” I said. “I knew he was dying. I just…I think this is so fucked. SJ being part of that legacy is messed up.”

The idea of Vito’s grubby hands on SJ, of him viewing my nephew—my son, for all intents and purposes—as some pawn in his game, made my stomach churn.

“He doesn’t just see SJ as a part of it,” Dante said, taking a slow sip of his drink. “He sees SJ as the legacy. Vito’s daughter, Alicia, was the closest thing to a human connection he ever had. She’s gone, and that leaves the boy.”

“Alicia was the worst,” Zane said. “I mean, she was almost as bad as Jez.”

I couldn’t argue with that.

“Vito’s idea of parenting is...let’s say unconventional,” Dante replied, a sardonic twist to his lips. “But yes. Alicia was his blood, and SJ is her son, and he’s Jez’s son. That’s all that matters to him now. A chance to rewrite his story, leave behind something more permanent than money or power.”

“Let me get this straight,” I said, my words barely contained behind gritted teeth. “He’s dying, so now he suddenly wants to play doting grandpa?”

I already knew all these things—I just needed to hear them again. I needed Dante Moretti to make these things real for me.

Dante shrugged, as though the absurdity of it didn’t bother him. “It’s not about love, Hassan. It’s about control. Vito knows he’s not leaving his empire to anyone who’ll handle it the way he wants. He sees SJ as his only option—a clean slate he can mold into what he needs.”

All it would take was one misstep, one sign that SJ wasn’t really on the table, and this whole thing would go up in flames—with Justice, Bash, and Skylar still in the fire.

SJ didn’t stay put for long. As Dante spoke, his low, commanding tone filling the room, SJ wriggled away from Jade’s careful attention. His small, determined footsteps echoed on the polished hardwood as he toddled over to Dante, cow puzzle piece still clutched in his tiny fist.

“Tío Dante!” SJ called, his high-pitched voice piercing through the weighty tension. He reached up toward Dante with both arms, demanding attention in the way only a two-year-old could.

For a moment, the room froze. I saw Zane tense, his hazel eyes narrowing as they flicked between SJ and Dante. Even Jade straightened where she sat, her hand instinctively resting on her belly. It wasn’t fear that filled the air, exactly—more like a guarded uncertainty. SJ wasn’t afraid of Dante, not in the slightest. But the rest of us knew better than to let our guard down.

Dante’s dark eyes shifted from me to SJ, his expression unreadable. For a beat, I thought he might ignore the boy altogether, that his ruthless pragmatism didn’t extend to the soft, innocent weight of a toddler. But then his lips twitched into something resembling a smile—not a kind one, but a faint crack in his polished veneer.

He crouched down, folding his tall frame with effortless grace, and looked SJ directly in the eyes. “What is it, piccolo uomo?” he asked, his voice dropping into a softer, almost conversational tone.

SJ grinned and thrust the cow puzzle piece toward him. “Cow go moo!” he declared, his chubby cheeks flushed with triumph.

Dante raised an eyebrow, glancing at the puzzle piece as if it were a foreign object. Then, with a slow nod, he said, “Yes. Cow goes moo.”

SJ beamed, clearly pleased with himself. “Tío Dante smart!” he declared, before immediately turning and toddling back toward Jade without a second thought, leaving the cow puzzle piece on the floor between them.

Dante straightened, brushing nonexistent dust from his tailored trousers, and picked up his whiskey glass as though nothing had happened. “Your nephew,” he said, looking at me, “has no sense of danger.”

“He has a sense of trust,” I shot back, watching SJ settle into Jade’s lap. “And that’s more than most kids in his position get.”

Dante gave a low hum, neither agreement nor dismissal. “Let’s make sure he doesn’t pay for that trust,” he said, his voice once again edged with steel.

Zane let out a breath he’d been holding. “The point stands, Dante. You’re asking us to dangle SJ like bait. Hassan’s right—this is fucked.”

“No,” Dante replied, his tone cool and deliberate. “What’s fucked is Vito thinking he can take him without consequences. That’s where I come in.”

I crossed my arms over my chest, feeling the weight of SJ’s presence in the room like a stone in my gut. “You’d better mean that,” I said. “Because if this goes wrong…”

“It won’t,” Dante interrupted, his gaze cutting into me like a blade. “Because I don’t lose.”

“You’d better be right,” I muttered, turning away from him to glance back at SJ. He was giggling now, holding out another puzzle piece for Jade, who was obliging him with a smile that masked her own exhaustion. The sight was grounding, a reminder of what was at stake. Of why we had to win.

“He’s right, you know,” Jade said. “I mean, for what it’s worth. I’ve never seen the man fail.”

“Thanks, beautiful,” Dante said, his tone softening.

“You’ve got this, Hassan,” Jade said softly, as though reading my mind. “I’m sure if the plan wasn’t going to work, Dante wouldn’t pitch it.”

I nodded, though the knot in my stomach didn’t loosen. It wouldn’t, not until this was over and everyone—Justice, Bash, Skylar, and SJ—was safe. But for now, all I could do was hope that Dante Moretti was as good as he said he was.

And that Vito didn’t see through the cracks in our plan before it was too late.

If ads affect your reading experience, click here to remove ads on this page.