Chapter 56 Max
Max
Still agitated, I shower, dress, and head downstairs to start my day but not before switching Cassidy's phone off. She will sleep for as long as her body tells her she needs to. Fuck ballet. Fuck anyone who wants to talk to her.
As I take the staircase down to the first floor, I look through the windows over the open balustrade.
Connolly. It's my city. Jimmy's too. But it’s not Cassidy's.
She loves quaint urban Brussman and yet, she's never once complained about dropping her whole life there.
Her family. To be with me. To be in my room every night—alone.
Fuck.
The sight of Butch in his navy, tailored two-piece suit, sipping his espresso and reading the paper at the kitchen island, stills my previous thoughts.
Staring at him, I feel my forehead tighten. "You're here a lot these days."
When he peers over at me, I catch a hint of disappointment in his eyes. "Morning, son. How's your girl?"
I smirk, knowing he's here to spend his morning with Cassidy.
He has no idea that I know he has breakfast with her before she goes to ballet and he goes to Jimmy's.
She has Butch completely smitten, wrapped snugly around her sweet little finger.
What a soppy motherfucker. "So, do you want to be called Pop, Grandad, or Nànnu? "
A cocky-arse grin hits his lips. "Caught me."
Moving towards the fridge, I say, "She won't be down for a while. She needs to sleep..." I sigh angrily. "You probably speak to her more than I do at the moment, anyway."
As I make myself a protein shake, he watches me silently, his sceptical eyes following me around the kitchen.
I freeze, scowling at him. "What?"
He doesn't jump to answer me, seemingly contemplative. Then he states, "Every man has two options in life: either be the man she needs you to be or move out of the line."
I sneer, setting my glass down on the island bench. "I'll torch the fucking line."
He smiles, leaning forward on his heavy arms. "I believe you would. Love is maddening. Hasn't watching your brother all these years not taught you this?"
Scoffing, I say, "Bronson was mad before Shoshanna."
His brows draw in and he sips his coffee.
This is Butch in an emotional mood. It's a rarity, and I have no doubt it has to do with Cassidy.
"Your brother always leans towards the theatrics," he says, placing his empty espresso cup down.
"He's more like your grandfather than me. You, you're so much like me."
His words settle in my stomach, like hunger or sickness, causing me to shift my weight.
Was it a compliment or a dig? To know which, I would have to know exactly what Butch thought about himself.
And that, I don't know. The discomfort in my stomach is soon fuelled by the realisation that I am like him, annoyingly so. Home late. Cold. Impatient.
"And just like you, I don't get home until after midnight and have no time for my family."
He leans back, folding those weapons of arms over his chest. My words rush off him like water. "I nearly gave up the life once."
That takes me by surprise. "I didn't think Victoria cared."
"She never did," he states adamantly and then I catch a glimpse of something in his stern eyes, a moment where they nearly reveal a secret. A truth buried deep. Something painful. "I didn't nearly give up for her."
Perhaps in other families that kind of statement would warrant a follow-up question, but we are not like other families.
His business is his, and I have always taken exactly what he has offered me and never more.
It's called respect in our world. Respect for a man's silence. "What would he have you do?"
Butch frowns. "Who?"
"Jimmy."
Butch's arms unfold, and he makes a fist, cracking his knuckles. "Do you think of me as Jimmy's property? That's never been the case. Don't mistake my quiet for compliance."
Shaking my head with contempt, I say, "So you'd see me leave my brothers?"
He scoffs and it pisses me right off. "Max, let's talk plainly here. Xander won't be collecting and reinforcing. He's more important to Jimmy than that."
And although he's the youngest, it's not Xander I'm worried about. I know he'll be working behind the scenes soon enough. It's my reckless, emotional big brother. "And Bronson?"
Butch lets out a long sigh. "He wouldn't have it any other way."
I tighten my jaw. "He'll get himself killed."
"You underestimate him; he's made for that life—the frontline work."
"He's not," I state curtly. "He has just given up on any other!"
"And you never did," he bites back. "So why are you still treating your legacy like a goddamn burden instead of finding a place amongst it that suits your interests as well as the Family's?"
It wasn't a fucking question that required an answer.
Fuck.
He's fucking right. I snarl to myself, thinking about the way everyone views me as the uninterested Butcher. The bored one. Out of all my brothers, I'm the one who just finds the whole organisation not worthy of my time. What a bloody insult that must be to my family. To the Family in Sicily.
Bronson seems to revel in the intimidation.
Xander can't hack it emotionally, but that's fine.
He's now motivated to study law and use his big fucking Einstein brain to keep us safe in his own way.
Clay has embraced it, using it to his advantage.
He's slowly been manipulating the entire Cosa Nostra mould to suit his endeavours, but me.
.. What the fuck have I done to make this life my own?
When Butch stands up and turns to leave, I find myself interested in his business even though I know I should keep my goddamn mouth shut. Respect, remember? "Who was she?" I ask.
With his back still to me, he mutters gravelly, "It doesn't matter. She's gone."
As he leaves, I drink my shake. The front door clicks shut, and I stare through the alfresco windows to the canals.
The fucking bored Butcher...
Palming my tight jaw, I press down hard and release some tension. It has never been a case of accepting the role on the ground with Bronson or disowning it.
I accepted it.
But I never wanted it.
I'm reminded of our first ever job, back when we were twelve.
Bronson took that fucking cigar like it was a loaded MK37; the ash and embers, the bullets, the power and allure were just as dangerous.
I never wanted the cigar or what it signified—loss of control.
Loss of free will. That is what working for the Family has always felt like to me.
And I never wanted to arm myself with their power.
I'd prefer to beat a man on the field using my own hard-earned skills and strength.
That has never been an option.
I'm in.
I've seen too much. Done too much.
And I would never leave my brothers.
But for Cassidy, I'll step up and make my own way. Even if that means cementing myself to the Family. Involving myself in deep corruption. Managing it.
I text Clay and Jimmy, requesting a meeting this afternoon.
Placing my phone on the bench, I exhale loudly. I rub the tension that has returned to my jaw. There will be no going back from this. But it'll be on my goddamn terms. With my power. My resources. My specific skill set. Jimmy isn't nearly as educated as he believes himself to be—not even close.
I'll no longer be just Butch's son.
I'll be an earner.
An associate.
I'll control the means of producing so much fucking profit for the Family that Jimmy will be accepting my goddamn cigar. I find myself smirking at the prospect.
When I stride into Jimmy's boardroom, Clay is leaning on the bar, a drink clasped in his hand.
Standing beside him, Jimmy laughs—a throaty laugh that he only does when in the presence of his son-in-law.
That cheerful intonation makes my jaw tic.
It speaks of a bond that goes beyond Clay having married Aurora.
Jimmy isn't his fucking family.
Always the fucking professionals, both men are dressed in dark suits and ties. I've only ever seen Jimmy a handful of times in anything else. They turn to acknowledge me, smiling easily.
"Max." Jimmy walks towards me, arms wide. "Clay, get your brother a drink. We should celebrate his future arrival."
I force a smile and embrace him. "Whiskey," I say, giving Clay a nod of acknowledgment over Jimmy's shoulder.
Pouring me a shot, Clay says, "I will drink to that." He moves over to me and I wrap my arms around him. "We don't see enough of each other," he says into my ear.
I release him and accept the drink he presents me. "I agree."
My big brother is all business these days. I can't remember the last time I had a casual drink with him. At his wedding, perhaps. I wonder how often Jimmy sees him, but as soon as I do, I bury that thought. Along with the resentment attached.
We drink for a while by the bar, keeping things on the lighter side. But after fifteen minutes of small talk, the tic in my jaw tells me I've hit my quota for sharing and receiving bullshit. We move towards the boardroom table and sit.
I relax opposite Clay while Jimmy positions himself on my right, at the head. I text my guy and then hear a knock vibrate through the door.
"Come in," I say before Jimmy can, and it makes me want to smirk. My guy enters and passes me the documents, then leaves straight away. I slide one over to each of them.
Clay flips it over and then back again before flicking through to the last few pages—the summary pages. He begins to read as Jimmy opens the first page, skimming the text.
"What is this?" Jimmy asks, seemingly too impatient to read it.