Chapter Eighteen Charlotte
The war room is exactly what it sounds like.
Long table, dark wood, scarred from years of sidearms and coffee mugs and fists.
Twelve chairs. Maps on the walls, some pinned, some taped, some held up by knives driven into the plaster.
The lighting is low, warm, the kind that comes from fixtures that were expensive thirty years ago and haven't been updated since.
It smells like leather and old smoke and the specific musk of men who carry violence the way other people carry briefcases.
Leone is at the head of the table. Alexandra beside him, laptop open, her posture straight, already scanning the room the way I am. She catches my eye. Nods. The nod says you belong here and pay attention and don't let them see you sweat all at once.
Carmelo sits to Leone's left. Big, quiet, his hands folded on the table like a man in church. Dante across from him, phone face-down, leg bouncing under the table. Two soldiers I don't know fill the remaining seats, both young, both watchful.
Claudio pulls out a chair for me. Not performatively.
He just moves the chair and angles it and his hand touches the small of my back for half a second as I sit down, and the gesture is so natural that I don't think anyone notices except Emilio, who notices everything and says nothing, which is its own kind of loudness.
Emilio takes the seat beside me. Claudio stands.
He doesn't sit at war councils. It’s the one thing he gave me a heads up about before coming in here.
He positions himself behind Leone and to the right, arms crossed, back to the wall, his eyes moving across the room in a slow sweep that never stops.
The sentinel. The man who watches while others talk.
The room settles. Voices drop. The double doors open one more time.
Aurelio Bonaccorso walks in.
I've never seen him in person. I've heard the name a hundred times.
The don. The patriarch. The old lion. Leone speaks of him with the careful respect of a man who loves someone he also fears.
Claudio speaks of him the way soldiers speak of generals.
With distance. With precision. With the understanding that this man holds the power of life and death and exercises it with the casual authority of someone who has been making those decisions for longer than most of the people in this room have been alive.
He's smaller than I expected. Not short, but diminished.
A man who was once large in the way that Leone is large, broad and commanding, but has been reduced by something.
His suit fits perfectly but hangs differently than it should, the shoulders slightly too wide, the collar slightly too loose.
He walks with a cane, dark wood, silver handle, and leans on it more than a man would who was using it for show.
His face is carved. Deep lines around his mouth and eyes, a jaw that's still sharp despite the thinning of age, silver hair swept back from a high forehead.
His eyes are dark and bright and miss absolutely nothing.
They sweep the room the way Claudio's do, but slower.
More deliberate. The scan of a man who has been reading rooms for fifty years and no longer needs to rush.
He sees me. His gaze lands and holds. Not hostile. Assessing. The appraisal of a man who has been told about me and is now confirming or denying whatever he was told against the evidence of his own eyes.
I hold his gaze. I don't know if this is the right move. In this world, looking a don in the eye might be defiance or disrespect or a death wish. But Charlotte Richardson doesn't look away from anyone, and Emma Wren spent too many years looking down to ever do it again.
Aurelio nods. One dip of his chin. Then he moves to the head of the table, where Leone stands and pulls back the chair for him, and the old man sits with the careful movements of someone managing pain he doesn't intend to discuss.
"Sit," Aurelio says. The word fills the room. His voice is deep, roughened by age and accent, and it carries the specific weight of a man who has never had to repeat himself.
Everyone who isn't sitting sits. Claudio stays standing. Aurelio doesn't comment on this, which tells me it's expected.
"You know why we're here," Aurelio says. He folds his hands on the table. His knuckles are swollen. Arthritis or age or both. "Salvatore Ferretti has confessed. The details are in front of you."
Folders. I didn't notice them. One at each seat, unmarked, containing what I assume is the summary of everything Salvatore told Claudio in the interrogation room.
The men at the table open theirs. I open mine.
Pages of dense text, financial diagrams, timelines.
Alexandra's work. Clean, thorough, devastating.
"Werner Kreiss," Aurelio continues. "Geneva.
The financier behind Apex Meridian and presumably part of the organization known as The Silent.
His goal is the absorption of both the Bonaccorso and Castillo families into a single infrastructure controlled by his people.
We have six weeks before phase three begins. "
He pauses. Coughs. Not a small cough. A deep, racking thing that comes from somewhere in his chest and shakes his whole frame. He covers his mouth with a handkerchief. White linen. When he pulls it away, I see him fold it quickly, but not quickly enough. There's a spot of pink on the fabric.
Leone's jaw tightens. He doesn't look at Aurelio. He looks at the table, and the effort of not looking at Aurelio is written in every line of his body.
"The plan," Aurelio says, his voice rougher now. "Leone."
Leone stands. "We move on two fronts. First, the Maryland site Salvatore identified. Kreiss's secondary meeting location. Claudio leads a strike team. Objective: secure all records, hard drives, documents. Neutralize any personnel. We need the evidence to map The Silent's full network."
"Second," Leone continues, "Emilio and Carmelo extract the bartender from the Delaware safe house. Savannah. She's a witness to Kreiss's operation. She's also a civilian, which means she comes out clean and unharmed."
Emilio shifts in his chair beside me. The movement is small. A straightening of his spine, a tension in his shoulders. The name Savannah does something to him.
Interesting.
"The Castillo mole remains unidentified," Leone says. "Salvatore didn't know the name. We'll need to build that case separately. Alexandra is already working on it."
Alexandra nods. Doesn't speak. Her fingers are on the keyboard.
Aurelio listens to all of this with his hands folded and his eyes moving from face to face. When Leone finishes, the room is quiet. Waiting. The way rooms wait when the man at the head of the table hasn't dismissed them yet.
"There is one more thing," Aurelio says.
The quality of the silence changes. I feel it. A tightening, like a string being wound one turn past comfortable. Leone's hand, resting on the table, goes still. Claudio, behind him, uncrosses his arms.
"I have been fighting a battle of my own," Aurelio says. "For some time now. A battle I chose to fight privately, because privacy in these matters is both a privilege and a necessity."
He pauses. His dark eyes move across the room.
"Pancreatic cancer," he says. "Diagnosed fourteen months ago. The prognosis was never good. It has since become worse. It’s everywhere."
The room doesn't breathe.
I watch the words land on each man differently. Carmelo closes his eyes. His folded hands tighten until the knuckles go white. One of the young soldiers looks at the table. The other looks at Leone.
Emilio grips the edge of the table. Both hands. The wood creaks under his fingers. His jaw is locked and his eyes are fixed on Aurelio and there's a brightness in them that he's fighting to keep from spilling over.
Claudio doesn't move. Doesn't breathe. He stands against the wall with his arms at his sides and his face blank and his eyes locked on the old man at the head of the table, and the stillness in him is absolute.
Not the stillness of a machine. The stillness of a man who has just been told that the ground under his feet is shifting, and the only response his body knows is to stop moving and wait for the world to settle.
"I have months," Aurelio says. "Not years. The doctors are specific about this, and I have learned that arguing with doctors is less productive than arguing with the Castillo’s.
" A ghost of a smile. Dark humor. The man is dying and he's making jokes, and I think this is what power looks like when it's honest. Not the performance of strength but the admission of weakness delivered with enough authority that it still sounds like a command.
"I have spent my life building this family.
Not the blood family, though that matters.
The family in this room. The men who carry my name and my trust and my purpose. "
He looks at Leone.
"I am transferring operational control, effective today. Leone Costa is the head of this family's operations. His authority is mine. His decisions are final. His word is law."
Leone doesn't react. His face is stone. But his hand on the table trembles, once, a single vibration that he kills before it becomes a tell. Aurelio sees it. I see Aurelio see it.
"This is not a retirement," Aurelio continues.
"I will advise. I will counsel. I will be available for the decisions that require my experience.
But the day-to-day, the war, the operations, the future.
That belongs to Leone now." He pauses. "And when the time comes, when my daughter, Dahlia, is ready to come home and stop playing house with her thug of a husband, the family returns to blood.
Leone will steward until she's prepared. That is my wish and my instruction."
Dahlia. I've heard the name. Alexandra mentioned her once, late at night, in the east wing. I don’t know much else, but maybe Claudio will fill me in.