Page 100 of Ruthless Lord
I take my phone from my pocket and stop the recording.
“Two minutes of talking… ten minutes of brutality.” I smile to myself. “Exactly how I like it.”
I limp slowly back to my car. Somebody else will come out and clean this shit up.
I have a wife waiting for me back home.
Chapter 31
Charlie
“Ireally didn’t want it to come to this.” I stare at the fence around my father’s Radnor house.
“The recording’s good, but it doesn’t go far enough. You said it yourself, we need the old man.”
I let out a sigh. I know he’s right. I just wanted it to end with our trap the other night.
At least we have leverage now. My father could have pleaded ignorance, at least until Stefano got that confession. That brutal, ugly recording. I wonder if we should play the whole thing so Dad understands who he’s dealing with.
Maybe we’ll do the edited version. Just for brevity’s sake.
“Last chance to stay behind.” Stefano pushes open the door and gets out. “I don’t want you in there with me.”
“I grew up in this place. You’re going to need my help. Besides,” I slap the door behind me and follow him to the fence. “My dad’s a big fucking baby.”
Stefano smothers a smile. “You going to slap him around if he gets in your face?”
“I won’t bother with an open palm.”
“That’s my girl. Put your shoulder and hip into it. That’ll give weight to the punch.”
“How about this?” I trot around the fence line until I find the spot I’m looking for. There are big, fluffy bushes on the other side, perfect to fall into and good at blocking any trespassers from view. “Once this is all over, you give me some fighting tips.”
“You just want an excuse to wrestle.”
“And you just want an excuse to pin me down.” I start climbing the fence and pause at the top. “You need help with this, old man?”
He lets out a long sigh and shakes his head. “Not fucking funny,” he mutters, struggling to get up as easily as I did. I let go and fall back into the bush, hitting it a lot harder than I used to. I roll out, wiping sticks and leaves from my hair. Stefano drops down a moment later, only slightly more graceful.
“That was easier when I was twelve,” I mutter as we walk along through the trees. Ahead, the house looms at the top of a slope. I remember sledding down this hill when I was a kid. I’d have to avoid hitting the trees, but it was fun as hell. At least until I messed up and nearly broke my arm.
We approach the house together and pause at the trees. I point out a set of Bilco doors hidden neatly near some decorative plants. “Those are always unlocked. Dad’s lazy and his staff doesn’t care. We’ll go in that way.” The building is a massivemodernist structure with lots of glass windows and a sloping roof.
Stefano takes out his phone and makes a call. “Kill the system,” he murmurs, waits a moment, and hangs up.
“Davide all good?”
He nods and stalks forward. “All good.”
I hurry after my husband. He seems totally calm but I’m a mess of emotions. I haven’t been here in a while, and now I’m breaking in through the basement like a thief. My father’s done nothing but try to hurt me ever since I became the heir to the Westbrook fortune, so why do I even care if we’re here to hurt him back?
Maybe because he’s still my father. That’s the sick part of all this. Regardless of what happens, he’s the man that raised me, and it wasn’t always like this. I have good memories in this house.
Stefano hauls the basement doors open. I head down the steps and into the basement. There’s no light and it’s pitch black, but Dad doesn’t really store much down here. There are some antiques covered by cloths and tools stacked along the walls, but it’s easy to navigate toward the stairs.
I go first with Stefano on my heels. I listen at the door, but I don’t hear anything. It opens into a hallway, the walls lined with painfully familiar art. Dad hasn’t updated much since I was last here. The rugs are priceless and the vases should be on display in a museum, not some rich asshole’s second home. A Van Gogh’s hanging above a priceless early American side table in the entry hall.
The place really is beautiful. Lots of stone and natural wood. Dark beams cross the ceiling. The kitchen’s modern and clean. I was the only one who ever used it, aside from Dad’s private chef.
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