Chapter 9: The Price of a Clean Slate
Three months later, Sandra Cole’s aggressive federal investigation finally produced seven sweeping indictments.
Dominic Caruso’s name was miraculously missing from the list. Jeffrey Hart skillfully delivered exactly enough crucial information to satisfy the strict parameters of the federal cooperation framework.
But Dominic’s older brother, Patrick Caruso, was indicted on multiple federal racketeering charges.
It was this brutal reality—more than the threat of prison, more than the relentless lawyers—that hit Dominic in a way that fundamentally changed his soul.
He called Scarlett from the back seat of his car directly outside the towering federal courthouse.
“Patrick’s name is on the unsealed document,” Dominic said. He sounded stripped of his usual armor.
“Where are you right now?” Scarlett asked, stepping into the diner’s kitchen for privacy.
“Sitting outside the courthouse,” Dominic murmured. “I don’t know where to go.”
“I am at work until seven o’clock,” Scarlett instructed firmly. “Come to my apartment on Callum Street at seven-thirty. Do not bring your bodyguards to my door.”
“I’ll be there,” Dominic promised.
He arrived at exactly 7:30 PM.
They sat together in her tiny, cramped apartment. Scarlett made him cheap chamomile tea because she had run out of coffee. Dominic, a man who owned penthouses, sat quietly in the only good, unbroken chair she owned. Scarlett sat across from him on the edge of her unmade bed. Neither spoke for twenty long minutes.
“I couldn’t save him,” Dominic finally whispered, staring down at the chipped ceramic mug. “I traded my own safety, and Patrick took the fall.”
“You did not force Patrick to commit federal crimes, Dominic,” Scarlett said gently, reaching out to touch his knee. “You made a choice to finally step out of the dark. He made his own choice to stay in it.”
The bedroom door creaked open, interrupting their quiet moment.
Norma Monroe shuffled slowly into the small living area. She leaned heavily on her aluminum cane.
Dominic immediately stood up from the chair, a reflexive show of deep respect.
Norma looked the towering billionaire up and down for a long, calculating moment. She possessed the sharp, intuitive eyes of a mother who missed nothing.
“So,” Norma said, her voice raspy but firm. “You are the man making my daughter think so hard lately.”
Dominic offered a hesitant smile. “I sincerely hope that is not a complaint, Mrs. Monroe.”
“It is a warning,” Norma corrected sharply, pointing her cane at the floor between them. “My daughter thinks plenty on her own. But if a man from the wrong side of the tracks brings his darkness into my home, he better ensure he leaves it at the door. I will not watch her pay for your sins.”
Dominic’s smile faded into an expression of profound respect. “I hear you, ma’am. And I swear to you, I am doing everything in my power to burn that darkness down.”
He wasn’t lying. But burning down an empire came with a massive price tag.
Two days later, Dominic called a mandatory sit-down with his remaining underbosses in a soundproof room beneath a Ridgewood meatpacking plant.
Silvio Dante, a capo who ran the East Side extortion rackets for twenty years, slammed his fists on the table when Dominic announced the total restructuring.
“You don’t just hand over the Port Authority and walk away clean, Dominic!” Silvio roared, cigar ash scattering across the table. “You’re selling us out because of a federal squeeze and some diner waitress!”
“The illicit contracts end today, Silvio,” Dominic stated, his voice an immovable wall of granite. “We transition to legitimate logistics and real estate. Anyone who objects can take their severance and leave the city.”
“You bleed for this!” Silvio spat, drawing a weapon and placing it flat on the table. “You owe this family!”
Dominic stared at the gun. He didn’t flinch.
“I am buying my son’s future,” Dominic said coldly. “And I am buying my own exit.”
To secure peace and prevent a bloody civil war within his own ranks, Dominic surrendered the highly lucrative East Side Redevelopment Project to the Lupertazzi family, a rival syndicate. He signed over the deeds to three massive commercial properties.
He lost half his net worth in forty-eight hours. He surrendered his remaining pride to men he previously commanded.
When Cory Caruso found out, the twenty-two-year-old stormed into his father’s office.
“You burned down what Grandpa built!” Cory yelled, his face red with fury. “This is suicide! The other families will tear us apart!”
“Let them try,” Dominic said, his voice dropping into a lethal register. “I am done building cages. If you want to be part of this family’s future, you will help me build something clean. If you want to be a gangster, pack your bags.”
The shouting match lasted for ninety agonizing minutes.
When Cory stormed out, he dialed his teenage sister, Natalie.
“Dad has lost his mind,” Cory panted into the phone. “He’s tearing the whole syndicate apart.”
“I know he’s different,” Natalie replied softly over the phone.
“Why is he doing this?!” Cory demanded.
“Because, Cory,” Natalie smiled. “She happened.”