Serafina's POV
The first bullet shattered the chandelier.
Crystal rained down like knives as guests screamed and scattered. I dragged the maid behind me, heels slipping on polished marble now slick with spilled wine and panic.
The orchestra vanished into chaos. Men shouted orders in Italian. Somewhere behind us, Luca roared my name.
"Left," Matteo barked. He slammed a guard into the wall, seized the man's gun, and fired without breaking stride. The shot echoed through the corridor, sharp and final.
I didn't look back. We burst through a service door into a narrow passage lit by flickering fluorescents. The maid sobbed, struggling to keep up.
"Keep moving," I said, breath tearing out of me. "Don't stop."
Gunfire followed.
Not warning shots.
Kill shots.
Matteo shoved us ahead of him, taking the rear, firing backward with terrifying precision. He didn't hesitate. I didn't miss it. This wasn't rebellion, this was survival
"Where are we going?" I shouted.
"The old wine tunnels," he replied. "If they're not sealed."
A guard rounded the corner ahead.
Matteo shot him before he could raise his weapon. The body hit the floor hard. I stepped over it without thinking.
That scared me more than the blood.
We reached the stairwell. Matteo kicked the door open, ushering us down. Alarms blared overhead, red lights flashing.
The sound of boots thundered from above.
Halfway down, the maid stumbled. I caught her arm. She looked at me like I was a miracle. Like I was death.
"I didn't mean to" she sobbed.
"I know," I said. "Move."
At the bottom, Matteo slammed his shoulder into a rusted steel door. It groaned, then gave way. Cold air rushed 4-4+/out, thick with damp stone and age.
The wine tunnels. Rows of old barrels lined the narrow passage, dust and cobwebs clinging to them like ghosts.
The smell was sharp and sour. We ran.
Behind us, the door burst open.
"Split," Matteo ordered. "Now."
"What?" I protested.
He grabbed my arm, pulling me close. "If they catch all three of us, we're dead."
My chest seized. "I'm not leaving you."
His eyes locked onto mine hard, fierce, unyielding.
"You already chose," he said. "Now trust me."
He turned to the maid. "Follow the tunnel until you see daylight. Don't stop. Don't look back."
The maid hesitated, then ran. I grabbed Matteo's hand. "You're not doing this alone."
He squeezed once. Hard. "I am." Then he shoved me sideways into a narrow side passage and slammed a barrel across the opening.
Gunfire erupted. Matteo disappeared into smoke and echoing shots.
"No-!" I tried to climb over the barrel.
A hand clamped over my mouth. I screamed into it.
Vittorio Moretti dragged me into the shadows.
"Quiet," he hissed. "Unless you want Luca to find you first."
Rage exploded through me. I slammed my elbow into his ribs. He grunted but didn't let go.
"Matteo is buying us time," Vittorio said sharply. "Don't waste it."
"He'll die," I spat.
"Yes," Vittorio said. "If we fail."
He released me, moving fast now. "This way."
We ran through the tunnels, boots splashing through shallow water. The sounds of pursuit split, scattering in different directions.
"You planned this," I accused between breaths.
"I planned contingencies," Vittorio replied. "You exceeded expectations."
That wasn't comforting. We emerged into a cellar beneath an abandoned vineyard.
Night air hit my lungs, sharp and alive. Vittorio slammed the door shut behind us and shoved a heavy crate into place.
Silence.
For a heartbeat.
Then gunshots echoed underground.
I spun on him. "Where is he?"
"Fighting," Vittorio said. "As expected."
My hands shook.
"If he dies-"
"He won't," Vittorio interrupted. "Not yet. Luca won't kill him quickly."
That landed like a punch. "Because he wants me."
"Yes," Vittorio said simply. "And because Matteo knows too much." Sirens wailed in the distance.
Not the police.
Luca's men.
Vittorio pulled out his phone. "It's time."
"For what?" "To turn the city against him."
He handed me the flash drive again.
"These accounts tie Luca to international weapons shipments and judges he paid off. Enough to fracture his alliances."
"And you're giving it to me because...?"
"Because Luca won't suspect you," Vittorio said.
"He still thinks you're breaking."
I laughed, hysterical and sharp. "He made me hold a knife to an innocent woman."
"And you dropped it," Vittorio said. "That's why this works."
He opened the trunk of a car parked in the shadows. Inside were clothes. Weapons. Cash. "Choose," he said. "Run or rule."
I didn't hesitate.
"Rule," I said.
Something like approval flickered across his face. Before we could move, headlights cut through the trees.
Too close.
"Down," Vittorio snapped.
We ducked behind the car as vehicles roared into the clearing. Doors slammed. Men shouted.
Luca's voice carried through the night.
"She's here."
My blood froze.
Footsteps crunched closer.
Vittorio leaned toward me. "If this goes wrong, you run. You don't stop."
"I'm not leaving Matteo."
Vittorio's jaw tightened. "Then don't miss your shot."
A guard appeared around the hood. I fired.
The recoil jolted up my arm. The guard dropped instantly.
Shouts erupted.
Gunfire answered.
Vittorio returned fire, moving with practiced ease. We fell back toward the trees, bullets tearing bark and dirt around us.
Then I saw him.
Matteo emerged from the tunnel entrance, blood streaking his sleeve, eyes locked on me.
Alive.
Relief nearly dropped me to my knees.
Luca stepped out behind him, gun trained on Matteo's back.
"Enough," Luca called. "Drop your weapons."
Matteo didn't move.
Luca smiled. "You always were predictable."
He shifted the gun slightly, aiming not at Matteo.
At me.
"Choose," Luca said calmly. "Come back to me, Serafina. Or watch him die."
Everything narrowed.
The noise.
The men.
The guns.
All gone.
Matteo shook his head once.
Don't.
I raised my gun.
Not at Luca.
At the fuel tank behind him.
I fired.
The explosion lit the night. Fire tore through the clearing. Men screamed. Luca was thrown backward, disappearing into smoke and flame.
The blast knocked me off my feet.
Hands grabbed me. Pulled me up.
"Move!" Matteo shouted.
We ran. Behind us, the De Santis estate burned.
And somewhere in the chaos, Luca De Santis survived.
I knew it.
Because this war had just begun.
Serafina's POV
The fire followed us.
Even as we ran, even as the night swallowed us whole, I could still feel the heat of the explosion licking at my spine, hear the echo of men screaming, smell burning fuel and scorched earth clinging to my lungs.
The De Santis estate burned behind us like a wounded beast, roaring its fury into the sky.
But Luca De Santis was not dead.
I knew it the way you know when a storm hasn't finished breaking when the air goes too still, too expectant.
"Keep moving," Matteo said, breath rough, blood soaking through the sleeve of his jacket. He staggered once but caught himself, jaw clenched so tightly I thought his teeth might crack.
We plunged deeper into the trees, branches tearing at my dress, thorns ripping silk and skin alike. Vittorio led the way, his pace relentless despite his age, his silhouette sharp against the moonlight like a man carved from strategy rather than flesh.
Only when we reached the ravine did he signal us to stop.
A narrow cut in the earth opened before us, hidden beneath overgrowth and shadow. Vittorio shoved aside the foliage, revealing a concealed path sloping downward.
"This way," he said. "If Luca's men are smart and they are, they'll split into search rings. This buys us minutes. Not hours."
Minutes were all we ever got in Luca's world.
We descended fast, half-sliding down the damp earth until my boots hit stone. A tunnel mouth yawned open before us, reinforced with old concrete and rusted steel supports.
Another escape route. Another secret.
"How many of these do you have?" I demanded.
Vittorio didn't look back. "Enough to survive."
Gunfire cracked in the distance.
Matteo swore under his breath. His steps faltered again, and this time I caught him, my arm sliding around his waist. The heat of his blood soaked into my palm.
"You're hurt," I said.
"I've been worse," he replied. A lie. We both knew it.
We pushed on until the tunnel widened into a small chamber lit by a single exposed bulb. Vittorio slammed the metal door shut behind us and threw the lock.
The sound rang final, heavy.
Silence crashed down.
Only then did Matteo sag.
I dragged him to the wall and lowered him carefully to the ground, my hands shaking as I pressed against the wound in his side. Blood seeped between my fingers, dark and steady.
"No," I whispered. "No, no-stay with me."
"I am," he said, breath uneven. "I'm not going anywhere."
Vittorio knelt beside us, already tearing open a medical kit I hadn't seen him carry. "Bullet grazed him," he said briskly. "Exit wound is clean. He'll live."
Relief hit me so hard my vision blurred.
Matteo's eyes found mine. "You fired," he said quietly. "You didn't hesitate."
"I wasn't going to let him choose for me," I replied. My voice didn't shake. It surprised me.
Vittorio finished bandaging Matteo and stood. "Then it's settled."
"What is?" I asked.
"You've crossed the line Luca built his empire on," he said. "There's no returning to silence now."
I rose to my feet. My hands were still stained with Matteo's blood. I didn't wipe them away.
"Good," I said. "I was done being quiet."
Vittorio studied me for a long moment, then nodded once. Approval. Not admiration, calculation.
"Then you need to understand what comes next," he said. "Luca will control the narrative by morning. He'll paint you as unstable. Matteo as a traitor. Me as a ghost."
"He'll hunt us," Matteo added.
"Yes," Vittorio agreed. "But first, he'll secure his power."
My stomach tightened. "How?"
"By announcing your death."
The words landed cold and precise.
"He'll say you were killed in the explosion," Vittorio continued. "Tragic. Public. Final. It protects his image. Buys him sympathy. And it frees him to move without worrying about appearances."
"And Matteo?" I asked.
Vittorio's gaze flicked to him. "He'll be declared dead too. Or worse. A traitor executed while attempting escape."
Matteo exhaled slowly. "He'll use it to clean the house."
"Yes," Vittorio said. "Which is exactly what we want."
I frowned. "Explain."
"Power hates uncertainty," Vittorio said. "If Luca believes you're gone, he'll relax his grip. That's when alliances shift. Men start asking questions. That's when documents leak."
The flash drive.
I pulled it from my clutch and held it up. "This?"
"That," Vittorio said, "is the knife you didn't use tonight."
Matteo looked between us. "You trust him," he said to me quietly.
"I don't," I replied. "But I trust that Luca made him afraid enough to gamble."
A corner of Vittorio's mouth twitched. "You're learning fast."
Sirens wailed again in the distance closer now.
Vittorio checked his watch. "We move. There's a safe house twenty minutes from here."
We exited through another tunnel mouth that opened onto a dirt road. A black SUV waited in the shadows, engine already running.
As we climbed in, Matteo caught my wrist. "Serafina."
I turned to him.
"If this becomes a war," he said, voice low, "it won't end cleanly."
"I know," I replied. "That's why I'm not letting you fight it alone."
His thumb brushed my pulse once. The contact was brief. Electric. Forbidden even now.
The SUV surged forward.
We drove in silence, the road twisting through vineyards and forgotten countryside. My reflection stared back at me in the window, hair loose, dress torn, eyes sharp with something new.
Not fear.
Resolve.
The safe house was a modest villa tucked behind olive trees, unassuming and dark.
Vittorio ushered us inside, locking down security with practiced efficiency.
"Rest," he said. "We strike at dawn."
"Strike how?" Matteo asked.
Vittorio turned to me. "That depends on her."
I met his gaze. "Luca used marriage to control me," I said. "So we start by destroying the alliances built on it."
His eyes gleamed. "Names?"
"Tomorrow," I said. "After I make a call."
Vittorio arched a brow. "To whom?"
I pulled out my phone.
The same unknown number still lingered at the top of my screen.
I typed a single message.
You wanted me broken. I'm not. If you're watching, prove you're on the winning side.
The reply came instantly.
Always was.
Coordinates followed.
My pulse spiked.
Matteo watched my face. "What is it?"
"The third eye," I said. "They want to meet."
Vittorio exhaled slowly. "Dangerous."
"Yes," I agreed. "Which is why I'm going."
Matteo stepped forward. "No. Not alone."
I met his gaze. "I won't be."
Outside, thunder rolled across the hills.
Somewhere in the city, Luca De Santis was waking to ashes and lies.
And for the first time, the game wasn't his anymore.