Isabella's perspective
Dr. Rossi stared at the boy lying on the stainless steel operating table, barely alive, then looked at me with those snobbish eyes. "I won't treat anyone without ten thousand dollars in cash, sweetheart. This isn't charity."
I didn't even blink. Although I didn't have a single penny on me, I held a bargaining chip a hundred times more deadly than any banknote.
"I have no cash," I began, my voice flat and lifeless. "But I have intelligence that can save you from spending the rest of your life in federal prison. Tomorrow night, the FBI will raid the underground casino on Eighth Street. The undercover agent's name is Miller, codename 'Viper.' He will meet his contact at the docks at midnight."
Rossi's face turned deathly pale, all color draining from his complexion. Under Rossi's gaze, a mixture of shock and awe, I pushed aside the mountain-like burly assistant. My hands, once used to play Chopin for Mafia elites, now transformed into the calmest wings of redemption. Using the first-aid techniques honed in that dark world, I deftly and precisely drained the compressed fluid from Angelo's chest. With a weak, low gasp, his violently heaving chest miraculously calmed, settling into long, rhythmic breaths.
Rossi watched me, his expression a mixture of fear and fascination with the monster I had transformed into. "You can stay," he murmured, taking a step back.
Hours later, as I held my sleeping son in that blood-soaked inner room, I knew perfectly well what was happening in Chicago, three hundred miles away. Memories of my past life replayed in my mind with nauseating clarity.
At that very moment, in the glass penthouse of the Lucrete Building, my fate was sealed. My grandfather, Marco Moretti, known as "The General," was bowing to Lorenzo Falcone. To protect me from the elaborate schemes orchestrated by the matriarch of the Falcone family, my grandfather was being forced to relinquish our family's control over the Port of Chicago.
I could almost hear Lorenzo's smooth, aristocratic voice. He casually tossed an antique coin between his fingers as he glanced at Damian Valenti, who stood to the side, utterly dejected.
"To solidify your marriage with Miss Richie, the Moretti family has handed over the port," Lorenzo probed the new godfather. "In exchange, I declare your marriage to Isabella Moretti null and void. Damian, what do you think of this deal?"
Damian, without the slightest hesitation, coldly replied, "My only wife is Serafina Richie."
"You won't regret it?"
"no way."
With just one word, Damian stripped me of all the protection I had received from the Valenti family and threw me into the clutches of wolves. He abandoned us like trash. But he had no idea that the woman he had discarded had crawled back from hell.
A week later, the acrid dust from the Gary limestone quarry filled my throat.
I swung the heavy hammer, the violent impact reverberating through my arms. My hands were raw and bleeding, blood seeping into my rough canvas gloves. I needed clean cash to buy antibiotics for Angelo, and I also needed this cruel, almost self-destructive physical labor to forge my body into a weapon.
Amidst the white dust and mist, a convoy of black Cadillac Escalades came to a stop at the edge of this desolate mine.
I didn't stop working.
Maria, our family's most loyal servant, stumbled out of the lead car, flanked by heavily armed Moretti family soldiers. She had spent days navigating the filthy streets, bribing bartenders and informants, all in an attempt to find her former Mafia queen shoveling stones amidst the ruins.
"Miss!" Maria's voice broke into a heart-wrenching sob. She ran through the mud and knelt before me, not caring that the mud had soiled her spotless clothes. "Oh God, Miss Isabella...look at your suffering. We've come to take you home."
I slowly put down the hammer, took off my gloves, and carelessly wrapped my bleeding hand with a dirty cloth. My eyes were like still water, showing neither the shock nor relief she had expected.
In my previous life, they arrived two days after I lost Angelo. When they arrived, they only had time to buy him a small wooden coffin. That version of me was already shattered beyond words, my heart utterly dead.
But this time, everything is completely different.
"I know, Maria," I said calmly, my gaze passing over her weeping figure to the armored vehicles waiting to take us back to Chicago. "Help me pack the children's luggage."
Isabella's Perspective
Dr. Rossi stared at the barely breathing boy on the stainless steel operating table, then looked at me with his greedy eyes. "No cash of a hundred thousand dollars, I won't treat you, sweetie. This isn't charity."
I didn't even blink. Although I didn't have a single dollar on me now, I held a stake far deadlier than cash.
"I don't have cash," I said, my voice flat and devoid of emotion, "but I have information that can save you from spending the rest of your life in a federal prison. Tonight, the FBI will raid the underground casino on Eighth Street. The undercover agent's name is Miller, code-named 'Snake.' He will meet his handler at the docks at exactly midnight."
Rosy turned deathly pale, the color draining from his face instantly. Under the mixed shock and awe in Rosy's eyes, I pushed the massive assistant, who was as tall as a hill. The hands that had once only played Chopin for the elite of the mafia had now become the most composed wings of salvation. Relying on the first aid skills honed in that dark world in the past, I drained the oppressive fluid from Angela's chest with astonishing precision. With a soft sigh, his violently ups and downs chest miraculously calmed down, turning into long and regular breaths.
Rossi watched me from the side, filled with fear, yet utterly fascinated by the monster I had transformed into. "You can stay," he muttered, stepping back.
Hours later, as I held my sleeping son in that blood-stained back room, I knew clearly what was happening in Chicago, three hundred miles away. Memories of my past life replayed in my mind with repulsive clarity.
At this very moment, in the glass-top apartment of the "Lucree" building, my fate is being nailed to the gallows. My grandfather, known as "The General" Marco Moretti, is bowing to Lorenzo Farcone. To save me from the carefully woven slander of the mistress of the Farcone family, my grandfather is being forced to give up control of our family over the Chicago port.
I can almost hear Lorenzo's smooth, aristocratic voice. He casually tosses an antique coin while looking at Damián Valentín, standing by his side with a heart of ashes.
"To solidify your marriage with Miss Ricci, the Moretti family has surrendered the port," Lorenzo probes the new godfather. "In exchange, I declare your marriage to Isabella Moretti null and void. Damián, how do you feel about this deal?"
And Damien, without the slightest hesitation, coldly replied: "My wife is only Seraphina Rich."
"You won't regret it?"
"Never."
With just one word, Damien stripped me of all the protection of the Valenti family and threw me into the wolves. He discarded us like garbage. But he didn't know that the woman he threw away had already crawled back from hell.
A week later, the pungent dust from the Gary limestone quarry filled my throat.
I swung the heavy iron hammer, the violent impact vibrating through my arms. My hands were already raw, blood seeping into the rough canvas gloves. I needed clean cash to buy antibiotics for Angelo, and I also needed this cruel, almost self-abusive heavy labor, to forge this body into a weapon.
In the white dust haze, a fleet of black Cadillac Carlyle cars stopped at the edge of this desolate mine pit.
I didn't stop what I was doing.
Maria, the most loyal servant of our family, stumbled down from the carriage, flanked by heavily armed Moretti family soldiers. She spent days navigating the dirty streets, bribing bartenders and informants, just to find her former Mafia queen moving stones in this wasteland.
"Miss!" Maria's voice broke into heart-wrenching sobs. She ran through the mud to kneel before me, completely unconcerned about the mud staining her spotless dress. "Oh, God, Miss Isabella... look at what you've suffered. We're coming to take you home."
I slowly lowered the iron hammer, took off my gloves, and wrapped the bleeding palm with a dirty cloth carelessly. My eyes were like a pool of stagnant water, without the shock or relief she expected.
I know they will come today. But in my previous life, they were a whole week late. By the time they arrived, they only just managed to buy a small wooden coffin for Angelo.
"I know, Maria," I said calmly, my gaze passing over her weeping figure as I looked toward the armored vehicles waiting to take us back to Chicago. "Could you help me pack the children's luggage?"
Isabella's perspective
Maria carefully took Angelo's meager few pieces of clothing, her hands still trembling, and wiped the mine dust from my son's pale little face.
Before we could even approach the waiting convoy, a sharp, sarcastic voice pierced the oppressive silence.
"What a tragedy, Miss Isabella."
I turned around and saw my aunt's personal maid, Carla, standing beside the armored vehicle. She was wearing a brand-new, crisp wool coat, and her gaze swept over my mud-covered clothes, causing her to wrinkle her nose in disgust. She was Old Lady Moretti's mouthpiece, sent here to make me clearly aware of just how badly I had fallen.
"The general surrendered the Port of Chicago for you," Kara continued with feigned pity. "What a heavy price to pay for a wife who was abandoned. We've prepared seats for you and the young master in the cars in the middle of the convoy. That... is more in line with your current status."
She curled her lips into a cruel and triumphant smile, waiting to see me lower my head in shame.
I didn't blink, nor did I argue. I simply gripped Angelo's small hand and walked straight past her, my boots crunching on the gravel. I bypassed the ordinary sedan and headed directly for the lead bulletproof Cadillac-the vehicle reserved exclusively for those of the highest bloodlines.
Maria, who was always loyal, immediately ran forward and opened the heavy car door for me.
I settled into the luxurious leather seat, pulled Angelo into my arms, and rolled down the tinted window halfway. Kara stood frozen in the dust, her smug expression now replaced by utter resentment.
"Let's go," I said to her, my voice devoid of any warmth. "Don't fall behind."
Kara's face flushed red. "His Excellency Lorenzo Falcone has officially dissolved your marriage! You have no power now!" she retorted sharply, eager to regain control.
I let out a soft, sinister laugh. The empty words written by those self-proclaimed gods were meaningless to a woman who had already witnessed the end of the world. I rolled up the car window, completely shutting out her pathetic existence.
The journey back to Chicago was a blurry silhouette of a gray highway. When the magnificent iron gates of Moretti Estate finally came into view, a heavy gloom settled over me.
The convoy came to a sudden stop.
Through the windshield, I saw a sleek black sedan blocking the entrance. I recognized the man leaning against the hood immediately. Leo. Damian Valenti's most trusted soldier.
The blood in my veins instantly turned cold. In my previous life, Damian's men didn't come to take Angelo today, because by this time, my son would already be a cold corpse.
I pushed open the door and got out of the car, immediately shielding Angelo behind my legs for protection.
Leo straightened up and gave me a polite but stiff nod. "Miss Moretti. I've come on Godfather Valenti's orders. I've come to take young Master Angelo home."
"Go home?" The word was forced out of my throat, filled with venomous hatred. "Damian is a beast who would trade even his own flesh and blood like casino chips. He abandoned us to the wolves, and now he wants his heir back?"
Leo frowned and stepped forward. "This is for Angelo's future, miss. Lord Valenti and Miss Richie-"
"Don't mention her name in front of me." I interrupted coldly, my voice extremely calm yet carrying a chilling pressure. I stared directly into Leo's eyes, at his blind loyalty that would ultimately destroy him. "Go tell Damian that if he dares to lay a finger on my son, I will expose the Valenti family's most shameful and sordid secrets to the entire Chicago Mafia."
Leo froze, his hand instinctively reaching for the holster inside his suit jacket. "Miss Isabella, be rational. Serafina just wants-"
"I know exactly what Serafina wants," I interrupted him again, taking a step closer until I could see his pupils dilate slightly. I lowered my voice and dropped a truth he couldn't comprehend at the moment. "Soon, she will need a loyal man to handle some extremely dark and bloody troubles for her. When that day comes, Leo, you will find that the price of serving her far exceeds your capacity to bear it."
Leo froze. The chillingly certain look in my eyes struck a nerve deep within him, a nerve he himself was unaware of. Without a direct order from the Godfather to wage war on Moretti family territory, he dared not make a move.
He slowly backed away, his eyes fixed on me, before getting into the car.
I watched the Valenti family's car reverse and speed away before turning around. I held Angelo's hand tightly and stepped through the massive iron gates of my grandfather's estate. I had won the standoff at the gates, but the real battle had just begun; I had to arm myself first.