Elena Vitiello POV:
The dealer's hands shook slightly as he burned the top card and quickly dealt the flop onto the center of the green felt. The Queen of Hearts, the King of Spades, and the Ace of Diamonds.
Sofia buried her face into the back of Luca's jacket, her shoulders shaking as she let out loud, dramatic sobs. She was trying to weaponize her tears, hoping some man in the room would step up to defend her honor. Not a single person moved. The men around us looked at her with cold, unblinking contempt.
Luca stood frozen, the heavy killing intent from a dozen armed guards pressing down on his chest. A thick bead of sweat rolled down his temple. He finally realized that the protective bubble he lived in for the past ten years had popped. He was standing in a room full of predators, and he was the prey.
He shifted his eyes away from the guards and looked at me. His gaze was frantic, begging. He was silently asking me to call off the dogs, to save him from his own stupidity, just like he had done a hundred times before.
I met his gaze. My eyes were empty, reflecting nothing but the cold chandelier light. I severed the final, invisible thread connecting us.
It was my turn to act. I reached out with my right hand, my long fingers elegantly pinching the corners of my two hole cards. I did not look down at the community cards on the table. I kept my eyes locked onto Luca's face, turning a simple game of poker into a public execution.
I lifted the cards and slammed them face-up onto the table with a sharp, explosive crack.
Every eye in the room darted to the felt.
There lay two Jacks. The Jack of Clubs and the Jack of Spades.
In the language of the cards, and in the deep-rooted slang of the mafia, a Jack was a servant. A foot soldier. A disposable pawn meant to take the hit for the royalty.
I placed my hands flat on the edge of the table and pushed myself up. I leaned forward, letting my presence expand until it suffocated the space between us.
I stared dead into Luca's wide eyes and spoke in a voice so cold it could freeze blood.
"I fold."
I paused for a fraction of a second, letting the terminology hang in the air before delivering the final strike.
"I'm throwing away these two useless Jacks."
A collective, muffled gasp swept through the crowd. The double entendre was a brutal, precise blade, and every single person in the room understood exactly what I just did. I didn't just insult them; I publicly stripped them of their status, declaring them abandoned property.
All the blood drained from Luca's face, leaving him looking like a corpse. His mouth opened slightly as he stared down at the two discarded face cards. He saw his own reflection in the glossy paper. He was the trash being tossed aside.
Behind him, Matteo's face contorted in shame. He squeezed his hands into tight fists, his nails digging so hard into his palms I could see the skin turning white.
Sofia wiped her eyes, looking confused. She didn't understand the poker terminology, but she understood the absolute dominance radiating from my posture. Her face twisted into a mask of pure, ugly resentment.
I did not give them another second of my time. I reached down, grabbed my black velvet clutch from the table, and turned my back on them.
I walked toward the exit. The crowd of dangerous men parted immediately, creating a wide, clear path for me.
Behind me, I heard a sudden, violent scuffle. Panic had finally overridden Luca's paralysis. The reality that I was walking away—permanently—slammed into his brain.
He shoved Sofia aside with brutal force. "Get off me!" he yelled.
Sofia shrieked as she lost her balance on her ridiculous heels. She crashed hard onto the wooden floor. The cheap fabric of her red dress caught on the leg of a chair and ripped open with a loud, embarrassing tear.
Matteo rushed forward, reaching down to help her up. Sofia slapped his hand away viciously, her face red with fury and embarrassment.
I pushed the heavy brass doors open. The biting chill of the October Chicago wind slammed into me, whipping loose strands of hair across my face.
My armored Maybach was already idling at the curb, the rear door held wide open by my shadow guard.
Before I could take the first step down the concrete stairs, Luca burst through the brass doors behind me. His chest heaved, his eyes wild with desperation.
"Elena!" he shouted, his voice cracking.
He leaped down the first two steps, his arm extending outward. His large hand reached out, aiming to grab my wrist to force me to stop.
I spun around on my heel. I did not flinch. I did not step back. I stared at him with eyes as sharp as razors. The temperature on the steps dropped to freezing.
In the darkness around us, the distinct sound of metal sliding against metal cut through the wind.
"Get lost."
Elena Vitiello POV:
Before his fingers could even graze the skin of my wrist, three sharp, synchronized metallic clicks shattered the night air.
From the deep shadows of the club's exterior pillars, three of the Vitiello family's elite shadow guards materialized like ghosts. They moved with terrifying speed, stepping into a perfect triangular formation that placed me securely behind their bodies.
Three matte-black Glock 19s, each fitted with a long cylindrical suppressor, were raised and locked onto their targets. The hollow black muzzles pointed directly at the center of Luca's forehead, his heart, and his right kneecap.
Luca's outstretched hand froze in mid-air. His entire body locked up as the primal survival instinct took over. A thick sheen of cold sweat instantly broke out across his forehead, soaking the collar of his dress shirt.
He stared at the emotionless faces of the men aiming at him. His eyes widened as the reality finally registered in his thick skull. I hadn't just locked him out of my room; I had completely replaced my security detail with men who would blow his brains out without a second thought.
He looked past the barrels of the guns, his eyes finding my face. His voice shook, thick with disbelief and a pathetic sense of betrayal. "You... you're letting them point guns at me?"
He sounded like a victim. He had completely erased his own actions from his memory.
I stood behind the wall of guards, the cold wind whipping the heavy black velvet of my dress around my legs. I looked at him like he was a stain on the concrete.
I tilted my head slightly to the side. "What? You're allowed to point a gun at my chest for a whore, but I'm not allowed to defend myself?"
My words hit him like a physical blow. The remaining color drained from his face, leaving him ashy gray. His mouth opened and closed as he struggled to find an excuse.
"That... that was an accident," he stammered, his hands raising slowly in surrender. "I was just angry... I didn't mean to hurt you, I swear, I just—"
"Shut up," I snapped, my voice cutting through his lies like a whip. "Your voice makes me sick."
I took one step forward. The guards instantly shifted, parting just enough to let me look down at him from the top of the stairs.
I stared into his terrified eyes, making sure every syllable etched itself into his brain. "Luca, remember your place. You are just a stray dog I took in. You ate my food, you slept under my roof, and you bit the hand that fed you."
I paused, letting the cold wind carry the silence. "Now, I don't want you anymore. If you cross the line again, if you ever try to touch me again, I will make sure your death is ugly."
Luca's body swayed violently. The invisible pillar that had supported his ego for the last decade crumbled into dust. His knees buckled slightly, and for a second, I thought he was going to collapse onto the pavement. He finally realized that the endless forgiveness he relied on was gone forever.
I turned my back on him. I walked down the remaining steps and slid into the leather seat of the Maybach.
The heavy armored door slammed shut, severing my line of sight. The thick glass blocked out the sound of the wind and the sight of his pathetic face.
Outside, the shadow guards maintained their aiming stances. They did not lower their weapons until my driver pulled the Maybach smoothly away from the curb and merged into the city traffic. Only then did they holster their guns and vanish back into the darkness.
Luca stood completely alone on the freezing steps. The wind cut through his thin suit jacket, but the numbness in his chest was worse than the cold.
The heavy brass doors opened again. Matteo walked out, holding onto a limping, disheveled Sofia. She was shivering, clutching the torn fabric of her red dress over her thigh.
When she saw Luca standing there staring into space, her face twisted with angry entitlement. "Did you see what they did to me?!" she shrieked, her voice shrill. "My dress is ruined! You need to go back in there and teach them a lesson, Luca! You have to—"
Luca spun around, his eyes wild and bloodshot. "Shut up!" he roared, his voice echoing down the empty street. "Haven't you embarrassed us enough for one night?!"
Sofia jumped back, stunned into silence. It was the first time he had ever raised his voice at her. A flash of pure, venomous resentment sparked in her eyes.
Before she could scream back, a sharp buzz vibrated from the inside pocket of Luca's jacket.
He moved mechanically, pulling his phone out with trembling fingers. The screen lit up the dark sidewalk. It was an automated text message from American Express.
*Notice: Your Centurion Black Card ending in 4092 has been permanently canceled by the primary cardholder. All linked accounts have been frozen.*
Luca stared at the glowing letters. His breathing stopped. The reality of my financial execution finally hit him. I hadn't just stripped him of his status; I had stripped him of the wealth he used to pretend he was a king.
Matteo saw Luca's face. He quickly reached into his own pocket and pulled out his phone. He stared at his screen, his face turning the color of chalk.
A harsh gust of wind blew past them, kicking up dead leaves from the gutter and swirling them around their expensive shoes.
Matteo let his arm drop to his side. He looked at the empty street where my car had disappeared. "We're done... she drained our blood."
Luca POV:
The midday sun beat down on the Magnificent Mile, reflecting off the pristine glass storefronts, but I felt nothing but a cold, heavy dread sitting in the pit of my stomach.
Sofia had a death grip on my arm. She was dragging me down the busy sidewalk, her heels clicking aggressively against the pavement. She was trying to walk with her head held high, desperate to erase the humiliation of last night by doing the one thing that always made her feel powerful: spending money.
She pulled me through the heavy glass doors of the Hermès VIP boutique. The air conditioning hit my face, smelling of expensive leather and polished wood.
Sofia marched straight past the regular displays and pointed a manicured finger at a glass case. "That one," she demanded, her voice loud and arrogant. "The Himalayan crocodile Birkin. Box it up."
The sales associate, a tall woman with perfectly styled hair and a practiced, tight smile, unlocked the case. She carried the bag to the polished marble counter with gloved hands. "An excellent choice, madam. That will be one hundred and five thousand dollars."
Sofia didn't even blink. She turned to me, holding out her hand expectantly.
I reached into my wallet. My fingers brushed against the thick, heavy metal of the Centurion Black Card. My heart hammered violently against my ribs. I had stared at the cancellation text all night, but a part of my brain desperately clung to the hope that Elena was just trying to scare me. She wouldn't actually cut me off. She loved me too much to leave me with nothing.
I pulled the black metal card out and handed it to the clerk. I rubbed the side of my nose, trying to hide the cold sweat breaking out on my upper lip.
Matteo stood near the entrance, his arms crossed over his chest. He was staring intensely at the cash register, his face pale. He had that look he got right before a shootout.
The clerk took the card with a respectful nod. She slid the magnetic strip through the heavy POS machine.
A sharp, high-pitched *beep-beep-beep* echoed in the quiet store. A bright red light flashed on the screen of the machine.
The clerk's professional smile froze. She looked down at the screen, then back up at me. Her tone dropped a fraction of a degree in warmth. "Sir, your card was declined by the issuer."
Sofia gasped loudly. She slammed her hand on the marble counter. "Impossible!" she shrieked, her voice echoing off the walls and drawing the stares of the wealthy women browsing nearby. "That is a no-limit black card! You did it wrong. Swipe it again!"
The clerk's jaw tightened. She gripped the card and ran it through the machine a second time, slower.
*Beep-beep-beep.* Red light.
The clerk let out a small, barely audible sigh. The respectful deference vanished from her eyes completely, replaced by the cold, assessing glare reserved for frauds trying to play dress-up.
I felt the stares of the other customers burning into my back like physical needles. The heat rushed up my neck, turning my face a dark, humiliating red. My pride, the only thing I had left, was being shredded in public.
I snatched the black card from the counter. My hands were shaking. I dug into my wallet and pulled out my personal Visa card, the one tied to my actual bank account. I slammed it onto the counter. "Use this one."
The clerk swiped it. The machine beeped instantly. *Declined: Insufficient Funds.*
The bag cost over a hundred grand. The limit on my personal card was exactly five thousand dollars. Without Elena's money, I was nothing. I was just a street rat standing in a palace I couldn't afford.
Matteo saw the panic in my eyes. He gritted his teeth, walked over, and pulled out his own credit card. "Try mine," he muttered, trying to save whatever dignity we had left.
The clerk swiped his card. Red light. Declined.
The clerk picked up both of our cards and pushed them across the marble counter toward us. She didn't bother smiling anymore. "Gentlemen," she said, her voice raised just enough for the entire store to hear. "If you cannot afford the merchandise, please do not waste our time. We have paying clients waiting."
A group of older women standing near the silk scarves let out a collective, poorly hidden laugh. One of them pointed at Sofia's shoes and whispered to her friend.
Sofia's face crumpled. The illusion of her high-society life shattered into a million pieces. She let out a loud, humiliated sob, covered her face with her hands, and ran out of the boutique.
I glared at the clerk, my vision swimming with rage. I snatched our useless plastic cards off the counter and sprinted out the door after her.
I caught up to them at the corner of the street. The cold wind whipped off the lake, chilling my sweat-soaked shirt. Sofia was leaning against a brick wall, crying hysterically, her makeup running down her cheeks.
"She's trying to kill us!" Sofia sobbed, pointing a finger at my chest. "Elena is a vicious, evil bitch! She's doing this to humiliate me! She wants to ruin us!"
Listening to her cry, the crushing guilt I felt last night mutated into a twisted, defensive rage. My mind flashed back to Elena's cold, dead eyes on the steps of the club. She looked at me like I was garbage. She threw me away without a second thought.
I clenched my fists so hard my knuckles popped. "I'm going to get an explanation," I snarled, my voice vibrating with anger. "She owes us for ten years of loyalty. I'm going to get back what's ours."
Matteo stared at me, his eyes wide. "Luca, are you insane? Going there now is suicide. You saw the guards."
"I don't care!" I shouted. "I'm not letting her treat us like dogs!"
Matteo closed his mouth. He knew it was a death wish, but he didn't argue. He just followed me.
We dropped Sofia off at the cheap, cramped apartment Matteo rented under his own name. Then we got into my beat-up Ford sedan—the only car I actually owned. I slammed the gearshift and floored the gas pedal. The engine roared, struggling to accelerate as I sped toward the Vitiello estate.
Back at the apartment, Sofia stood by the dirty window, watching our taillights disappear. She stopped crying. She wiped the black mascara off her cheeks, her eyes turning hard and calculating.
She reached into her purse and pulled out an old, cracked burner phone. She scrolled past the empty contact list and dialed a number she hadn't called in years.
"Since you won't give me a way out," she whispered to the empty room, a cold smile stretching across her face, "then none of us will live."