Luca POV:
The freezing wind howled across the barren dirt field of the Chicago Outfit’s lowest-tier training camp. The air tasted like cheap diesel, dried sweat, and copper blood.
I gritted my teeth. The two-hundred-pound canvas sandbag dug into my bruised shoulders. I squatted down into the freezing mud and launched myself forward in another agonizing frog jump.
Three feet to my right, Matteo stumbled. His prosthetic leg slipped in the deep, freezing sludge. He let out a choked gasp and collapsed face-first into the mud, the massive sandbag crushing him against the ground.
The drill instructor, a massive brute with a face full of knife scars, marched over. He didn't yell. He didn't tell Matteo to get up.
He raised his heavy combat boot, the sole studded with iron nails, and brought it down violently onto Matteo’s ribcage.
A sickening snap echoed across the silent yard. Matteo let out a high-pitched, slaughtered-pig scream, clutching his side as he rolled in the muck.
I threw my sandbag off my shoulders. I roared, lunging at the instructor with my fists raised, aiming for his throat.
The instructor simply stepped to the side. He swung his massive fist, burying his knuckles directly into my unhealed jaw.
White light exploded behind my eyes. I hit the mud hard, tumbling over twice before coming to a stop. I coughed, spitting a mouthful of black dirt and dark red blood onto the ground.
Around the yard, fifty bottom-tier thugs and dock workers erupted into cruel laughter. They pointed at us, mocking the former Lieutenants who used to command them.
The instructor walked over. He planted his heavy boot directly onto my chest, pinning me to the earth. He leaned down and spat a thick glob of saliva directly onto my cheek.
He told me I was worse than a stray dog. He told me I was garbage.
I squeezed my eyes shut. The humiliation burned through my veins like acid. Tears mixed with the freezing rain and ran into my mouth. I had never known what it felt like to be completely powerless.
Hours later, the sun went down. I dragged Matteo down a flight of concrete stairs into our assigned basement room.
There was no heater. The walls leaked dirty water. There was only one moldy mattress on the floor.
I laid Matteo down. He was shivering violently, holding his broken ribs, whimpering with every breath.
My coat pocket buzzed. I pulled out my phone. The screen was spider-webbed with cracks, but I could read the caller ID. Sofia.
My hands were covered in dried blood and mud. I pressed the answer button and held the phone to my ear.
Sofia did not ask how I was. She did not ask if I was safe. A shrill, hysterical scream blasted through the speaker.
She yelled that she had been chased by loan sharks. She screamed that one of them had scratched her cheek with a ring. She demanded that I wire her one hundred thousand dollars immediately to pay them off.
I stood in the freezing, dark basement. I looked at the water dripping from the ceiling. I listened to Matteo crying in pain.
The filter in my brain completely shattered. I saw her. I finally saw her exactly as she was.
"Do you know how we are living right now?" I asked, my voice terrifyingly calm. "Matteo’s ribs are broken. We are sleeping in the mud."
Sofia went silent for one second. Then, her voice turned venomous. She cursed me. She called us pathetic, useless garbage who couldn't even protect a woman.
Her words hit me like a rusty hammer to the skull.
My mind flashed back to the grand hall of the Vitiello estate five years ago. I saw Elena. I saw her drop to her knees on the freezing marble floor, bowing her head to the ruthless council, begging them to spare my life after I had made a critical error.
A low, dark chuckle rumbled in my chest. It grew louder, echoing off the concrete walls of the basement until I was laughing like a madman.
Sofia yelled at me to stop laughing, screaming that I was insane.
My laughter died. My eyes turned as cold and dead as the Chicago winter. "You are a bloodsucking monster," I whispered.
I didn't wait for her to reply. I ended the call. I threw the phone against the concrete wall with all my strength. It shattered into a dozen useless pieces.
I walked over to the small, cracked mirror hanging over the rusted sink. I looked at the filthy, bruised, pathetic creature staring back at me.
I pulled my fist back and punched the glass. The mirror exploded. Sharp shards sliced into my knuckles, but I didn't feel the pain.
"I will climb back up. Even if I have to step over corpses, I will go to New York and take her back."
Elena Vitiello POV:
The bright morning sunlight poured through the floor-to-ceiling windows of the penthouse master bedroom.
I opened my eyes. My body ached deeply from the trauma, but my mind was sharper than a razor.
I walked into the bathroom, washed my face, and tied my hair back. I walked over to the mahogany desk and opened the black folder Dante had left for me.
Inside were hundreds of pages of printed ledgers from the New York Outfit’s casino operations. Row after row of black ink.
I scanned the first two pages. My eyes immediately caught a subtle, recurring discrepancy in the third-quarter cash flow. The numbers looked clean, but the routing patterns were artificially delayed.
I didn't reach for a calculator. I walked over to my suitcase, unzipped the hidden bottom lining, and pulled out a matte black, ultra-thin laptop.
In the gilded cage of the Vitiello estate, the dark web was my only open window. Coding was the only thing my father couldn't control. I opened the laptop and typed in a thirty-six-character encryption key.
The screen flashed to a pure black command terminal.
My fingers flew across the keyboard. The rhythmic clacking filled the quiet bedroom. I bypassed the New York Outfit’s outer firewall in less than four minutes.
I dove directly into the casino’s digital mainframe. I set up a mirrored proxy and pulled the raw, unedited transaction logs.
Within thirty minutes, I found it. Fifty million dollars had been slowly siphoned out through phantom vendor payouts. I ran an IP trace on the receiving offshore accounts in the Caymans.
The shell company was registered under a dead man's name, but the server pinged back to a private estate in Queens. An estate owned by Carlo, one of Dante’s oldest and most powerful Capos.
I formatted the evidence into a brutal, undeniable three-page document. I connected to the wireless printer in the corner of the room and printed it out.
I grabbed the warm sheets of paper. I didn't bother putting on shoes. I walked barefoot out of the bedroom, my bare soles sinking into the plush carpet as I headed down the hall toward Dante’s study.
The heavy oak door was cracked open. I could hear the deep, rumbling voices of several men arguing inside.
I pushed the door wide open and walked in.
Five older men in expensive suits were sitting around a massive conference table. Dante sat at the head, his face an emotionless mask.
The men stopped talking instantly. They glared at me. Their faces twisted with blatant disrespect, offended that a Chicago woman in pajamas dared to interrupt their sacred meeting.
One of the men opened his mouth to bark an insult.
Dante raised a single finger. The man snapped his mouth shut. Dante leaned back in his leather chair, his green eyes locked onto me.
I walked straight to the table. I slapped the three pieces of paper directly onto the polished wood in front of Dante.
"Your third-quarter casino revenue is bleeding," I said, my voice completely flat. "Fifty million diverted to an offshore account. The leak is Carlo."
Dead silence fell over the room.
Then, chaos erupted. The old men slammed their hands on the table. They shouted at me, calling me a liar, demanding Dante throw me out for disrespecting a made man.
Dante ignored them. He picked up the three pages. He scanned the first page, then the second.
When he reached the third page, his eyes stopped. He stared at the exact IP routing path I had mapped out. He knew his own security systems. He knew his tech team would need three days to crack this level of encryption.
I had done it before my morning coffee.
Dante dropped the papers onto the desk. He looked up at his men. Get out, he commanded. His voice was quiet, but it carried the weight of an executioner's axe.
The old men swallowed hard. They scrambled out of their chairs and practically ran out of the room, pulling the heavy door shut behind them.
We were alone.
Dante stood up slowly. He walked around the edge of the massive desk. He stopped right in front of me, towering over me, his chest inches from my face.
I held my ground. I stared straight up into his eyes.
He raised his hand. He didn't grab my waist. He didn't touch my face. His large hand slid to the back of my neck, his long fingers tangling in my hair, gripping the base of my skull.
He tilted my head back slightly. His ash-green eyes burned with a terrifying, absolute obsession.
"Just how many more surprises are you hiding, my Queen?"
Elena Vitiello POV:
The entire block surrounding Le Bernardin had been locked down by the New York Outfit. Snipers sat on the rooftops, and soldiers guarded the alleyways.
A black Rolls-Royce pulled up to the curb. Dante stepped out first. He turned and offered me his hand, encased in a black leather glove.
I placed my hand in his and stepped out of the car. I wore a high-necked, long-sleeved black velvet gown. It covered every inch of my bandages, but the fabric clung to my body, turning me into a sharp, lethal silhouette.
Dante placed his hand firmly on the small of my back. We walked through the glass doors together.
The restaurant was packed with the highest-ranking members of the New York underworld. The moment we stepped inside, the room went completely silent.
Dozens of eyes locked onto me. I felt the heavy, suffocating weight of their judgment. I saw the sneers. I felt the hostility radiating from the old-school mobsters who viewed me as nothing more than a broken Chicago toy.
Dante ignored them all. He guided me to the center of the main table and pulled out the chair to his right.
Halfway through the dinner, the tension in the room hit a boiling point.
Sitting directly across from me was Carlo. The man I had exposed that morning. He clearly didn't know I had handed Dante his death warrant yet.
Carlo swirled his red wine. He leaned forward, a nasty grin on his face. He spoke in loud, heavily accented English. He said Chicago women were only good for kneading pasta dough and opening their legs.
A few of the older men at the table chuckled darkly.
The air around Dante turned to ice. His jaw locked. His right hand dropped below the table, his fingers wrapping around the grip of his concealed pistol.
I moved faster. Under the tablecloth, I placed my hand firmly over Dante’s thigh, digging my fingers into his muscle to stop him.
I picked up my linen napkin and dabbed the corner of my mouth.
I looked Carlo dead in the eyes. I opened my mouth and spoke in perfect, flawless old Sicilian—the ancient dialect of the original families, a language almost dead to the modern thugs.
My father had spent millions turning me into the perfect mafia weapon. He just never expected me to use it against men like him.
The entire table froze. The chuckling stopped instantly. Dante’s hand relaxed under mine, and he raised an eyebrow, watching me.
I didn't stop. Still speaking in the ancient dialect, I rattled off a sequence of twelve encrypted GPS coordinates.
Carlo’s face drained of all color. The wine glass in his hand began to shake violently, spilling red drops onto the white tablecloth.
I kept my voice cold and steady. I detailed exactly how he had used that coordinate to smuggle two shipments of stolen cartel weapons past Dante’s borders last month. I named his contact. I named the exact time of the drop.
The silence in the restaurant was deafening. The only sound was the faint clinking of the crystal chandeliers above us.
Carlo began to sweat profusely. He stammered, pointing a trembling finger at me, trying to formulate a lie in English.
I reached into my clutch. I pulled out the folded copy of the IP trace I had printed that morning. I tossed it across the table. It slid to a stop right in front of Carlo’s plate.
The Capos sitting next to him leaned over to look. They gasped.
Dante leaned back in his chair. He looked at me, his chest swelling with raw, unfiltered pride. He snapped his fingers.
Four guards stepped out of the shadows. They grabbed Carlo by his arms and dragged his thrashing, screaming body out the back door.
Dante picked up his wine glass. He looked around the table. His voice was low, but it carried to every corner of the room. From this night forward, her word is my word.
The men at the table quickly lowered their eyes. They raised their glasses in silent submission.
Under the table, Dante turned his hand over. He laced his fingers through mine.
I felt cold metal press against my palm. He slipped a small, heavy black key embedded with a microchip into my hand.
"This is the master key to New York's intelligence network. Now, it's yours."