Chapter 6

Elena Vitiello POV:

I stood in the center of my bedroom, staring at the monitor. Luca's voice echoed through the speaker, demanding I open the door because the woman he chose over me was terrified. A wave of physical nausea hit the back of my throat. The sheer audacity of his words made my skin crawl.

I did not press the talk button to argue. I did not waste my breath screaming at him. I walked directly to the wall panel, gripped the thick power cord of the intercom system, and ripped it out of the socket.

A harsh burst of static hissed through the room, followed immediately by absolute, beautiful silence. I owned this space again.

On the monitor, Luca froze. He heard the static cut off. He stared at the camera, his coaxing smile dropping into a scowl of frustration. He slammed his open palm against the bulletproof glass. He was so used to me answering his calls, so used to my endless patience, that being ignored broke his brain.

Matteo stepped up beside him, his mouth moving rapidly. I could read his lips. He was mocking my temper, telling Luca that the princess was acting up again and refusing to listen to reason.

I turned my back on the screens. I walked to the far corner of the room where a massive glass display cabinet stood against the wall.

The shelves were lined with items I had collected over the past decade. Every single piece was a gift from Luca or Matteo. To anyone else, they were worthless trinkets, but I had treated them like holy relics.

I opened the glass door. I reached in and grabbed a crudely carved wooden bear. Luca bought it for me from a street vendor when he was eighteen. My fingers tightened around the rough wood. A sharp splinter pierced the skin of my palm, sending a tiny jolt of pain up my arm. The pain was good. It grounded me.

I turned and tossed the bear into a large black heavy-duty trash bag I kept for dry cleaning. It hit the bottom with a dull thud. That was the sound of a ten-year bond breaking.

Next was a cheap plastic music box. Then a low-grade crystal bracelet that turned my wrist green. Then a journal filled with Matteo's terrible jokes. I moved like a machine, my face blank, my heart pumping ice water. I swept every item off the shelves, tossing them into the plastic bag. I was purging the infection from my life.

Out in the hallway, the heavy thumping started. Luca was pounding his fists against the glass door. The muffled, rhythmic thuds vibrated through the floorboards. He was losing control of his temper.

I frowned. The noise was an unacceptable intrusion. I walked to my nightstand, opened the drawer, and pulled out a pair of Sony noise-canceling headphones. I slipped them over my ears and flicked the switch to maximum isolation. The pounding vanished. The world went completely mute.

I went back to the cabinet and finished the job. I did not stop until every shelf was bare, leaving nothing but cold glass and empty space.

I gathered the top of the black garbage bag and tied it into a tight, vicious knot. I dragged it across the marble floor and kicked it against the wall near the door, exactly where I put rotting food scraps.

I looked back at the monitor. Luca's knuckles were red and bruised from hitting the glass. He was pacing, his mouth moving aggressively as he complained to Matteo. Matteo crossed his arms and pointed down the hall, clearly suggesting they go find the head butler to fetch the master key. They still believed they had the right to force their way into my sanctuary.

Just as they turned to leave, a shadow fell over the far end of the corridor.

A man stepped into the light. The heavy, rhythmic strike of his leather shoes against the floor was visible even without sound.

Luca and Matteo froze instantly. Their hands dropped instinctively toward the holsters at the small of their backs. It was the survival reflex of street dogs.

The shadow receded, revealing Domenico Vitiello. The Underboss of Chicago. My father. He wore a pristine three-piece charcoal suit, his posture radiating absolute authority.

His eyes, sharp as a hawk, swept over the two men standing at the locked door.

Luca immediately pulled his hand away from his gun. He dropped his chin to his chest, bowing deeply. Matteo mirrored the movement, a visible sheen of cold sweat breaking out on his forehead. They knew what true violence looked like.

Domenico walked up to the bulletproof glass. He glanced at the card reader, noting the blinking red light. He turned his head slowly, his gaze locking onto Luca. His mouth moved in a slow, deliberate cadence. I knew exactly what he was asking. He was asking why his daughter's guards were locked out like stray dogs.

Luca stammered, his hands waving nervously. He was lying, trying to blame a system glitch to cover up the fact that he drew a weapon on me earlier.

My father let out a visible snort of disgust. He did not bother exposing the lie. Instead, he raised his right hand. The heavy gold family crest ring on his index finger caught the light. He tapped the ring against the bulletproof glass three times.

I felt the faint vibration through the floor. I reached up and pulled the headphones off my ears. I looked at the monitor, meeting my father's piercing eyes through the camera lens.

I took a breath, hit the intercom button, and spoke clearly into the microphone.

"System unlock."

Chapter 7

Elena Vitiello POV:

The heavy bulletproof glass doors slid apart with a loud, mechanical hiss, the pressurized air escaping into the corridor.

I stood a few feet back from the threshold, my posture rigid. The high neck of my black cashmere sweater hid the rapid pulse beating against my collarbone. I kept my face entirely blank, an unreadable mask of calm.

Luca saw the doors open and immediately shifted his weight, his foot lifting to step inside my private wing. He did not make it. My father shot him a single, dead-eyed glare that nailed his boots to the carpet. The invisible line of our hierarchy was drawn in the air, and Luca finally realized he could not cross it.

Domenico Vitiello stepped over the threshold, his presence sucking the oxygen out of the room. He stopped in front of me, his tall frame towering over mine. He looked down, his eyes scanning my face, checking for signs of weakness or panic.

His gaze drifted downward and stopped at the black garbage bag tied up by my feet. The sharp edge of the wooden bear poked against the plastic. My father's eyes narrowed slightly. He saw the evidence of a purge.

"Why did you revoke their West Wing access?" Domenico's voice was a low rumble, devoid of warmth. It was an interrogation.

Behind him, I heard Luca swallow hard. The sound was loud in the quiet hallway. Luca's heart was in his throat, terrified I would tell my father about the gun.

I looked straight into my father's eyes. I did not blink. "The security system required a routine reset and upgrade. I cleared the cache." My voice was perfectly flat, a lie delivered with the absolute conviction I learned from watching him negotiate at the table.

Out of the corner of my eye, I saw Luca's shoulders drop a fraction of an inch. A microscopic sigh of relief escaped his lips. My stomach churned with a cold sneer. He was so stupid he actually thought I was protecting him.

Domenico did not break eye contact with me. The air grew thick and suffocating. He knew I was lying. A man who survived thirty years in the Cosa Nostra could smell a cover-up from a mile away.

Without breaking his gaze on me, Domenico suddenly twisted his torso and swung his right arm backward.

The back of his hand collided with Luca's face with a sickening, wet crack.

The force of the blow snapped Luca's head to the side. He stumbled, his heavy boots scraping against the floor to keep his balance. Bright red blood instantly welled up at the corner of his mouth, dripping down his chin.

Matteo flinched, taking a fast half-step backward. He kept his hands glued to his sides, absolutely terrified to intervene.

"Do not forget who pulled you out of the mud," Domenico snarled at Luca, his voice dropping to a lethal whisper. He pointed a thick finger at Luca's bleeding face. "If my daughter is unhappy, you have failed your only purpose. And dogs that fail their purpose get put down."

Luca kept his head turned, his eyes fixed on the floor. The blood dripped onto the expensive Persian rug, leaving dark stains. "Yes, Boss," he mumbled, his voice thick with humiliation and fear.

I watched the blood fall. I felt nothing. The physical violence did not satisfy me. A slap was just skin deep. I wanted to destroy his entire foundation.

Domenico turned his attention back to me. The murderous aura receded slightly, replaced by the stern expectation of a mafia patriarch.

"The rumors of your friction with your detail have already reached the ears of the Capos," Domenico said, his tone leaving no room for argument. "Weakness breeds ambition in the ranks. You will attend the family gathering at the downtown social club tonight."

He stepped closer, his voice hardening. "You will walk in there looking like a true Vitiello. You will crush these pathetic whispers."

I gave him a single, sharp nod. "I will be there on time. And I will handle my personal items." I placed a heavy emphasis on the word items.

Domenico analyzed my face for a moment longer. He found what he was looking for. He reached out and gave my shoulder a firm, heavy pat. It was a seal of approval.

He turned around to leave. As he passed the doorway, he paused and glanced down at the black plastic bag one last time. "Trash should indeed be thrown out," he muttered.

He walked away, his bodyguards falling into step behind him. Their heavy footsteps faded down the hall.

The oppressive weight in the air lifted. Luca wiped the back of his hand across his bloody mouth. He looked at me, his eyes pleading. He took a step forward, his hand reaching out. "Elena, let me explain what happened earlier—"

I took a slow step backward, retreating entirely into my room. I placed my hand on the wall panel. I looked at him. I did not look at him with anger or hatred. I looked at him the way I looked at a dead rat on the street.

Luca froze, the rejection in my eyes stabbing him right in the chest. His mouth opened, but no words came out.

I slammed my palm against the close button. The bulletproof doors rushed together, sealing shut with a heavy mechanical thud right in his face.

Through the thick glass, I saw Luca standing next to the garbage bag, his bloody reflection staring back at him. His lips moved, and I could read the exact words forming on his mouth.

"What the hell does she want?!"

Chapter 8

Elena Vitiello POV:

The antique grandfather clock in the hallway chimed eight times. I stood in the center of my massive walk-in closet, staring at my reflection in the floor-to-ceiling mirror. I analyzed the woman looking back at me, checking for any cracks in the armor.

My fingers trailed along the endless racks of clothing. I walked past the row of soft, pastel dresses. Luca used to tell me I looked approachable in those colors. He liked it when I looked soft. I grabbed the entire row of hangers and shoved them violently to the back of the closet.

I moved to the section I reserved for funerals and family trials. I pulled out a Tom Ford haute couture gown. It was crafted from heavy black velvet, featuring a plunging V-neckline and long, tight sleeves. In our world, black was the color of mourning, but it was also the color of absolute, undisputed power.

I stripped off my sweater and stepped into the gown. The cold velvet clung to my skin, heavy and restrictive. It felt exactly like a suit of armor.

I sat at my vanity and pulled my long hair back, twisting it into a severe, tight chignon at the base of my neck. I erased the natural color of my lips with a layer of dark, blood-red lipstick. The bright color against my pale skin stripped away the last traces of the forgiving girl I used to be.

I opened my jewelry box and ignored the diamonds. I picked up a heavy gold signet ring embedded with a flat, polished black onyx. The Vitiello family crest was carved deep into the stone. I slid it onto my right index finger. It was heavy. It was a weapon.

I walked out of the estate through the main doors. The damp night air hit my face. A black armored Maybach was idling at the bottom of the stone steps.

For the first time in ten years, Luca was not standing by the rear door waiting for me.

Instead, a stranger in a dark suit stepped forward from the shadows. He was one of the family's elite shadow guards. He kept his head bowed respectfully as he pulled the heavy door open for me.

I slid into the leather backseat. The interior of the car was dead silent. There was no soft jazz playing on the radio, no casual banter from the driver's seat. There was only the low, vibrating roar of the V12 engine. I stared out the tinted window as the gates of the estate closed behind us.

Thirty minutes later, the Maybach pulled up to the curb in front of the Cosa Nostra social club in downtown Chicago.

The valet rushed forward, his hands literally trembling as he opened my door. He kept his eyes glued to the pavement, terrified of making eye contact with the Underboss's daughter.

I stepped onto the sidewalk. I walked up to the heavy brass doors of the club and pushed them open.

A wall of sound and heat hit me instantly. The loud chatter of mobsters, the clinking of whiskey glasses, and the thick, suffocating smell of expensive Cuban cigars filled the air.

The moment the brass doors clicked shut behind me, the noise near the entrance died. The silence rippled outward like a wave, creating a bizarre, three-second pause in the entire room.

Dozens of eyes locked onto me. I felt the weight of their stares. Some looked with fear, some with respect, and some with a hidden, venomous joy.

In the corner booth, a group of affiliated family heirs held their whiskey glasses, their eyes darting to the empty space behind my shoulders. They were looking for my dogs.

A blond man from a lower-tier family leaned over to his friend, his voice carrying over the music. "Looks like the princess finally lost her leashes."

His friend snickered, hiding his mouth behind his glass. "I heard Luca and Matteo are busy playing house with that civilian girl, Sofia. Totally whipped."

I heard every word. My expression did not change by a single millimeter. I did not slow my pace. I kept my chin parallel to the floor, my spine straight, the red soles of my Louboutins clicking rhythmically against the hardwood. I walked past them like they were invisible dust.

I headed straight for the center of the room, to the large oval table under the crystal chandelier. It was the highest-stakes Texas Hold'em table in the club, reserved exclusively for Capos and inner-circle members.

Two older Capos saw me approaching. They stopped their conversation and offered me slow, respectful nods, acknowledging the Vitiello blood in my veins.

I pulled out a heavy leather chair and sat down gracefully. I reached into my clutch, pulled out a solid black casino chip worth one hundred thousand dollars, and tossed it onto the green felt. It landed with a heavy, authoritative clack.

The dealer, a professional who had seen men shot over less, swallowed hard. He quickly shuffled the deck and slid two cards face down in front of me. The surrounding crowd shifted closer, holding their breath, waiting for the game to start.

Before I could touch my cards, the heavy brass doors of the club slammed open with a massive, echoing crash.

Everyone's head snapped toward the entrance.

A wave of cheap, synthetic vanilla perfume cut through the cigar smoke. Sofia walked through the doors. She was clinging tightly to Luca's arm, practically hanging off his bicep. Matteo walked half a step behind them, scanning the room like a loyal bodyguard.

I sat at the table. I did not turn my head. I did not even blink. I kept my eyes focused entirely on the intricate pattern on the back of my playing cards.

A loud murmur erupted from the crowd. The whispers turned into a buzzing hive. The usurper had just walked into the queen's court.

The dealer wiped a bead of sweat from his forehead. He looked at me, his hands shaking slightly, waiting for my command.

I reached out, my finger resting on the edge of my cards.

"Call."

Chapters
Customize
Next Chapter
Minishorts Logo
Enjoy full short drama episodes, No waiting, watch now!
MiniShorts Youtube
PRODUCTS AND SERVICES
About us
support@minishorts.com
©2026 MiniShorts All Rights Reserved. CHASINGTOP HK LIMITED