Isabella POV
The tires of Rocco’s town car screeched to a halt outside the VIP entrance of Mount Sinai Hospital. Black armored SUVs formed a barricade, and heavily armed Soldiers stood like statues, turning the drop-off zone into a militarized checkpoint.
Before the vehicle even settled, the rear door was ripped open.
Damien stood there, a towering shadow of vengeance. He didn't care about the hospital staff watching from the glass doors. His large hand clamped down on my arm like a steel vice, hauling me out of the leather seat with enough force to make my teeth rattle.
"You think you can touch what's mine in broad daylight?" he snarled, his face inches from mine. His icy blue eyes were completely feral, burning with a murderous intent that would have made any other woman drop to her knees. "Is this your fucking Vendetta, Isabella? A warm-up?"
I didn't struggle against his grip. I simply adjusted my designer sunglasses, meeting his lethal glare with absolute calm. "I didn't touch her, Damien."
My composure was the worst thing I could have offered him. To a Don demanding submission and fear, my indifference was a confession of cold-blooded guilt. His jaw clenched so hard I thought the bone might snap. Without another word, he dragged me through the pristine hospital lobby, his dark aura parting the sea of doctors and nurses like a scythe.
He shoved the heavy door of Room 302 open.
The air inside was thick with the cloying scent of lilies and antiseptic. Giuliana lay in the center of the high-tech bed. Her head was wrapped in thick white gauze, and her right leg was elevated in a heavy cast.
The moment her eyes landed on me, she let out a theatrical, terrified gasp. She shrank back against the pillows, her trembling hands reaching out to clutch Damien’s tailored sleeve.
"It's her," Giuliana sobbed, her voice a fragile, broken whisper. "Damien, please... keep her away from me. It's a Falcone warning..."
It was a flawless performance. I watched Damien’s posture shift, his broad shoulders curving protectively over her as his savior complex went into overdrive. When he turned his head to look at me, the disgust in his eyes was absolute. I was the monster; she was the martyr.
I leaned casually against the doorframe, crossing my arms. I didn't see a victim. Through the lens of my training, I saw a poorly constructed crime scene.
"You need a better makeup artist, Giuliana," I said, my voice slicing through her fake sobs like a scalpel.
Damien stepped toward me, his fists balled. "Shut your fucking mouth—"
"The blood on her gauze," I interrupted, pointing a manicured finger at the bandage. "It's a splatter pattern. Head wounds seep; they don't spray outward onto the dressing after it's been applied. That's a burst blood pack." I let my gaze drop to her elevated leg. "And for someone with a fractured tibia, there is absolutely no stress tension in her thigh or calf muscles. She's relaxed."
Giuliana’s fake crying hitched, a flicker of panic crossing her pale face.
"Damien," I continued, my tone dropping to a dead, chilling flatline. "If I wanted her dead, we would be discussing how to dredge her car from the bottom of the Hudson River right now. We wouldn't be standing here watching this pathetic community theater."
I pulled my burner phone from my pocket, tapping the screen to open the camera. "Let's get this on the record for the Commission."
"Give me the damn phone!" Damien roared.
He lunged at me, his massive frame moving with the terrifying speed of an apex predator. A normal woman would have frozen. I executed a micro-shift. I twisted my ankle just a fraction of an inch, letting my weight collapse as if my stiletto heel had caught on the linoleum floor.
I dropped smoothly out of his trajectory. Damien’s momentum carried him forward, and his heavy fist smashed straight into the drywall beside the doorframe with a sickening crunch.
Plaster dusted the air. I was already back on my feet, smoothing the invisible wrinkles from my blouse, completely unharmed.
Damien slowly pulled his fist from the wall. His knuckles were split and bleeding. He looked down at me, the blind rage in his eyes suddenly fracturing into profound, unsettling confusion. He was a master of violence; his brain was struggling to process how a clumsy trip had perfectly evaded a lethal strike.
"Should we call the police to document this 'attack'?" I asked calmly, looking past him.
On the bed, Giuliana wasn't crying anymore. She was staring at me, her knuckles white as she gripped the sheets. For the first time since I met her, the fear in her eyes wasn't an act. It was real.
Isabella POV
The real, unadulterated terror in Giuliana’s eyes was a beautiful thing to witness. For a fraction of a second, the sterile hospital room was completely silent, heavy with the weight of her crumbling facade.
Before Damien could process the shift in her demeanor, the heavy door swung open. Two Moretti Soldiers stepped inside, their expressions grim. One of them leaned in, whispering urgently into Damien’s ear.
I watched Damien’s broad shoulders stiffen. The confusion that had momentarily clouded his icy blue eyes vanished, replaced by a renewed, lethal certainty. He turned his murderous glare back to me.
"You think you're clever, Isabella?" Damien’s voice was a deadly rasp. "You think you can orchestrate a hit and keep your hands clean?"
Right on cue, Giuliana let out a pathetic whimper. With trembling fingers, she reached for her phone on the bedside table and held it out to Damien. "She sent this... right before it happened."
Damien snatched the phone. I didn't need to see the screen to know what it said. The puppet master was playing their hand.
"A text," Damien snarled, turning the screen toward me. "Read it."
Disappear or else.
I glanced at the glowing screen, my eyes immediately dropping to the timestamp. 2:00 PM. A faint, mocking smile touched my lips. It was almost too easy.
"Two o'clock," I noted aloud, my voice echoing calmly off the pristine walls. I slowly turned my head to look at the hulking figure standing rigidly by the door. "Rocco, you can vouch for me, can't you?"
The Underboss flinched as if I had shot him. Damien’s head snapped toward his second-in-command, his eyes narrowing into dangerous slits.
"After all," I continued smoothly, relishing the absolute trap I had just sprung, "at exactly two o'clock, you were busy carrying my hundred-and-fifty-thousand-dollar handbags out of Bergdorf Goodman."
The silence that followed was deafening. Damien stared at Rocco, waiting for a denial. Rocco’s jaw clenched so hard a muscle ticked violently in his cheek. He looked at his Don, then at me, trapped between his absolute loyalty and an undeniable truth.
"Yes," Rocco ground out through his teeth.
Damien’s expression fractured. The humiliation of having his own Underboss provide my airtight alibi was a physical blow to his pride.
"You're the Don of the Moretti family, Damien," I said, stepping closer to him, my voice dropping to a lethal whisper. "Use your vast resources to trace that text. See who is actually playing games on your turf."
I didn't wait for his response. I turned my attention to the Soldier who had just delivered the report. "Where exactly did this tragic ambush happen?"
The Soldier hesitated, glancing at Damien before answering. "An industrial access road near the old shipyards in Queens."
A genuine, dark laugh escaped my throat. I looked back at Damien, my eyes cold and unyielding. "A surveillance blind spot. A road used exclusively for running contraband and dumping bodies. Damien, do you honestly believe your precious white rose was sightseeing there?"
"I-I got lost," Giuliana stammered from the bed, her voice pitching higher in panic. She swallowed hard, her eyes darting nervously.
"In an era of private drivers and GPS?" I mocked, not even looking at her. "Don't insult my intelligence."
I saw the subtle shift in the room. The two Soldiers exchanged a brief, uneasy glance. Even they could see the glaring holes in her story. But Damien, blinded by his twisted need to be a savior, stepped protectively in front of the bed, shielding Giuliana from my logic.
"Get out," Damien roared, his voice vibrating with a desperate, cornered fury.
I elegantly adjusted the collar of my combat shirt, brushing away an invisible speck of dust. I looked at him with nothing but pity.
"I'm leaving because this performance has become boring, Damien," I said, my tone dripping with aristocratic disdain. "Not because of your command."
I turned on my heel and walked toward the door. As I passed the two Soldiers, I stopped. I didn't look at Damien. I looked directly at his men, channeling the absolute authority of my bloodline.
"Check the skid marks," I ordered them, my voice crisp and professional. "See if it was panic braking or a controlled maneuver to initiate a drift. And pull the telemetry data from the car's black box. A professional ambush and a botched staged event leave entirely different data signatures."
I didn't wait to see their reactions. I walked out of the room, the heavy door clicking shut behind me, leaving the Moretti Don alone with his fragile liar and a truth he was too terrified to face.
Isabella POV
The VIP parking garage of Mount Sinai Hospital was a concrete cavern that smelled of damp earth and heavy exhaust. A cold, gray drizzle drifted in through the open archways, leaving greasy, iridescent puddles across the asphalt. Through the exit, the New York skyline was a blurred watercolor of gray, a perfect reflection of the storm brewing within the Moretti empire.
My armored SUV sat idling at the curb, a low, predatory purr in the gloom. I was halfway to the door when heavy, urgent footsteps echoed behind me.
"Isabella."
I turned slowly. Damien strode toward me, his face a mask of barely contained fury. Rocco trailed a step behind him, looking as though he were marching to his own execution.
"Speak," Damien barked at his Underboss, his eyes never leaving mine.
Rocco swallowed hard, shifting uncomfortably under the fluorescent lights. "The text message sent to Giuliana... it's a ghost, Boss. It was routed through multiple military-grade proxies and encrypted at the source. Completely untraceable."
Damien’s jaw ticked. The veins in his neck strained against his collar as he took a menacing step toward me. "You used Falcone resources," he accused, his voice a lethal, vibrating hum. "You had your family's tech division scrub your tracks."
I lied smoothly, a mocking smile playing on my lips. Let him drown in his paranoia; he had no idea he was looking at 'K', the very ghost his men were chasing. "I'm just a discarded wife, Damien. If I wanted to send a message, I’d send a Soldier to knock on her door, not play children's games."
The absolute dismissal in my tone made his eyes darken with a dangerous, volatile storm. He was a Don used to absolute submission, and my defiance was tearing him apart.
A gust of damp wind swept through the garage. I didn't shiver, but Damien’s deeply ingrained savior complex—his desperate need to control and protect—flared to life. He stripped off his custom, five-thousand-dollar Brioni suit jacket and stepped into my space, reaching out to drape it over my shoulders.
I recoiled, stepping back as if his touch were a plague.
The sudden, violent rejection caught him off guard. The heavy silk-blend fabric slipped from his grasp, falling with a wet, pathetic slap into a filthy puddle of rainwater and motor oil.
Damien froze. He stared down at the ruined garment, the symbol of his wealth and authority soaking up the grime of the garage floor. When he looked back up at me, the raw frustration in his eyes was almost palpable.
"Ten million," he gritted out, his voice tight, trying to buy back the control he had just lost. "I'll add another ten million dollars to the annulment settlement."
I looked at him with pure, unadulterated disgust. "I don't want your blood money."
I reached for my car door, but he slammed his hand against the frame, trapping me.
"My grandfather called," Damien said, the words tasting like ash in his mouth. "Don Carlo. He wants us both at the family estate tonight for the monthly dinner. He wants an explanation for the... chaos."
The Chairman. The ruthless architect of the Moretti legacy. To defy him was a death sentence, even for a sitting Don.
"I'll unfreeze your accounts," Damien offered, the command in his voice bleeding into a desperate plea. "All of your credit cards. Just be there."
I paused, calculating the angles. The Chairman's dinner was the absolute epicenter of Moretti power. It was the perfect stage.
A slow, ice-cold smile curved my lips. "Fine. I'll attend." I leaned in slightly, dropping my voice to a deadly whisper. "But don't expect me to perform the role of a doting wife, Damien. And don't expect me to honor Omertà. If your grandfather asks me a question, I will tell him the exact, ugly truth."
The color drained from his face. I had just handed him a live grenade, and he had no choice but to hold it.
"Pick me up at the St. Regis at eight," I ordered, pulling the door open and forcing him to step back into the freezing rain.
I climbed into the back seat, the heavy armored door sealing shut with a definitive thud. As my driver pulled away, I glanced in the rearview mirror. Damien Moretti was left standing alone in the cold drizzle, staring after me, his ruined jacket forgotten in the dirt at his feet.