LOGINThe email arrived at eight fifty-three.
Andrea read it first. She set her coffee down and said nothing. I read it twice.
Cassius Moretti. New Head of Strategic Operations and Research and Finance oversight, effective immediately.
“Well, I didn't see that coming,” Andrea said.
“Well,” I said.
We went back to our screens.
Cassius arrived an hour later.
He stood at the front of the floor and the room went quiet without being asked.
“I’ll keep this brief.” His voice was low and even, the kind that didn’t need volume because it had never needed it. “Nothing about how this department operates changes. You’ll continue reporting through your existing channels. The difference is that those channels now run through me.” He paused. “I don’t manage by committee. If something is wrong I expect to know before it becomes a problem. If you’re uncertain about something, ask. I’d rather answer a question than fix a mistake.”
His eyes moved across the room once and found mine for a second that didn’t quite match the neutrality of everything else about him.
Then it was over and he left. He slightly nodded his head and made his way towards the CEO’s office.
The floor didn’t go back to what it was. People were talking, not loudly, but his name was moving desk to desk like a current underneath everything.
I went back to my screen and thought about nothing in particular.
About thirty minutes later my phone rang. The hospital. Sadie’s voice on the other end, careful. Mamma had taken a sudden turn. They were already there.
I informed Andrea and left as quickly as I could.
Dr. Reeves had the kind of face that prepared you before his mouth did.
He walked me to the small room off the corridor and sat across from me and folded his hands on the table and I watched him do all of it and knew before a single word came out.
“Sienna.” He said then paused.“Your mother’s current treatment isn’t holding the way we’d hoped. The cancer has progressed into the lymph nodes which changes our approach significantly.” He paused. “There’s a specialist we recommend — Dr. Adeyemi. She’s had considerable success with cases presenting like your mother’s. The treatment she uses is more aggressive, more targeted.” Another pause.”Your mother’s insurance will continue covering what it currently covers. But Dr. Adeyemi’s protocol sits entirely outside that. The full course is out of pocket.”
Then he gave me the number.
It landed heavily, settling into everything beneath it.
I thanked him. Shook his hand. Walked back down the corridor and stood in the doorway of my mother’s room — the burgundy headscarf, the slow rise and fall of her chest, her hands folded lightly over the blanket — and my siblings sitting side by side with her. I sat next to Sam and held his hand. His face looked teary. I held my mother's hand and listened to the quiet of the hospital — the nurses’ station down the hall, a trolley somewhere, the soft machinery of a building organized entirely around keeping people alive.
After a while, I kissed her forehead and left with Sam after several attempts to convince him. Sadie decided to stay behind.
I stood at the car park and the number sat with me the way it had since Dr. Reeves said it. I put my salary next to it. Put the bill next to it. Put six months of careful budgeting next to it.
None of it touched the number.
Cassius’ POV
Deleray Private night club - 12:57 a.m
Max finished the brief in the car. Lorenzo Bianchi, a business associate of ours. Eight months skimming Moretti supplies under the assumption that small meant invisible.
I straightened my cuff and got out of the car.
No name on the door.
Inside — low light, low music, the particular atmosphere of a place that existed exclusively after dark.
He had twelve men with him.
Lorenzo was at the third table from the back, facing the door. He clocked me crossing the room and buried what crossed his face beneath a smile.
I sat down uninvited.
“Moretti.” He opened his arms like a man welcoming an old friend. “I wasn’t expecting you personally. Can I get you something?”
“No.”
He leaned back, easy, comfortable. “Look — whatever you’ve heard, I can explain—”
“August fourteenth,” I said. “Forty-two thousand. September second, sixty-one thousand. September nineteenth, thirty-eight thousand.” I went through every date, every amount, eight months without a single note in front of me, and I watched his face perform relaxed while everything behind it ran calculations that were coming up short. “Should I continue?”
The smile stayed but it was working hard now.
“There’s been a misunderstanding,” he said. “The routes were compromised on our end — we lost product, the numbers reflect—”
“Lorenzo.”
He stopped.
“The routes weren’t compromised. I have the manifests.”
The smile finally let go.
He tried a different angle — leaned forward, lowered his voice, the language of two men being reasonable. “Listen. I can have everything returned within the week. Every cent. Consider it an error in accounting, we move forward, no damage done.”
“The damage is done.”
His jaw tightened. He looked at his men briefly — twelve of them positioned around the room, a number he’d decided was a wall — and something shifted in his posture. The last card.
“You know who I know?” he said. “Benedetti. You want to do this, you’re doing it with him watching.”
I looked at him for the first time like he was worth looking at.
“Benedetti’s been dead eleven months,” I said. “Try again.”
The room went stillOne of his men moved his hand beneath the table.
I didn’t look at him. “I wouldn’t.”
The hand stopped.
Lorenzo looked at me and I looked at him and the story behind his eyes ran its full course and arrived somewhere we both already knew.
He made his choice.
Lorenzo’s hand moved toward his jacket.
He didn’t get far.
Two of my men rained bullets on him before he could react. The sound swallowed itself in the music of the club. Lorenzo’s chair went back with him in it and the room froze in that particular suspended second between a thing happening and everyone present accepting that it had happened.
The glass Lorenzo had been holding was still rolling across the table when I spoke.
“Hands.” My voice came out the same way it always did — level, unhurried, the same register I’d used reading his numbers back to him. Every remaining man in the room complied. “Good.”
I looked at them, all eleven, one by one, unhurried — and let the silence do what silence did in rooms like this.
“Your employer made a choice,” I said. “That choice was his. Not yours.” I straightened my jacket. “The routes will be restored and the outstanding amount will be returned in full by Friday. You do that and tonight is simply a night that happened.” I paused. “You don’t — and it won’t be one of my father’s men next time.”
Nobody spoke. Nobody moved.
I buttoned my jacket and walked out.
The cold hit immediately.
Max fell into step beside me. “Hungry?”
“Yeah.”
We got in the car.
“Tell my father it’s done.”
Max made the call. I looked out the window and said nothing else.
Dante’s watch ticked against my wrist. The inside man sat at the back of everything.
My building appeared. I got out without a word.
The night had the particular silence of something unfinished.
The apartment was quiet in a way it had never been before.I was up before the sun. I lay in bed for a while first, staring at the ceiling, waiting for something to arrive that didn’t—just the hollow numbness — wide and flat and somehow worse than crying. I got up because lying there felt like something I couldn’t afford.The kitchen was cold. I turned the kettle on and made breakfast. My hands moved automatically — eggs, toast, the cracked wooden spoon Sadie refused to replace. Enough for four people before I caught myself. I stood very still for a moment with the spoon in my hand. Then I put one plate back in the cupboard and kept going.Sadie came out of Mamma’s room at half past seven.She appeared in the doorway still in yesterday’s clothes, her hair undone, her eyes carrying the specific swollen weight of someone who had cried through the night and run out of tears somewhere around four in the morning. She looked at me. I looked back. We both said nothing to each other. She sat
Sam’s door was still locked when I checked.I stood behind and listened for movement and heard nothing. I knocked twice, nothing.I went to the kitchen and made eggs and toast and left the plate outside his door with a note folded against it.*Take care of yourself today. I love you.*I stood there a moment longer than necessary. Then I picked up my bag and left.I took a cab straight to the hospital. At the entrance I found myself lost in thought.I couldn’t go in. I was scared to face reality. I left Sadie a text, turned back, and headed for work. It was very unlike me.The office was loud with the particular energy of a floor that had a meeting to prepare for. Andrea was already at her desk when I arrived, highlighter in hand, a stack of quarterly reports beside her coffee.She looked at me once. Set the highlighter down.“What happened?”I shook my head and sat down and opened my laptop.She didn’t push. She turned back to her screen and said nothing and that, the specific kindn
The email arrived at eight fifty-three.Andrea read it first. She set her coffee down and said nothing. I read it twice.Cassius Moretti. New Head of Strategic Operations and Research and Finance oversight, effective immediately.“Well, I didn't see that coming,” Andrea said.“Well,” I said.We went back to our screens.Cassius arrived an hour later.He stood at the front of the floor and the room went quiet without being asked.“I’ll keep this brief.” His voice was low and even, the kind that didn’t need volume because it had never needed it. “Nothing about how this department operates changes. You’ll continue reporting through your existing channels. The difference is that those channels now run through me.” He paused. “I don’t manage by committee. If something is wrong I expect to know before it becomes a problem. If you’re uncertain about something, ask. I’d rather answer a question than fix a mistake.”His eyes moved across the room once and found mine for a second that didn’t qu
The letter was still in my bag.I’d moved it twice — once from my jacket pocket to my work bag, once from my work bag to the bottom drawer of my desk at home where I kept things I wasn’t ready to look at. It sat there now while I got dressed in the dark, while Sam argued with Sadie about whose turn it was to do the dishes. I knew the number. I just wasn’t ready to truly face it. Andrea was already at her desk when I arrived, coffee in hand, reading something on her screen with the focused expression of someone who had already been productive for an hour.“Second day,” she said without looking up. “Harder than the first.”“Why?”“First day you’re too nervous to notice anything. Second day you actually see where you are.”She wasn’t wrong.We went to the coffee place at ten-fifteen — two blocks east, exactly as Andrea advertised. Small, warm, the kind of place that had been there long enough to stop trying to impress anyone. Andrea ordered without looking at the menu. I followed her l
The apartment smelled like Sadie had been cooking since noon.Pasta and chicken, my favourite dish. I could tell she was busy all afternoon. Mamma was on the couch when I walked in. Sitting upright in the way that told me it had cost her something. She had her good headscarf on — the deep burgundy one and her eyes were bright. I felt the particular relief of it move through me quietly.Sam looked up from the floor where he’d spread his homework across the carpet. “You’re late.”“First day Sammy, cut me some slack.”“You’re late.” He repeated, laughing this time. I stepped over his textbooks and kissed my mother’s forehead. She smelled like the hospital and her perfume underneath it, that particular combination I’d stopped noticing until I noticed it again.I sat next to her and leaned into her shoulder the way I had when I was seven. She still felt the same. That was the part that got me, that she could feel the same and be so different underneath it.“Sit,” she said, patting the cu
York City — December 2025“Marcus—”“Stay down.” The warmth left his voice. He reached for his phone without looking my way, not once. I understood the way you understand things when it’s already too late. Marcus had known this was possible. He just hadn’t believed they’d be bold enough. Not in the open. Not against a Castello.The first shot took out the rear window.I screamed. Glass rained across my shoulders and I dropped low as the car swerved violently. Marcus shouted into his phone in rapid Italian, his free hand pressing my head further down. More shots. The car lurched. The driver made a sound I would never forget — not a scream. Just a soft, surprised exhale, like someone interrupted mid-thought.The car made a swift turn and ran straight into a fire hydrant. The impact threw me forward hard enough that my vision whitened at the edges. The driver’s head was against the wheel. He wasn’t moving.Silence for exactly one second.Then the doors opened.Men in dark clothing moved







