MasukLina’s POV
I woke up to silence.
Not the normal kind. Not the kind that comes at night when the world sleeps. This silence felt aware—like it knew I was awake and was waiting for me to catch up.
My hand pulsed as I moved, a dull ache spreading behind my eyes. The bed beneath me was too soft, swallowing me whole. The kind of comfort that didn’t belong to someone who had been dragged somewhere unconscious.
Something brushed my arm.
Silk.
I frowned, rubbing it slowly between my fingers. Smooth. Cool. Expensive. My stomach twisted—not the sick kind, not yet—but tight enough to warn me. I pushed myself upright.
The room was dim, lit by a warm glow that seemed to come from the walls themselves. Lamps shaped like old torches flickered softly, shadows clinging to dark wooden panels. Polished mahogany lined the walls, carved carefully, deliberately.
Someone spent money here. Real money. Thick velvet curtains—black and heavy—spilled onto the marble floor. The marble was spotless, reflecting light like glass.
This wasn’t a place you stayed by choice.
My heartbeat picked up. Where did they bring me?
The floor was cold when I stood, the chill biting straight into my bones. That’s when I noticed the door—tall, solid, intimidating. Not the kind you kicked open. Not the kind you escaped through without a plan.
I walked toward it. Hesitated.
My hand hovered over the handle as instinct screamed at me. Once I stepped outside this room, things would become real in a way I wasn’t ready for.
Still, I opened it.
And everything inside me went still.
My breath caught painfully in my chest. The hallway stretched endlessly—wide, polished—crowned by a chandelier so massive it looked like it could fall and crush anyone beneath it. Crystal and gold trapped the light effortlessly, dazzling without trying.
As I moved forward, my footsteps echoed. Loud. Lonely. As if the house itself wanted to announce me.
Portraits lined the walls.
Men stared down at me from their frames, dressed in sharp black suits. Cold eyes. Unreadable faces. No smiles. No warmth. Just authority framed in gold.
These weren’t men who asked.
They took.
At the far end of the hallway stood two guards. They didn’t move when they noticed me. Black suits. Calm expressions. Hands resting casually where their guns were visible—no attempt to hide them. No need to.
The message was clear.
My stomach sank.
I walked past them anyway.
Neither of them spoke. Neither did I.
Beyond them, the mansion opened into a massive hall. A curved staircase rose upward, elegant and deliberate, like it led to a throne instead of a second floor.
Symbols were etched into the railings—not decorative. Warnings.
I didn’t recognize them.
I understood them.
Black marble. Deep reds. Gold threaded through it all—not as decoration, but as a reminder.
This luxury wasn’t meant to impress. It was meant to intimidate.
No one needed to explain what kind of man owned this place.
Only one kind ruled in silence—surrounded by guards, history, and fear dressed as elegance.
I wasn’t in his mansion. I was in his kingdom.
And he was the kind of king people whispered about.
The kind whose name carried consequences.
He was Carlino Lacentra.
The realization dropped into me like a stone into a bottomless pit. The Mafia king of the Lacentra empire. My heart sank as the truth settled—cold, heavy, unavoidable. I hadn’t fallen into the hands of a small-time crime lord. Not someone dangerous but contained.
He was the danger.
No—he was the crime itself.
“Wandering around?”
The voice came from behind me. Deep. Commanding. Sharp enough to jolt my body into motion. I staggered as I turned.
He stood there, unmoving.
His gaze locked onto me, intense, suffocating. It wasn’t just a look—it was an examination. Like my soul had been dragged into the open, stripped bare, and he was searching for something rotten inside.
I swallowed hard. The words burned on the way out. “Y-you’re… Carlino Lacentra?”
Silence followed.
Not the ordinary kind. The kind that crawled into your bones and stayed.
He didn’t answer.
His face revealed nothing. His lips didn’t move—but his legs did. He started toward me with unhurried precision, each step deliberate.
Panic flared.
What was he doing?
I stepped back.
He stepped forward.
Again.
And again.
The distance between us disappeared too quickly. My back hit the wall, the impact knocking the air from my lungs.
Before I could react, he had me caged in—one arm braced beside my head, cutting off every possible escape.
“Rules are rules,” he said calmly. “You don’t wander when you have nothing to do.” His eyes dipped briefly, assessing. “Back to your room. Now.”
Something icy slid down my spine.
This wasn’t just authority. This was certainty. The kind that came from a man who had never been told no—and had buried those who tried.
I lifted my chin, forcing my voice steady. “I wasn’t told I was a prisoner.”
For the first time, something shifted in his eyes. Not anger. Not surprise.
Interest.
“You weren’t told anything,” he replied. “That should concern you more.”
That was my cue.
I ducked beneath his arm before he could stop me, my heart slamming violently against my ribs as I hurried down the hallway. Right now, defiance was a blade with no handle. Dying wouldn’t help me escape.
I had to live.
I wouldn’t let his intimidation own me.
Being trapped in this place—this prison—might just be the key to my—
“Ouch—”
Pain shot through my toe, sharp and immediate, stopping me cold. I gasped, blinking back tears as I looked down.
A wheelchair.
My gaze lifted.
An elderly man sat there, perhaps late fifties, early sixties. Silver threaded through his hair, though dark strands still clung stubbornly. His face was lined with quiet exhaustion, but his eyes—tired yet alert—studied me calmly.
He wasn’t startled.
He wasn’t angry.
He was watching.
“I’m sorry,” I said quickly. “I wasn’t paying attention.”
He didn’t respond right away. His stare lingered, something unreadable flickering across his expression.
Then, finally, his lips parted. One word danced out of his mouth.
“Dwan.”
Carlino’s POVThe gates of Kailen’s estate rose ahead of us like the entrance to a fortress. Black iron. Reinforced concrete walls. Armed guards posted along the perimeter towers.A kingdom built on fear.Engines died behind me as our convoy rolled to a stop in the tree line. My men stepped out almost instantly, weapons already in their hands. The cold air carried the faint scent of wet soil and gun oil.I adjusted the cuff of my black suit. Taking off my blazer, I rolled the sleeves of my shirt. “Positions,” I said calmly.No shouting. No chaos.Just obedience.Men moved through the trees like shadows. Rifles raised. Scopes settling.Beside me, Niel chambered a round into his pistol with a quiet click.Matteo stood on my other side, scanning the estate walls through binoculars.“Four at the main gate,” he murmured. “Two on the tower.”I didn’t respond. My eyes were already fixed on the guards. For a moment, everything held still. Then—“Now,” I ordered.Gunfire shattered the quiet.S
Carlino’s POVNiel peeled off at the end of the corridor without another word.He had his orders.Now I had mine.The Black Chamber doors loomed ahead—thick steel, soundproof, the kind built for conversations that never left the room.Two of my men followed behind me, silent as a shadow. I pushed the door open. The room smelled faintly of metal and antiseptic. Three chairs. Three traitors. Chains bolted to the floor.Marcio. Chris. Elara.Their heads were lowered when I stepped inside. Whether from exhaustion or calculation, I didn’t care.The door shut behind me with a dull thud. The sound echoed. Their heads jerked up almost instantly.Fear moved through two of them like electricity.Chris flinched.Elara’s eyes widened.Marcio didn’t move.He sat there with the same indifferent expression he’d worn since the first hour of interrogation, as if this entire situation bored him.I walked forward slowly. Boots clicking against concrete. No hurry. No wasted motion. I stopped a few feet i
Carlino’s POVThe order went out the moment I stepped out of the Black Chamber. Quietly. No retaliation announcement. No spectacle. No war declaration.Just silence.“Niel,” I said as we walked down the corridor.He fell into step beside me, blade already gone from his hand like it had never existed.“Yes, Don.”“Cut Kailen’s supply routes.”He didn’t ask which ones.He already knew.Kailen’s empire didn’t breathe through violence. It breathed through logistics—ports, shipments, private airstrips, shell companies moving cargo that never appeared on paper.Break the arteries, and the body suffocates.“Tonight?” Niel asked.“Now.”I stopped at the end of the hall and turned toward him. “No fireworks. No signatures. I want confusion. I want his people waking up to empty docks and stalled trucks.”Niel’s mouth twitched faintly. The closest thing he had to a smile
Carlino's POV The Black Chamber had never been meant for negotiation. It was where the truth was forced out of people when words stopped working.The air down there always felt heavier than anywhere else in the house, thick with the faint metallic scent of old blood and the damp chill of stone. The room sat beneath the bungalow like a buried secret. Everyone on the council seat knew it existed.No one ever wanted to see it.Until tonight.Niel was already waiting when I walked in. He leaned casually against a concrete pillar, flipping a serrated blade through his fingers with slow, practiced ease. The metal caught the dim light each time it turned.He didn’t ask questions.He never did.My guards dragged them inside.Marcio, Elara, and Chris stumbled across the floor, their polished shoes slipping slightly on the stained concrete. Their expensive clothes looked almost ridiculous here, like something fr
Carlino’s POVTwo more days passed. Two days of watching the same three shadows move.Marcio.Elara.Chris.My men tracked every meeting, every call, every step they took. But the trail kept circling back on itself.No Kailen. No location. No mistake.They were careful.Too careful.Which meant one thing—they knew exactly how much protection the council gave them. But that protection ends today.Because there were rules in Cosa Nostra.A king could accuse.But a council decided whether one of their own could be dragged to interrogation… or execution.So I called the meeting. Not a suggestion. A summons.Every council member received it within an hour.And when a Mafia king summons the council, no one refuses.~~~The council chamber inside the bungalow was silent when I arrived. The door opened slowly as one of my guards stepped aside.
Carlino’s POVThings were collapsing.Not loudly. Not all at once.But steadily.Shipments were delayed. Deals stalled midway through negotiations. Contracts that had been sealed months ago were suddenly “reconsidered.” Stakeholders who used to call daily had gone silent.Some withdrew entirely.Others waited.Watching.Like vultures circling a wounded animal.The office lights burned long past midnight most nights. Files stacked higher on my desk than they had in years. Reports. Losses. Territory disruptions.Sleep has become a luxury.And tonight, like the last several nights, I didn’t bother trying.Neil stood across the office while I scanned the latest shipment report. “Three containers seized in Valencia,” he said.“Customs?”“No.”My eyes lifted.“Private enforcement,” Neil continued. “They were tipped off before the ship even docked.







