MasukDante’s pov
“Drive faster. We’re already late.” My voice is calm, but everyone in the car hears the warning underneath it. I sit in the backseat of the armored sedan, legs spread slightly, posture relaxed . The windows are blacked out, bulletproof. I glance at my watch again, irritation flickering sharp and brief. Late is unacceptable. Outside, the city blurs past in streaks of concrete and glass. We’re moving fast. Too fast for most people. Not fast enough for me. Two cars lead the convoy. Two trail behind. Armed men in every vehicle. Radios murmur constantly, low and clipped, confirming routes, clearing intersections, updating positions. My phone buzzes in my hand. Capo Romano: Five minutes out. Capo DeLuca: Arrived. Security Chief: Perimeter secured. This meeting decides too much to be careless with. Territory, alliances, blood , if things go wrong. I’ve spent weeks tightening this situation into something controllable. I won’t have it unravel because of traffic. The driver tightens his grip on the wheel and presses harder on the accelerator. The engine responds immediately. Good. I lean back slightly, eyes forward, mind already shifting into calculation. Faces, voices of Godfathers. Who will lie, Who will push too far. Who might need to be reminded of their place. Nothing shakes me today. Then something moves in the road ahead. It was not a car and definitely not a barricade but a human . My driver is definitely moving too fast nervously to notice. “Brake!” someone shouts. It happens all at once. A figure stumbles into our path, barely upright, moving wrong, like gravity is pulling them down faster than they can walk. The driver swerves instinctively, too late to be clean, too fast to be gentle. Tires scream. The car jerks violently, the force throwing me forward against the restraint before snapping me back. Metal slams into metal as the lead vehicle clips something during the swerve. The sound is deafening, ugly, final. The convoy skids to a halt. Shouts explode over the radios. Doors fly open. Guns are out before the cars fully stop. My instincts ignite immediately. This feels wrong. Too sudden. Too messy. The kind of chaos people use to mask an ambush. “Secure the perimeter,” I snap, already unbuckling. “Eyes everywhere.” I’m out of the car before anyone can stop me. The air outside smells like burnt rubber and hot metal. Men fan out in practiced formation, scanning rooftops, windows, alleys. Fingers tight on triggers. The driver stumbles out after me, pale, shaken. “Boss… I swear, she just…she came out of nowhere.” I follow his line of sight. There’s a body on the asphalt. Small. Still. Blood stains the road beneath her, dark against the gray. One shoe lies a few feet away, twisted at an unnatural angle. Traffic has frozen in every direction now, cars stopped mid-lane, horns blaring, people shouting. My irritation drains, replaced by something colder. This isn’t a setup. This is a person. I start toward her. “Boss,” one of my men warns. “Let us…” “I said clear the area,” I cut in. My voice leaves no room for argument. “Now.” They move immediately, forming a tighter perimeter, barking orders at the growing crowd. Someone is already filming. I see the phone held up, shaking. One of my men steps in front of it, blocking the view. I crouch beside the woman. She’s unconscious. Breathing, but shallow. Each rise of her chest is uneven, like her body is struggling to remember how to do it. Her clothes are simple. Worn. Nothing about her screams threat or trap. There’s blood at her temple, a thin line trailing into her hair. Her skin is pale beneath the streetlights, lips parted slightly. For reasons I don’t understand yet, my chest tightens. “Check her pulse,” I say. There’s hesitation. A half-second too long. I snap my head up. “Now.” A guard kneels opposite me, fingers pressing to her neck. “It’s weak,” he says. “But it’s there.” Good. For the first time today, my meeting doesn’t matter. I lean closer despite myself, scanning for injuries, cataloging damage the way I’ve been trained to assess threats and casualties. My focus narrows to her breathing, the faint tremor in her fingers, the way her lashes rest against her cheeks. Then I see it. Just below her jawline, half-hidden by blood and shadow, there’s a scar. Thin. Pale. Old. My breath stills. No. I tell myself it’s coincidence. Scars are common. Everyone carries something like that, somewhere. The world is full of damaged people. Still, I lean closer. The shape is wrong for coincidence. Too precise. A narrow curve that dips slightly near the center, exactly where… My heart starts pounding, hard enough that I feel it in my throat. Memory crashes into me without warning. A garden, years ago, sunlight filtering through leaves. A girl laughing, younger, her hair longer then, swinging as she turned. A quiet smile she only showed when she felt safe. A stubborn streak that got her into trouble more than once. A girl who vanished. A girl we buried without a body. A girl I trained myself to believe was dead. My hands begin to shake. I straighten abruptly, forcing air back into my lungs. “Clear the street,” I order, my voice sharper now, edged with something my men recognize immediately. “I want it empty.” They don’t ask questions. “Get a private ambulance,” I add. “Now. No sirens. No delays.” Someone is already on the phone. I look back down at her face. Blood, dirt , pain and beneath it, faintly, unmistakably familiarity. The curve of her cheek. The shape of her mouth. Subtle changes carved by time and hardship, but the bones don’t lie. I crouch again, closer this time, ignoring the chaos around us. This is impossible. She was gone. She had to be. I watched years harden around that truth until it became part of me, something I carried without questioning. My voice gets softer, barely a whisper , meant only for myself. “That’s impossible.”Serena’s / Martina’s POV“I want a list. Every member who voted to strip my name.” I said Matteo doesn’t argue, He disappears into the adjoining room, already making calls, already pulling encrypted voting logs and internal recordings. Dante remains where he is, watching me instead of the screen.By morning, the safe house is quieter. I sit at the head of the long steel table in the operations room. The broadcast from the previous night is frozen on the wall-mounted screen…Victor standing tall, my title gone beneath a red banner.Matteo steps in with a printed document in his hand.“Verified,” he says. “Cross-checked against chamber recording.”“Read them.” I said not looking at him He unfolds the paper. “Alessandro Vane.”I nod once.“Luca Moretti.”I picture his face, the way he avoided looking directly at me during the vote.“Stefan Rizzi.”Matteo continues down the list, Each name lands evenly in the room. I don’t interrupt, I don’t comment I just commit them to memory. When he
Serena’s POVBy the time we reach the safe house, the city is already buzzing. The gates slide shut behind us with a heavy metallic thud. Matteo’s men sweep the perimeter immediately, weapons visible, movements efficient. No one speaks until we’re inside.Dante stays close as we move down the narrow corridor toward the operations room. He hasn’t said a word since we left the estate. He doesn’t need to. The weight of what I did is walking beside me.The safe house is functional with reinforced walls, encrypted systems, independent power supply. Screens line the far wall of the main room. Matteo is already at the central console.“Secure,” he confirms. “No tails. No trackers.”I nod once. “Put the Council feed on.”One of the screens flickers to life. The chamber appears, still in session. Victor stands at the head of the table.“By unanimous emergency vote, Martina Fernandez is hereby stripped of title and protection.” The words echo through the Council chamber speakers before the feed
Victor’s POV“He’s… they’re gone.”The words leave my mouth the moment I step into the dungeon. The air is thick with cordite and damp stone, the Smoke still clings to the ceiling. My shoes grind against broken concrete and twisted metal as I move forward without haste. The heavy cell door hangs open, bent at the hinges, an ugly reminder that someone dared to breach my house.Marco is slumped against the far wall, pale, blood soaking through his sleeve and pooling beneath him.“She shot me,” he rasps when he sees me. “Martina. She didn’t even hesitate. She shot me and took him.”I glance at the wound, then at the empty cell. Dante is gone, the bars that held him now stand useless, framing nothing but darkness.“And you let them walk out?” I ask calmly.His jaw tightens. “There was nothing to let. She came prepared. She chose him over everything.”I do not kneel beside Marco. I do not call for help. Instead, I walk slowly across the room, taking in the blast marks on the walls, the fal
Dante’s POVThe first explosion shakes dust from the ceiling. For half a second, I think it’s the execution squad preparing something theatrical. Then the second blast tears through the estate above the dungeon, violent enough to rattle the bars of my cell and knock loose fragments of stone that rain down onto the floor around me.Smoke begins to crawl down the stairwell in thick gray ribbons. I’m on my feet before I consciously decide to move.Another blast detonates closer this time, and the iron door at the top of the stairs screeches as something heavy slams into it. The hinges give way with a tortured metallic snap. The door crashes inward, bouncing once on the stone before settling crookedly against the wall.Then Gunfire erupts.The corridor fills with smoke and dust, turning the torchlight into a hazy orange blur. I step forward, gripping the bars, my pulse hammering so hard it drowns out everything else.A silhouette appears at the top of the stairs.She moves through the smo
Dante’s POV“Martina?”My voice scrapes against my throat before it reaches the open air. It sounds weak, unfamiliar, like it belongs to someone who has already accepted his fate. I hate that this place has begun to change even the sound of me.The cell is damp enough that the stone sweats. Water runs in thin lines down the walls and pools near the drain in the corner. The cold has settled into my bones, slow and patient, and no matter how many times I roll my shoulders or flex my hands, I can’t force the stiffness out. My knuckles are split from the first night, when I tested the bars and the door.The footsteps echo in the corridor.Every time I hear them, my heart skips. The guards rotate every few hours. I know the rhythm of their boots now… the heavy drag of the older one, the sharper strike of the younger.I push myself off the wall and straighten, even though the motion pulls at the bruise along my ribs. I won’t be found sitting, I won’t be found broken.The iron door groans as
Serena’s / Martina’s POV“Victor won’t stop.” The words left my mouth before I realized I had spoken them aloud.The safe house was silent except for the low hum of the generator buried somewhere beneath the stone floors. Thick walls surrounded us, old limestone that had once belonged to a monastery before being converted into one my fathers hidden properties. Outside, vineyard hills rolled into the distance, quiet and deceptively peaceful. It looked like exile.Matteo stood by the narrow window carved into the stone, rifle angled toward the gravel driveway below. He hadn’t relaxed since we arrived. His shoulders were rigid, eyes scanning every movement beyond the iron gate. He trusted no one. Not even the wind.My mother sat on the worn leather sofa across the room. Her hands were clasped so tightly in her lap that her knuckles were pale. She was alive, that fact still stunned me. The ambush should have ended differently. Victor had intended it to.I paced back and forth across the







