A Violent Kind of Grace
My name is Elvira Rossi, daughter of Don Rossi, head of the Itavelle mafia family.
Three months ago, my father was killed. Our operations were stripped bare, nothing left.
The accounts were draining fast, and the family still had mouths to feed.
Then a DNA report surfaced out of nowhere.
According to it, I was the LaRosa family's long‑lost true heiress, missing for eighteen years.
Money, at last, had found its way to me.
For the sake of my people, I was willing to set aside my pride and play the part of a sheltered heiress.
The car sent to escort me back to the estate broke down halfway up the mountain?
I steadied it with one hand and carried it the rest of the way to the hilltop manor.
The fake heiress dissolved into tears, accusing me of pushing her?
I answered by striking the century-old tree in the courtyard, splitting it clean through.
She went silent immediately.
My fiancé sent bodyguards to "teach me self‑defense"?
My two friends politely introduced them to the concept of being permanently embedded in a wall.
As my so‑called "family" shook in fear, my knuckles cracked softly.
After all, before inheriting the mafia, I inherited my father's favorite rule:
"If violence can solve it, don't waste words."