With nowhere to go, my thoughts drifted to Dante, the ruthless future Don who saved me from a fire ten years ago.
I had loved him in secret for a decade, but I chose a vow of silence because my childhood best friend, Elena, claimed him as hers.
I had watched her cling to his side through a decade of bloodshed, stepping into the shadows so they could rule.
I thought I was nothing but a worthless pawn, abandoned by my blood and invisible to the only man I ever loved.
So I packed my battered duffel bag, accepted a dangerous transfer to a hostile casino territory, and vowed to never return to New York.
I chose to build my own empire and live for myself.
But what I didn't know was that the moment I disappeared, the cold-blooded Underboss went completely feral.
He kicked down my old apartment door, left my toxic family cowering in the hallway, and mobilized an entire death squad just to bring me back.
Chapter 1
Serena POV:
I was seated at a small table in the syndicate café, the bitter scent of espresso heavy in the air. Across from me, a matchmaker was negotiating the terms of my sale to a Capo of some repute when the VIP doors were thrown open with a percussive crack.
The man whose memory I had spent ten years attempting to bury stepped across the threshold. The café's VIP room was his unofficial office-neutral ground where business and blood could mix without staining either.
He laid a roll of blueprints on the table with a quiet finality and spoke to the room at large. "You have three seconds to vacate my private room."
I drew a sharp breath of the stale, coffee-scented air, and a swallow caught halfway down my throat, lodging there like a knot of coarse sand.
I stared at the man standing in the doorway.
Dante.
He was dressed in a suit of black wool so finely tailored it seemed to absorb the light around it.
A thin, silvered scar rested near his left eye, a line of pale silk stitched into the hard geography of his face.
He was the Underboss of the New York Syndicate.
He was the future Don.
He was also the boy who had pulled me from a warehouse fire a decade ago-an act of salvation I had since learned to treat as a debt.
The matchmaker rose with a clumsy scrape of her chair, the blood draining from her features until her skin was the color of old parchment.
She inclined her head, the words of apology for trespassing in his private room a choked murmur of his formal title.
Her fingers dug into my arm, her whisper a venomous hiss against my ear. "Stand. Show the man respect."
My muscles refused the command, locking me to the chair.
I had consented to this meeting only to appease my mother, to forestall the inevitable blow that followed my defiance.
Minutes earlier, I had informed the matchmaker that my ideal husband would be a man of quiet habits, extensive education, and a capacity for lethality.
The irony was a blade twisting in my gut. I had, of course, been describing Dante.
He had returned from his training in Sicily four years ago, moving through the city's underworld as an unseen force.
This was the first time I was seeing him up close.
Dante's gaze swept the room and settled upon me. It was a slow, deliberate motion.
If he recognized me, his expression yielded nothing. His eyes held only a profound and unnerving stillness-the kind a man learns when a single flicker of emotion could cost him everything.
He regarded me with the detached curiosity one might afford a crack in the pavement. But I caught it-the briefest flex of his fingers against the rolled schematics, a tell I remembered from the academy. He knew exactly who I was.
His fingers tapped a soundless rhythm against the rolled schematics for a new casino operation.
The silence that emanated from him was not an absence of noise, but a palpable presence, a weight in the air.
A cold, dense pressure began to build behind my sternum.
I found my voice, a thin, reedy thing, and suggested to the matchmaker that our business was concluded.
An urgent need to flee the room pulsed in my veins, a frantic drumming against my ribs.
But before I could rise, a woman swept through the heavy wooden doors, moving past the imposing figures of the armed guards as if they were statues.
It was Elena.
My former childhood best friend.
She walked directly to Dante and laid a hand on his chest, a gesture of such familiar ownership that it made my breath catch.
She leaned into him, and the cloying sweetness of her perfume displaced the scent of coffee, filling the room. A light, practiced laugh escaped her lips.
With a dismissive flick of her wrist toward the matchmaker, she announced that Dante had come only to meet her for a private discussion.
She looked up at him, her expression a study in pure adoration.
Without pause, she began to speak of Famiglia business, her voice weaving a tapestry of Capos' names and weapon shipments with the ease of someone discussing the morning's gossip.
I remained standing, a ghost at their feast.
I was a foreigner in the blood-soaked country of their shared life.
The sight of them, a tableau of power and intimacy, sent a jolt through my memory, pulling me back to our adolescence.
We used to be the Iron Trio.
We had been a unit, a fortress of three against the world.
Then the whispers had begun, insidious as rising damp-rumors that Dante and Elena were a bonded pair, their futures intertwined to rule the New York underworld.
I remembered the precise, suffocating moment I chose the code of silence.
I chose Omerta, a vow that felt like swallowing shards of glass.
I had receded into the background, a willing shadow, to clear the path for their perfectly ordained future.
Dante did not push Elena away.
Instead, he looked down at her, a muscle working in the hard line of his jaw, and informed her in a clipped, toneless voice that they were leaving.