Mag-log inI read the message four times.
Each time I read it, the fifty-six minutes got shorter and the room got smaller, and the man sleeping beside me felt simultaneously like the safest and most dangerous place I could be.
Detective Marcus Reid.
The name meant nothing to me. But the outline had already told me things I was not supposed to know yet, things I had been carrying around in the back of my mind like a map of a building I had not yet been allowed to enter. And one of the things I knew was that a detective named Marcus existed on the edges of this story, investigating quietly, building a case, watching things from a distance that nobody else was watching from.
Which meant this message was real.
Which made it infinitely more complicated than if it had been a trap.
I looked at Marcello beside me in the dark. The slow rise and fall of his chest. The absolute stillness of him in sleep. I thought about what he had said in the study, that quiet, unfinished sentence he had left hanging in the doorway like a door left deliberately ajar.
Whatever you are not telling me.
And then I thought about Alberto, out there somewhere in this city making movements that had already reached Marcello's ears, searching for a sister who had asked him to stay still and stay hidden and had apparently asked the impossible. Forty-nine minutes now.
I made a decision.
I slipped out of bed with the same careful silence I had used the night before, crossed the bedroom floor in the dark and went to the bathroom, closing the door softly behind me before I turned on the tap to cover the sound of my voice and sat down on the edge of the bath with my phone in both hands.
I typed back to the unknown number.
"I am reading this. Who gave you this number, and what exactly do you think you know?"
I kept the tap running and waited.
The reply came in under a minute.
"I have been monitoring communications connected to Diego Alcazar for eleven months. Your number appeared in his contact activity three days ago after your name came up in an intercepted conversation. I know you are inside the Giordano penthouse. I know you are there under a false surname. And I know that Alberto Alfonso has been attempting to locate you through channels that have already attracted attention from Giordano's people. Your brother is not being careful, Miss Alfonso. He needs to stop immediately."
I stared at the screen.
Alberto. Again. Always Alberto, moving through this city like a man who believed that love was sufficient armour against consequences.
I typed quickly. "What do you want from me?"
"Nothing that puts you at risk. I want you to stay exactly where you are and continue exactly as you have been. You are in a position that took Diego Alcazar two years of work to get someone into, and he failed every time. I am not asking you to spy. I am not asking you to feed me information. I am asking you to stay alive and stay in that building and respond to me when I reach out. That is all. Can you do that?"
I read it twice.
The tap was still running. From the bedroom, nothing. No movement, no change in the rhythm of Marcello's breathing that I had become so attuned to in three days that I could hear its absence from another room.
"And my family," I typed. "Alberto."
"I will make sure he is redirected tonight. He will not be told details, but he will be given enough to make him stand down. You have my word on that."
A detective's word. Offered through an encrypted message at eleven fifteen at night to a woman sitting on the edge of a bathtub with the tap running.
I thought about Diego at the service entrance. The careful assembly of him. The practised warmth. The way he had reached for my arm with the confidence of a man who had never once considered that his touch might no longer be welcome.
I thought about Nissi's four words. Don't do anything stupid.
I thought about Ric on the terrace, saying the truth always finds its way out in this family, and make sure he hears it from you first.
And then, underneath all of those thoughts, quiet and persistent and entirely unwelcome, I thought about Marcello's hand tucking that strand of hair behind my ear. The same strand. The same gesture. Already a habit after three days, as if his hands had decided something his mouth had not said yet.
I turned the tap off, stood up and looked at myself in the bathroom mirror for a long moment.
Then I typed one word back to Detective Marcus Reid.
"Okay."
I turned off the bathroom light and went back to bed.
Marcello had not moved.
Morning came grey and quiet, the kind of New York morning that looks like the city is gathering itself before something. Rosa had coffee ready before I reached the kitchen, which meant either she woke impossibly early or she never fully slept, and I was beginning to suspect the latter.
I sat at the kitchen counter, wrapped both hands around the cup and thought about Alberto.
By the time I had finished my first coffee, my phone buzzed with a message from him.
Not a call. A message, which already told me something because Alberto preferred calls. He said texts were for people who had something to hide.
"I have been advised to pause my search. I don't fully understand why, and I don't like it, but I trust the source. Are you safe?. One word is enough."
I looked at that last line for a moment. One word is enough. My brother,r who filled every room with his voice and his presence, asking for one word because he understood that even one word from me right now was more than the situation safely allowed.
I typed back. "Yes."
His reply came immediately. "Okay. One word from me, too. Hurry."
I set the phone down and pressed my lips together against something that wanted to be tears and was not going to be allowed to be.
Sera appeared in the kitchen doorway in her silk robe with her coffee already made, which meant she had beaten even Rosa this morning.
"You look terrible," she said, sitting beside me.
"Good morning to you,u too," I replied.
She looked at me sideways. "Marcello told me about Diego Alcazar coming here yesterday."
I turned my head. "He told you?"
"He tells me things he does not tell other people." She said it without pride, just as a fact. "We grew up together more than he and Ric did. Different kinds of trust." She turned her cup slowly on the counter. "Diego Alcazar is not just an ex-boyfriend, is he?"
It was not quite a question.
"No," I said carefully. "I don't think he is."
Sera nodded slowly. "Marcello ran his name last night. After you went to bed." She paused. "I don't know what came back, but whatever it was, it put three extra men on the building entrance by midnight."
Three extra men by midnight.
Which meant Marcello had been awake, running searches while I had been sitting on the edge of his bathtub, communicating with the detective who was investigating the same man.
We had been working in parallel in the same building without knowing it, and the thought of that, the strange intimacy of it, unsettled me more than it should have.
"Sera," I said. "Can I ask you something?"
She looked at me. "You can ask."
"When Marcello decides he cannot trust someone. What does he do?"
She was quiet for a moment, turning her cup again. Then she said, "It depends on someone."
"What does it depend on?"
She looked at me directly. "On whether he cares about them or not." She held my gaze with an expression that was doing several things at once. "If he doesn't care, it's quick, and it's final. If he does." She paused. "If he does, it's the worst kind. Because he gives them every chance to tell him the truth themselves, and if they don't take it, what comes after is not anger."
"What is it?" I asked quietly.
She set her cup down. "Grief. And Marcello's grieving looks exactly like Marcello destroying something."
The kitchen went quiet.
From down the corridor came the sound of the study door opening and Marcello's footsteps crossing the entrance hall. Unhurried. Deliberate.
Sera picked up her coffee, stood up from the stool and looked at me one more time with an expression that contained something close to compassion.
"Whatever you are sitting on," she said quietly, "don't sit on it much longer."
She walked out of the kitchen as Marcello walked in, and they passed each other in the doorway with the wordless ease of people who had shared a language since childhood.
Marcello looked at me across the kitchen.
He looked like he had slept well and thought even better, and the combination of those two things on a man like him was genuinely terrifying.
"Come with me," he said. "I want to show you something."
I stood up from the stool and followed him down the corridor, and he led me not to the study and not to the sitting room but to a door at the far end of the penthouse that I had noticed but never seen opened.
He pressed his thumb to a small panel beside it, and the lock disengaged.
Inside was a room that was smaller than the others, simpler, with one window, one chair and a table, and on the table was an open file.
He stepped aside so that I could see it clearly.
I walked forward and looked down at the papers spread across the table, and the first thing I saw was a photograph.
A family photograph. Old, slightly faded at the edges, taken outside a house I recognised immediately because I had grown up inside it.
My mother was in it. Alberto was in it. A younger version of me was in it, maybe eight years old, squinting slightly in the sun.
And my father, Enzo Alfonso, stood at the centre of the photograph with his hand on my shoulder and a smile that had no idea what it was standing on the edge of.
I could not move.
I could not speak.
I could not do anything except stand in front of that photograph in a locked room in Marcello Giordano's penthouse and wait for the world to finish falling.
"Sit down, Vittoria," Marcello said from behind me.
His voice was very quiet.
And it contained absolutely nothing that I could call mercy.
VITTORIA'S POVBoth of us.I stood in the study doorway and let those three words settle into the room and find their weight.A file on both of us meant Reid had not arrived here tonight as a man seeking alliance. He had arrived as a man holding leverage over two people simultaneously and waiting to see which one would be more useful to what came next.I looked at Marcello.His expression was the still, careful version that meant he had already processed several steps ahead of the current moment and was waiting for me to catch up before he moved."Where is he?" I said."Sitting room," Marcello said. "Tw
VITTORIA'S POVMarcello moved through the penthouse like a current.Not loud. Not panicking. Just fast and absolutely deliberate, each instruction delivered in a low voice that carried the specific authority of a man who had prepared for something like this so many times that the preparation had become instinct.I stood in the kitchen doorway with Alberto beside me and watched the building transform around us in the space of four minutes. Men appeared from rooms I had not known were occupied. Positions taken at windows and entrances. The quiet mechanical sound of things being locked that I had not known needed locking.Alberto said nothing beside me. He was doing his own version of watching, that careful inventory he had always taken of any
VITTORIA'S POVRosa.The woman who had appeared every morning with coffee before I reached the kitchen. Who had told Marcello about Diego's visit to the service entrance with the quiet efficiency of someone doing their job? Who had looked at me after Diego left with an expression I had read as professional discretion and had apparently been something else entirely.I looked at the grainy footage on Marcello's phone screen and thought about every small interaction I had catalogued in the past few days. Rosa was setting down cups without being asked. Rosa was hovering at a careful distance during Diego's visit. Rosa appears in doorways at precise moments with precise information.Not discretion.Positioning.She had been positioning herself inside every significant moment since I arrived, close enough to observe, far enough to remain unremarkable, and I had walked past her every single time without seeing it because she had been so thoroughly invisible that invisibility itself had becom
VITTORIA'S POVI stared at Nissi's message until the screen went dark.Then I turned it back on and stared at it again."I'm sorry. I didn't know they would take him."Eight words that were doing three different things simultaneously. They were a confession. They were a boundary, drawing a line between what Nissi had agreed to be part of and what had apparently crossed even her threshold. And underneath both of those things, buried in the sorry and the didn't know, was something that looked uncomfortably like genuine fear.Nissi was scared.Which meant whatever she had signed up for when she started feeding information to Diego, and Seymour's people ha
VITTORIA'S POVI read the message four times.Each time, the four words stayed the same on the screen, unmoved by how many times I needed them to mean something different from what they meant."We have your brother."No name attached. No number I recognised. No follow-up message giving me instructions or demands or any of the things that should logically come after four words like that, which was somehow worse than if there had been twenty more sentences underneath them. The silence after a threat is always louder than the threat itself.My hands were not shaking. I noticed that distantly, the way you notice small details when your mind has
VITTORIA'S POVI stayed.Not because he had told me to. He had said it quietly enough that it could have been refused without consequence, and we both understood that. I stayed because the word had come from somewhere unguarded in him, somewhere that did not usually send words out into rooms, and walking away from it would have felt like closing a door on something that had taken considerable effort to open.I took the chair across from the desk, the same chair that had heard more truth in the last twenty-four hours than most chairs heard in a lifetime, and I wrapped both hands around my coffee cup and said nothing.Marcello looked at the map for a moment longer, then pushed it to one side and picked up his own cup.We sat li
VITTORIA'S POVI stood in the middle of the bedroom with the phone pressed against my ear and Alberto's words sitting in my chest like a blade that had gone in cleanly and was waiting to be pulled out.
VITTORIA'S POVThe rest of that day passed like a held breath.The penthouse felt different in the afternoon. Tighter. The men moving through the corridors had changed someh
VITTORIA'S POVDiego ended the call in two seconds flat.Marcello looked at the dead screen for a moment, then set my phone down on the desk with the careful deliberateness of a man who had just made a decision and was in no hurry to announce it.He leaned back in his chair, laced his fingers toget
VITTORIA'S POVI did not sit down.I stood in front of that photograph with my back to Marcello and my hands hanging at my sides and I made a decision in the space of three heartbeats. Not a calm decision. Not a strategic one. The kind of decision that gets made when every other option has been rem







