Mag-log inThe files screamed as she cranked the handle. Rust and old grease protested the intrusion, the screech echoing like a dying animal in the Sub-Level 3 tomb.
Lina ignored the noise. She pulled drawer 404. Inside, the missing piece of the manifest sat in a clean plastic sleeve—Thorne’s last middle finger to the city. She laid the two halves together on the cold steel.
The fibers locked. It was whole.
Lina’s flashlight beam trembled. It wasn't Dominic. It wasn't the old patriarch.
Authorized Transfer: Marco Moretti.
The air in the room suddenly felt like lead. Marco hadn't just hated his father’s "legitimacy" plan; he’d sold the old man to the Russians for a seat at the table. And Dominic—the big brother playing CEO—didn't have a goddamn clue that the man sleeping in the next room was his father’s executioner.
"Checkmate, Rossi."
Lina didn't jump. She just went still. A shadow stood at the end of the aisle, framed by the sickly yellow light of the hallway. Detective Cody Fletcher. He wasn't smiling. He was holding a Glock 19, his gold shield catching the dim light of her fallen flashlight.
"Cody," Lina said, her heart hammering against her ribs. "Does the Commissioner know you’re on the Moretti payroll, or is this a freelance gig for Perla?"
"The city pays in scrip and headaches, Lina," Cody rasped, taking a slow step forward. His eyes were dead. "Dominic pays in quiet. He wants a clean city. You’re the only mess left."
"You’re backing the wrong horse," Lina spat, her hand inching toward the heavy metal drawer. "Dominic didn't kill his father. It was Marco. He conspired with Victor Russos twelve years ago. If you bury this, you’re not just a dirty cop, Cody—you’re a dead man when Dominic finds out you knew."
Cody flinched. The muzzle of the Glock wavered for a fraction of a second. "You’re bluffing."
"Look at the signature! If Marco finds out you’ve seen this, you’re a liability he’ll erase before breakfast."
"Give me the paper, Rossi," Cody growled, his finger tightening. "Now."
"Here! Catch!"
Lina didn't wait. She grabbed the edge of the heavy steel drawer—packed with fifty pounds of dead-weight files—and heaved it with everything she had. It crashed into Cody’s knees with a sickening crack.
The gun went off. The roar in the concrete vault was deafening, a white flash blinding her as the bullet chewed into the ceiling. Plaster rained down.
Lina snatched the manifest and bolted. She didn't look back as Cody roared in pain behind her. She dived into the darkness of Row 50, her boots pounding the concrete, heading for the service tunnel that led to the subway.
Lina crouched by the rusted pylon of Pier 7, her lungs screaming for air. Behind her, the city was a wall of wet granite; ahead, the black, choppy water offered a smuggler’s hope that wasn't coming.
The engine hum cut through the mist first—low, rhythmic, expensive.
Four black SUVs materialized from the gray like predators from a dream. Hugo Sidney stood at the center, a mountain of a man who didn't need a gun to look lethal.
Then, the armored town car slid into the circle.
Dominic Moretti stepped into the rain. He didn't look like a mobster; he looked like a man who owned the rain. He opened a black umbrella with a slow, mechanical precision, the drumming of the water the only heartbeat in the silence.
He walked toward her, his handmade loafers splashing softly in the puddles. He stopped ten feet away. Controlled. Absolute.
"A long night, Miss Rossi," Dominic said. His baritone was smooth, devoid of heat. "Trespassing, assault, theft. You’re racking up quite the portfolio for a Sunday morning."
"Fletcher’s your dog, Moretti," Lina spat, her back against the freezing railing. "I didn't steal anything. I just found what you tried to bury twelve years ago."
Dominic’s eyes didn't flicker. "The past is a graveyard, Lina. Only fools go digging there without a shovel."
He didn't signal. He didn't have to. Hugo was on her in a blur—one hand crushing her wrist like a vice, the other sliding her 9mm from her waistband before she could even blink. Another shadow stripped the waterproof sleeve from her jacket.
The operative handed the manifest and the brass key to Dominic.
Dominic didn't look at them. He slipped them into his charcoal overcoat as if they were nothing more than a lost dry-cleaning receipt.
"You think burning that changes it?" Lina yelled, her voice cracking with fury and cold. "Marco sold your father! Your brother invited the Russians into this harbor to butcher his own blood! Look at the signature, Dominic! Look at it!"
For a heartbeat, the rain seemed to freeze in mid-air. Dominic’s face remained a mask of polished stone, but his grip on the umbrella handle tightened until his knuckles turned ghost-white. The silence wasn't empty; it was a pressurized chamber about to explode.
"Hugo," Dominic finally said, his voice dropping to a whisper that carried further than a scream. "Put her in the car. We’re going home. I think it’s time for a family meeting."
Lina swiped the stolen keycard. The reader blipped green, and the heavy steel door groaned open, exhaling a breath of stagnant, metallic air that tasted like fifty years of buried lies.
She clicked her flashlight to its lowest setting. The beam cut a weak path through the dancing dust.
"Rossi? You there?" Sophia’s voice crackled in her ear, sharp with panic.
"I'm in," Lina whispered, her voice barely a vibration.
"The guards? Stan?"
"Busy with the pizza guy. But it’s a tomb down here, Soph. Smells like wet cardboard and old blood."
"Listen, Bailey just pinged me," Sophia hissed. "This is bigger than the Morettis. Blankenship is on Victor’s payroll, and there’s talk of a Russian arms dealer, Travis, moving in on the docks. You’re standing on a powder keg."
"I know the players, Soph. I don't need a briefing," Lina snapped, her boots scuffing the cracked concrete. She felt the heavy brass key in her pocket—Thorne’s last legacy. "Marco’s trying to sell the family out to the Russians while Dominic plays CEO. I just need to find the box this fits."
"It’s an acoustic nightmare in there, Lina. One dropped flashlight and the whole building hears you. Just... find it and get out."
"I'm at Row 44. Maritime Records," Lina muttered, ignoring the frantic thumping in her chest. She scanned the rusted iron cabinets, her light flickering over labels that hadn't been touched since the nineties. "Thorne was the only one who didn't trust the cloud. Whatever Marco buried, it’s in one of these drawers."
"Rossi, if you see a suit, you run. Promise me."
"I'm a reporter, Soph. I don't run. I dig."
Lina ended the comms. She didn't need the chatter. She needed the lock.
Rain lashed against the warehouse window. Hugo tossed a thick manila folder onto the metal table.Dominic just stared at it."Open it," Hugo said, pulling out a chair.Dominic flipped the cover. Inside were three high-res aerial photos. Men in tactical gear swarmed the North District freight yard, loading crates into transport trucks."Shinjiro Takahashi," Hugo said, tapping a face in the corner of the third shot. "The North yard is his now."Dominic leaned in, studying the perimeter."He moved his primary assault team there," Hugo added. "They didn't touch Pier 4."Dominic's eyes moved across the photo. Pier 4. Taro and Yosuke cut off and butchered. The backup squad walking into a kill box."We bled for this bastard," Dominic said.Hugo watched him. "What?""Shinjiro used us to clean his own house," Dominic said, pressing a hand flat on the picture. "Taro and Yosuke reported directly to Ichiro. Shinjiro wanted them gone. He used our bullets to do it."Hugo's mouth tightened. "We were
Kenji stepped onto the top floor, the clean leather of his shoes clicking against the polished marble. He walked straight past the empty receptionist desk without a glance, placed his palms against the tall oak doors, and pushed them open.Ichiro sat perfectly still behind his mahogany desk."Take the visitor's chair," Ichiro said, his voice gravelly and low."I'll stand," Kenji replied, stopping dead center in the room, arms crossed. "Sitting makes me soft."Ichiro brought his cane down hard against the floorboards, the sound cracking off the wood-paneled walls. "We share the same blood, Kenji. We share the same name.""And we share the empire," Kenji said. "Don't forget that part."Ichiro slid a thick ledger across the desk, the paper skimming to a halt at the edge. "Look at the numbers."Kenji stepped closer and tilted his head toward the page."A Tokyo trust fund. Three dummy companies in Panama. Forty million dollars," he read, his voice even."You dropped that cash straight into
The smoke was still rising when Gabe got to his office.He stood at the floor-to-ceiling window with a cup of coffee going cold in his hand, watching the thin black column curl up from the direction of Pier 4 against the gray dawn sky. At this distance it looked almost peaceful — the kind of smoke that meant something was finished, not something that was starting.He'd gotten the call at 4 a.m. A brief one. Shinjiro's people had hit the warehouse. Casualties on both sides, nothing that couldn't be managed. Moretti's men had pushed back harder than expected, but the important thing was that the pier was burned, the ledgers were gone, and whatever Moretti had been sitting on in that back office wouldn't survive the morning.Gabe set his coffee on the windowsill and checked his phone. Nothing from Moss yet, which suited him fine. She'd locked the perimeter down — he'd seen the tape himself when he drove past at dawn — but that was jurisdictional theater, the kind of move she made when sh
Ichiro leaned over the table, one finger tracing the tactical map. On screen, the green dots marking Moretti's defense held their ground in a tight, unbroken line. The red dots — his own Vanguard — were scattering in every direction at once.The doors banged open. Madame Cleo crossed the floor fast, heels striking hard against the boards."The docks are a mess, Ichiro." She slammed her leather folder down on the desk. "Everything's going sideways out there.""The secondary squad is collapsing." Ichiro's eyes stayed fixed on the screen. "Moretti is cutting through them.""Taro went off the air four minutes ago." Cleo stepped up to the desk. "Yosuke's tracker died right after. Both of them are gone."Ichiro's hand closed around the head of his cane. "Where is Shinjiro? He has the primary unit and the ordnance. Get him on the line and tell him to move his trucks to the pier. Now.""I tried." Cleo shook her head. "Radio silence, all of it. The satellite locators don't put any of his peopl
Their leader didn't look back. He shrugged, turned, and walked out into the rain. His eleven men followed, their shapes folding into the fog.Taro pressed his spine flat against the splintering wood, eyes wild. "They're leaving. They're breaking the line.""They're mutinying!" Yosuke ripped his empty magazine out and slammed a fresh one home. "The Chairman ordered this raid. They can't just walk!""The Chairman's an old man reading spreadsheets in a glass tower," a voice said in Taro's earpiece, level, almost bored.Taro's chest went cold. "Kato. Your boys are breaking formation. They're leaving us exposed. Get them back inside.""They're doing exactly what they were told." Kato's voice carried no weight at all, no urgency, nothing Taro could push against. "They're leaving you in the dirt."A bullet tore through Taro's shoulder pad before he could answer. "You're selling out Ichiro.""We answer to Shinjiro now, Taro. Not the old man." Something in Kato's tone almost passed for amuseme
Trent sat in his parked sedan across from the precinct, a cheap digital recorder pressed against the phone's receiver. Four days of unanswered calls to Wallace had used up whatever patience he'd started with. Through the foggy windshield, the building's windows were mostly dark except for the duty desk on the ground floor.It had taken him most of an afternoon to get here — a procurement filing nobody but a city clerk had read in years, a name buried on the fourth page of a maintenance bid that had no business being there: Meridian Holdings, the same name he'd later match against a routing code on a Sentinel Cement customs log a contact had let him glance at for ninety seconds and no longer. He didn't have the whole picture. He had enough pieces of it to sound like he did, which, for what he was about to try, would have to be sufficient.He dialed the precinct's main line and pitched his voice low, flat, official-sounding in a way that had worked on smaller departments before."This i
Leonard Howard couldn't stop his hands from shaking. He yanked his silk tie loose, breathing through the panic.The steel door slammed shut.Chief Prosecutor Miller tossed a thick folder onto the metal table. Thud. "Leonard. Let's talk.""My lawyer is on his way," Leonard rasped, clutching a wet ha
"Drop them right there," Ella told the associate, nodding at the clerk’s counter.The two massive boxes hit the wood with a deafening thud. The clerk jumped. Ella didn't smile; she shoved seven thick binders through the document slot."Emergency restitution filings," Ella snapped. "Seven of them. S
"Six hours live, Lina. We didn't just leak the data. We broke the goddamn internet. The city servers melted ten minutes ago."Lina leaned in, her eyes locked on the skyrocketing traffic spikes. "Is it hitting him where it hurts?""It's hitting him everywhere," Marvin laughed, a harsh, jagged sound.
The interrogation room door slammed. Moss dragged a metal chair across the floor.Victor didn't look like a kingpin anymore. He looked like a man waiting for a funeral. "Name," Moss snapped."You know who I am, Moss. Stop playing house." Victor leaned forward, his cuffs clattering against the tabl







