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BREACH

Author: bennywrites
last update publish date: 2026-07-14 01:09:50

The dark swallowed the corridor whole.

Lorenzo’s hand left mine so fast the brass key nearly slipped from my fingers before I closed my fist around it on instinct, shoving it deep into the waistband of my sweatpants in the same motion I’d used to hide the map.

“Stay behind me,” he said, and the playful, needling edge that had lived in his voice all week was gone. This was the man from the alley. Cold. Precise. Lethal.

“Boss, sublevel three, they’re already—” The radio cut to static mid-sentence.

“Two rifles, now,” Lorenzo barked at the guards flanking us. One pressed a sidearm into his hand without question; the other grabbed my arm and hauled me back against the wall beside the storage unit, angling his own body between me and the corridor like a human shield.

Muzzle flashes lit the far end of the hallway in stuttering strobes, gunfire cracking off the concrete in short, controlled bursts. Not wild. Trained. Whoever this was, they weren’t a street gang.

“Rossi family,” Lorenzo muttered, more to himself than to me, his eyes narrowed at the flashes. “They wouldn’t dare. Not without—”

He stopped.

“Without what?” I demanded.

“Without knowing exactly where to find me.” His jaw tightened. He looked down at me, and for a fraction of a second, something raw and unguarded passed over his face — not fear for himself, I realized. Fear of a calculation he didn’t like the answer to. “Someone told them I was down here tonight, Alina. That’s not information that leaves this house by accident.”

The words hit harder than the gunfire. Someone in his own house. Maybe someone who also knew exactly when I’d be dragged down to a room marked 4-B behind a mafia heir who suddenly had far too many enemies converging on one basement at once.

“You think this is about the key,” I said.

“I think this is about you.” His hand found my wrist, not gentle this time, hauling me back down the corridor away from the gunfire, toward a service stairwell hidden behind a rack of rifles. “Move.”

We ran.

The stairwell was narrow, unlit, my bare feet slapping cold concrete as Lorenzo took the steps two at a time, still gripping my wrist like he thought I might vanish into the dark the second he let go. Behind us, the gunfire grew closer, shouts bouncing off the walls in a language I didn’t recognize.

“Where does this go?” I gasped.

“Wine cellar. Then the east garden.” He didn’t look back. “If we make the garden, we make the gate. If we don’t—”

A door burst open on the landing above us.

Two men in black tactical gear swung into view, rifles already rising.

Lorenzo shoved me sideways into an alcove hard enough to knock the air from my lungs, his own body pivoting into the open stairwell as three shots cracked in rapid succession. Plaster exploded off the wall inches from my head. I screamed — I couldn’t help it — and clapped both hands over my mouth too late to take it back.

When I looked again, both men were down. Lorenzo stood over them, breathing hard, the sidearm still smoking in his hand, his knuckles white around the grip.

“Are you hit?” His voice was rough, cracked in a way I hadn’t heard yet.

“No. I’m—” I looked down at myself like I needed to check. “No.”

He crossed the space between us in two strides and gripped my face in both hands, tilting it side to side, checking for blood that wasn’t there with a thoroughness that had nothing to do with strategy and everything to do with something he probably didn’t want to name. His hands were shaking, just slightly. I felt it against my jaw.

“You don’t get to die before I figure out what you know,” he said, low and fierce, like the sentence was a threat aimed as much at himself as at me.

“Charming bedside manner,” I breathed, my heart still slamming against my ribs.

The ghost of something — not quite a smile — pulled at the corner of his mouth. Then it was gone, replaced by the mask snapping back into place as more shouts echoed from below.

“They’re flanking the cellar.” He pulled me upright, back toward the stairs, faster now. “New plan. We don’t go for the garden. We go for the panic room, and I make one call, and by morning every single person in this house who isn’t loyal to me is going to wish the Rossi family had gotten to them first.”

We hit the top of the stairwell just as the lights flickered back on — and standing in the doorway, blocking our path, gun already leveled at Lorenzo’s chest, was the scarred guard from the alley.

The one who’d carried me over his shoulder the very first night.

“Drop it, Boss,” he said quietly. “I’m sorry. I really am.”

CHAPTER ELEVEN: THE MAN WHO CARRIED ME

Time stopped.

I stared at the scarred guard — the giant who’d hauled me over his shoulder that first night, who’d taken my elbow to the jaw and worn the bruise for it, who’d stood silent guard outside my door for a week while I threw insults at his boss over instant noodles. His gun didn’t waver. Neither did his eyes, which were wet in a way that didn’t match the steadiness of his hands.

“Marco.” Lorenzo’s voice went very, very quiet. That was somehow worse than shouting. “Lower the weapon.”

“I can’t.” Marco’s jaw worked. “They have my sister, Boss. Rossi’s men picked her up from her apartment two days ago. They said if I didn’t get you to the east stairwell tonight, if I didn’t make sure the girl was with you—” His eyes flicked to me, guilty, desperate. “I didn’t have a choice.”

“Everyone has a choice,” Lorenzo said. “You just made the wrong one.”

“They have Elena.” Marco’s voice cracked. “She’s nineteen.”

Something in Lorenzo’s face shifted — not softened, exactly, but recalculated, the way it had in the library when he’d looked at the map and realized the game had more players than he’d accounted for. He didn’t lower his own gun, but he didn’t raise it either.

“You’re going to help me fix this,” Lorenzo said slowly, “instead of dying for the men who took her. Right now. Tell me exactly what you agreed to.”

Marco’s arm trembled. For one terrible second I thought he was going to pull the trigger just to end the impossible math of it — his sister’s life against his boss’s, weighed out in a stairwell at one in the morning.

I moved before I could talk myself out of it.

“Marco.” I stepped half in front of Lorenzo, ignoring the way his hand shot out to grab my shoulder and yank me back. “If they wanted him dead, they’d have told you to shoot him the second you saw him. They didn’t. They want him alive and cornered — which means they need something from him. Which means your sister is only useful to them as long as you’re useful. The second you pull that trigger, you’re both disposable.”

Marco’s eyes darted to me, then back to Lorenzo, the gun dipping a fraction of an inch.

“She’s right,” Lorenzo said, seizing the opening, his voice dropping into something almost gentle — a register I hadn’t heard from him before, reserved apparently for men he was talking down from murdering him. “Whoever’s running this wants me alive too, or your orders would’ve been simpler. That means we have time. Not much. But some.”

“How much?” Marco’s voice broke completely now, the gun lowering another inch.

“Enough to get your sister back,” Lorenzo said, “if you put the gun down and tell me everything, starting now.”

The rifle clattered to the concrete floor. Marco sank against the doorframe like his legs had given out, and for a moment the only sound in the stairwell was his ragged breathing and the distant, dying echo of gunfire from the cellar below — already thinning, already being handled by whatever loyal men Lorenzo had left.

Lorenzo didn’t waste the moment. He crouched in front of Marco, gripping his shoulder with a hand that had been pointing a gun at him thirty seconds earlier. “Address. Who took her. Everything.”

While Marco talked in broken, guilty fragments, I stood pressed against the cold concrete wall, my hand still curled tight around the small brass key hidden in my waistband, and realized with a sinking, dangerous clarity that I hadn’t stepped in front of Lorenzo De Luca to save a stranger’s sister.

I’d done it to save him.

And that terrified me more than any gun pointed at my head all week.

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  • Marked by the Mafia devil’s heir   A FATHER’S RECKONING

    The shattered glass lay forgotten at my feet.“Say that again,” I said, my voice barely a whisper.The guard didn’t look at me this time. He looked at Lorenzo, waiting for permission that came in the form of a single, terse nod.“The man we pulled off sublevel three was carrying a burner phone with a contact list,” the guard said. “Three numbers, all routed through shell accounts. One of them traces back to a private security firm that’s been drawing a salary from an offshore account under the name Arthur Moretti for five years running.”The room tilted. I gripped the arm of the chair to keep from sliding out of it entirely.“That’s not possible,” I said. “He’s a mechanic. He fixes cars. He drinks cheap beer and yells at the television during football season. He is not—” My voice cracked. “He is not a man who hires mercenaries to shoot up a mafia estate.”“He is exactly that man,” Lorenzo said, quiet and final, “and has been for longer than you’ve been paying rent on that apartment I

  • Marked by the Mafia devil’s heir   WHAT THE BLOOD KNOWS

    Marco was gone within the hour, escorted out by two guards Lorenzo trusted enough to send after his sister. The gunfire in the cellar had stopped completely, replaced by the low murmur of cleanup crews and the distant slam of a van door somewhere above ground.I sat on the edge of a leather armchair in Lorenzo's private study, my knees pulled to my chest, still shaking from the adrenaline that had nowhere left to go."Drink," Lorenzo said, pressing a glass of amber liquid into my hand. He didn't wait to see if I obeyed. He never did."I don't drink whiskey.""You do tonight." He crouched in front of me, and for the first time since the alley, he looked tired. Not weak. Never weak. But human, in a way the tailored suits and cold baritone usually buried.I took a sip. It burned all the way down, and somehow that was the first thing all night that felt honest."You could have died in that stairwell," he said. It wasn't concern, exactly. It was closer to an accusation."So could you." I s

  • Marked by the Mafia devil’s heir   BREACH

    The dark swallowed the corridor whole. Lorenzo’s hand left mine so fast the brass key nearly slipped from my fingers before I closed my fist around it on instinct, shoving it deep into the waistband of my sweatpants in the same motion I’d used to hide the map. “Stay behind me,” he said, and the playful, needling edge that had lived in his voice all week was gone. This was the man from the alley. Cold. Precise. Lethal. “Boss, sublevel three, they’re already—” The radio cut to static mid-sentence. “Two rifles, now,” Lorenzo barked at the guards flanking us. One pressed a sidearm into his hand without question; the other grabbed my arm and hauled me back against the wall beside the storage unit, angling his own body between me and the corridor like a human shield. Muzzle flashes lit the far end of the hallway in stuttering strobes, gunfire cracking off the concrete in short, controlled bursts. Not wild. Trained. Whoever this was, they weren’t a street gang. “Rossi family,” Lor

  • Marked by the Mafia devil’s heir   STORAGE UNIT 4-B

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  • Marked by the Mafia devil’s heir   THE KITCHEN WARFARE

    If Lorenzo De Luca expected me to sit in a corner, weep, and look beautiful for his brooding pleasure, he had severely miscalculated.By day three of my official estate house arrest, the initial paralyzing terror had settled into a sharp, vibrating irritation. Yes, I was a hostage. Yes, my supervisor's life hung in the balance. But working twelve-hour shifts standing over a boiling industrial dishwasher teaches you one vital skill: how to handle arrogant men who think they own the room.The heavy oak door to my room was no longer deadbolted during the day. As long as I didn't approach the massive glass perimeter windows or the heavy iron gates outside, I was allowed to roam the residential wing.Naturally, my first stop was the kitchen."Who allowed you in here?" a sharp, heavily accented voice barked the moment my bare feet hit the pristine white marble floor of the estate’s kitchen.A middle-aged man in a spotless white chef’s uniform stood behind an island, holding a terrifyingly s

  • Marked by the Mafia devil’s heir   THE TERMS OF SURVIVAL

    The heavy oak door didn't open again for the rest of the night.I sat on the edge of the mattress, my wrists burning under the tight grip of Lorenzo’s silk tie. The metallic scent of Dr. Evans’s blood still lingered in the air, a horrifying reminder of the countdown hanging over my head. Six hours until dawn. Six hours until Lorenzo carried out his threat to break the only person who had ever looked out for me.When the first morning light finally filtered through the bulletproof glass, the heavy deadbolt clicked open.I braced myself, expecting the scarred giant or a squad of guards to drag me to a execution warehouse. Instead, Lorenzo walked in alone.He had changed into a fresh white shirt, completely devoid of bloodstains, and the stark white bandage across his nose made his icy glare look even more menacing. He carried a heavy silver tray, which he set down on the pristine wooden nightstand with a quiet click.On the tray sat a single glass of water and a steaming bowl of cheap,

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