登入Chapter 6: The Funeral
My husband's funeral was supposed to make me cry. Instead, it made me angry. The church was packed from the front doors to the last row. Politicians, businessmen, mafia captains, old family friends—everyone had come to pay their respects to Anthony Romano. Or maybe they had come to see what would happen next. In our world, death was never just death. It was opportunity. I stood beside the casket dressed in black. My daughters stood next to me, holding my hands so tightly that my fingers hurt. I didn't tell them to let go. They had lost their father. No matter what Anthony had done to me, he had still been their father. The younger one looked up at me. "Mama?" "Yes, sweetheart?" "Is Daddy really not coming back?" The question nearly broke me. I forced a smile. "No, baby." Her eyes filled with tears. I pulled her against me and kissed the top of her head. For a moment, I forgot about the affair. I forgot about Sophia. I forgot about the documents Marco had shown me. I simply missed my husband. The version of him I thought I knew. The version that apparently never existed. Hours passed in a blur of handshakes and condolences. "I'm sorry for your loss." "He was a great man." "The family is here for you." Everyone repeated the same lines. By the twentieth person, they all sounded identical. Then Marco appeared beside me. "You need some air." "I need this day to be over." He gave me a sympathetic look. "Almost." I nodded and turned back toward the crowd. That was when I saw her. At first, I thought I was imagining things. A woman stood near the back of the church wearing a black coat. Dark hair. Sharp features. Cold eyes. Sophia Marino. My stomach dropped. For a second, neither of us moved. Neither of us looked away. Then I noticed the child standing beside her. A boy. Maybe seven years old. Anthony's son. The child from the photograph. The child from the documents. The child Anthony had hidden from me for years. My pulse started pounding. "What is she doing here?" I whispered. Marco followed my gaze. His expression changed immediately. "Julia..." "What is she doing here?" A few people had started noticing them. Whispers spread through the church. Heads turned. Questions followed. Sophia seemed to realize what was happening. She placed a hand on the boy's shoulder. "Come on," she told him softly. Then she walked away. Just like that. But the damage was already done. People had seen them. And I had seen them. Marco touched my arm. "Not today." I laughed bitterly. "Not today?" "Julia—" "She brought him here." "I know." "To my husband's funeral." "I know." I looked toward the doors where she had disappeared. The anger returned instantly. Stronger than before. The funeral ended an hour later. By evening, the Romano estate was filled with senior members of the organization. I sat at the head of the dining table. The same seat Anthony usually occupied. Nobody seemed comfortable with that. Good. I wasn't comfortable either. One of the captains cleared his throat. "We need to discuss leadership." Another man nodded. "The family needs stability." "The territory needs direction." Translation? They were already discussing who would replace my husband. Three hours after his funeral. Unbelievable. I folded my arms. "And what exactly are you suggesting?" The room became quiet. Nobody wanted to answer first. Finally, one of the older captains spoke. "We simply need a temporary leader until a proper decision is made." "A temporary leader?" "Yes." I looked around the table. Every face suddenly became very interested in avoiding eye contact. Cowards. "My father built this territory," I said. Nobody replied. "My husband managed it." Still silence. "And now you're discussing it like I'm not sitting here." A few uncomfortable glances appeared around the room. The older captain shifted in his chair. "Julia, nobody is disrespecting you." "No?" I leaned forward. "Then let me save everyone some time." The room became completely silent. "Until further notice, I will be handling Romano family affairs." Someone nearly choked on his drink. Another man blinked twice. One actually laughed. Big mistake. I turned toward him. "You find something funny?" His smile disappeared immediately. "No." "Good." Nobody spoke after that. For the first time all evening, I felt in control. Not because they respected me. They didn't. Not yet. But they had finally realized I wasn't going to disappear quietly. The meeting ended shortly before midnight. One by one, they left the estate. Soon, I was alone on the balcony overlooking the city. The lights stretched endlessly into the distance. Anthony used to stand here. He used to talk about power. About loyalty. About family. Funny. The same man who preached loyalty had been living a double life. I shook my head. The pain was still there. The betrayal was still there. But something else was growing beside it. Determination. Whoever planted that bomb. Whoever killed Anthony. Whoever thought the Romano family would become weak after his death. They were wrong. Very wrong. And for the first time since the explosion, I made a promise to myself. I would find the truth. No matter what it cost.The heavy, solid-steel door of the sub-level quarters didn't just close—it sealed with a vacuum hiss that seemed to suck the remaining oxygen straight out of the corridor."No, no, no!" Sophia shrieked, throwing herself against the cold metal. She beat her fists against the reinforced steel until her knuckles bled, her voice cracking into high-pitched hysteria. "Leo! They have Leo! Let us out!""Sophia, shut up and stand back!" Julia snapped.Her voice didn't shake, but inside, her chest felt like a chamber of pressurized glass ready to shatter. She stared at the silver-engraved master keycard lying on the concrete floor. Marco. The man who had protected her father during the final, paranoid years of his life. The man who had held her hand at Anthony’s funeral and sworn on his own life to help her keep the crown.It was all a lie. Every single word of reassurance, every strategic piece of advice—it was all designed to position her exactly where Cassio and the De Lucas wanted her."We
The tires of the armored sedan shrieked against the asphalt as Marco threw the car into a hard, desperate U-turn. Inside the cabin, the silence was replaced by the deafening roar of adrenaline.Julia gripped the leather-bound ledger tightly in one hand, her other hand resting on the cold grip of her pistol. Her heart hammered violently against her ribs. Inside the house. The words from the distorted phone call looped in her mind like a curse. The estate was supposed to be impenetrable—guarded by men her father had hand-selected. If someone was inside, it meant the fortress had been unlocked from within."How far?" Julia demanded, her voice cracking slightly despite her effort to remain calm."Ten minutes, boss," Marco replied, his hands white-knuckling the steering wheel as he weaved through the morning traffic. "I’ve already tried calling the security desk at the main gate. No one is answering.""And the sub-level quarters?" Luca asked, his voice chillingly steady. He was already ch
The air on the veranda froze instantly. A low, mocking breeze swept through the vineyard, rustling the grapevines below, but inside the stone courtyard, no one dared to breathe. Silvio’s cruel smile remained etched into his wrinkled face, his eyes darting between Julia and Luca, waiting for the explosion. Julia did not flinch. She kept her gaze pinned to Silvio, though every muscle in her body had gone rigid. Beneath her charcoal blazer, her fingers gently brushed the cold steel of her weapon. She had entered this sanctuary expecting a traitor, but she hadn’t expected the traitor to be standing right next to her. "That is a very convenient lie, Silvio," Luca said, his voice dropping into a register so deep and calm it was terrifying. He didn't pull his gaze from the old man's bodyguards. "Anthony was siphoning money to Milan because he was trying to hide it from Julia. If I were helping him, why would I fly back to help her secure the domestic throne?" "Because you wanted the
The morning sun did not bring warmth to the Romano estate; it only cast long, cold shadows across the stone courtyard as the armored sedan pulled out.Julia sat in the backseat, the leather-bound ledger heavy in her blazer pocket. She could feel Luca’s eyes on her from the other side of the cabin. The silence between them was no longer just a business barrier—it was a tactical front."You’re quiet today, Julia," Luca remarked, his voice smooth, almost casual. "Still thinking about Silvio?""I’m thinking about loyalty," Julia replied, keeping her gaze fixed on the passing city streets. "My father always said that the people who smile the widest when you succeed are the ones who have the knives ready when you turn around.""Your father was a wise man," Luca said, adjusting his coat. "But he also knew when to strike. If Silvio really is the leak, we can’t just walk into his territory and accuse him. The council will see it as an act of war against the old guard. They’ll rally behind Cass
The heavy silence of the bedroom was broken only by the hum of the television screen. Julia stared at the small leather book in Sophia's hand. It was worn, its edges scuffed from being crammed into pockets and hidden in drawers. That tiny book held the key to the betrayal that had shattered Julia’s life, written in the handwriting of the husband who had lied to her until his final breath. "Give it to me," Julia said, her voice dropping to a low command.Sophia hesitated, her fingers tightening around the leather. She looked at Luca, then back at Julia. "If I give this to you, do I have your word? You protect my son. No matter what the council says. No matter what he says." She pointed a trembling finger at Luca."You are in no position to negotiate, Sophia," Luca intervened, stepping past Julia. His tone was sharp, a threat wrapped in business-like precision. "You are in a Romano safehouse because you have nowhere else to go. Hand it over, or we let De Lucas find you.""Luca, st
The drive back from the Verona estate was dead silent. The adrenaline from the council meeting was beginning to fade, replaced by the crushing weight of the trap Julia had just sprung on herself. She looked out the window, watching the city lights blur into long, distorted streaks of silver and gold."You handled Silvio well," Luca said, breaking the silence as he leaned back against the leather seat. "The old man was ready to hand my brother's empire over to Cassio. You took the air right out of the room.""I did what was necessary to keep my father's legacy alive," Julia replied, not turning to look at him. "But let’s not pretend this is a real victory, Luca. We just traded a war with the council for a marriage written in ink and blood.""It’s a business arrangement, Julia," Luca said, his voice entirely flat, devoid of any comfort. "In our world, marriage is the cheapest way to buy loyalty. You keep the city, I keep the ports, and the De Lucas think twice before shooting at o







