The Genovese Daughter's Vendetta
After my second life began, I tore the Blood Invitation from the Valenti territory with my own hands. And I rejected the passionate declarations of the two most dangerous heirs in Riviera City.
Because I had chosen one of them before. Giancarlo. In my first life, I had chosen Giancarlo Valenti.
And on the night of our Blood-Bound Union, the night the old alliances were supposed to be sealed in sacred oath before every Boss and Caporegime in the city, he fled. He abandoned me at the altar for Rosalia Ferraro, a street orphan I had pulled from the gutter and given the shelter of my family's name. My Nonna Elisabetta, the last true Matriarch of the Genovese line, the woman who had raised me after my parents were gunned down in a rival hit, collapsed at the ceremony table. The shock stopped her heart. She died with the Genovese name on her lips and dishonor in her eyes.
I was left with nothing.
Then another came. Salvatore Monreale, the hot-blooded Enforcer-heir of the brutal Monreale Family, took my hand in the wreckage of that night and said to me, "You still have me. I will never betray you."
He walked me through the darkness. He married me in a quiet ceremony with no witnesses and no celebration. I thought, perhaps, that this was enough. That loyalty, even cold loyalty, could be enough.
But he was ice after the wedding. Distant. Cruel in his silence. I told myself he regretted the union. I told myself the absence of an heir weighed on him, that the empty nursery in the Monreale estate was the wound between us.
Until the night of the ambush.
A car bomb meant for both of us detonated on the Via Oscura. I was thrown into the wreckage, my ribs shattered, my blood pooling on the cobblestones. Rosalia had been in the trailing car. She suffered a scratch on her forearm. Nothing more.
Salvatore stepped over my dying body to reach her.
I bled out on the street, and as my soul drifted, untethered and howling, I learned the truth. My entire life had been a game. A cruel, coordinated performance staged by three players who had written their scripts long before I ever learned the rules. Giancarlo. Salvatore. Rosalia. They had already drafted their wills, every cent of their combined empires left to her. Every territory. Every safe house. Every laundered dollar.
And the reason I had never conceived an heir in all those years of cold marriage was not fate. It was design. They had bribed the surgeon. While I was sedated for a routine procedure, they had hollowed me out. Removed the possibility of legacy from my body entirely, so that no Genovese blood would ever complicate their plans. They did it to prove their devotion to her. A tribute of flesh, offered at my expense.
In this new life, I swore a single, unbreakable oath to myself.
Stay away from all of them. Survive. Rise. And live on my own terms.
The sound of tearing paper filled the empty classroom like a gunshot.
My teacher stared at the shredded remains of the Blood Invitation from the Valenti Family's territory, the prestigious acceptance into their domain that every young operative in Riviera City would have killed for. Her face drained of color.
"Seraphina, what are you doing?"
This year, four from our training grounds at the Primo Liceo had earned passage into Valenti territory. I was the only one who had done it by placing first in the city's Proving Grounds, the highest score across every district and every Family's jurisdiction. Not only my teacher, but every handler and instructor in the school had staked their reputations on my future.
I kept my voice level. Calm. The way Nonna had taught me to speak when the world was watching.
"I'm not going to Valenti territory. I've applied to La Rete. The National Syndicate's elite network. They've accepted me." I paused, letting the weight of it settle. "They've also promised to send their own medical personnel to care for my Nonna full-time. Private physicians. Round-the-clock protection."
My teacher's eyes widened. La Rete. The name alone carried a gravity that even the Valenti couldn't match. A shadow organization that operated above the Families, recruiting only the most exceptional minds in the country. No one applied to La Rete. La Rete chose you.
"I see." She exhaled slowly, adjusting her glasses. "We all know your family's circumstances are... difficult, Seraphina. Your Nonna raised you alone after everything that happened to your parents. You study hard in this new life. Build something worthy of the Genovese name. And repay that woman's devotion. She deserves that much."
I nodded. There was no time to dwell on the ghosts of my first death.
The sharp trill of a phone broke the silence. Then another. Giancarlo and Salvatore, both calling within seconds of each other, urging me to come downstairs. Their voices carried the easy authority of young men who had never been told no.
I pocketed the phone without answering and stepped into the corridor.
The whispers started immediately.
They clung to the walls like cigarette smoke, following me down the narrow stairwell of the Primo Liceo. Eyes tracked my every step. Clusters of students leaned into each other, their gazes sharp with judgment. I caught fragments. My name. Hissed syllables. The word puttana buried under someone's breath.
Halfway down the stairs, a foot shot out from the crowd.
I stumbled. Pain lanced through my ankle as my knee cracked against the stone step. I caught myself on the iron railing, knuckles white, and looked up at the girl who had done it. She didn't even bother to hide her smirk.
"Stronza," I spat through clenched teeth.
She flinched. Good.
I pulled myself upright, testing my weight on the ankle. It held, barely. I limped forward, jaw tight, refusing to let the pain show on my face. Genovese women did not limp. Genovese women walked through fire and called it a warm evening.
When I rounded the corner at the base of the stairwell, I heard them before I saw them.
Rosalia's voice drifted from the alcove near the courtyard doors, soft and carefully pitched. The tone of a woman who had perfected the art of the poisoned whisper. She stood between Giancarlo and Salvatore, her dark eyes wide with manufactured innocence, her hands clasped in front of her like a saint at prayer.
"I did see Seraphina getting out of a car with the Valenti Family's senior captains. Late at night. Near the waterfront." She paused, letting the image settle like a stain. "But that doesn't necessarily mean anything. Maybe Seraphina really did earn her place through her own scores. We shouldn't assume the worst."
The deflection was surgical. By defending me, she condemned me. By saying maybe she earned it, she planted the seed that perhaps she hadn't.
Giancarlo's expression was unreadable, but Salvatore's lip curled.
"Don't make excuses for her, Rosalia." A girl from our year stepped closer, her voice dripping with righteous contempt. "She won't even let anyone see her scores. If she had nothing to hide, why the secrecy? She's guilty. She knows it, and she doesn't want anyone else to find out."
Another voice chimed in, sharper. "You're too kind to her, Rosalia. You always have been. A woman like Seraphina, with that scheming mind? She'd sell her own blood to get ahead. Don't let her use you."
I stood in the shadow of the corridor and listened to the architecture of my own destruction.
After joining La Rete, I had signed an oath of Omert. Total silence regarding my scores, my ranking, my identity within the network. It was the first condition of entry, non-negotiable, sealed in blood-ink on vellum paper in a room with no windows. I could not reveal my results to anyone. Not my teacher. Not my Nonna. Not a single soul in Riviera City.
And Rosalia had turned that silence into a weapon.
She had taken my inability to speak and filled the void with her own narrative. Whispered it into every willing ear. Seraphina Genovese, the orphan heir of a dying Family, spreading her legs for powerful men to secure a future she couldn't earn on her own.
And my two childhood companions, the boys who had grown up beside me, who had watched me study by candlelight in Nonna's kitchen until my eyes bled, who knew better than anyone on this earth how hard I had fought for every scrap of knowledge and every point on those examinations, they stood there and nodded along. They chose Rosalia's poison over a lifetime of truth.
I swallowed the bitterness. It tasted like old copper. Like blood on the back of my tongue.
It doesn't matter, I told myself. None of this matters anymore.
Once I officially entered La Rete, every trace of my identity would be buried. My name, my lineage, my location, all of it would vanish behind layers of protection that even the Five Families couldn't penetrate. I would become a ghost. And ghosts did not waste their time on the living.
No more listening to these poisoned words. No more living like a fool inside a cage built from lies and false loyalty. No more walking blind toward a death I never saw coming.
I stepped out of the shadows and walked directly toward the three of them. My ankle screamed. I did not limp.
"You wanted to talk to me." I looked between Giancarlo and Salvatore, my voice flat and empty of warmth. "So talk."
Giancarlo's demeanor shifted like a card turning over. The contempt that had lingered at the edges of his expression vanished, replaced by a smile so practiced it could have been carved from marble. He was beautiful in the way that venomous things were beautiful. Dark hair swept back from a face built for magazine covers and murder.
"Seraphina." He said my name like he was tasting it. "This is wonderful news. We'll be in the same territory now. All those years of hard work, and it's finally paying off for you."
Salvatore smiled too. Slower. Hungrier. His eyes never left my face.
"We can continue to protect you, but four years are not enough. It takes a lifetime."
Several young women passing through the courtyard glanced in our direction, their eyes flickering with open envy before they looked away. I felt nothing. Not a ripple. Not a tremor. The words that once would have made my chest ache with gratitude now rang hollow as spent shell casings on a marble floor.
In the previous life, the four of us had been sent to the same territory for training. The Valentis and the Monreales had influence there, old connections woven deep into every corridor and back room. I had believed that if I proved myself, if I worked harder, sharper, longer than anyone else, I could earn my place at the table on my own merits. I threw myself into every trial, every test of loyalty and cunning the territory demanded. I studied the old ways. I memorized the ledgers. I learned to read a room the way Nonna had taught me to read a person's hands at dinner, watching for the tremor that betrayed the lie.
But in the end, every advantage I earned was stripped from me in silence. My invitation to sit at the inner table, the one reserved for those who proved their worth, was quietly redirected. The commendation from the local Padrino, the one that should have carried my name to the ears of La Rete itself, was rewritten. All of it, every scrap of recognition, every hard-won honor, was handed to Rosalia as though she had bled for it.
And then came the whisper campaign.
Rumors slithered through every hallway and safe house. They said I had compromised myself with the territory bosses, that I had traded my body for favor. The words spread like kerosene on stone, and once the match was struck, there was no stopping the fire. I was isolated. Frozen out of every meeting, every gathering, every shared meal. For four years I lived as a ghost in a world that had once been mine by birthright, surrounded by people who would not meet my eyes.
Through all of it, Giancarlo and Salvatore had sworn they stood beside me. They pressed their hands over their hearts and told me they would shield me from the poison. That no one would touch me while they drew breath.
I did not learn the truth until I was already dead.
They were the architects. Every whisper had originated from their lips or been sanctioned by their silence. Every door that closed in my face had been locked by their hands. In all those countless nights when I lay awake in the dark, tears soaking the pillow until the gray light of dawn crept through the shutters, they had been sitting with Rosalia. Laughing with Rosalia. Using the raw, bleeding wound of my suffering to make their beloved comfortable, to make her shine brighter against the shadow they had made of me.
My silence stretched too long. Rosalia filled it, her voice carrying that particular note of practiced fragility, sweet and slightly wounded, like a songbird with a clipped wing.
"Seraphina is so fortunate." She tucked a strand of dark hair behind her ear, her gaze dropping to the ground with rehearsed modesty. "Born into a name. Born beautiful. Two men sworn to her since childhood, both devoted, both willing to kill for her. I was never given such a life." A pause, delicate as a held breath. "If Seraphina hadn't taken me in, hadn't given me the protection of the Genovese name, I never would have survived. I wouldn't have had a place anywhere."
The effect was immediate. Both men turned toward her as though pulled by the same invisible thread.
Giancarlo spoke first, his voice dropping into that low, assured register he reserved for promises he intended to keep. "Rosalia, don't say that. You're extraordinary. Beautiful. Sharp. There is a future waiting for you that you can't even see yet." He straightened the cuff of his jacket, a gesture so casual it almost disguised the weight of what came next. "When this is over, when you've proven yourself, I'll speak to my father. I'll have him place you as an advisor in our operations. A position of real authority."
Salvatore cut in before Giancarlo had finished, his jaw tight with competitive heat. "No. Come to us. The Monreale family will give you more. A higher seat. Better protection. Whatever you want, Rosalia." His dark eyes burned. "Whatever you want, I will hand it to you myself."
They argued over her like two dogs over a bone, their voices rising, each trying to outbid the other in devotion. I stood apart and watched, and the sadness that moved through me was old and quiet, a grief that had already been mourned.
After all these years of knowing me. After a lifetime of shared blood and shared bread and sworn oaths whispered in the dark of childhood bedrooms, neither of them had ever once made me such a promise. Neither had ever looked at me with that desperate, aching need to give. The realization settled into my bones with the finality of a coffin lid.
Pretended love could never match the raw devotion that poured from the heart unbidden. They had performed loyalty to me like actors reciting lines. For Rosalia, they simply burned.
I turned to leave. Giancarlo noticed the shift before Salvatore did. His hand shot out and closed around mine, his grip firm, his expression carefully arranged into something that might have passed for concern if I hadn't known what lived behind those pale eyes.
"Seraphina." His thumb traced a slow circle against my wrist. A gesture of possession disguised as tenderness. "Don't misunderstand. We're good to Rosalia because she's yours. Because you brought her into our world. Everything we do for her, we do for you."
Salvatore moved closer, his broad hand coming down on the top of my head, ruffling my hair the way he had done since we were children. As though I were still a little girl. As though I could still be soothed by the rough warmth of his palm.
"Don't overthink it." His voice was gruff, almost gentle. "You've finally finished the trials. Come. Let us take you for a drive through the old streets. We have something for you."
I nodded. I did not refuse. I was leaving this city, and I wanted to look at it one last time. Every crumbling facade. Every lamppost. Every corner where three children had once played at being invincible. I wanted to carry the image with me so that when I closed the door on this life, I would remember exactly what I was walking away from.
We descended to the garage beneath the compound. The air was cooler there, heavy with the scent of motor oil and cold concrete. Three cars waited in a row, their polished surfaces gleaming under the fluorescent lights.
Giancarlo moved first. He opened the passenger door of his black sedan and gestured for Rosalia to sit. Salvatore did the same with his own car, pulling the door wide, his eyes already on her.
Rosalia hesitated. She looked at me from beneath her lashes, her expression a masterwork of manufactured discomfort.
"Isn't the passenger seat reserved for Seraphina?" She pressed her fingers together, the picture of reluctance. "If I sit there, she'll be upset with me."
Giancarlo placed his hand on the small of her back and guided her into the seat with a firmness that brooked no argument. The words left his mouth before he could catch them, raw and unguarded.
"She doesn't deserve..." He stopped. Swallowed. Rearranged the sentence like a man defusing a bomb he had accidentally armed. "She won't mind. She has the best temper of anyone I know."
I heard it. The first two words. The ones he tried to bury beneath the correction. She doesn't deserve it.
Salvatore heard them too. His expression darkened, a muscle jumping in his jaw. He slammed his own car door shut with enough force to echo through the concrete chamber, his fury directed not at the insult itself but at the fact that Giancarlo had spoken it first, had claimed the right to diminish me before Salvatore could position himself as the kinder man.
Both engines turned over. Both cars idled, ready to pull out into the fading afternoon light. It was only then, in the same shared moment, that they realized I was still standing on the concrete, alone, between their taillights.
The windows rolled down in unison. Two faces appeared, two mouths already forming the shape of explanations that would not come. They looked at each other across the narrow distance, caught in the absurdity of their own cruelty, and found no suitable excuse between them.
I spared them the effort.
"It's fine." My voice was even. Colorless. "I'll drive myself."
Relief flooded both their faces so quickly it was almost comical. A breath released. Shoulders dropping. The tension dissolving like sugar in hot espresso. But beneath the relief, I caught the flicker of something else. Confusion. A dim awareness that the woman standing before them was not behaving the way she was supposed to. That the script had changed, and they had not been given the new pages.
"Seraphina..." Giancarlo began, leaning out of his window, one arm draped over the door.
I pressed the button on my own car's remote. The locks clicked open. I slid behind the wheel, pulled the door shut, and raised the window before his voice could reach me. I had no interest in hearing another beautifully constructed lie. Not today. Not ever again.
The convoy pulled out of the garage and into the streets of Riviera City.
I followed at a distance, watching their taillights weave through traffic. The city unfolded around me like a map of everything I was about to lose. The old stone buildings with their wrought-iron balconies. The narrow alleys where laundry still hung between windows like white flags of surrender. The waterfront promenade where the fishing boats rocked against their moorings and the salt air carried the faint, sweet rot of the sea.
The three of us had grown up here together. Blood-promised since we were old enough to understand the word. From the time we could walk, Giancarlo and Salvatore had trailed after me through these streets, pulling my braids, fighting each other for the right to carry my schoolbag, swearing with the grave sincerity of children that they would marry me when we were grown. That they would protect me. That nothing in this world or the next would ever touch me while they lived.
And then my parents were killed.
A rival hit. Clean. Professional. Two bullets each, delivered on a Tuesday evening while the pasta water was still boiling on the stove. The vast and once-feared Genovese empire collapsed inward like a building whose foundation had been removed in the night. The soldiers scattered. The allies grew distant. The tribute payments stopped arriving. And in the end, the great house that had once commanded the respect of every Family from the coast to the capital was reduced to two people. An old woman and a girl. Nonna Elisabetta and me, clinging to each other in the ruins of a name that no longer frightened anyone.
An old woman and a young girl. That was all the Genovese name had left. Two souls holding up the crumbling pillars of a house that wolves circled every night, sniffing for weakness. Nonna Elisabetta kept the old alliances alive with memory and grace, but memory did not stop bullets, and grace did not pay tributes. So I studied. I learned the ledgers, the routes, the names of every capo and soldier who had ever sworn loyalty to our blood. I wanted to carry the weight of the Family before it crushed us both.
Rosalia had come from nothing. A street orphan from the tenements beyond our territory, with no name, no blood, and no protection. The other girls in our circles treated her like gutter trash. When I learned that she, too, had lost her parents, something in my chest cracked open. I saw myself in her. I took her in, gave her the shelter of the Genovese name, paid for her schooling, dressed her in clothes she could never have afforded, and told her we would survive this world together.
I never imagined she would mistake my love for condescension. That every kindness I offered would curdle into poison inside her. She envied everything I had. The name. The legacy. The two young men whose families had been oath-bound to mine since before we were born. And with a patience I had not thought her capable of, she used that envy like a stiletto, turning Giancarlo and Salvatore against me, thread by thread, whisper by whisper, until the three of them had woven a noose around my life.
While these thoughts still churned behind my eyes, the car slowed to a stop.
Whatever had happened earlier must have unsettled them both. Giancarlo and Salvatore moved quickly, almost falling over each other to open the door for me, to take my coat. Their gestures carried the stiff courtesy of men who sensed they had committed an offense but could not name it.
Giancarlo's voice was bright, almost boyish, as he swept his hand toward the iron gates ahead. "Seraphina, look. Do you recognize it? This is the old grove. The place where the three of us used to hide when we were children." His eyes glinted in the low light. "Salvatore and I pooled our resources and bought the entire parcel. From now on, this is ours. Our territory. Our secret."
Salvatore gave a single, firm nod. "I had someone plant tulips across the eastern slope. Your favorites. By next spring, the whole hillside will be covered in them. A sea of color."
"And then the four of us can come here," Giancarlo continued, his smile widening. "Drive out on a Sunday afternoon, walk through the flowers, forget the rest of the world exists."
Their faces were open, unguarded, full of a future they had already written in their heads.
I stared at the dark stretch of land beyond the gates for a long time. I said nothing. It was true that this grove had once been our sanctuary. The three of us had played here as children, hiding from our families' wars, pretending we were ordinary. Those memories were real. They were the last pure things I owned.
But I had never liked tulips.
I was allergic to pollen. All pollen. They would have known this if they had ever truly looked at me.
Before the thought could settle, the sky above us shattered into light. Fireworks erupted in great cascading arcs, painting the darkness in golds and silvers and deep Genovese crimson. The bursts arranged themselves into letters, spelling my name across the heavens like a declaration of war dressed as a love song.
In the glow of that manufactured dream, Giancarlo reached into his jacket and produced a small velvet box. He opened it. Inside, nestled against black silk, sat a ring. Old gold. A blood-red ruby flanked by two smaller diamonds. The kind of piece that carried generations inside its setting.
"Seraphina." His voice dropped, low and deliberate. "This is the Valenti heirloom ring. My father and mother entrusted it to me with one instruction: place it on the hand of the woman who will stand beside the head of the Valenti Family." He held it out to me, his gaze steady and sure. "I have wanted to give this to you for a long time. I was only waiting for the right moment."
Salvatore's jaw tightened. He stepped forward, cutting between us with the blunt force that defined everything about him. "Seraphina, forget the ring. Be with me." His voice was rough, almost angry, as though tenderness was a language he had never been taught. "Have you forgotten what happened at the river when we were children? You fell in. The current took you. I jumped in after you without a second thought. I nearly drowned pulling you out." He struck his own chest with an open palm. "I would give you my life. What is a ring compared to that?"
In my previous life, I had believed them. Both of them. Their devotion had seemed so deep, so absolute, that I let myself trust it the way a child trusts the ground beneath her feet. I had thought: these are the men who were promised to me in blood. Nonna will be safe. The Genovese name will endure. We are oath-bound since youth, and oaths do not break.
I did not learn the truth until the day I died. That devotion could be performed. That a blood oath could be spoken with a lying tongue. That the men who swore to protect me had rehearsed their affection the way actors rehearse lines, and the woman who had coached them stood smiling in the wings.
I opened my mouth to refuse them both.
Rosalia spoke first.
"Seraphina." Her voice was small, trembling, perfectly calibrated. "Why did you tell people I was spreading dirty rumors about you? Now everyone is attacking me online." She held her phone out, the screen's blue light catching the tears she had summoned to the corners of her eyes.
I looked at the screen. Beneath a post on the academy's official forum, hundreds of comments had metastasized like a tumor. They called me shameless. They said I had spread my legs to secure my place at the academy. The few voices that had risen in my defense, Rosalia had screenshot and reframed, presenting them as proof that I had organized a coordinated attack against her.
Salvatore ripped the phone from her hand and read the screen, his face darkening with every line. He turned on me, his voice a low snarl. "Seraphina, what the hell is this? It's one thing if you can't keep your own name clean, but to turn around and blame Rosalia for it?" His fist clenched at his side. "She has no one. She has nothing. And you drag her through the mud?"
Giancarlo did not raise his voice. He never did. But the way he looked at me, that quiet, measured gaze, carried a question sharper than any accusation. He studied my face the way a consigliere studied a witness on the stand, searching for the crack that would confirm a lie he had already decided was there.
I swallowed the fire rising in my throat. "I didn't do it." My voice came out steady, though the effort nearly split me open. "If you don't believe me, investigate it yourselves. Pull the records. Trace the posts. You have the resources."
Neither of them heard me. They had already turned away, flanking Rosalia like bodyguards escorting a wounded principessa.
"Don't worry, Rosalia. I will have my people scrub every post by morning. No one will say another word."
"You look pale. Let me take you somewhere warm. There is a pasticceria on Via Luca that stays open late. The chocolate torta there will settle your nerves."
They guided her forward, one on each side, their hands gentle on her arms. Not once did either of them look back.
I stood alone beneath the fading smoke of the fireworks. The air smelled of sulfur and spent gunpowder. Ash drifted down around me like grey snow, settling on my shoulders, on the dark earth, on the velvet box Giancarlo had left sitting on the hood of the car, forgotten.
I watched the last ember die in the sky and felt nothing.
In the face of what I had already survived, in the face of death itself, this small betrayal was barely a whisper.
At least I was still alive. And this time, I had a life worth defending.
I wanted to drive home, but the memory surfaced like a slap: Salvatore had taken my bag. He'd slung it over his shoulder without asking, the way he always did, as though carrying my things entitled him to carry my fate. I had no choice but to follow the three figures ahead of me along the gravel path that wound through the estate gardens.
They stopped near a hedge of overgrown boxwood, half-hidden by shadow. I heard Salvatore's voice before I saw him, low and grating with impatience.
"Rosalia, baby, how long are we supposed to keep up this act? I can't stomach it anymore. Seraphina's out here playing games nobody asked her to play. Who knows what kind of filth she's dragged herself through?"
Giancarlo's voice slid in next, smooth as polished marble and just as cold. "Seraphina can't tell a real heirloom from a forgery. She couldn't tell loyalty from a lie. Is it any wonder some old man whispered a few pretty words and she ended up in his bed? A woman like that, carrying the Genovese name?" He let out a breath that was almost a laugh. "She was never fit to stand beside the Valenti Family. Rosalia, the ring from my mother's vault was always meant for you. You're the only one worthy of wearing it."
Rosalia looked between them, her dark eyes glistening with practiced vulnerability. "Seraphina has done terrible things, I know. But she was kind to me once. She took me in when I had nothing. How can I just abandon her?" Her voice trembled at the edges, delicate as spun glass. "If you two won't do as I ask, if you won't at least keep up appearances for my sake, then I have nothing left to say to either of you. Ever."
The effect was instantaneous. Two heirs of the most powerful crime families in Riviera City fell over themselves to apologize to a girl with no blood, no name, no territory. They tripped over each other's words, eager to grind me into the dirt if it meant lifting her an inch higher.
More than ten years. I had known them for more than ten years. And all of it, every shared meal, every whispered secret, every childhood oath sworn on summer nights, amounted to less than a few soft words from Rosalia Ferraro.
I pressed my knuckles against my mouth to keep the sound inside. Then I turned and walked away.
The night stretched endlessly around me. The streets of Riviera City were empty at that hour, the old brownstones and shuttered storefronts standing like tombstones in the dark. I walked the entire way home on a swollen ankle, each step a small act of penance for the fool I had been in my first life.
By the time I crossed the threshold of the Genovese estate, the ankle had ballooned to something grotesque, the skin taut and shining under the hallway light. Nonna Elisabetta took one look at it and her face crumpled. She disappeared into the kitchen and returned with a bottle of old liniment, the kind that smelled of camphor and rosemary, and she knelt on the floor to rub it into my skin with hands that had once commanded the respect of every Don in the city.
I could not let her carry my pain on top of her own. So I told her about the invitation.
I told her that I had been accepted into La Rete.
The bottle nearly slipped from her fingers. She looked up at me, and for a moment the years fell away from her face. The grief, the decline, the slow erosion of everything the Genovese name had once meant vanished behind a light I had not seen in her eyes since I was a child.
"My Seraphina." Her voice broke on the second syllable. "My girl is truly something. I am old, cara mia. I have been old for a long time. You are the only one left who can raise this Family from its knees."
I nodded. Tears burned behind my eyes, but I held them.
"After so many years." She cupped my face in her weathered hands. "After so many years of silence, the Genovese Family finally has something to celebrate. We will hold a proper feast. A gathering. We will invite everyone, and they will see that this Family still stands."
Her smile was radiant. It was the exact same smile she had worn the day she sent me to the blood-bound union ceremony in my previous life, the day she believed I was entering an alliance that would restore our honor. She had been so full of joy, so certain that Giancarlo Valenti would protect what was left of her world.
And then he never came. He abandoned the ceremony. He shattered the oath in front of every Family in Riviera City. And the shock of that public dishonor, the sheer, annihilating weight of it, stopped Nonna Elisabetta's heart where she stood.
She died on the floor of the chapel, surrounded by white flowers and the whispers of people who had already begun to forget her name.
Not again. Not in this life. I would burn the entire city to the ground before I let that happen again.
Nonna was old, and her body was fragile even if her spirit was iron. I took every detail of the feast upon myself. The venue, the guest list, the catering, the security. I handled it all.
Two days before the gathering, Giancarlo and Salvatore appeared at the estate gates. They came bearing gifts, as though a box of imported chocolate truffles, the kind I had loved as a child, could serve as absolution. They said they wanted to help with the preparations.
"Seraphina." Giancarlo's voice carried the careful warmth of a man who had rehearsed his contrition. "You haven't returned a single one of my messages. Are you still upset about what happened that night?"
Salvatore stood beside him, arms crossed, jaw tight. "We weren't trying to come down on you. We were looking out for you. In our world, reputation is everything. A woman's honor is the Family's honor. We just didn't want you making mistakes you couldn't take back."
I did not forgive them. I would never forgive them. But I allowed them to stay and help, because their presence served a purpose. They owed me debts from a lifetime they could not remember, debts written in blood and silence and years of cruelty that no apology could erase. There was no settling those accounts. All I wanted from this life was to never owe them anything again.
Since my parents' assassination, the Genovese Family had withered. The old alliances dried up. The phone stopped ringing. No one visited, no one paid tribute, no one so much as sent a card at Christmas. We had become ghosts in our own territory, and ghosts were easy to ignore, easy to rob, easy to destroy.
But an invitation to La Rete changed the calculus entirely. It announced to every Family, every crew, every ambitious soldier in Riviera City that the Genovese bloodline had produced something rare. A mind sharp enough to attract the attention of the most powerful shadow syndicate in the country. It meant the Genovese had a successor. It meant we were no longer prey.
Nonna understood this better than anyone. She treated the feast with the gravity of a war council, scrutinizing every detail, every name on the guest list, every arrangement of flowers and crystal. Nothing could be left to chance.
The night of the gathering arrived.
The grand hall of the Genovese estate had not been opened in years, but Nonna and I had restored it to its former glory. Crystal chandeliers threw fractured light across white linen tablecloths. Silver candelabras lined the center of the long table. The scent of fresh gardenias and aged wine hung in the air like a benediction. Riviera City's elite filled the room: capos, consiglieres, old-guard dons with silver hair and heavy rings, their wives draped in black silk and diamonds.
Rosalia entered behind Giancarlo and Salvatore.
She wore a gown that must have cost more than anything a girl from the slums had any right to own. Midnight blue, cut low, designed to make men forget she had no family crest to speak of. She paused just inside the entrance and let her gaze sweep the hall, taking in the chandeliers, the silver, the gathered power of a dozen families.
Envy flickered across her features, quick as a knife drawn and sheathed.
"Seraphina is so lucky," she murmured, her voice barely above a breath.
Then something harder settled into her expression. Something I recognized from the life before, though I had been too blind to see it then.
"But what does noble blood and a sharp mind matter in the end?" The words were almost inaudible, spoken to no one, meant for herself alone. "I still have ways to make you wish you were dead."
The lights in the hall dimmed.
Every screen mounted along the walls of the grand hall flickered to life simultaneously. The conversations died. Glasses paused halfway to lips. A hundred pairs of eyes turned upward.
The images were photographs. One after another, projected in merciless high definition across every surface. Each one showed me, or something designed to look exactly like me, naked, tangled in bedsheets with different men. Strangers. Faces I had never seen. Bodies I had never touched. The fabrications were seamless.
The silence lasted three seconds. Then the whispers began, spreading through the room like poison through a vein.
"Isn't that the Genovese girl? The eldest daughter?"
"Dio mio. And she's supposed to be the one restoring the Family's honor?"
"What do you expect? No mother, no father, no one to teach her rispetto. A girl raised without discipline ends up exactly like this."
"They said she slept her way into La Rete's good graces. Looks like the rumors were true."
"The Genovese Family is truly finished. They let their sole heir become some man's kept woman. A puttana parading in silk."
I had endured such ridicule twice before, in the life I'd already lived. The first time was at my blood-bound union ceremony.
Giancarlo had walked out in front of every Boss, every Caporegime, every wife and widow in Riviera City. He abandoned the alliance for Rosalia, a street orphan with no blood, no name, no standing. The dishonor struck my Nonna like a bullet to the chest. She collapsed at the altar where the oaths should have been sworn, and she never rose again. The Genovese name became a punchline whispered in every social club and back room from the waterfront to the old quarter.
The second time was my funeral. Before my body was cold in the ground, before the last handful of earth had settled over my coffin, Salvatore Monreale dropped to one knee in front of my open grave and proposed to Rosalia. He turned my death into a spectacle. My entire existence into a joke told over glasses of Barolo at someone else's feast.
The memory of that life surged through me like ice water, and I turned to my Nonna in a panic. Her breathing had gone shallow and ragged, her thin chest rising and falling too fast. Her eyes, still sharp even at her age, had gone red and glassy as she stared at the photographs splayed across the floor in front of her.
"My Seraphina." Her voice cracked like old wood. "She would never do such a thing."
Her color was wrong. The pallor beneath her olive skin had turned to ash. My heart seized in my chest, and I dropped to my knees beside the gathered crowd, begging anyone, everyone, to help me get her to a hospital. But the onlookers pulled back as though I carried a plague. They averted their eyes, tucked their hands into their pockets, stepped behind one another. No one wanted to be seen touching the granddaughter of a dying Family, a woman branded by scandal. As if dishonor were a disease that spread through skin.
It was the two blood-promised who finally stepped forward from the crowd.
Giancarlo moved first, his expression unreadable as he pulled his car keys from the breast pocket of his charcoal suit. Salvatore appeared at my side without a word, and together we lifted Nonna Elisabetta between us, her frail body lighter than it had any right to be, and carried her to the waiting car. Giancarlo drove. Salvatore and I held her steady in the back seat as the city blurred past the tinted windows.
The hospital smelled of antiseptic and fluorescent grief.
"Fortunately, you arrived when you did." The doctor pulled his surgical mask down to his chin, his face grave. "Another twenty minutes and I would not have been able to save her."
I thanked him until my voice broke. Then I stationed myself at Nonna's bedside, her hand in mine, her pulse a thin thread beneath my fingers. While she slept, I pulled up the security feeds on the hospital's network terminal. I knew what I would find, and I found it.
Rosalia Ferraro. Clear as a confession on the surveillance footage. She had been the one to plant the photographs, to swap them into the display where everyone would see. Every single image was fabricated. Doctored intelligence, composited with surgical precision, designed to destroy what little remained of the Genovese name.
I saved the footage. I reached for the phone to contact the authorities.
Two hands stopped me.
Giancarlo's grip closed around my wrist from the left. Salvatore stepped in front of me from the right. Their faces wore the same expression: cold, dismissive, final.
"It was a joke, Seraphina." Giancarlo's voice was smooth as polished marble and just as hard. "You want to make a federal case out of a prank? Do you understand what you'd do to Rosalia if you brought the Feds into this?"
I stared at them. The shock lasted only a heartbeat before the rage swallowed it whole.
"What about me?" The words tore out of me like something alive. "My Nonna nearly died in that room. Her heart almost gave out. And you stand there worried about Rosalia?" My voice climbed, raw and ragged. "She wasn't afraid of destroying me? Of destroying the entire Genovese Family? Of killing the last Matrona of our bloodline with her poison?"
Salvatore moved before I finished speaking. He shoved Rosalia behind his broad back, shielding her with his body, and drove his open palm into my shoulder hard enough to send me stumbling.
"Are you finished, Seraphina?" His jaw was set like a locked vault. "Your Nonna is alive. She's breathing. She's fine. And besides, flies don't land where there's no rot. You must have done something shameful first for these rumors to take hold. Where there's smoke, there's fire."
In the life before, those words would have shattered me. Now they fell against my skin like dead leaves. I felt nothing.
I pushed past both of them, numb and steady.
Giancarlo caught my wrist again. His grip was different this time. Tighter. His eyes had lost their diplomatic sheen and revealed something beneath, something cold and reptilian and utterly without mercy.
"Seraphina. Don't humiliate yourself further." His voice dropped to a register meant only for my ears. "You know the reach of the Valenti and Monreale Families. There is no Consigliere in this city, no lawyer, no judge who would dare take your case against us."
I did not release the phone. I did not look away.
His fingers tightened until the bones in my wrist ground together.
"Don't forget," he whispered, "your Nonna is still in that bed. Still connected to those machines. I can have the doctor end her treatment with a single word. One phone call, Seraphina. That's all it would take." His lips barely moved. "I'll count to three. If you haven't handed over that surveillance footage by the time I finish, I will have someone pull the ventilator."
He began to count, his eyes never leaving mine.
"Three."
The word hung in the sterile air like a death sentence.
"Two."
"I was wrong." I dropped to my knees on the cold linoleum. The tears came then, hot and silent, carving tracks down my face. "I was wrong. Please."
I did not dare. I could not gamble with Nonna's life. Not again. Not in this lifetime.
Salvatore ripped the phone from my hands and hurled it against the floor. It shattered on impact, the screen splintering into a web of fractured glass, the casing splitting apart and scattering across the tiles like broken teeth. A shard sliced across the back of my hand. Blood welled in a thin red line.
He looked down at me with the flat, empty gaze of a man watching an insect drown.
"As long as we're alive," he said, "you will never touch Rosalia again."
They left. Their footsteps receded down the corridor, unhurried, absolute.
I stayed on the floor. The cold seeped through my knees, through my palms, through the thin fabric of my clothes. The pain did not come from the cut on my hand. It radiated from somewhere deeper, somewhere older, a wound that had been open for two lifetimes. Every promise made in youth. Every oath sworn under summer skies when we were children running through the old quarter together. All of it was counterfeit. The blood-promises were hollow. The loyalty was theater. Only the betrayal was real.
I wept until my chest ached and my throat closed and there was nothing left inside me but silence.
I did not know how long I remained there before I rose and walked back to Nonna's room like a woman already dead. I was terrified that Giancarlo or Salvatore would make good on their threats, so I did not leave her side. For days I sat in that plastic chair beside her bed, sleeping in fragments, eating nothing, watching the monitors trace the rhythm of her stubborn, enduring heart.
During those days, only Rosalia reached out. Message after message arrived on the burner phone I had acquired. She told me, in bright and breathless detail, how the two blood-promised had taken her traveling. Bungee jumping off coastal cliffs. Dining at private restaurants overlooking the sea. Every adventure was one we had once planned together as girls, dreams whispered in the dark of the Genovese estate, promises that were never meant for her.
I blocked her number.
When I finally looked up from the phone, two men stood at the foot of Nonna's bed. They were young, composed, and carried themselves with the quiet lethality of professionals. Their suits were dark and unadorned, their postures relaxed but alert. Each wore a small pin on his lapel: a silver net, barely visible unless you knew to look for it.
La Rete.
They inclined their heads in unison.
"Seraphina Genovese." The taller of the two spoke with a calm that bordered on reverence. "We are operatives dispatched by the organization. You have our word and our oath that your Nonna's safety and health will be maintained in your absence. No one will touch her. No one will reach her."
The weight of those words settled over me like armor.
It was time.
I returned to the Genovese estate one final time. I walked through the rooms where I had grown up, where the ghosts of my parents still lingered in the grain of the wood and the scent of old roses. I gathered every item connected to Giancarlo Valenti and Salvatore Monreale. Photographs, letters, gifts, tokens of alliances that had never been real. I burned them in the courtyard fireplace and watched the smoke curl into the evening sky.
Then I walked out the front door, climbed into the waiting car, and did not look back.
Giancarlo and Salvatore were not my protectors. They were not my allies. They were not my future.
I would carve that future myself. With my own hands, my own mind, my own blood. For Nonna. For the Genovese name. For the girl who had died once and refused to die again.
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