1 Chapters
Chapter 8 8

Chapter 9 9

Chapter 10 10

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Alessa POV
The water of Lake Michigan had been freezing that night, a black, churning abyss that swallowed the city lights. But the look on Elizbeth Shields' face as she went over the railing? That had been pure fire.
Three years later, I could still hear the splash. It was the sound of a reputation being cemented.
They said I was reckless. They said I was a spoiled brat who didn't understand the delicate web of alliances holding the Chicago Outfit together. Elizbeth had insulted my grandfather, Consigliere Felton Moreno, calling him a "glorified secretary" within earshot of half the city's debutantes. She thought her family's alliance with the Blairs made her untouchable.
She was wrong.
I didn't regret pushing her. I only regretted that the Coast Guard fished her out before hypothermia could finish the job.
"You need to learn humility, Alessandra," Don Alfonzo had told me, his voice devoid of the warmth he usually reserved for his favorite niece. To appease the screeching Claudine Blair and prevent a war, he exiled me. *Sicily.* A convent near Palermo. A place designed to break spirits and force submission through silence and prayer.
They expected me to come back broken. They expected a penitent girl dressed in rags, clutching a rosary, eyes cast down in shame.
I shifted gears, and the engine of my custom-built Pagani Huayra roared like a trapped beast, vibrating through the soles of my stilettos.
Chicago sprawled before me, a grid of grey steel and dirty snow, so different from the sun-bleached cliffs of Sicily. But the rot was the same. The power was the same.
My grandfather, my *Nonno*, had bought my freedom with blood and brilliance. He had dismantled the Vaughn family's hold on the border ports, handing Don Alfonzo a new empire of smuggling routes on a silver platter. A king's ransom for a granddaughter's return. I would not let his effort go to waste by looking like a victim.
I checked my reflection in the rearview mirror. My dark hair was sleek, falling over a jacket tailored by a master in Milan-limited edition, aggressive shoulders, sharp lines. Around my neck, resting against my skin, was a heavy gold chain bearing the Moreno crest: a hawk clutching a dagger. It wasn't jewelry; it was a dog tag. It was a warning.
The convent hadn't humbled me. The nuns in Palermo were tougher than any Chicago gangster I'd ever met. They taught me that silence wasn't weakness; it was a weapon. They taught me that patience cuts deeper than a knife.
I pressed the accelerator. The car, a sleek shadow of matte black carbon fiber worth more than most people's lifetimes, surged forward onto the Magnificent Mile.
Heads turned. I saw them on the sidewalks-Associates, low-level soldiers, the eyes and ears of the families. They froze, staring at the machine prowling their streets. They were looking for the exile. They were looking for the girl who had been sent away in disgrace.
Instead, they got a queen returning to her throne.
A smirk touched my lips, cold and sharp. Let them stare. Let Claudine Blair choke on her afternoon tea when she hears I'm back. Let Elizbeth Shields stay away from large bodies of water.
I was Alessandra Moreno. I was born in blood, raised in silk, and forged in exile.
The city blurred past my windows, a kaleidoscope of grey and gold. I wasn't hiding in the back of a tinted limousine. I was driving myself, exposed, loud, and undeniable.
My grip tightened on the leather steering wheel. I could feel the pulse of the city, the tension that always hummed beneath the surface of Chicago. I was the variable Don Alfonzo had been wary of introducing back into this volatile equation.
Good.
I turned onto the main avenue, the engine purring a low, threatening note. The road ahead was clear, or so it seemed. But in this life, the road is never truly clear.
"I'm home," I whispered to the empty car, the words tasting like iron and expensive wine.
I was ready for whatever welcome parade they had planned. Or better yet, whatever ambush they thought I wouldn't see coming.