Isabella POV
The scent of expensive leather and Victoria's cloying Chanel perfume couldn't mask the stench of my reality. I sat in the back of the Russo family's stretch limousine, my hands resting on the cheap manila envelope containing the only possessions I had left after five years in federal prison.
Victoria slid a crisp, legal document across the polished walnut table. Next to it sat a one-way ticket to Geneva and a black, untraceable credit card.
"Sign it," she demanded, her voice trembling with a mixture of disgust and poorly hidden terror. The Art Deco onyx bracelet on her wrist clinked against the wood. "A blood oath of exile. You renounce the Russo name, you maintain *Omertà*, and you disappear. Or I have an Enforcer fit you for concrete shoes in the Hudson before midnight."
Mia leaned forward from the opposite seat, intentionally catching the dim cabin light on the massive diamond on her left hand. "Gavin says hello, by the way," she smirked, her voice dripping with venom. "He picked this out himself. He thought you'd prefer Europe to a coffin, but honestly, I don't care either way."
I didn't flinch. The girl who would have cried at their betrayal died on the cold concrete floor of a cell five years ago. I looked at Victoria's perfectly manicured hands, noting the slight tremor she couldn't control. She wasn't here out of power; she was here out of fear. She was terrified I would expose how she and Gavin Conti had framed me to secure their pathetic alliance.
I leaned forward, my worn combat boots planting firmly on the velvet carpet.
"You think a piece of paper and a plane ticket erase five years in a cage?" I whispered, my voice as cold and sharp as a surgical scalpel. I locked eyes with my stepmother. "This isn't over, Victoria. A *Vendetta* is owed. I am going to take everything from you."
Victoria's face drained of color. She opened her mouth to scream, but the sound was instantly obliterated by a deafening roar of tearing metal.
A massive, kinetic force slammed into the right side of the limousine. The three-ton armored vehicle was violently shoved across the asphalt, the tires shrieking in protest. Victoria's crystal champagne flute shattered against the partition, golden liquid and glass shards raining down on us like shrapnel.
I braced my forearms against the roof, my muscles-honed from years of brutal prison fights-absorbing the shock. Through the sudden spiderweb cracks of the bulletproof window, I saw them: three heavy, unmarked black SUVs moving in a flawless, aggressive tactical formation.
They hit us again.
The limousine spun wildly. Up front, the Russo driver-a low-level Associate who had clearly never seen real combat-was hyperventilating. He screamed uselessly into his radio, his hands slipping off the steering wheel as panic consumed him.
My mind raced, calculating the angles and the force. This wasn't a sloppy Conti hit. This wasn't a warning. The precision, the sheer power of the assault-this was a coordinated, military-grade extraction. Someone with absolute authority wanted me, and they were tearing through the Russo family to get me.
And if I left my life in the hands of this weeping driver, we were all going to die on this highway.
Isabella POV
The deafening screech of tearing metal drowned out Victoria's hysterical screams. Our three-ton armored limousine spun wildly across the asphalt as the three unmarked black SUVs hit us again in flawless, military-grade formation.
Up front, the Russo driver-a pathetic Associate who had clearly never seen a day of real combat-was hyperventilating. He dropped the radio, his hands slipping off the steering wheel as he sobbed.
We were going to die because of a coward.
Survival was the first lesson the federal penitentiary had beaten into me. You never put your life in the hands of the weak.
"You're going to get us killed!" Victoria shrieked as I unbuckled my seatbelt.
I ignored her. With a burst of kinetic energy that defied my slender frame, I vaulted over the partition separating the passenger cabin from the front. I grabbed the weeping driver by the collar of his cheap suit.
"Get out of the way. Now," I commanded, my voice a lethal, icy whip honed in the darkest corners of a prison block.
The sheer murderous intent in my eyes paralyzed him. He scrambled over the center console, cowering in the passenger seat. I slid behind the wheel, my combat boots slamming onto the pedals. The moment my hands gripped the leather, the soul of the dying vehicle shifted. It was no longer a tomb; it was my weapon.
I checked the mirrors. The SUVs were boxing us in, trying to force a complete stop. My mind raced, calculating weight, velocity, and the terrain ahead.
An uphill exit ramp approached on the right.
I floored the gas, feinting left before violently jerking the heavy steering wheel to the right and slamming the brakes. The sudden shift of three tons of armored steel caught the right-flank SUV completely off guard. Our reinforced bumper clipped their rear quarter panel. The SUV lost traction, spinning out of control before crashing through the metal guardrail and tumbling down the steep embankment.
One down.
Ahead of us, a massive logging truck labored up the highway. A brutal, suicidal plan formed in my mind. I accelerated, ignoring the agonizing grind of the limo's failing transmission. I drafted inches behind the truck's massive timber load, using it as a physical and visual shield.
The second SUV accelerated blindly to keep up.
At the absolute last second, I wrenched the steering wheel hard to the left. The limo swerved into the open lane. The pursuing SUV had no time to react. It plowed headfirst into the rear of the logging truck. The impact snapped the securing chains, and massive wooden logs rained down, instantly crushing the vehicle and completely blocking the highway for the third SUV.
I eased the battered, smoking limousine onto the desolate roadside shoulder. The engine gave one final, pathetic shudder before dying completely.
Silence descended, broken only by the hiss of the radiator.
Before I could even uncurl my fingers from the wheel, the driver's side door was yanked open from the inside. Victoria lunged at me, her face twisted in a grotesque mask of terror and humiliated rage. She couldn't handle the fact that the stepdaughter she had thrown to the wolves had just become her savior. She needed to reassert her pathetic dominance.
"You absolute psycho!" she spat, raising her hand to slap me.
I didn't even blink. My hand shot out, my fingers clamping around her wrist like a steel vise. I squeezed, feeling the delicate bones grind together.
Victoria gasped, the color draining from her face as excruciating pain replaced her fury.
I didn't look at her. I kept my eyes fixed on the rearview mirror, my voice devoid of any human warmth. "I just saved your life. Next time, I might not."
I shoved her arm back, discarding her like trash. The power dynamic shattered into a million unfixable pieces. Victoria stumbled back against the leather seats, clutching her red, bruising wrist. She looked at me not as a daughter, but as a monster she had unwittingly unleashed.
As she cowered, a sleek, silver Rolls Royce Phantom glided silently onto the shoulder, rolling past our smoking wreckage.
Through the heavily tinted rear window, I felt it. A gaze so heavy, so suffocatingly powerful, it made the hairs on the back of my neck stand up. The glass lowered just a fraction. In the shadows of the backseat, I saw the sharp, unforgiving jawline of a man in a charcoal suit. The faint glow of a tablet illuminated his face as he handed it to the man in the front seat.
I couldn't hear his voice, but I saw his lips curve into a faint, dangerous smirk.
He was assessing me. Not as collateral damage, but as an asset. I didn't know who he was, but as the Phantom smoothly accelerated away, I knew this ambush wasn't an assassination attempt, but a violent invitation.
Isabella POV
The silver Phantom disappeared into the haze, leaving the acrid stench of burning rubber and radiator fluid in its wake. Victoria didn't even notice the ghost that had just passed us. Her trembling fingers were already dialing a number on her phone, her eyes darting around the desolate highway.
Ten minutes later, a black Mercedes pulled onto the shoulder. A Russo Associate stepped out, looking nervously at the crushed SUVs. Victoria and Mia scrambled into the backseat like frightened rats fleeing a sinking ship.
I stepped forward, but Victoria rolled down the window just enough to let her venom slip through. Her face was a mask of terror and malicious triumph. "Trouble like you belongs with the scrap metal," she spat.
The locks clicked. The Mercedes sped off, leaving me alone with the smoking wreckage and a bewildered tow-truck driver who had just arrived on the scene.
I didn't feel the sting of abandonment. The federal penitentiary had burned away my capacity for heartbreak years ago. Instead, a cold, absolute certainty settled in my chest. This wasn't an insult; it was a liberation. Their names were now carved in stone on my *Vendetta* list.
"Take me to Manhattan," I told the driver, climbing into the cab of the tow truck.
An hour later, I walked through the gilded doors of Bergdorf Goodman. The contrast between my scuffed combat boots and the pristine marble floors was jarring, but I didn't care. I needed armor.
"Well, if it isn't the family's dirty little secret."
I stopped. Gavin Conti stood by a display of silk ties, looking like the perfect, arrogant heir in his bespoke navy suit. The man who had driven the car, framed me, and sent me to hell.
He marched over, his face twisting with disgust. "I don't know how you crawled out of your cage, Isabella, but you don't belong here. Stay away from Mia." He made the fatal mistake of grabbing my arm, his fingers digging into my bicep to assert his pathetic dominance.
Prison had taught me that hesitation was death.
I didn't argue. I moved. I clamped my hand over his, twisting his wrist at a brutal, unnatural angle while sweeping my heavy boot behind his knee. Gavin hit the marble floor with a sickening thud, the breath exploding from his lungs. Before he could even process the shock, I dropped my weight, driving my knee directly into his throat.
I leaned in, applying just enough pressure to make his eyes bulge with genuine panic. With a sharp, calculated jerk of my hands, I snapped his wrist.
The crisp crack echoed over the soft ambient music. Gavin let out a muffled, agonizing wheeze, his face turning a mottled purple.
I lowered my face to his ear, my voice a dead, icy calm. *"Un debito di sangue deve essere pagato, Gavin. E io verrò a riscuoterlo."* (A *Vendetta* is owed, Gavin. I will collect.)
Suddenly, the hairs on the back of my neck stood up. That same heavy, suffocating gaze from the highway washed over me. I glanced up.
On the second-floor mezzanine, half-hidden in the shadows of the menswear section, stood a man. Broad shoulders, charcoal suit. Even from this distance, the sheer authority radiating from him was absolute. Beside him stood another man, quiet and still as a shadow.
Two security guards rushed toward me, but the man on the mezzanine merely raised a single finger. The guards froze instantly. Their aggressive posture vanished. They hauled a sobbing, broken Gavin off the floor and practically dragged him toward the exit.
"We apologize for the disturbance, ma'am," the head of security said to me, not meeting my eyes. "The cameras clearly show he assaulted you first."
It was a lie, and we both knew it. It was a silent command from the man above.
I didn't look up again. I didn't owe him a thank you. I walked into the designer boutique and pointed to a razor-sharp, tailored white suit.
As I paid with the last of the cash in my pocket, I caught a final glimpse of the mezzanine in a mirrored pillar. The man was speaking to his shadow. I couldn't hear the words, but my eyes tracked the dangerous, deliberate curve of his lips.
*I changed my mind. I don't want her as a lead. I want her.*
I took my shopping bag and stepped out into the biting wind of Fifth Avenue. I needed to disappear, find a secure terminal, and figure out exactly what kind of devil had just intervened in my war.