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Home > Mafia > Beyond Death: The Ruthless Don's Eternal Obsession
Beyond Death: The Ruthless Don's Eternal Obsession

Beyond Death: The Ruthless Don's Eternal Obsession

Author: : MAINUMBY
Genre: Mafia
They say the Don of Chicago has ice in his veins and blood on his hands. They say he's forgotten the girl who died in a freezing apartment on New Year's Eve, clutching a velvet box he threw in the trash. They're wrong. The Don never forgot. He just didn't know I was watching. Because I'm still here-a ghost tethered to the man who destroyed my life and then, inexplicably, destroyed himself over my memory. This is the story of how the boy who promised me forever became the monster who broke me. And how, after everything, he followed my soul to the very edge of death just to ask me one question. My name is Elena Rossi. And this is how I learned that in the Mafia, love is the most dangerous weapon of all.

Chapter 1

They say the Don of Chicago has ice in his veins and blood on his hands. They say he's forgotten the girl who died in a freezing apartment on New Year's Eve, clutching a velvet box he threw in the trash.

They're wrong.

The Don never forgot. He just didn't know I was watching.

Because I'm still here-a ghost tethered to the man who destroyed my life and then, inexplicably, destroyed himself over my memory.

This is the story of how the boy who promised me forever became the monster who broke me. And how, after everything, he followed my soul to the very edge of death just to ask me one question.

My name is Elena Rossi. And this is how I learned that in the Mafia, love is the most dangerous weapon of all.

Chapter 1

Elena POV

As I stood in the immense marble corridor of the Blackwood Academy, a slow warmth seeping through the bandage on my forehead, the future Don of Chicago looked down the length of his nose at me as if I were a smudge on the glass.

"I am taking Serafina Vitiello as my preferred alliance," he announced, his voice a cold pronouncement that struck the stone walls and returned diminished. "The Rossi girl is no longer my concern."

If I did not move out of his way in the next three seconds, the boy who had once sworn to give me his entire world was going to let his armed enforcers trample me right into the burnished floor.

The corridor was dead silent.

Every heir and daughter of the Chicago Cosa Nostra pressed themselves against the lockers, a collective, breathless tableau of fear and fascination.

I leaned heavily on my wooden cane, my right leg betraying me with a fine, incessant tremor.

The blood from my hairline seeped through the white gauze, a warm drop sliding down my temple like a single, viscous tear.

Dante Falcone did not stop walking.

He was eighteen, but he already carried the terrifying, suffocating weight of a mafia king.

He wore a pitch-black bespoke suit that fit his broad shoulders perfectly, delineating the lethal architecture of his frame.

His dark hair was swept back, and his jaw was set in a line of pure, lethal cruelty.

This was the heir who, with a single, indifferent gesture, had compelled a veteran smuggler to set fire to his own ledgers.

This was the boy who left trails of bodies in the warehouse districts.

And he was walking straight toward me with eyes as cold and inert as river stones in winter.

"Move," Dante commanded.

His voice was a low, guttural rasp that felt like a physical pressure in my chest, as if my ribs were being cinched by a tightening band.

I gripped my cane tighter, my knuckles straining white against the dark wood.

"Dante," I whispered.

"That is Don Falcone to you, Rossi," Serafina Vitiello murmured, detaching herself from his shadow where she had been lurking.

Serafina was a Capo's daughter, dressed in designer silk, her lips painted a blood red.

She linked her arm through Dante's, a gesture of public annexation.

He did not pull away.

A knot of ice formed in my gut, the betrayal a more profound violation than any physical blow.

Just yesterday, my parents' screaming match had shattered the windows of our apartment.

My father had thrown a glass bottle, and it had met my skull with a sound like cracking ice.

I had come to the Academy desperate for the one person who had always protected me.

"What happened to your head, Elena?" a boy whispered from the crowd.

"A horseback riding accident," I lied immediately, my voice shaking though I fought to keep it steady.

I could not expose my father's drunken violence.

In the Syndicate, a disgraced Soldier who abused his dependents without cause could be executed on the spot, leaving me utterly orphaned.

Dante stopped mere inches from me.

I looked up into his face, searching for a trace of the boy who used to sneak into my window to wipe away my tears.

There was nothing.

Only a vast, terrifying emptiness.

He reached into his pocket.

For a split second, I thought he was going to touch my face, a remembered comfort.

Instead, he pulled out a sterile medical patch.

He tossed it onto the desk beside me.

It landed with a soft, dismissive slap that seemed to suck all the sound from the corridor.

"Consider that a returned favor for the time you bandaged my hand when we were ten," Dante said, his tone devoid of any human emotion.

I stared at the patch, my vision blurring with unshed tears.

"I have already submitted the paperwork to the Syndicate matriarchs," Dante continued, raising his voice so the entire hall could hear.

"I am being reassigned to the Northern Sector to shadow Serafina's father."

A rustle of shocked whispers moved through the onlookers.

He was leaving our district.

He was leaving me.

"Why?" I choked out, the word scraping against my dry throat.

Dante looked down at me, his gaze dropping to my trembling hands and the cheap cane supporting my weight.

"Because I require a Queen who can stand on her own two feet," Dante said coldly.

He brushed past me, not looking back.

His shoulder slammed into mine.

The impact sent a splintering shockwave of pain down my injured leg.

My cane slipped on the polished floor.

I hit the ground hard, my knees cracking against the marble.

No one moved to help me.

"Let us go, Dante," Serafina purred, stepping over my legs. "She is staining the floor."

I sat in the middle of the hallway, the metallic taste of blood in my mouth.

I watched the back of Dante's dark suit disappear around the corner, and the silence he left in his wake was more suffocating than the crowd had ever been.

"Get up, Rossi," the instructor barked from the doorway, his face a mask of bored indifference to the display of cruelty.

"Class is starting."

Chapter 2

Elena POV

A thick, metallic smell of copper met me at the threshold the moment I pushed open the door to our grim apartment.

It was dense and sweet, like old pennies left to oxidize in the sun.

"Dad?" I called out, dropping my keys on the gouged laminate counter.

The living room was destroyed. The wooden dining chairs were splintered.

The balcony door was wide open, the sheer curtains being torn by the wind, lashing against the walls like frantic, tethered ghosts.

I walked slowly toward the balcony, my cane clicking against the hardwood.

A cold dread coiled in my stomach as I looked over the railing.

Twenty stories down, on the unforgiving concrete of the Chicago streets, a police perimeter was already set up.

There was a yellow tarp. Beneath it, a dark pool of crimson was slowly expanding.

My mother had not escaped the Syndicate's wrath. Or perhaps she had merely run out of places to hide.

She had jumped.

The apartment phone began to ring, a shrill, piercing sound that made me flinch.

I picked it up.

"Is this the Rossi residence?" a sterile, official voice asked.

"Yes," I breathed.

"Your father, Lorenzo Rossi, was contacted regarding the remains of Isabella Rossi. He explicitly refused to claim them. If someone does not sign for the ashes by tonight, they will be processed as unclaimed refuse."

The phone slipped from my hand and clattered against the wall, dangling by its twisted cord.

The remainder of the afternoon was a gray, featureless blur. Exactly two hours later, I walked out of the city morgue.

The heavy, cheap plastic urn was pressed tightly against my chest, a pathetic substitute for the scaffolding of my life, which had just collapsed.

As if in grim parody of my grief, the sky broke open.

A torrential downpour washed over the city, heavy sheets of freezing rain that soaked through my thin jacket in seconds.

I dragged my bad leg toward the bus stop, a violent tremor seizing my spine as the chill worked its way into my bones.

I huddled under the narrow awning of a closed bakery, a meager shelter against the deluge.

Across the street, the towering glass doors of a high-end restaurant swung open, casting a warm, golden rectangle onto the wet pavement.

Dante stepped out.

He was flanked by four massive Syndicate bodyguards.

Serafina was pressed against his side, laughing at something he had said.

Dante opened a large black umbrella.

He tilted it entirely over Serafina, shielding her expensive dress from a single drop of water, allowing the rain to darken the shoulder of his own tailored suit.

I stood in the shadows, clutching my mother's ashes, the rain plastering my hair to my bleeding forehead.

Dante turned his head.

His dark, piercing eyes locked onto mine across the busy street, and for a moment the roar of the traffic and the drumming of the rain receded, leaving only the stark, silent space between us.

He looked at my soaked clothes. His gaze fell, lingering on the plastic urn in my arms.

"Dante?" Serafina asked, following his gaze. She wrinkled her nose. "Is that the Rossi girl? What is she holding?"

Dante did not blink.

His face hardened into a mask of pure ice, an expression of calculated neutrality.

"Her family's mess is no concern of ours," Dante said, his tone deliberately dismissive.

His voice carried over the sound of the rain, loud and cruel, a pronouncement meant only for me.

He placed a hand on the small of Serafina's back and guided her into the waiting armored SUV.

The black car splashed through a deep puddle, sending a wave of dirty water washing over my sneakers as it drove away.

I sank against the coarse brick wall and slid to the wet pavement.

I buried my face in my knees and sobbed until my throat tasted like blood.

When I finally limped back into my apartment building, the hallway was dark.

My father was waiting by the door, a hulking shadow in the gloom.

He held a half-empty bottle of whiskey.

His eyes were bloodshot and unhinged.

"Where were you?" Lorenzo slurred, lurching toward me.

"I went to get Mom," I said, my voice a hollow thing as I held up the urn.

Lorenzo's face contorted into a mask of pure, ugly rage.

He swung his arm.

The back of his heavy hand cracked against my jaw, the impact snapping my head to the side with a sharp crack of bone.

I flew backward.

My head slammed against the doorframe.

The plastic urn dropped, popping open.

A puff of gray ash spilled across the dirty, beer-sodden carpet.

"Do not ever bring that whore into my house!" Lorenzo roared, and his heavy boot drove into my stomach.

I gasped, curling into a ball as the air was driven from my lungs in a single, agonizing burst.

He grabbed me by the collar of my wet jacket and dragged me out into the stairwell.

With a guttural roar, he threw me down the first flight of concrete steps.

"Stay out there with her!" he screamed, slamming the heavy fire door shut and locking it with a final, echoing crack of the bolt.

I lay on the cold concrete, my body a constellation of pain, staring as the gray dust of my mother settled onto my clothes.

A strange, terrifying numbness took hold. I dragged myself up the stairs and looked out the small, grimy corridor window.

Directly across the street was the heavily guarded penthouse building where the Falcone family lived-a tower of glass and steel that seemed to mock my ruin.

Through the rain-streaked pane, I saw Dante's SUV pull up.

I did not think.

It no longer mattered if I died tonight. I just moved.

I dragged my bruised body out of the building and stumbled across the street, pushing past his bodyguards before they could draw their weapons.

"Why?" I screamed, grabbing the lapels of Dante's wet, expensive suit. "Why are you doing this to me? What did I do to you?"

Dante looked down at my bloody, trembling hands clutching his fabric.

He grabbed my wrists and ripped my hands away with a force that felt as if it might tear the bones from their sockets, pinning them to my sides.

He leaned in close.

I could smell the sharp mint and dark tobacco on his breath, a clean scent against the metallic tang of blood in my mouth.

He smiled a cold, cruel smile that did not reach his flat, lifeless eyes.

"Because your mother was sleeping with my father."

---

**Dante**

The heavy glass doors slid shut behind me, and I kept walking.

I did not look back. I could not look back. If I turned around and saw her standing in the rain with my mother's words still burning in my ears, I would break. And a Falcone heir did not break. Not where anyone could see.

My boots echoed across the marble lobby. The guards nodded as I passed. I nodded back. The world continued to function. The elevator doors opened. I stepped inside. The doors closed.

Only then, in the three seconds of privacy between the lobby and the penthouse, did I allow myself to close my eyes.

*Your mother was sleeping with my father.*

The words had tasted like poison on my tongue. I'd watched them hit her-watched the light drain from her eyes, watched her stumble backward as if I'd put a bullet in her chest. And I'd just stood there. Letting her bleed.

Because what was the alternative?

My mother had cornered me in the study three days ago. She'd laid photographs on the mahogany desk-grainy surveillance shots of Isabella Rossi on her knees in the Don's private office. "The Families are calling for a blood price," she'd said, her voice as cold and smooth as the pearls around her throat. "The Rossis will be made an example of. The girl included."

"The girl has nothing to do with this."

"She's a Rossi." My mother had looked at me with those flat, calculating eyes-the eyes of a woman who'd survived thirty years in the Syndicate by feeling nothing. "If you care about her at all, you will make her hate you. Publicly. Completely. Give the Families a show of disloyalty so convincing they'll forget she was ever yours to protect."

I'd refused. For three days, I'd refused.

Then the first threat arrived. Not to me-to her. A typed note slipped under my door: *The Rossi girl has pretty hands. It would be a shame if something happened to them.*

I'd burned the note and memorized the warning.

So I'd stood in the corridor at Blackwood and announced to the entire Academy that Elena Rossi was nothing to me. I'd let Serafina drape herself over me like a trophy. I'd watched Elena hit the marble floor and I hadn't helped her up. I'd stepped over her like she was garbage.

And then, tonight, in the pouring rain, I'd told her the cruellest truth I possessed.

*Because your mother was sleeping with my father.*

I hadn't told her the rest. I hadn't told her that her mother wasn't just sleeping with the Don-she'd been gathering intelligence on the Rossi family's operations for him. That Isabella Rossi was a spy. That the entire Rossi bloodline was now marked for extermination. That the only thing standing between Elena and a bullet was the performance I'd just given-the show of hatred so convincing the Families believed I'd discarded her.

If they believed she was nothing to me, they'd leave her alone. If they saw me destroy her, they'd be satisfied. They'd find another target.

That was the math of the Mafia. That was the logic of survival.

The elevator doors opened. I walked into the penthouse. The lights were off.

I stood in the darkness of my own living room, six hundred feet above the city where Elena was probably still standing in the rain, clutching her mother's ashes, and I did something no Falcone heir had done in three generations.

I put my fist through the wall.

The plaster crumbled. My knuckles split. Blood ran down my wrist in hot, steady rivulets, and I welcomed the pain. It was nothing compared to what I'd just done to her.

I would make her hate me. I would make the entire world believe I wanted her destroyed. I would play the monster so convincingly that even she would forget the boy who'd climbed through her window in the rain.

And one day-when the threat was neutralized, when the families had moved on, when I was Don and no one could question my decisions-I would find her. I would kneel at her feet and tell her the truth. I would spend the rest of my life earning her forgiveness.

But tonight, I stood in the dark and bled into the wreckage of my own wall, and I allowed myself exactly sixty seconds to feel it all before I locked it away.

Sixty seconds.

Then the mask went back on.

---

Chapter 3

Elena POV

The words landed not as a sound but as a physical concussion, and the world went silent around me.

I stopped breathing.

The streetlights flickered above us, casting long, menacing shadows across Dante's face.

"You're lying," I whispered, my voice trembling.

Dante released my wrists and shoved me back a step.

"I saw them," Dante stated, hi

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