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Home > Mafia > Too Late, Mafia Boss: Watch Me Shine
Too Late, Mafia Boss: Watch Me Shine

Too Late, Mafia Boss: Watch Me Shine

Author: Harman Lowry
Genre: Mafia
For three years, I played the fool, sacrificing my dignity to drag Luca back from the abyss so he could inherit the Falcone Family. But at his grand swearing-in banquet, the woman he claimed as his own wasn't me. It was my illegitimate half-sister, Elena. To please her, he laced my soup with poison and watched his men mock my agony. When my mother was dying in the ICU and desperately needed my medical signature, Elena's enforcers pinned me to the floor of an underground fighting ring. "Perform your jester routine, Claire. Make me laugh," Elena taunted. Crying, I begged Luca to save my mother. But he just looked at me with cold disgust, wrapped his arms around Elena, and kissed her passionately right in front of me. Driven by blinding desperation, I smeared filthy clown makeup on my face and tore my dignity to shreds just to beg for a merciful laugh. But it was too late. Because of their twisted games, my mother flatlined and suffocated to death alone. I didn't understand how eighteen years of blind devotion and three years of keeping him alive amounted to nothing, or why he so easily believed Elena's fabricated lies to destroy my life. Staring at my ruined, painted face on the cold floor outside the hospital morgue, the last trace of my love for him turned to ash. I wiped away the greasepaint, downloaded the hidden evidence of their crimes, and dialed an independent federal lawyer. "I am breaking Omertà. File the lawsuit."
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Chapter 1

For three years, I played the fool, sacrificing my dignity to drag Luca back from the abyss so he could inherit the Falcone Family.

But at his grand swearing-in banquet, the woman he claimed as his own wasn't me. It was my illegitimate half-sister, Elena.

To please her, he laced my soup with poison and watched his men mock my agony.

When my mother was dying in the ICU and desperately needed my medical signature, Elena's enforcers pinned me to the floor of an underground fighting ring.

"Perform your jester routine, Claire. Make me laugh," Elena taunted.

Crying, I begged Luca to save my mother. But he just looked at me with cold disgust, wrapped his arms around Elena, and kissed her passionately right in front of me.

Driven by blinding desperation, I smeared filthy clown makeup on my face and tore my dignity to shreds just to beg for a merciful laugh.

But it was too late. Because of their twisted games, my mother flatlined and suffocated to death alone.

I didn't understand how eighteen years of blind devotion and three years of keeping him alive amounted to nothing, or why he so easily believed Elena's fabricated lies to destroy my life.

Staring at my ruined, painted face on the cold floor outside the hospital morgue, the last trace of my love for him turned to ash.

I wiped away the greasepaint, downloaded the hidden evidence of their crimes, and dialed an independent federal lawyer.

"I am breaking Omertà. File the lawsuit."

Chapter 1

Claire POV

I stood at the epicenter of the Syndicate's grand ballroom, the heat of the crystal chandeliers pressing down on my bare shoulders, waiting for the man I had spent three years coaxing back from the abyss to claim me.

But a shriek of feedback tore through the microphone, and the name Luca Falcone announced was not my own.

It was my illegitimate half-sister's.

The applause from the Made Men and Soldiers struck me like a physical wave, a roar of sound that seemed to suck the very air from the room.

A frantic, uneven rhythm pulsed in my throat. For three years, I had played the fool-the relentlessly optimistic jester in his court of shadows.

I had bartered my dignity for cheap laughs, swallowed insults like bitter pills, and dragged Luca piece by piece from the suffocating mire his mother's suicide had left him in.

I kept him fit to inherit the Falcone Family.

Now, he stood on the raised dais, his navy suit the exact shade of blue he always loved. His gaze swept the crowd with the dispassionate, lethal stillness of a man who owned every shadow in the city.

He did not look at me.

Elena Moretti emerged from the velvet darkness of the VIP booths.

She wore a gown the color of fresh blood, a sheath of crimson silk that clung to her limbs like a second skin. A line of cruel amusement pulled at one corner of her mouth.

A hush fell over the ballroom, thick and expectant. Everyone knew who I was. Everyone knew what I had done for him.

The Consigliere, an older man with a face of granite, cleared his throat, the sound a sharp crack of disapproval in the heavy air.

He stepped toward the microphone, his displeasure a palpable force.

Elena paid him no mind. She slammed her champagne flute onto the nearest table.

The crystal stem snapped with a sound like a gunshot.

She looked right at me, her voice cutting through the low murmur of the crowd.

"Look at her," she sneered. "Forever trailing three steps behind him, waiting for whatever scraps he might let fall from his fingers."

The words were a blow, but it was the sibilant whispers of the Capos and Associates that made my skin crawl.

They were laughing. They were pitying me.

The Consigliere grabbed Elena by the elbow, his grip tight enough to leave bruises on her pale skin, and pulled her aside to hiss a reprimand about Family decorum.

My mind was a sudden, stark void. The air in the ballroom grew thin and hot, the starched collar of my gown suddenly feeling like a garrote.

Under the crushing weight of their stares, I turned and pushed my way through the heavy oak doors.

I needed air. I needed an explanation.

The night air in the estate's courtyard was sharp with the coming frost.

I wrapped my arms around myself, my heels sinking into the damp, manicured grass.

A low murmur of voices drifted from the stone archway near the rose garden.

I found them there. Luca and Elena.

Luca was leaning against the stone wall, a rare, unguarded smile softening the hard lines of his face. He was telling her a joke.

He looked stripped of the formidable Don persona he wore inside, reduced to a simple, lovesick courtier.

He never smiled at me like that anymore.

Elena noticed me first. She rested a hand on his chest, her manicured nails tracing the lapel of his tailored suit.

Luca turned his head. His smile vanished, his expression shuttering as if a lamp had been extinguished from within.

"Well, look what the wind blew in," Elena murmured, her tone thick with a feigned sympathy. "The desperate little fool."

Luca scoffed. He pushed off the wall and took a step toward me.

His towering frame blotted out the moonlight.

"No one of real standing in The Family will have you, Claire?" he mocked, his voice a low, cruel rumble. "So you must follow me into the gardens and beg for scraps?"

I stared up at him.

I remembered the slick warmth of blood I had wiped from his knuckles after he fought in the underground rings to quiet the ghosts in his head.

I remembered the long nights I had stayed awake, humming forgotten lullabies until the nightmares released their grip.

"I sacrificed everything for you," I said, my voice a low tremor that refused to break. "For three years."

Luca let out a harsh, impatient breath. "Explain what?"

"Why are you doing this?" I demanded.

He cut me off. "You are delusional. You think a few shared moments meant a thing? Kissing you was a diversion. You were convenient."

He turned his back on me.

He faced Elena and raised his right hand, the one bearing the sprawling, dark tattoo of the Falcone crest.

"I swear my loyalty to you, Elena," he vowed, his voice ringing with a terrifying sincerity. "Only to you."

He intertwined his fingers with hers.

Standing in the cold night air, I felt the warmth in my veins turn to slush.

I watched his gaze remain fixed on her. He had discarded me as one would a broken tool.

Trapped by Syndicate law that forbade departure before the Don's first official banquet, I was forced to attend.

Hours later, the private Family dinner commenced in the east wing.

The long mahogany table was crowded with Capos and their wives.

I sat at the far end, a knot of hot iron twisting low in my belly.

I clutched my abdomen under the table, a cold sweat breaking out across my skin.

A shadow fell over my plate.

Luca stood beside my chair.

He picked up my silver spoon, dipped it into my bowl of clear broth, and held it to my lips.

I stared at the soup. My vision swam.

I remembered how he had fed me with that same spoon when a fever had laid me low two winters ago.

Lulled by the fleeting ghost of his former tenderness, I opened my mouth and swallowed the broth.

Luca dropped the spoon. It clattered against the porcelain bowl, the sound sharp enough to draw a few curious glances from the table.

He leaned down, his lips brushing my ear.

"That soup was laced with a toxin," he whispered, his tone flat, clinical. "A lesson in knowing one's place."

A cold numbness spread through my limbs, and I realized with sickening clarity-the man I had kept alive for three years had just poisoned me with his own hand.

Chapter 2

Claire POV

Elena strutted into the Syndicate's training compound the next morning, a retinue of loyal Soldiers at her heels. Her laughter, sharp and triumphant, ricocheted off the bare concrete walls.

I leaned against the dented metal lockers, my stomach still churning with a chemical fire. Every breath felt like an inhalation of powdered glass.

"I won the bet," Elena announced, her voice pitched to carry to the far side of the gym.

The Soldiers chuckled, their eyes darting toward me with an open, insolent curiosity.

She turned to face me, a vicious gleam in her eyes. "Luca put something in your food last night. I told him you were too witless and trusting to notice. I told him you would eat from his hand like a stray."

As if summoned, Luca walked through the double doors. He wore black tactical gear, his sheer physical presence immediately commanding the room. The men straightened, their deference instinctual.

He stopped beside Elena. He did not grant me so much as a glance.

"She would swallow poison if I called it sugar," Luca sneered, his voice edged with contempt.

Disbelief buckled the last fragile support of my composure. A fresh spasm, sharper this time, twisted through my stomach. Cold sweat drenched my workout clothes.

The sharp blast of a whistle from one of the Capos cut the tension. The crucial endurance and medical assessment for the Syndicate was now underway.

I forced myself onto the track. My legs felt like lead weights. The toxin was still ravaging my system, each jarring step sending a fresh wave of nausea through my gut.

I had to rush to the restroom. Once. Twice. Ten times.

Every time I broke from the track, the Capos pointed and laughed. They called me weak. They mocked my lack of stamina, their cruel jokes echoing in the cavernous gym like the calls of carrion birds.

After dozens of trips to the bathroom, I was dehydrated to the point of collapse. My vision tunneled, the periphery dissolving into a dark, shimmering haze. The fluorescent lights overhead flickered and spun.

I stumbled out of the restroom and collapsed onto the cold tiles of the dimly lit corridor, my body having no more to give.

Footsteps approached. Slow, deliberate, heavy.

Luca leaned against the doorframe. He looked down at me, his expression a detached study in contempt.

"A little discomfort and you fall to pieces?" he mocked. "You aspire to be a Syndicate doctor, yet you cannot endure a minor stomach ailment. Pathetic."

I closed my eyes, and the darkness claimed me.

I woke in a sterile white room. The acrid smell of antiseptic stung my nose. I knew it at once-the mafia's private clinic.

A nurse adjusted my IV drip. She looked at me with a pity she did not try to hide.

"Your stomach ulcer has perforated," she informed me quietly. "A senior Family doctor brought you in. He covered the medical fees himself, off the books."

It was not Luca. It was the Consigliere's physician.

The image of the boy I grew up with dissolved, leaving only the hollow silhouette of a stranger.

I reached for my phone on the bedside table and opened the encrypted Family network.

The first post on the feed was from Elena. It was a photo of her hand intertwined with a man's.

I recognized the distinct, sprawling mafia tattoo on the back of that hand. Luca.

The caption read: Claiming my Don.

A cold pressure built behind my sternum, more acute than any chemical burn. I opened my contacts and tapped his name. The call dropped immediately. I tried the secure messaging channel.

Message failed to send.

He had severed every line of communication between us.

Without warning, my phone vibrated in my palm. It was the housekeeper from the Rossi estate. Her voice was frantic, breathless.

"Miss Claire, you must come home. Your father has brought his mistress here."

I ripped the IV from my arm, ignoring the sharp sting. Blood welled up, dripping onto the starched white sheets. I ignored the nurse's shouts and ran from the clinic.

I rushed through the heavy iron gates of the Rossi estate. The front doors stood agape, as if to welcome a conquering army.

I found them in the grand parlor. Elena and her mother, Rosa, were sitting on the expensive velvet sofas, as if they were born to them. Rosa was sipping tea from my mother's favorite porcelain cup, a casual act of desecration.

My father, Capo Vincenzo Rossi, stood by the fireplace. He looked at me with the cold indifference of a stranger.

"Claire, this is Rosa," he said, his voice flat. "They will be living here now. If you dare defy me or cause a scene, I will sever the black-market funding that keeps your mother breathing in that hospital."

I stared at him. The man who was the author of my life was threatening to murder my mother to appease his paramour.

Elena stood. She stepped close, her perfume cloyingly sweet. She wore a provocative smirk.

"I am five months your senior," she whispered, her voice for my ears alone. "You were the mistake, Claire. I will strip you of everything. Your status. Your dying mother. And Luca."

A wire, stretched taut for years within my mind, finally gave way.

I raised my hand and delivered a slap across her face that echoed in the high-ceilinged room.

Elena shrieked. She lunged, her nails digging into my shoulders like claws.

A brutal scuffle ensued. We crashed into a pedestal. A priceless Ming vase tipped and shattered. Shards of porcelain and droplets of blood scattered across the pristine marble floor.

Heavy footsteps thundered into the room.

Luca stormed in. He reached us in two strides, yanking me away by my hair with a vicious tug. He tossed me aside like a bundle of rags.

My back slammed against the wall. The breath rushed from my lungs.

Luca dropped to his knees, cradling Elena against his chest. He checked her face for injury, his touch a study in gentle concern.

He turned his head to look at me. His eyes were as cold and flat as a frozen lake.

"Have you lost your mind?" he roared, his voice rattling the crystal chandelier. "You attack your own sister out of a fit of jealousy?"

Vincenzo and Rosa rushed over, fussing over Elena, checking her arms, smoothing her hair.

I sat on the floor among the broken porcelain. My hands were bleeding. My head throbbed.

No one spared me a glance.

I looked at the four of them. A grotesque portrait of a family made whole by my exclusion.

A sound bubbled up in my throat. I laughed. It was a hollow, broken sound that quickly dissolved into a silent flood of tears that burned my cheeks.

I pulled my phone from my pocket with shaking, bloody fingers. I dialed the number I had saved months ago. It was a mentor of Professor Silas Vance, a renowned underground surgeon.

He answered on the first ring.

"I accept the offer to leave the country for your medical training," I said, my voice dead and flat. "But I have conditions-and you are not going to like them."

Chapter 3

Claire POV

The Professor's voice came through the phone speaker, calm and measured-a stark, grounding contrast to the wreckage of my life.

"We are pleased you have decided to join the institute, Claire," he said, his tone unwavering. "Your conditions will be met. You have my word."

Less than an hour later, an encrypted email appeared on my screen. It contained an acceptance letter from an elite, untouchable medical institute in Europe, along with a referral to a highly secure private hospital for oncology patients.

I stared at the glowing screen. A cold, hard resolve settled in my chest like a block of granite. I was going to smuggle my dying mother out of the country with me, far from the Syndicate's suffocating grasp.

Pocketing my phone, I knew a return to the compound was unthinkable. I trudged instead through the freezing rain to a neutral, twenty-four-hour urgent care clinic on the edge of the city's neutral zone to have the lacerations on my hands and arms seen to. The glass from the Ming vase had cut deep.

I sat in a stupor on the edge of the metal treatment bed while an exhausted night nurse carefully picked jagged shards of porcelain from my skin with a pair of tweezers.

Without warning, the clinic's flimsy wooden door was kicked inward, rebounding violently from the wall. Luca had tracked my burner phone.

Luca strode in, and the temperature of the small room seemed to plummet. He dismissed the terrified civilian nurse with a sharp jerk of his chin. She scurried out, trembling visibly.

In two strides, he closed the distance between us and his fingers clamped around my injured arm. Pain flared, white-hot, shooting straight to my shoulder.

"You will donate blood to Elena," he demanded, his jaw clenched so tight a muscle jumped beneath his skin. "She lost blood because of your unhinged little stunt."

I tried to wrench my arm back, but his grip was like iron. He was a Don, a man trained to kill. I was merely a medical student.

"Let go of me," I warned, my voice eerily calm despite the agony radiating through the limb.

He sneered, tightening his hold until I thought the bone would snap. "Walk to the blood-draw room, Claire. Now."

Instead of complying, I leaned forward and sank my teeth hard into his forearm. I bit down with every ounce of strength I had, tasting the sharp, metallic tang of his blood soaking through his fine wool shirt.

Luca cursed and yanked his arm back, stepping away to inspect the bleeding crescent of the bite mark.

But before I could slide off the bed to flee, he lunged forward again. He gripped the back of my neck, his rough fingers twisting in my hair. He yanked me flush against his hard, unyielding chest and crashed his lips onto mine.

It was no kiss, but an act of possession-a bruising, desperate attempt to grind my defiance into dust.

He pulled back just enough to speak, his lips moving against mine.

"I will take you to my bed after I am made Don," he murmured, his breath hot and ragged against my skin. "Just save Elena today. Be a good girl, and I will give you what you have been begging for."

Bile rose in my throat, my entire body recoiling from the grotesque bargain he was offering.

Summoning every last ounce of strength, I shoved both hands hard against his chest, breaking his suffocating hold.

Without a second thought, I swung my arm and delivered a stinging, open-handed slap across his face. The sound cracked like a whip in the sterile, quiet room.

Luca's head snapped to the side. A vivid red mark bloomed at once on his pale cheek. He slowly, deliberately turned his head back to me, his dark eyes swirling with a lethal promise.

"As of this moment," I declared, my voice fractured but entirely steady, "whatever I felt for you is ash."

Luca scoffed, a dark, mocking sound. He reached for me again, seizing my wrist to drag me toward the door. "You are throwing a tantrum. Let us go."

Suddenly, the clinic door swung open again. The senior Syndicate doctor stepped in, holding a metal clipboard. He took one look at the charged scene and frowned.

"Sir," the doctor intervened, his voice respectful but professionally firm. "Close-blood transfusions between half-siblings carry a lethal risk of Graft-versus-Host Disease. It could kill Elena. We have blood bags in storage."

Luca froze. He looked sharply at the doctor, then slowly back at me. As the medical reality settled, he finally released my arm. He wiped his mouth with the back of his hand, his expression hardening to stone, and walked out of the room without another word.

I sank back onto the treatment bed, staring blankly at the water-stained ceiling panels.

A bitter, hollow laugh escaped my lips. Eighteen years of blind devotion. Three years of bartered dignity, playing the fool to keep him alive. And it had all amounted to nothing.

I closed my eyes, forcing my mind to pivot from the wreckage of my heart and focus on survival. I remembered a hushed conversation with my mother from months ago. She had known Vincenzo was unfaithful. She had known the lethal risks of The Family. Anticipating the worst, she had secretly transferred all her hidden offshore assets and clean accounts into my name.

I had the money. I had the acceptance letter. I had a way out.

My knuckles had gone white from strain, the tendons in my wrist spasming so that my thumb kept missing the icons on the screen, but I booked a one-way flight out of the country. I deliberately selected the exact date of Luca's official swearing-in ceremony. I wanted to be gone the very moment he took the throne-leaving behind nothing but a ghost.

Leaving the clinic behind, I rushed straight to the city's premier oncology ward. I met in private with the head administrator, ruthlessly finalizing the complex, expensive details for a covert international medical transfer for my mother.

By the time I left his office, it was done.

I walked down the quiet, dimly lit hospital corridor and stopped outside my mother's room. I peered through the small glass window in the heavy door. She was sleeping, her face alarmingly pale and sunken against the white pillows, the steady hiss of the ventilator breathing for her.

I covered my mouth with both hands to choke back a sob. My knees gave way, and I slid down the cool plaster of the wall until the cold linoleum met my back.

I wept silently, my shoulders shaking with the force of it, terrified to make a single sound. I could not risk waking her-I could not let her see the dark, ugly bruises already blooming on my arms.

I did not return to the Rossi estate until late that night.

The sprawling mansion was dark. The housekeeper informed me in a whisper that Vincenzo and Elena had not returned. They were out celebrating somewhere in the city, toasting their victories.

I walked alone up the grand staircase, surrounded by a hollow, peaceful silence.

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