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Blood and Badge

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Blurb

Two liars. One deadly truth.She’s an FBI agent with a personal rivalry. He’s the mafia underboss who sees right through her.When Agent Elena Rossi infiltrates the powerful Moretti family to find her sister’s killer, her only goal is justice. Her carefully crafted disguise is flawless until she meets Dante Moretti. With a predator’s gaze and a genius for detecting lies, the chillingly perceptive underboss uncovers her secrets instantly. But instead of handing her over to be executed, he makes her a dangerous offer: her life in exchange for her complete surrender. She becomes his to control, his to keep.Now, Elena is trapped in a gilded cage of her own making. Every whispered confession, every burning glance, is a step deeper into the darkness. To trust Dante is to betray her sister’s memory and her badge. To fall for him could mean sleeping with the enemy. And if he discovers her final, devastating secret that she’s hunting for his guilt in her sister’s murder the price will be paid in blood.In a world where every touch is a lie and every promise is a weapon, the line between obsession and love vanishes. The only thing more dangerous than the family hunting her is the man who holds her heart… and her life in his hands.

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A Rose in the Rain
The rain made ghosts of the city lights. From the driver’s seat of her uninspiring car, Agent Elena Rossi watched them bleed across her windshield, her fingers tightening on the steering wheel. Her gaze was locked on the glowing rose sign across the street: The Vesper Lounge. According to the file, her little sister Sofia had been smiling in security footage here just three hours before her body turned up in a warehouse ten miles away. A single black rose on her chest. The Moretti family’s calling card. “Rossi, confirm comms check.” The voice of her handler, Paul Chen, crackled in her concealed earpiece, pulling her from the memory that was always there, a fresh wound beneath her sternum. “Confirmed,” Elena whispered, her voice steady despite the tremor in her hands. She forced them to relax. Lia Moretti wouldn’t be nervous. Lia is calm. Lia belongs here. “Remember the sequence,” Chen continued, his tone all business, a brittle shield against the operational dread. “Enzo meets you inside. You play your part. You get the job. You get in. That’s it. No deviations.” “I know the sequence,” Elena said, her eyes scanning the club’s ornate entrance. A giant of a man in a tuxedo stood sentry, checking names against a list. Her name, her new, poisoned name was on it. “Lia Moretti. Cousin from Castellammare, here for a fresh start.” The legend was meticulous. Born Lia Moretti, raised in Sicily until age twelve, then moved to Newark. A minor record for aggravated assault, a charge conveniently lost in the system. She spoke the language, knew the customs, and bore a passing, useful resemblance to a low-level Moretti associate’s real cousin, who was currently enjoying an all-expenses-paid “vacation” in Fiji courtesy of the FBI. It was a good legend. It had to be. Elena stepped out into the downpour. The silk of her emerald-green dress, Lia's dress, not Elena's, plastered itself to her legs instantly. She didn’t shiver. She walked, her posture shifting, a subtle roll entering her stride, a hardness settling in her jaw. Become the ghost, her instructor had said. Until you forget your own name. The bouncer’s eyes swept over her, lingered. “Name?” “Moretti. Lia.” He scanned the list, gave a curt nod, and opened the door. The sound hit her like a physical force: a deep, throbbing bassline and the shriek of laughter that was too sharp to be real. The Vesper was a study in curated decadence: low lighting, velvet banquettes, the glint of gold watches and crystal glasses. The air was thick with cigar smoke and ambition. She spotted Enzo near the bar, a wiry man with a nervous smile. Her “cousin.” He waved her over, his eyes darting around the room. “Lia! You made it. Come, meet some people.” He introduced her to a few faces: a bookie, a money launderer, a soldier with knuckles like worn stone. She made small talk in smooth Italian, laughing at the right moments, her eyes constantly mapping the room. And then she saw him. Dante Moretti sat in a corner booth, a king holding court in the shadows. He was younger than she expected from the grainy surveillance photos, maybe mid-thirties. He wore a simple, exquisitely cut navy suit, no flashy jewelry. He wasn’t the largest man in the room, but he commanded its gravity. He listened to an older capo speak, his head tilted slightly, his expression one of polite, chilling attention. Then, as if sensing the weight of her stare, his eyes cut across the room and met hers. Elena felt it like a jolt of electricity. His gaze wasn’t aggressive; it was absorbing. It felt like he was reading the fine print on her soul. She didn’t look away, Lia wouldn’t, and offered a slight, respectful nod. He held her eyes for three heartbeats longer than was comfortable, then returned to his conversation without acknowledgment. “The underboss,” Enzo whispered, following her gaze. “Dante. Don’t stare. He doesn’t like it.” An hour later, the “opportunity” presented itself, just as the FBI had orchestrated. A known capo, Ricco, was “alone” at a high-stakes poker game in a private room upstairs. The plan was simple: rival Albanians, tipped off by the Bureau, would crash the game to shake down Ricco. Elena, positioned nearby, would intervene in a display of loyal, chaotic bravery that would earn her credibility. She heard the commotion shouting, the crash of overturning furniture. She moved. Bursting into the smoky room, she saw two large men holding Ricco against a felt table. Perfect. “Get your hands off him!” she yelled, channeling Lia’s Newark accent. One thug turned, swinging a sap. Elena didn’t use her Bureau jiu-jitsu. She fought dirty, as the legend would have it. A kick to the knee, a jab to the throat with her car keys, a wild swing with a heavy ashtray. It was messy, brutal, and effective. The Albanians, paid to lose, retreated with curses. Ricco, breathing heavily, clapped her on the back. “Where’d you learn that, kid?” “Newark,” she grunted, wiping blood from her lip. It wasn’t entirely fake. The crowd that had gathered parted. Dante Moretti stood in the doorway, his hands in his pockets. His calm was a shockwave that silenced the room. He looked at the wreckage, at Ricco, and finally at her. “Clean this up,” he said, his voice quiet but absolute. He didn’t thank her. His eyes, that storm-gray, scanned her disheveled state, the calculated wildness of her fighting style. “You. Come with me.” He led her not to the bustling main floor, but to a small, soundproofed office behind the kitchen. It was Spartan: a desk, two chairs, a cabinet. He closed the door. The distant music vanished. “Sit.” She sat. He remained standing, leaning against the desk, looking down at her. “Lia Moretti. Castellammare del Golfo,” he said. It wasn’t a greeting. “Tell me about the festival of Santa Fortunata. What’s the traditional dish served at the procession?” Another test. The file had mentioned the festival, but not the dish. Her mind raced, scrambling through cultural databases she’d memorized. Focus on the emotion, not just the fact. “Sfincione,” she said, injecting a note of nostalgic warmth. “But not the street vendor kind. The old women, they start the dough at dawn. The smell… it smells like home.” She looked up at him, letting a flicker of vulnerability show. “My nonna made it every year until she died.” Dante was silent for a long moment, his expression unreadable. Then, the faintest, most unnerving smile touched his lips. It was the smile of a cat watching a mouse complete an interesting maze. “Welcome to the family, Lia,” he said. But as she stood to leave, relief was a cool wave in her veins, and he spoke again, his voice so low it was almost lost in the hum of the ventilation. “One more thing,” he said. He reached into his pocket and placed a small object on the desk between them. It was an earring. A simple, silver stud. Elena’s blood turned to ice. It was Sofia’s. She’d bought the pair for her sister’s last birthday. One had been found at the warehouse crime scene. The other had never been recovered. Until now. Her eyes snapped to him. The predator’s smile was gone, replaced by a flat, analytical intensity. He said nothing. He just watched her, waiting for her reaction, the reaction of a grieving sister, not a newly-minted associate. The game had changed before it had even truly begun. He wasn’t just testing her cover. He was connecting her to the corpse. “A token,” Dante said finally, his gaze piercing through her carefully constructed mask. “To remind us all that in this family, nothing is ever truly lost. Or forgotten.” He picked up the earring, closed his fist around it, and walked out, leaving her alone in the silent room with the devastating truth echoing in the sudden, terrifying quiet. He knew. Not everything. But enough. She was already in the lion’s den, and the lion had just shown her he kept trophies.

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