The first gunshot tore the night in half.
Isabella DeLuca dropped behind a stack of shipping containers, metal cold through her coat. Bullets screamed overhead, biting the air where her head had been a second before.
“Damn it,” she hissed. This wasn’t how the night was supposed to go. A missing shipment. A quick inspection. Her father’s voice on the phone: “Go make sure it’s not stolen, Bella. In and out.” In and out. Instead she’d walked into a slaughter.
Shouting everywhere. Men scrambling. Gunfire kept coming, fast and disciplined, not the messy spray you got from street gangs. A few feet away, Marco, one of her father’s soldiers, crumpled. He clutched his shoulder, blood already soaking through his shirt, cursing in Italian like it might make the pain stop.
“Miss DeLuca!” Her bodyguard, Dante, yanked at her sleeve. “We have to move. Now.”
Bella didn’t move. Her chest felt too tight. Because this wasn’t random. Random was messy. This was timed. The guards changed at 1:03 AM. The shipment log went dark at 1:07. She’d been in position at 1:10. Someone had a copy of her schedule.
Betrayal. The word sat like ice in her stomach.
Another bullet slammed into the container beside her. The metal screamed. Sparks kissed her cheek. Dante grabbed her arm hard enough to bruise. “Bella. Now.”
She wrenched free and risked a look.
At the harbor entrance, black SUVs idled in a perfect line. Doors flew open and men poured out. They didn’t run. They flowed. Shoulders squared. Weapons up. Moving like they’d trained for this exact night, this exact spot. Not police. Not a rival crew looking for territory. These were soldiers.
Then she saw it. A silver wolf, stitched small on a jacket cuff. The thread caught moonlight before the man ducked behind a forklift.
Moretti.
Her jaw locked. Of course. The Morettis. Her father’s oldest enemy. The family that took her uncle Vincenzo. The family that put a bomb in her cousin’s car last spring. The family led by Leonardo Moretti the name that made DeLuca captains shut up at dinner tables. Cold. Ruthless. Brilliant. The future king of the underworld, if you believed the whispers.
Bella didn’t believe in kings. But the rumor was he’d never lost a fight. He’d never needed to.
Another explosion rocked the docks. Heat slapped her face. A container went up, orange flames licking the sky, and for a second everyone’s shadows stretched long and ugly across the concrete. Someone screamed. Her pulse kicked hard. This wasn’t about a shipment anymore. This was about bodies.
Dante shoved a handgun into her palm. Metal, warm from his grip. “Take it.”
“I know how to shoot, Dante.”
“I know. Humor me.”
She didn’t get to answer. Two Moretti soldiers rounded the corner, rifles raised. The first one’s eyes widened when he saw her. Bella fired before he finished raising his weapon. The shot was clean. He dropped like a puppet with cut strings. The second lunged. Two more shots. Chest. Throat. He hit the ground and didn’t get up.
For one breath, the world made sense again. Violence had rules. Pull trigger. Threat stops. No messy feelings. A fierce, ugly grin touched her lips. This she could handle. This she understood.
Then the air changed.
The gunfire didn’t stop. The shouting didn’t stop. But something shifted, like the tide pulling back before a wave. Heads turned. One by one. Toward the far end of the docks.
A black car rolled in slow. No lights. Tires barely made a sound. The door opened and he stepped out.
Tall. Dark suit that probably cost more than Dante made in a year. No gun visible. He didn’t need one. Calm came off him in waves the kind of calm that meant he’d already calculated every way this night could go, and he liked all of them.
Leonardo Moretti.
Bella had never seen him in person. But she knew him instantly. Power didn’t cling to him. It was part of him, like smoke is part of fire. One of his men hurried over, spoke fast, urgent. Leo listened without blinking. Without nodding. Without giving anything away.
Then he looked up.
Across fire and smoke and thirty years of blood, his eyes found hers. The distance between them was huge. It didn’t matter. The hit was immediate. Sharp. Like a blade pressed flat against her throat. Not a threat. A test.
I see you, that look said. I know exactly who you are, Isabella DeLuca.
She hated him for it. Hated that her stomach flipped. Hated that her first thought wasn’t run but he’s judging me and he’s right.
Another explosion cracked nearby. The moment shattered. Gunfire again. Leo vanished behind a wall of his men. But that look stayed burned behind her eyes.
Dante’s hand clamped on her shoulder, harder this time. His voice had gone rough. “Miss DeLuca. East team’s gone dark.”
“How many?”
“Six.”
Six. Six men she’d eaten breakfast with last week. Six families she’d send flowers to tomorrow. Her stomach twisted. Too many. Way too many to be bad luck.
This had been planned. Down to the minute. Which meant someone in the DeLuca family gave them the playbook. Someone who knew the codes. Someone who’d sat at her table.
The thought was worse than the bullets. Enemies outside the family were expected. You trained for them. You shot them. Enemies inside meant every door in your house was unlocked.
“We’re leaving,” she said. Her voice came out steady. She was proud of that.
Dante and the remaining men formed a tight circle, guns out, moving backward toward the convoy. Bella let them pull her, but she took one last look over her shoulder.
The black car was gone. Leo was gone. Only burning containers and the smell of gunpowder remained. But the feeling stayed, cold under her skin: tonight wasn’t finished. It had barely started.
They reached the vehicles. Tires crunched on broken glass. As Dante yanked the door open, Bella’s phone vibrated in her pocket. Once. Soft. Encrypted.
Her blood went cold before she even looked. That number was buried. Almost nobody had it. Her father. Her uncle. Maybe two captains.
She unlocked it with a thumb that wouldn’t quite stop shaking.
One sentence. No name. No number. Just words.
The Morettis didn’t set the trap. Someone inside your family did.
Bella stared at it until the letters blurred. The phone felt heavier than the gun in her other hand. Because bullets you could shoot. But how do you shoot a ghost in your own house?
Dante slammed the door. “Go, go, go.” The convoy roared to life.
Bella didn’t look up from the screen. The Morettis didn’t set the trap. Someone she trusted did. Someone who knew she’d be here tonight. Someone who wanted her dead, or worse wanted her father to blame the Morettis for it.
She closed her eyes. The harbor burned behind her. But the fire she felt now was all on the inside.