The city never truly sleeps, but tonight, the rhythm of the streets felt like a death rattle. The neon lights of the skyline flickered through a haze of smog and rain, illuminating a concrete jungle that belonged entirely to Marco Valkar.
Twenty years ago, that world had been a nightmare of shattered glass and cordite. Eight-year-old Marco had been pressed against the mahogany of his father’s desk, the wood biting into his spine while the air turned gray with plaster dust and gunpowder. He remembered the sound of the front doors splintering a sound that signaled the end of his childhood. He watched through the gap in the furniture as his father, the once-invincible titan of the Valkar name, stood amidst the c*****e. He was a man of iron, yet as he shouted, “Marco! Stay down!” the boy saw it. It wasn't the roar of the gun that stayed with him, but the microscopic tremor in his father’s grip. That sliver of human terror was the spark that cauterized Marco’s heart.
When the sun rose over the ruins of the mansion the next morning, the silence was heavier than the gunfire. His father lay among the wreckage of a betrayed empire. Marco didn’t weep. He didn’t call out for a mother who was already gone or a father who couldn't answer. He stood in the blood-stained foyer and made a silent, freezing vow: every shadow that had moved against his bloodline would eventually be consumed by fire.
The years that followed were not lived; they were forged. Atia and Larry, the two enforcers who had survived the purge, didn't offer him comfort—they offered him a blade and a curriculum of violence. They raised him in the dark, teaching him that mercy was a luxury for the dead and that every man had a pressure point. By fifteen, he had pulled his first trigger, watching the light fade from a rival’s eyes with a chilling sense of clarity. He didn't feel guilt; he felt a surge of intoxicating sovereignty.
By twenty-four, Marco Valkar had rebuilt the throne from the ashes. He wasn't just the heir; he was a god of the underworld. The streets didn't just whisper his name—they choked on it.
Tonight, Marco paced his penthouse office, the heels of his hand-made boots clicking against the marble like a countdown. His bodyguards moved behind him, silent and lethal, mere extensions of his will. On his desk lay intelligence reports of mid-level syndicates trying to nibble at the edges of his territory. He looked at the maps, the logistics of his war machine, and felt a predatory boredom. He almost invited the challenge.
He paused by the floor-to-ceiling window, watching the rain streak the glass. Down on the street, far below the safety of his fortress, he spotted a girl. She was walking with a steady, defiant gait someone who looked like she belonged to a world of normalcy and sunlight, a world he had discarded decades ago. For a fleeting second, his cold curiosity was piqued. He wondered what it felt like to walk a street without calculating the nearest exit or the trajectory of a sniper’s bullet.
He shook the thought away, turning back to his desk to finalize the orders that would break his rivals. He was the apex predator. He was the man who saw everything. He was in total control of this city.
But as the downpour intensified, a shadow detached itself from a narrow alleyway just paces behind the girl. A gloved hand reached into a heavy trench coat, drawing a silenced pistol with a fluidity that suggested years of professional s*******r. The barrel leveled, aiming directly at the girl's spine.
Marco’s gaze drifted back to the window one last time. As the assassin stepped into the pale glow of a streetlamp, the girl became an afterthought. Marco’s breath hitched, and the composure he had spent twenty years perfecting shattered in an instant. He recognized the cold, calculating eyes beneath the hood. It was a face from the night of the m******e the one person he had been told was buried long ago, the one person he thought was already dead.