The rain over Milan fell like thin silver threads, painting the city in reflections of neon light and sorrow. It was nearly midnight, and inside the grand marble mansion of the Mancini family, Marco Mancini stood before a tall Venetian mirror. He had the face of a man who had everything — money, fear, respect — yet his eyes carried the weight of too many sleepless years.
The reflection stared back coldly. A silk tie around his neck, a gun holstered beneath his suit jacket, and a heart that felt like stone. Marco wasn’t born cruel; he had simply been forged by a cruel world. His father, Don Riccardo Mancini, once ruled half of Northern Italy’s underworld with iron discipline. When he was assassinated, Marco inherited the empire before he was even thirty. Now, every deal, every death, and every betrayal bore his signature.
The room behind him smelled of smoke and whiskey. On his mahogany desk lay a gun, two empty glasses, and a letter he couldn’t bring himself to read — one from his mother, reminding him that he had once wanted to be an architect, not a criminal.
Marco exhaled slowly. “An architect,” he murmured. “To build… not destroy.”
But dreams were for the dead.
That night, one of his lieutenants, Alberto, called with news that a worker at one of Marco’s factories had been caught stealing. Normally, such an issue wouldn’t concern him personally. But something in Alberto’s voice — anxious, hesitant — made Marco drive there himself.
The factory stood on the outskirts of Milan, a sprawl of metal and light, the sound of machinery echoing in the dark. Marco arrived in his black Maserati, his men already waiting outside, shoving a trembling worker toward him.
“Here he is, boss,” Alberto said. “Caught him taking supplies. Maybe more.”
The worker’s face was hidden beneath a hood. His hands were shaking, covered in grease. Marco signaled for his men to step aside. “Lift your head,” he ordered.
When the man did, the world seemed to still.
It was like looking into a mirror.
The same sharp jawline. The same dark hair, though messy and oil-streaked. The same brown eyes — except these weren’t hard or guarded; they were frightened and alive.
Marco stared, speechless for the first time in years. His men exchanged uncertain glances, whispering.
“What’s your name?” Marco asked finally.
“Luca… Luca Ferraro, Signore,” the man stammered.
“Ferraro,” Marco repeated, testing the sound. “You work here?”
“Yes, Signore. For three months now.”
“And you stole from me?”
Luca swallowed hard. “I—I didn’t mean to. I took food, sir. My sister… she’s sick. The pay isn’t enough for her medicine.”
Normally, such words would mean nothing to Marco. The rules of his empire were simple: theft was betrayal, and betrayal had one punishment. But something about this man — his face, his voice, the mirror-like resemblance — rooted Marco in place.
He turned to Alberto. “Leave us.”
“Boss?”
“Now.”
When they were alone, Marco walked in slow circles around Luca, studying him like an artist inspecting a sculpture. “You have no idea who I am, do you?”
Luca shook his head. “Only that you own this place, Signore.”
Marco smiled faintly. “You could say that. I own more than this place.”
Luca’s eyes flicked up. “Are you going to kill me?”
Marco leaned in close, so close he could see the fear trembling in Luca’s lashes. “If I were, you’d already be dead.” He paused, then straightened. “Go home. Return tomorrow morning. Alone.”
Luca’s confusion was plain. “Signore?”
“Go,” Marco repeated, voice cold as steel.
Luca didn’t wait to be told twice. He ran into the rain, clutching his jacket, glancing back once as the headlights of the Maserati disappeared into the dark.
That night, Marco couldn’t sleep.
He sat in his dim study, a single lamp burning beside a bottle of bourbon. His reflection stared at him from the window — but all he could see was that man’s face. Luca Ferraro. A nobody. A worker with his exact face. The coincidence gnawed at him.
What would it be like, he wondered, to live as that man? To work with your hands, to eat bread you actually earned, to wake up without a gun beside your bed?
He imagined walking among his workers unnoticed, no one bowing, no one whispering “Signore” with fear. Just… existing.
It was madness — and yet the thought of it gave him a strange kind of peace.
By dawn, the decision was made.
The next morning, Luca returned as ordered. The mansion loomed before him, white marble and iron gates guarded by men in black. He was led through vast halls filled with oil paintings and gold trim, until he reached Marco’s private study.
Marco sat behind his desk, dressed impeccably as always, cigarette in hand. “You came,” he said.
“Yes, Signore,” Luca replied cautiously. “You said—”
“I know what I said.” Marco stood and walked toward him. “You look like me.”
Luca blinked. “Pardon?”
“Look,” Marco said, dragging him toward a mirror. “Same height. Same face. Same eyes. Even your voice has a certain… echo.” He turned to face him fully. “Do you believe in fate, Luca?”
“I don’t know, Signore.”
“I didn’t either,” Marco said quietly. “Until now.”
He walked back to his desk, opened a drawer, and tossed a thick envelope across it. Inside, stacks of crisp euros gleamed. “How much do you make here in a month?”
Luca’s voice trembled. “Seven hundred, maybe eight hundred.”
“Take a look inside that envelope. That’s twenty thousand. And that’s only the beginning.”
Luca’s eyes widened. “For what?”
“For a role,” Marco said. “A game, if you will. You’ll live as me. Wear my clothes. Give my orders. Appear in my place when I say. You’ll have guards to protect you, and I’ll make sure your sister receives the best care money can buy.”
Luca stared at him as if he’d lost his mind. “You… want me to pretend to be you?”
“Yes.”
“Why?”
Marco smiled — a smile without warmth. “Because I’m tired, Luca. And because you’re the only one who can make this work.”
He extended his hand. “Do we have an agreement?”
Luca hesitated. He thought of his sister coughing in their tiny apartment, of the endless grind in the factory, of the hopelessness that had filled his days. And now, this man — his double — was offering him a way out.
Slowly, he reached out and shook Marco’s hand.
Marco’s eyes gleamed. “Good. Then your life changes today.”
He turned toward the window, where the morning sun broke through the clouds for the first time. “And so does mine.”