Chapter one

251 Words
The study smelled of old leather, expensive cigar smoke, and regret. Don Vittorio Conti sat in the throne-like chair behind the vast mahogany desk, a monolith of dark wood that had witnessed forty years of whispered conspiracies and silent verdicts. His hands, once capable of such precise violence, now lay resting on the polished surface, the knuckles swollen, the skin mapped with blue veins and old scars. A single file folder sat before him, stark and white against the dark grain. Outside, the muted sounds of New York City—a distant siren, the hum of traffic—filtered through the bulletproof glass of his penthouse. Here, in this sanctum on the 60th floor, he was above it all. Literally. Figuratively. Or so he had once believed. He was seventy-two years old. The title they used now was “Chairman.” A sanitized word for a man whose word had once been law from the docks of Red Hook to the clubs of Midtown. The Conti Family. Not as flashy as the Five Families of old, but resilient, adaptable. They’d moved from protection rackets and gambling into waste management, union pensions, and, most lucratively, digital currency laundering. Vittorio had overseen the transition from blood-soaked streets to spreadsheet-sanitized profits. He was a CEO of crime, his suits from Savile Row, his lawyers from Harvard. But the file. It was a medical report. A constellation of terminal diagnoses with Latin names that sounded like papal decrees. It gave him six months. Maybe eight.
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