The ticket arrived as promised first class to Paris, departing tomorrow night. Tucked inside the envelope were ten thousand euros, crisp and new, along with a note scrawled in sharp ink: For expenses.
Come alone. S.
Santino sat at his kitchen table, the ticket’s glossy edge glinting under the weak bulb. Salvatore Enzo. The boy who’d bolted from Naples seven years ago, swearing he’d return one day. The friend who’d vanished without a trace, leaving only memories and questions.
His phone buzzed, shattering the silence. Vito’s name flashed on the screen. Santino answered with a grunt. “Speak.”
“Don’t go,” Vito said, his voice tight, urgent. “It’s a trap, Santino. I feel it.”
Santino raised an eyebrow, leaning back in his chair. “How do you even know about the ticket?”
“Word travels fast,” Vito snapped. “Salvatore Enzo isn’t just running clubs in Paris. He’s El Amore’s right-hand man. You hear me? El Amore’s.”
The name hit Santino like a cold wave, sinking deep into his bones. Even in Naples’s shadowed alleys, they whispered about El Amore the faceless crime lord who gripped half of Europe’s underworld in an iron fist. Santino’s fingers tightened around the phone. “What does he want with me?”
“Could be your father’s debts. Could be your connections. Hell, maybe your head on a platter,” Vito said, his voice rising. “Does it matter? No one meets El Amore and walks away normal after. You know the stories!”
Santino’s gaze drifted across his apartment the bare walls chipped with age, a sagging couch, a single chair. Nothing here tied him down, nothing he couldn’t ditch in minutes. Was this normal? Was this living, counting euros in a rotting flat? He exhaled sharply. “I leave tomorrow.”
Vito cursed loud enough to rattle the line. “At least take backup, you stubborn bastard!”
“He said come alone,” Santino replied, his tone flat.
“And you trust him?” Vito’s voice cracked with frustration. “After Eleven years of silence?”
Santino paused, the question hanging heavy. Trust Salvatore? No. But curiosity burned in his chest, a fire Naples couldn’t quench. This city was a slow death, its streets sucking the life from him. “I’ll call when I land,” he said at last.
“If you land,” Vito muttered, then the line went dead.
Santino stood, packing light one change of clothes, his gun disassembled and tucked into a false-bottom bag, the cash bundled tight. He spent the night moving through Naples’s underbelly, settling accounts with his lieutenants. “Hold the line,” he told them, voice low. “I’ll be back—or I won’t.” Just in case.
The flight to Paris passed in a haze champagne fizzed in flutes he ignored, food sat untouched on his tray. The plane’s hum lulled him, but his mind raced. Paris greeted him with a steady drizzle, the tarmac slick under his boots. A black car waited at the terminal, its engine purring. The driver, a wiry man in a suit, stepped out and tipped his head. “Mr. Leandro? Mr. Enzo sends his regards.”
Santino nodded, sliding into the leather seat. The drive to Club Octana wound through shining streets, past gleaming storefronts and elegant bridges.
Paris was a world apart clean, orderly, dripping with wealth. Santino shifted uncomfortably, his worn jacket and thick Naples accent feeling like a neon sign of his roots. Rain streaked the windows, blurring the city into a dream he didn’t belong in.
Thirty minutes later, the car halted before a glittering monolith. Club Octana pulsed with life music thumped through its closed doors, bass vibrating the ground. A line of beautiful people shivered under umbrellas, their laughter cutting through the rain. Santino stepped out, raindrops beading on his shoulders as he straightened his jacket.
“Mr. Enzo is waiting inside,” the driver said, gesturing to a discreet VIP entrance on the right. “Go on.”

Latest Chapter
Chapter 71: Smuggler's Escape
The yacht Sea Serpent cut through the Persian Gulf like a knife through silk. Santino stood on the deck, watching Dubai's skyline shrink behind them. The city lights looked like scattered diamonds against the black water."You're brooding again," Tatiana said.She came up beside him, carrying two glasses of champagne. Her red hair whipped in the sea breeze. She wore a white dress that the wind pressed against her body."I don't brood," Santino said."Right, you meditate aggressively," Tatiana replied.Despite everything, Santino smiled. "Is that what I do?""Among other things." She handed him a glass. "Drink. You look like you need it."The champagne was good. Everything on Tatiana's yacht was expensive."How long until we reach international waters?" Santino asked."Twenty minutes. Then you're officially a free man," Tatiana said."I haven't been free in years.""That's because you choose the wrong women."Santino looked at her. "Present company excluded?""I'm not trying to kill yo
Chapter 70: Devil's Deal
Santino stood in the center of the empty space, hands in his pockets. The bomb he'd planted under Sandra's yacht should have killed her twelve hours ago.Instead, she was standing in front of him. Alive and Smiling."You're predictable like Vincent," Sandra said. "Just like your father.""I'm nothing like him," Santino replied."No?" Sandra raised a brow. "You both think violence solves everything. You both underestimate your enemies."Six men with guns surrounded them in a loose circle."How did you know?" Santino asked."About the bomb? Please. I've been doing this since before you were born," Sandra said. "I moved my base the moment you left the marina.""Smart," Santino admitted."Survival requires intelligence. Something Vincent never understood," Sandra said.She walked closer to Santino. Close enough that he could smell her perfume. "Do you want to know why I really hate him?" Sandra asked."Because he killed your husband," Santino said.Sandra laughed. "That's the simple versi
Chapter 69: Dubai's Height
The Dubai skyline stretched out below Santino like a sea of glass and steel. He stood on the rooftop of the Atlantis hotel, forty floors above the city. The wind was strong up here. It pulled at his jacket and made his eyes water.In his hand, he held Ben's key. The metal was warm from his palm. He'd carried it for weeks now, telling himself his father might still be alive. Telling himself there was hope.There wasn't."You're dead, aren't you?" Santino said to the wind. "You've been dead since that day in Naples."The key caught the sunlight. Such a small thing. But it had opened everything. The safety deposit box. The documents. The truth about who he really was."Vincent's son," Santino said. "Not Ben Leandro's boy. Vincent fucking El Amore's son."He laughed, but there was no humor in it. "You knew, didn't you? You knew and you never told me."The city noise rose from below. Cars honking. Construction. Life went on while his world fell apart."You protected me," Santino said. "Rai
Chapter 68: Blood Loyalty
The warehouse was cold and empty. Broken windows let in weak sunlight as Santino sat on a metal crate across from Salvatore. The silence stretched, heavy with history.Twenty years of friendship. Twenty years of lies.Santino’s voice cut through it. “You’ve been talking to Sandra.”Salvatore met his eyes. “Who told you that?”“Does it matter?” Santino’s tone was flat but steady.Salvatore crossed his arms. “It matters to me.”“Why?” Santino snapped. “So you can lie better next time?”Salvatore rubbed his face with both hands. He looked tired like the truth had aged him overnight. “Santino…”But Santino wasn’t finished. “Did you know Mia was adopted?” Salvatore’s head jerked up as his eyes went wide. “What?”“Sandra told me. Mia isn’t El Amore’s real daughter. She was adopted.” Santino said it slowly, watching for a reaction.Shock. Real, unfiltered shock spread across Salvatore’s face. His mouth opened, then closed again.“You didn’t know,” Santino murmured.“I… no. I had no idea.” Sal
Chapter 67: Mother's Pain
Sandra stood twenty feet away, her men fanning out behind her like black wings.“Hello, dear,” she called. Her voice was soft but razor sharp.Santino stepped forward, eyes narrowed. “Sandra.”She tilted her head, examining him. “You look like him. Your father. Same dark eyes. Same stubborn jaw.”Santino’s voice hardened. “What do you want?”Sandra walked closer, slow and unbothered. “To finish what Vincent started. But first… let’s say goodbye to your mother properly.”Ice crawled down Santino’s spine. “What did you do?”A slow smile crept across Sandra’s face. “Nothing yet. But Maria is very sick.”She paused, glancing around with a mischievous sparkle in her eyes. “It would be such a shame if her medication got mixed up.”Santino’s voice rose. “You touch her and I will”“You’ll what? Kill me?” Sandra laughed, head tossed back. “Like father, like son. Always threatening. Never thinking.”Isabelle stepped forward, grabbing Santino’s arm. “Don’t let her bait you.”“Smart girl,” Sandra
Chapter 66: True Father
The nursing home smelled like disinfectant and old roses as Santino followed the nurse down a narrow hallway, his heart hammering."She's been asking for you," the nurse said. "For weeks now. Said she knew you'd come.""How could she know?" Santino asked."Room 47." The nurse stopped. "She's fragile. The medication makes her confused sometimes."Santino pushed open the door. The woman in the bed was small, gray-haired. But her eyes were alert. Watching."Santino," his mother whispered."Mama?"She smiled. "I have missed you."He sat beside the bed. Her hand found his. Paper-thin skin. Warm."What happened to you? You seem so frail," he said."I am getting old, Santino. I also heard El Amore is dead. Is that true?" she asked."Yes.""I need to tell you the truth about your father, Santino.""What else should I know? I already know my father Ben is dead.""No, child. Ben raised you. Loved you. But he wasn't your blood," Maria said.The room spun. "Then who?""A man I loved before I met
You may also like
Ghost Directive
Wonderful65409 viewsCriminal Judge
Eric535 viewsNameless District
Nameless Swordman1.3K viewsFrom Street Rat To Mafia Boss
Sandra A. Noir572 viewsSavage Honor: Blood Oath
Flow160 viewsBlack Hand Over the Sky
shuo376 viewsBLOODLINE CHRONICLE: A MAFIA FATHER'S JOURNEY
King Cleo452 viewsCold-Blooded Barista
Abu Ulfah1.2K views
