End of a dynasty
Author: Onyes
last update2025-09-18 05:28:12

The mountain held its breath.

No leaf trembled and no loose stone rolled. Even the wind, that eternal traveler of the Lombard peaks, seemed to hush itself as if the ridgeline had been asked to keep a secret. Far below, cradled in a crescent of granite and shadowed pines, the DeLuca Research Center slept—a serpent of glass and steel coiled against the dark, its venom distilled into labeled vials, its sins catalogued and buried beneath concrete.

Tonight, something would pry those sins loose.

Three kilometres away, on a ridge rimed with frost, four figures stood like exclamation points against the sky. Adrian DeLuca did not move. He breathed so little his chest might as well have been a statue. His eyes, the colour of old river stones, were fixed on the compound like a judge reading a sentence. The flame that had lived in him since childhood—the slow bright ember that had ignited the night the gates shut on his mother—beat in time with the faint, digital tick in his earpiece.

The beast would burn. There would be no jury and no appeals. Only the precise arithmetic of retribution.

“Final check,” Adrian whispered. The word cut the cold. “Are we blind?”

Dante Greco’s fingers didn’t stop. Moonlight picked out the bones of a laptop balanced on his knees; code cascaded across the screen in green, a private constellation. “We’re in their system,” he said. “Badge overrides online. Internal alarms dormant. Patrol loop shifting—ninety seconds dead in the southeast corridor.”

Adrian exhaled a thin white cloud. “Then we are ready to move.”

They didn’t start with guns, it wasn’t needed. They began with an artful lie.

Elena Rossi stepped from the pines like she belonged to the place. Her lab coat was immaculate under the facility’s sodium glow, heels clicking the asphalt with the calm cadence of someone who’d practiced walking authority. She slid a forged badge through the scanner. The panel paused—a polite indecision—and then chimed. Heavy doors sighed and yielded.

She drove the unmarked van through as if there were nothing more unusual to it than the night.

Inside the center, antiseptic fused with the metallic breath of machines. Corridors ran in right angles under fluorescence; cameras hung like small, indifferent moons. Dante had already taught them to look the other way.

Elena moved through the corridors the way a surgeon moves through an operating theatre—deliberate, efficient, reverent and unsentimental. Level B3. Server room. The heart of the lie.

Marco Bellanti arrived minutes later through a service entry, flat-faced and clipped as an auditor from Milan should be. He wore credibility like armor: a clipboard of forged orders, a clipped Italian timbre, a story rehearsed until his voice betrayed no tremor. Two guards who’d been dozing by a console glanced up only long enough for Marco’s credentials to slide across their world. “Audit of biometric logs. Surprise compliance inspection.”

One guard frowned. “Not scheduled tonight.”

“It is now,” Marco said, and his smile had teeth.

His conversation became choreography—distraction, misdirection, two bodies folded into unconsciousness with the practiced economy of someone who had made violence efficient. “Non-lethal,” he breathed into his mic. “They won’t be missed for a bit.”

“Copy and contain. Buy Elena time,” Adrian replied, voice flat as ice.

The server room yawned like a cathedral of humming metal—racks and racks of black glass, blinking like the eyes of some sleeping leviathan. This was where names were kept, where the ledger of DeLuca cruelty lived: files naming vanished people, formulas for something monstrous, money trails threaded through politicians’ lives.

Elena opened the case.

Three vials sat in clinical foam, glass humming faintly. The gel inside looked innocuous—clear as water, scentless as breath. Thermite refined into a delayed, surgical weapon: no explosion, only a slow, savage heat that would liquefy steel, eat insulation, melt the spine of systems until the building’s secrets burned from the inside out.

She worked with the patience of someone who had long practiced undoing other people’s power. Node 3 through Node 8—each coated, each timer set for twelve hours. Quiet annihilation. No heroics. No mistakes.

A footstep broke into the calculus.

A guard, alerted by static in another corridor, rounded the corner. Their eyes locked. Time snapped.

Elena didn’t hesitate. Her satchel slammed to the floor with a dull report and she fled—boots beating a desperate tattoo on tile, lungs burning in the cold air. The guard was a shape behind her voice, a shout into a radio.

She wove through maintenance passages, pulled a panel—an engineered gap in the mountain’s skin—and slipped into the dark.

Calvin waited like a shadow inside the hollow, hand hooking hers. He yanked the panel closed as the guard’s flashlight swept past. For a long minute the two of them just breathed, listening to the building hold its own breath. Then, the night resumed.

On the ridge, they watched through thermals and feeds and the small miracles of human cunning.

At first, when the thermite ignited, nothing seemed to happen. Then orange bled slow and furious from vent shafts, a bad light crawling along circuits. Smoke rose as if the mountain itself had been wounded—thick, black, smelling of plastic and old, buried things. The fire moved like a thought: fast along conduits, precise, hungry. It ate the servers, then the insulation, then entire racks until the electricity that fed the building’s lies choked and died.

Flames found windows and vomited out of them. What had been neat glass and corporate angles became a pyre, a map of every cover-up and quiet cruelty. Sirens tried to answer across the valley but were weeks away by the time the blaze wrote its verdict.

Adrian watched. The light painted his face in stubborn orange. Triumph did not live there. Satisfaction did not live there. There was only the terrible, steady lightness of someone who had finally met the measurement of a life’s debt.

He saw Isabella in the flare—her small hands reaching for bread, the way she would smile with half her teeth as if the world’s small mercies were the only joys. He saw her collapse like a thin reed beneath a wind he could not stop. Memory came at him with the clarity of a photograph: a room that smelled faintly of flour, a laugh that had once been bright and then stopped. The fire was for that laugh.

Marco let out a slow exhale, the smirk gone from his mouth as if that expression had been retired for the night. “They’re burning,” he said, and it sounded like worship.

Dante closed his laptop and his hands trembled—not from cold but because something they’d done had unmade a small, awful architecture of power. “I’ve erased systems before,” he murmured, “but never a dynasty.”

The flames ran higher; the roof sagged like a throat giving up. Sparks rose into the black and turned into a constellation that might have once been lives. Embers drifted into the sky and scattered over snow that reflected them back like blood. The DeLuca name—once a clean type on letterhead—shuddered and reduced itself to heat and ash.

Dawn bled up over the eastern peaks in a slow, shameful gold. The mountain exhaled and the world filled with an unfamiliar quiet—no longer the hush of fear, but the brittle silence after an old order collapses.

Adrian turned away from the ridge. They moved as they had arrived: wordlessly, with the same economy of motion, leaving behind the light and the sound and the single, private satisfaction of a retribution rendered in flame.

A short scene later—because consequences demand attention—men in uniforms would stand beneath the burned windows and ask one another how such a thing had been allowed to happen. A journalist’s lens would find the cratered gate and show it on screens; a politician would call for inquiries while palms already began to smooth another scandal into a folder. For the team on the ridge, for Adrian, for Elena, for Dante, that last part was irrelevant. This was the first cut. The war had begun.

They walked downhill into the trees, into the thin new light, carrying with them the smell of smoke. This was just a taste or what was coming. You can say it is a welcome back gift from a son to a father.

Continue to read this book for free
Scan the code to download the app

Latest Chapter

  • Unclaimed Devotion

    Inside, the meeting had ended.Adrian stood near the lantern, reviewing satellite reports on a tablet. Calvin checked perimeter feeds. Elena sat alone, staring into the flame.She didn’t hear Marco enter.But she felt him.Felt the shift in the air.When she looked up, he was leaning against the wall, face shadowed, eyes tired.“You okay?” she asked.Marco nodded. “Yeah.”“You don’t look okay.”He forced a smile. “I’m fine, bella. Always am.”Elena frowned. “You don’t have to pretend with me.”Marco pushed off the wall. Walked toward her. “I’m not pretending. I’m just… tired.”She studied him. “Is it about earlier? About us not going back to Milan for now?”Marco froze.Then shook his head. “No. Why would it be?”Elena didn’t answer.◇◇◇◇◇That evening, the underground depot felt different.Elena was the one who insisted.“If we’re staying here,” she had said earlier, “then we might as well breathe like people again. It has been a long time since we ate and drank together.”So she or

  • If You Knew How Much I Loved You

    Hours passed.No one left.The discussion had not ended.It only softened, melting from sharp strategy into cautious reflection, like men easing their fingers off triggers without lowering the guns completely. The underground depot held their voices gently now, the way stone absorbs sound after enough years of silence.Adrian was speaking again.His voice was steady, measured, calm in the way only men who had stared too long into chaos could manage. He spoke about caution. About patience. About staying where they were until Milan revealed its next move clearly. He spoke of time as a weapon, of restraint as power, of silence as strategy.And Elena found herself watching him, hands folded on the table.She was watching the way his jaw tightened when he spoke of Milan, of blood, of unfinished business and Salvatore. On the small crease between his brows when he thought deeply. There was something distant in his gaze, something wounded but unbroken. Something that always made her chest ac

  • The Place No One Listens

    They met in the old salt mine of Pag, buried beneath limestone cliffs on an island forgotten by time. The walls were thick enough to swallow sound, invisible to satellites, abandoned by city planners, and long erased from public records. It had been abandoned since the 1950s, when the Yugoslav government shut it down after a cave-in killed twenty-three miners. No one returned. The entrance was sealed with concrete. The tunnels left to collapse into themselves. The air turned thick with salt, rust, damp stone, and old electricity. It was perfect. The entrance lay hidden behind a collapsed service tunnel masked by graffiti and broken fencing. Only those who knew the exact sequence of turns, the rusted ladder bolted behind a false wall, and the coded signal knock could get inside. The depot had once been a place of movement and noise. Now it was silence made permanent. They arrived separately, hours apart, one by one. Elena arrived first—on foot, dressed as a hiker, backpack slung

  • War of Pillars

    Days had stretched into weeks and weeks had blurred into a month since Adrian and his team had left Milan. The city, once vibrant and alive with the noise of commerce and chatter, had grown darker, colder, and more dangerous. Every street corner, every narrow alley, seemed to hide a predator, waiting to pounce. The war between the DeLuca and Valenti families had spiraled into something far BLOODIER than either side had anticipated.The Valenti, sensing weakness after the DeLuca empire had collapsed—banks seized, businesses frozen, assets plundered—believed this was their moment. They believed the DeLuca family —broken by Adrian’s vengeance, stripped of wealth, abandoned by allies, had lost their teeth, their bite dulled by financial ruin, and now it was their turn to dominate, to reassert themselves over years of suppression. They saw weakness and moved in, striking fast, brutal, without hesitation.But the DeLucas didn’t break either.They evolved.From empire to insurgency.For de

  • Where Fear Changes Masters

    He finally arrived at his new destination.The rickety Fiat grinded to a halt as it came across the forgotten part of the Milanese city, where the Milk Road had come apart and was beginning to rot. The streets no longer had lights illuminating them and had ceased to have cameras viewing them, only rusting gates, disintegrating brick buildings, and eerie quiet, indicating that the eyes of mankind were closely observing.Seneca hadn’t placed a single call to Enzo since he took off.When he arrived, he stepped out of the car, crossed the distance, and kicked the door open.And now, here he was.Swag’s Yard.A warehouse older than the Republic.Iron doors and cracked concrete. A single red lantern swinging over the entrance like a warning.Enzo stumbled into the cold air, his body screaming with every movement. His ribs hadn’t healed. They never would—not without real treatment. He could feel them shift beneath his skin like broken glass in wet paper. His lip still bled from where Seneca h

  • Silent Blood

    The search began at dawn.It was methodical, cold, and patient—the kind of search carried out by men who understood that silence killed faster than guns.Salvatore DeLuca’s orders moved through Milan like a second bloodstream. His men didn’t flood the streets in suits or recognizable faces.His men moved through Milan like ghosts—delivery drivers scanning alleyways between crates of tomatoes, street vendors wiping counters while eyes darted toward café entrances, construction workers hammering steel beams while comms crackled in hidden earpieces. They wore the city like a second skin: the baker with a pistol taped to his thigh beneath his flour-dusted apron, the taxi driver whose rearview mirror reflected not the road but thermal imaging feeds. Every shadow was a threat. Every face was a suspect. Every empty doorway a potential grave.Find Adrian.Find anyone tied to him.Alive or dead—it didn’t mat

More Chapter
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on MegaNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
Scan code to read on App