The Gilded Cage Of Crimson
The Gilded Cage Of Crimson
Author: Saranghae
1
Author: Saranghae
last update2026-05-24 23:16:21

The heat was the first thing that drifted into the narrow mahogany wardrobe. Then came the smell—thick, metallic, and heavy with the scent of burning velvet.

 Twelve-year-old Dante Rossi pressed his palms against his ears, but he couldn't block out the wet, heavy thuds from the floorboards outside, followed by his mother’s sharp, truncated scream. Through the vertical slit of the closet door, the world was cast in a terrifying, flickering orange.

 "Where is the ledger, Mario?" a smooth, terrifyingly calm baritone echoed through the private study.

 "Go to hell, Lorenzo," Dante’s father gasped, his voice wet and shallow. A heavy boots stepped on his chest, eliciting a choked groan. "You won't get... any of it."

 "A shame," the shadow replied.

 Through the sliver of space, Dante watched a figure step into the light of the growing flames. The man’s face was obscured by the low brim of a fedora, but the firelight glinted off a heavy gold signet ring on his right hand. The engraving was sharp and clear: a roaring lion gripping a broken dagger. The crest of the Valeriano family.

 The gunshot was deafening in the enclosed room. Dante bit his own hand, drawing blood from his knuckles to keep from crying out as his father’s body went limp on the Persian rug.

 "Check the boy's room," the man with the ring ordered, turning on his heel. "If he’s in the house, bury him in it."

 "And the files, Don Lorenzo?" a gravelly voice asked from the corridor.

 "Let the fire have them. Burn the house to the bedrock. Let the world forget the Rossi name ever existed."

 The heavy oak doors slammed shut. The smoke grew thick, clawing at Dante’s throat as he huddled in the dark, staring at the glowing embers of his life.

 Ten Years Later.

 The rain over the industrial port of Genoa fell like liquid lead, drumming a relentless, metallic rhythm against the rusted corrugated roof of Pier 4. Inside the abandoned warehouse, the only light came from a crackling fire burning in a rusted iron drum.

 Dante Rossi stood over the flames, his tall frame cloaked in a cheap, off-the-rack black suit. He stared at a leather-bound folder in his hands, then tossed it into the fire. The pages curled, blackening into ash.

 A sharp, electronic buzz echoed in the damp space. Dante pulled out a secure satellite phone and swiped the screen.

 "The ledger is gone," Dante said, his voice a low, gravelly baritone that carried absolutely no warmth. "My badge is destroyed. My records are wiped. Dante Rossi is dead."

 A distorted, scrambled voice crackled through the small speaker. "And the Ghost is born. Are you certain about this, Agent? Once you step through those gates, the Bureau cannot pull you out. You are officially an unregistered rogue."

 "I’ve been a ghost for ten years," Dante replied, his eyes tracing the silhouette of his mother’s face on a burning photograph before it turned to cinder. "Is the Vanni introduction set?"

 "It is. Enzo 'The Cleaver' Vanni is bleeding thirty million dollars a week because the Marcone family is raiding his northern supply lines. He’s desperate, paranoid, and looking for unlisted muscle. But he will test you, Dante. He’ll want to see if you bleed blue or crimson."

 "Let him try," Dante said coldly.

 "One more thing," the voice hesitated, the static hum growing louder. "Don Lorenzo Valeriano has officially returned to the Lake Como estate. He brought his daughter, Isabella. She’s being integrated into their primary money laundering operations. Watch your step. The girl is the crown jewel of his security asset list."

 "She’s just a name on a target sheet," Dante muttered, tossing the satellite phone directly into the iron drum. The lithium battery exploded in a sharp, blue spark, instantly suffocating the remaining oxygen and killing the fire. "And I am the one who crosses it out."

 Thirty minutes later, Dante parked his unbadged, matte-black sedan outside a decaying, concrete industrial slaughterhouse on the northern edge of the city. The overpowering stench of stale iron, wet concrete, and raw meat hung thick in the freezing night air.

 The moment his boots hit the rain-slicked asphalt, two heavily armed guards in worn leather jackets materialized from the shadows, their 12-gauge shotguns leveled directly at his chest.

 "Keep your hands where I can see them, stranger," the first guard barked, his breath pluming white in the cold. "Private property. Put the car in reverse before you become part of the inventory."

 Dante stepped fully into the downpour, slowly raising his hands to shoulder height. His expression didn't shift a fraction of a millimeter. "I am here to see Enzo. Tell him Alberto’s contact from the Balkan pipeline has arrived."

 The guards exchanged a fast, wary glance. The second one pulled a radio from his belt. "Boss, we got a live one out here. Tall, built like a brick wall, looks like a mercenary. Says he’s Alberto’s man from the Balkans."

 The radio spit static before a harsh, wet rasp cut through. "Search him down to the skin. If he’s clean, bring him down to the meat locker."

 The first guard shoved Dante roughly against the cold brick wall, patting him down with brutal efficiency. He snatched Dante’s customized semi-automatic pistol from his shoulder holster, whistling low. "Nice piece. Too nice for a street thug. Move it, Ghost."

 They marched him down a flight of slick concrete stairs, pushing through heavy, blood-stained plastic strip curtains and into a subterranean freezer. Giant, pale carcasses of beef hung from overhead steel tracks, swaying gently under the rhythmic flicker of halogen tubes.

 Sitting at a stainless steel butchering table in the center of the freezing room was Enzo Vanni. He was a massive, grotesque man with a stained white apron and a heavy cleaver embedded deep into a thick wooden chopping block.

 Enzo didn't look up. He picked up a sharpening stone, running it slowly along the edge of a jagged boning knife. Scritch. Scritch. Scritch.

 "You’re late," Enzo said, the sound echoing hollowly off the white-tiled walls.

 "The weather was bad," Dante replied, standing perfectly still, his boots anchored to the bloody drain in the floor. "And your perimeter security is incredibly slow."

 Enzo stopped his hand. He slowly raised his eyes, embedding a predatory glare directly into Dante. "Slow? They kept you alive, didn't they? That’s a luxury the last three guys who walked through that door didn't get."

 "They weren't me," Dante said.

 Enzo let out a dry, hacking laugh, slamming the boning knife into the wooden block right next to the cleaver. "I like a man with a big mouth. But confidence doesn't stop a Marcone hollow-point. Alberto says you don't have a record. No jail time, no military discharge, no tax trail. You’re a ghost."

 "A ghost is exactly what you need when you want people to disappear, Vanni."

 Enzo stood up, leaning his heavy, calloused hands on the steel table. "Or a ghost is a federal rat wearing a wire." He flicked his chin toward the two guards behind Dante. "Check him again. Rip the suit off him. Find the mic."

 The first guard lunged forward to grab Dante's shoulder, but Dante moved like an uncoiling spring. He caught the guard’s wrist, twisting it sharply until the radius bone popped with a sickening, and used the man's falling weight to drive his elbow directly into the second guard’s throat.

 Before Enzo could even draw his breath, both of his enforcers were writhing on the freezing concrete floor, disarmed and broken.

 Dante didn't even look down at them. He adjusted the lapels of his cheap suit, his breathing completely unhurried.

 Enzo stared at his moaning guards, his gaze slowly traveling back up to Dante’s unreadable face. Slowly, a dark, twisted grin split his heavy jowls. He began to clap his hands, a slow, mocking applause.

 "Well, look at that," Enzo chuckled, reaching into his apron to pull out a thick Tuscan cigar. "Alberto wasn't lying. You really are a monster."

 "I am a solution to your problem," Dante corrected, stepping closer to the stainless steel table until only the knives separated them. "Your business is hemorrhaging millions because the Marcones know exactly which shipping containers to hit. You need an enforcer who doesn't exist, and a strategy that doesn't leak."

 Enzo lit his cigar, blowing a dense cloud of grey smoke between them. "And why should I trust a man who just dismantled my security in my own basement?"

 "Because if I were a cop, you’d already be face down in that drain," Dante said, leaning over the table until his dark eyes locked onto Enzo’s. "And because I know who actually pulls your strings, Vanni. You don't make the final call. Don Lorenzo Valeriano does."

 The grin instantly vanished from Enzo’s face. The cigar tip glowed a dangerous, bright orange. "You speak the King's name very easily, stranger."

 "I want a meeting with the Don," Dante demanded, his voice dropping an octave. "I secure your northern port by Friday, and you put me in the same room as Lorenzo."

 Enzo chewed on the end of his cigar, measuring the absolute lack of fear in the Ghost's posture. Finally, he pulled the heavy cleaver out of the wood and pointed the blood-stained edge at Dante’s chest.

 "You clean up my docks first," Enzo growled. "If you fail, the Marcones will bury you in a shipping crate.

If you succeed... maybe I'll introduce you to the family."

 Dante gave a single, cold nod. "Deal."

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