Home / Mafia / blood and vows / When Shadows Speak
When Shadows Speak
Author: MFF
last update2025-11-15 18:24:27

The mansion was quieter than usual, and that silence carried the weight of fear. Even the servants walked softly, their whispers dying before they could echo through the long marble halls. Somewhere, behind those closed doors, power was shifting again—quietly, dangerously.

Lorenzo stood in the library before the great windows, the morning light fractured across the glass. A cup of untouched coffee cooled beside him. He hadn’t slept since the docks. Every movement in the house now sounded like a threat. Every familiar face could hide a dagger.

He had seen the evidence of betrayal with his own eyes—the missing shipments, the coded messages, the false ledgers. Someone within had turned against him, and that someone had Marco’s scent all over it.

The sound of footsteps broke the stillness. Isabella entered softly, her gaze cautious but steady. She carried a tray of breakfast she’d made herself, though she knew he wouldn’t eat.

“You’ve been standing there since dawn,” she said quietly. “You’ll break before your enemies do.”

Lorenzo’s jaw tightened. “Better I break than bend,” he said. “Bending gets you killed in this family.”

She set the tray down, watching him. “And silence? What does that get you?”

He turned toward her then, and for a heartbeat, the hard edges of his face softened. She was the only person who could speak to him like that. The only one who dared.

“I can’t trust anyone here,” he said, lowering his voice. “Not even the walls.”

“Then start with me,” she replied. “You already risked your life to protect mine.”

He shook his head. “I didn’t save you to make you part of this. You don’t belong in a world built on fear.”

“But I’m already in it,” she said. “And I can help you find whoever’s betraying you.”

He studied her face, searching for deceit and finding none—only courage. A kind of courage he’d long forgotten existed.

After a long pause, he nodded. “If you want to help, listen. Watch. Don’t speak unless you must. The people who smile at me the most are the ones who want me gone.”

---

That afternoon, Marco sat in a glass-walled office overlooking the city. His reflection stared back at him—sharp suit, colder eyes. The older cousin had always envied Lorenzo’s control over fear. But now, fear worked for him.

A man entered, one of his lieutenants, carrying a sealed envelope.

“It’s done,” the man said. “The money moved through the eastern accounts. No trace.”

Marco took the envelope, flipping it open. Inside was a photograph—grainy, black and white. It showed Lorenzo speaking to one of their dock informants.

He smiled. “Good. We’ll let the Commission see this. Let them think he’s cutting private deals.”

The lieutenant hesitated. “And the girl? The one staying with him?”

Marco’s expression darkened. “She’s his weakness. Every man has one. Let’s see how long he can protect her once the truth spreads.”

He leaned back, lighting a cigarette only to watch the smoke curl upward—an unspoken symbol of decay. “You see, my dear cousin thinks he can defy the code, that he can choose mercy over power. But mercy is a language this family doesn’t speak.”

---

Back in the mansion, Lorenzo met privately with Lucia, his oldest confidant. She had been with the family since childhood, serving first his father, then him. Her loyalty had always been a quiet constant. But now, even she avoided his eyes.

“Lucia,” he said, closing the office door behind them, “you’ve seen the books. Someone moved money from the main accounts. Who had access?”

Lucia hesitated. “Only a handful, Lorenzo. Myself. Paolo. And… your cousin.”

Lorenzo’s gaze sharpened. “Marco?”

She nodded. “But if you accuse him without proof—”

“I don’t accuse,” Lorenzo interrupted. “I eliminate.”

Her face tightened. “You sound like your father.”

“Then maybe that’s what it takes to survive.”

He turned away, pacing. Somewhere beneath his anger was the echo of exhaustion. He had spent his whole life cleaning the blood others spilled. But the blood was never enough; it always returned.

Lucia’s voice broke through the silence. “Be careful, Lorenzo. Marco’s not the boy who followed your lead anymore. He’s building something of his own.”

“I know,” Lorenzo said quietly. “And I’m about to tear it down.”

---

That night, Isabella found him in the same place—the library, lit only by the glow of the fireplace. He didn’t notice her at first, his attention fixed on the photograph lying on the desk. When she stepped closer, she saw it too: Lorenzo speaking to a man at the docks, a gun visible at his side.

“Where did you get that?” she asked.

“Someone sent it anonymously,” he said. “The kind of message you send before a storm.”

Isabella frowned. “It looks like a setup.”

“I know. But once that image reaches the Commission, it won’t matter if it’s true. In this world, perception is the only truth that matters.”

She hesitated, then said, “Maybe you should leave for a while. Just until you find out who’s behind this.”

He almost laughed. “Leave? The last man who ran from this family didn’t get far enough to regret it.”

Isabella stepped closer. “Then fight smart. You told me once that silence has a price. Maybe it’s time to make someone else pay it.”

Lorenzo looked at her for a long moment. “You’re braver than most soldiers I’ve known.”

“Maybe I just have more to lose,” she said softly.

He turned away before his expression could betray what he felt. Attachment was weakness. But in the space between them, something unspoken grew stronger each day—a bond made of fear, loyalty, and the kind of tenderness born from shared danger.

---

Meanwhile, in Marco’s penthouse, a phone rang once, twice, then stopped. His lieutenant entered with a small package.

“It came from inside the mansion,” the man said.

Marco opened it carefully. Inside lay a single chess piece—a black king—snapped in half.

He smiled darkly. “So, he knows.”

The lieutenant shifted uneasily. “Should we move tonight?”

Marco leaned forward. “No. Let him drown in suspicion first. The fear will eat him before I ever pull the trigger.”

He looked out over the glittering skyline, a city that had bowed to their family for generations. “He thinks blood binds us,” he murmured. “But blood only stains.”

---

At dawn, Lorenzo stood in the courtyard, watching the house come alive again. Servants swept, engines started, the rhythm of wealth continued as though the world hadn’t begun to crack. Isabella joined him quietly, her shawl wrapped tight against the cold.

“Do you ever miss peace?” she asked.

He didn’t answer right away. “Peace is a luxury people like me can’t afford.”

“Then what do you fight for?”

He turned to her, and for a heartbeat his walls faltered. “For the chance that someone else might not have to.”

She smiled faintly, though her eyes carried sadness. “Then you’re not like them, Lorenzo.”

He didn’t correct her. He couldn’t. Because somewhere inside, he feared she might be wrong.

As they stood there, Lucia watched from an upstairs window, clutching a phone in trembling hands. On the screen, a message glowed from an unknown number:

> He suspects you. Move before nightfall. Marco.

Lucia’s heart pounded. The choice was clear—and deadly.

Down below, Lorenzo raised his eyes to the window, sensing movement. Their gazes met for the briefest second. And though neither spoke, they both knew:

The price of silence had just come due.

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

Latest Chapter

  • THE LAST BROTHER

    The snowstorm swallowed the world whole.Wind ripped through the trees with a feral scream, carrying the scent of blood—Lorenzo’s blood—across the mountains. The forest seemed alive, breathing in ragged gasps as if it knew death was moving through its heart.Marco ran.His vision blurred, his side drenched red, breath slicing through frost like broken glass. The cold gnawed at him, ate him alive, but he didn’t stop. Rage kept him upright. Hatred kept his pulse pumping.Love—twisted, poisoned, delusional—kept him fighting.“Lorenzo…” he growled into the storm. “Still playing hero. Still stealing what’s mine.”Branches whipped his face as he stumbled deeper into the dark.Behind him, distant shouts echoed through the trees.De Luca soldiers.Hunting him.But he wasn’t running from them.He was leading them.---Inside the LodgeLorenzo’s vision faded in and out like a dying bulb.The bullet had gone deep. Too deep.He leaned heavily against Isabella as Lucio wrapped a cloth around his w

  • THE HUNTING LODGE MASSACRE

    The mountains rose like jagged teeth against the night, their shadows swallowing the narrow road that wound toward Marco’s hideout. Snow fell in thin, relentless sheets, turning the forest into a white graveyard. Every tree looked like a watching figure. Every shift of wind sounded like a warning.But Lorenzo did not slow down.The black SUV growled beneath him as he pushed it harder, engine screaming against the climb. His hands strangled the steering wheel, knuckles bone-white. He had driven for hours, but it felt like minutes—time had collapsed into a single thought:Isabella.Alive.Waiting for me.Terrified.Alone.His chest burned with every breath, as though his heart was fighting through ice and fire at once.Lucio’s voice crackled through the comms behind him.“Boss, we’re ten minutes behind you—don’t go in alone.”Lorenzo didn’t respond.A moment later:“Lorenzo, I swear—if you go in without backup—”He turned the radio off.There was no backup for what he intended to do.No

  • WHEN BLOOD CALLS BLOOD

    The sun had barely risen above the treeline when the De Luca mansion erupted into motion again. Footsteps echoed in the corridors, radios crackled with urgent static, and engines roared to life outside. The world was waking… but Lorenzo De Luca had not slept.He was still in the same clothes he had worn the night before, blood drying on his sleeves, shadows carved deep beneath his eyes. But his mind was awake—sharper than ever. Every nerve, every instinct, every breath was anchored to one truth:Marco wasn’t finished.Marco never stopped.And Marco wanted Isabella.Lorenzo stepped out into the hall just as Lucio approached from the staircase, a folder tucked under his arm.“You’re up?” Lucio asked.“I never went to sleep.” Lorenzo’s voice was gravel—not tired, but dangerous.Lucio swallowed. “We got intel from one of the men you… questioned.”Lorenzo gave him a cold, silent look.Lucio quickly corrected himself. “Interrogated. Professionally.”Lorenzo’s jaw twitched. “Show me.”They w

  • THE WOLVES UNLEASHED

    The sky was still bruised with the last traces of night when Lorenzo De Luca stepped into the courtyard, the cold morning air biting at his skin. Dozens of men stood before him—armed, silent, waiting. Engines idled in the background like hungry beasts ready to tear the city apart.Lorenzo’s presence was enough to quiet even the wind.He wore the same black shirt from the night before, though someone had stitched the torn sleeve. A dark coat rested on his shoulders, the collar turned up, casting a shadow across his jaw. He looked like a king stepping into battle… or a wolf who had already decided who would die by sunrise.Lucio approached him. “The teams are in position.”Lorenzo didn’t nod. He simply scanned the faces of his men—old soldiers, loyal guards, fighters trained from the shadows of his father’s empire. Every one of them would die for him. And all of them knew he might die today.“Marco wants a war?” Lorenzo said, voice steady, chilling, final.“Yes, boss,” Lucio answered.“

  • THE DEVIL’S DEBT

    The mansion was wrapped in an eerie quiet, the kind that didn’t soothe but suffocated. Night had fallen hours ago, yet no one inside the walls dared to sleep. Every guard was awake. Every gun was loaded. Every light stayed on. Fear moved through the air like smoke, curling into corners and shadows.Isabella felt it most.She sat beside the window of the guest room Lorenzo had moved her into—a room closer to his office, closer to his guards, closer to him. Her fingers trembled as she traced the outline of the bruises on her wrists. They stung when she pressed them, but the pain reminded her she was alive.Alive… even though Marco wanted her dead.Or worse.Her breath wavered. She hugged her knees tightly to her chest, staring at the moon outside. The forest beyond the mansion swayed with the wind, but in her mind, she heard footsteps… Marco’s footsteps. She heard the scrape of rope against wood. His chilling laugh. The whisper he left her with:“Lorenzo will bleed for this.”A shudder

  • Beneath the Roses

    The storm had not yet passed when Lorenzo De Luca stood at the tall windows of his study, watching the dark sky twist above the city. The thunder rolled like an omen, echoing through the marble halls of the mansion. The air smelled of gunpowder and roses — the strange scent that always followed war.He turned away from the window when Isabella entered. She wore a pale blue dress, her hair damp from the rain, her eyes filled with questions she had learned not to ask.“Lorenzo,” she said softly, “you’ve been standing there for hours.”“I’m waiting for silence,” he replied, his voice low. “It’s the only thing I can trust these days.”She walked closer, her hand brushing his sleeve. “You can trust me.”He looked at her for a long moment, then nodded. “That’s why I need you to leave.”Her breath caught. “Leave? What do you mean?”“You’ll go to the countryside. Matteo will escort you. You’ll stay there until I settle things with Marco.”Isabella’s lips parted in disbelief. “You can’t send m

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