Chapter 1

Sienna

The humidity of the Chicago summer clings to the back of my neck, thick and oppressive, as I wrestle the massive ceramic vase out of the rear of my delivery van.

My copper curls are glued to my skin, my muscles burning from the sheer awkward weight of the arrangement.

A custom five-hundred-dollar arrangement of coral charm peonies, dark baccara roses, jasmine, and hydrangeas ordered for the pre-opening of L'Ombra, the high-stakes centerpiece of the Riverwalk.

It is ten-thirty at night. The restaurant isn't supposed to open to the public for another week, but the corporate account under Costa Hospitality Group had paid double my usual rush fee for a late-night delivery.

For Petal it waits like the mouth of a trap I've just walked into.

I balance the massive ceramic arrangement against my chest, the weight of the water-logged clay and five dozen stems threatening to snap my wrists.

There is no way to open the heavy steel door without shifting the load.

I have to lean my entire weight into the frame, bracing the vase with one forearm while I use the palm of my free hand to shove the metal inward.

My muscles scream, the rough, cold glaze of the vase scraping against the tender skin of my inner arms, leaving red, chafed marks I'll feel for days.

"Hello?" I call out.

My voice echoes off the pristine stainless steel of an industrial kitchen. No one answers.

I step inside, letting the heavy door click shut behind me.

The sudden drop in temperature is a relief, the heavy air-conditioning raising goosebumps along my damp arms, but the silence is unnatural.

Opening a restaurant kitchen in a week usually means a chaotic hive of prep cooks, inventory managers, and shouting chefs.

Instead, it's a metallic tomb. The gleaming prep tables are spotless.

The massive walk-in freezers hum a low, vibrating drone that settles behind my ribs.

"Delivery for Costa Hospitality," I say, a little louder this time.

Nothing.

I adjust my grip on the vase. My forearms are beginning to tremble, the sheer weight of the water and ceramic threatening to slip from my sweaty palms. I walk past the deep fryers and the immaculate six-burner stoves, my rubber-soled boots squeaking faintly on the non-slip tile.

But the air in here holds no scent of garlic, rich stock, or baking bread.

It smells like bleach. And beneath the bleach, something sharper. Something dark and metallic.

Like a fistful of old pennies. Like copper.

A prickle of deep, primal unease works its way up my spine.

My instincts scream at me to set the vase on the nearest prep table, take a photo for proof of delivery, and walk back out into the humid night.

But the delivery note had been specific.

Back office. If I don't follow instructions, they could dispute the charge.

I push through the swinging double doors at the far end of the kitchen, stepping into a long, dimly lit hallway lined with mahogany.

Thick, sound-dampening carpet replaces the kitchen tile.

The hum of the freezers fades, replaced by a suffocating, heavy quiet.

At the end of the hall, a heavy oak door sits slightly ajar.

A voice murmurs. Low, gravelly, and terrifyingly calm.

"You thought twenty years was enough time," the voice says. The cadence is pure authority, vibrating with a lethal resonance that makes the hairs on my arms stand up. "You thought you could rebuild the Bellanti name in my city, breathing my air, and I wouldn't eventually find the leak."

I freeze. The heavy vase is slipping, the slick ceramic sliding a millimeter down my forearms. I try to hike it back up, but my muscles are fatigued.

Another voice speaks—wet, breathless, and choked with agony. "We... we know everything you do, Costa. The files... the dead man's switch. You're bleeding out and you don't even know who holds the knife."

A heavy thud. The sickening, wet sound of flesh connecting with bone. A muted groan.

Every survival instinct I possess screams at me to turn around, to run, to drop the flowers and vanish.

But my feet are cemented to the carpet. Panic, cold and paralyzing, floods my veins.

I shift backward, trying to retreat without making a sound, but my hip catches the decorative brass handle of a utility closet door jutting out into the hallway.

I stumble. The heavy ceramic vase pitches forward. I scramble to catch it, my wet palms sliding uselessly over the smooth glaze.

The vase hits the hardwood threshold of the slightly open door.

The sound of the shatter is deafening.

It erupts like a bomb going off in the quiet hallway.

Thick shards of expensive ceramic explode across the floor.

Two gallons of cold, heavily treated floral water splash over my boots, soaking the hem of my dress.

The coral charm peonies—the ones I had spent forty minutes meticulously wiring and placing—scatter across the ground, their delicate petals crushed against the wood.

The low murmur of voices inside the room cuts off instantly.

For one long, agonizing second, the only sound is the dripping of water from the ruined stems.

Then, the heavy oak door is wrenched fully open from the inside.

The breath leaves my lungs in a violent rush.

I am staring into a sprawling private dining room, but the furniture has been pushed to the walls.

The floor is covered in thick, translucent plastic sheeting.

In the center of the room, three men are strapped to reinforced steel chairs.

Their tailored suits are shredded, their faces are unrecognizable masses of swelling and dark, weeping crimson.

Blood pools on the plastic beneath them, thick and sluggish, stark against the opulent backdrop of the velvet-lined walls.

Standing around them are giants.

Three men in dark suits, massive and lethal, their postures radiating pure, unadulterated violence.

To the left, a man built like a heavy-machinery operator—six-foot-five and utterly, deliberately still—leans against the far wall with his thick arms crossed over his chest. His dark eyes move through the hallway in slow, methodical sweeps, cataloguing every detail of me before I can draw my next breath.

The resemblance between him and the man in the center is terrifying—the same predatory stillness, the same lethal eyes.

To the right, another towering man with a sharp jawline cannot be still.

He is moving even now—pacing a tight, aggressive line along the edge of the plastic sheeting, his massive hands flexing and clenching at his sides.

His jaw is locked, his gaze lit with the restless, combustible energy of a man who has been waiting too long to act and is running out of patience for delay.

They have to be brothers. The same dark, dangerous blood flows through all of them, a pack of wolves cornering a lamb.

As the door swings wide and he sees me standing in the hallway, he stops pacing.

His hand moves to the weapon at his hip with the instinctive speed of a man for whom reaching for it is as natural as breathing.

But I barely register the weapons. I barely register the blood.

My eyes lock onto the man in the center of the room.

The air in my throat turns to ash.

He is older. Forty-five, perhaps. His dark hair is threaded with stark, striking silver at the temples, swept back from a face that looks like it was carved from granite and ruthlessness.

He is tall—devastatingly so—with shoulders broad enough to eclipse the room.

He has discarded his suit jacket. His pristine white dress shirt is rolled up to the elbows, exposing thick forearms corded with muscle and pale, jagged scars.

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