Chapter 32 - Seraphina
I’ve just showered the sex off my body when I tell Gabriel I need to go to Brickell.
"I'm going to see Reyes," I say. "Today. Now."
We're upstairs in our suite, and Gabriel puts down the washer he was cleaning his face with, turning to look at me.
"You want to do this today." Not a question.
"Cristian is dead. The Markovic leadership will accept our terms within hours.
We have the leverage over them, so they really have no choice.
The only loose thread is Arturo Reyes. By tomorrow, he will hear what happened and calculate his next move.
I need to be in his office before he has time to think. "
Gabriel dries his hands, slow and deliberate.
"I'm coming with you," he says.
I don't argue. The version of this plan where I walked into Reyes's office alone, performing the vulnerable widow one last time — that version died with Cristian. I don't need to perform anymore. I need Reyes to see exactly who I am.
Gabriel nods. "Give me five minutes."
He shaves and changes his shirt. When he finishes, he looks like what he is: the Delgado prince.
Gabriel drives, silent. His presence fills the car like a barometric shift. The late afternoon light cuts gold through the windshield as we cross the causeway to Brickell, and the city looks obscenely normal. Traffic and joggers and tourists with shopping bags.
Reyes's Brickell office hasn't changed. Same orchids choking the air with sweetness. Same leather chairs arranged for intimidation. Same photograph of him with Jorge Delgado on a yacht, champagne raised in eternal celebration of profits built on blood.
But I'm not the same woman who sat in this chair before.
Last time, I leaned forward with fake curiosity, letting him see vulnerability in the curve of my shoulders. I was Sera Marin then, the alias, the performance. I asked about vault protocols with wide eyes while he preened and explained, never realizing I was memorizing every word.
Now I sit back, spine straight, hands folded. No warmth. No gratitude. No strategic touches or careful smiles. Just me, finally, looking at the man who thought he was grooming a widow and seeing him for what he is: a parasite whose time in Miami just ended.
Gabriel takes the chair beside mine but doesn't speak. He doesn't need to. Reyes's eyes went to him first when we walked in, the way anyone's would — read the stillness, the absolute authority radiating off him. Reyes knows something has changed. He just doesn't know what yet.
"Sera," Reyes begins, his smile back to paternal, trying for the dynamic he thinks we had. "And Gabriel. This is unexpected. When you didn't return my calls—"
"Cristian Markovic is dead."
The words land like stones dropped in still water. His smile freezes, not quite falling but losing its warmth. His eyes flick to Gabriel, and I watch him do the math.
"The Markovic leadership has accepted our terms," I continue, voice flat as Logan's spreadsheets.
“Not that they had much choice. And, frankly, Cristian's little kidnapping attempt gave us a lot more leverage than we had before.
Now, I walk away with everything, and the Markovics get to stay out of federal prison.
Oh, and the laundering relationship with the Delgados is terminated. Permanently."
Reyes's fingers drum once on his desk, the only sign of agitation. "I see. And you're here to…"
"Tell you that your practice in Miami is over." I pull the drive from my purse, set it on his desk with a small click. "Everything's on here. Every transaction you facilitated. Every commission you took. Every routing number you used to wash blood money through legitimate businesses."
His face drains of color, but he's too much of a professional to sputter. "You're threatening me?"
"I'm informing you. You leave Miami permanently. Find another city, another practice, another set of desperate widows to mentor. But not here. Never here again."
Gabriel shifts slightly, and Reyes's eyes flick to him, looking for the priest, the man he could have reasoned with. What he finds instead makes him sit back in his chair.
"This is a negotiation," Reyes tries, leaning forward with remnants of his old confidence. "Everything's a negotiation. What do you want? A percentage? A territory? I have connections you can't imagine—"
"You're not listening." I lean forward now, mimicking his posture. "We know everything. We own you. The Rosettis are watching your Cayman accounts freeze as we speak."
The reversal hits him in stages. I watch it happen as he processes what's actually occurring. I’m not the widow he mentored, the vulnerable woman who needs his guidance. And the man beside me — the priest who should have been easy to manage — has metaphorical blood drying on his hands.
His eyes narrow, and for the first time since I met him, I see the real Reyes. Not the slimy advisor. Not the paternal guide. The operator who survived forty years in Miami's underground by reading angles nobody else saw.
"You played me." Not angry. Almost impressed. "Every meeting. Every question about vault protocols. You were never the student."
"I learned from the best." The words burn my tongue with satisfaction. "My husband taught me to read rooms, to extract what I needed, to perform whatever version of myself would get results. You thought you were cultivating Julian's widow. You were just another mark."
Reyes sits back slowly, fingers steepled, processing his new reality. He's pragmatic enough to see the architecture clearly: the evidence is damning, the Delgado protection is gone, the Markovic connection is severed. His Miami career just evaporated.
"The FBI gets an anonymous package in twenty-four hours if you're still in the city," I tell him, letting the threat land soft as silk. "But if you're gone, if you stay gone, the records stay buried. You get to keep breathing. Just not here."
He accepts this with the calculation of a man who knows when he's been outplayed. The pragmatism that's kept him alive this long kicks in. He'll survive this, relocate, rebuild. But not here. Never here again.
"You could have destroyed me completely," he says, tilting his head with genuine curiosity. "Why the mercy?"
"It's not mercy. It's mathematics. You alive and gone is more useful than you dead and martyred. Your clients need to see you run. They need to know the old Miami is over."
He nods once. "Your husband would be proud. You became exactly what he wanted."
"No. I became what I chose to become. Julian's dead. You're leaving. And I'm still here."
The drive back is quiet. Gabriel takes a call from Logan, passing on intel from the Rosettis in New York — confirmation that the Markovic leadership has formally accepted our terms. The stand-down holds.
The dead man's switch stays active as permanent insurance, and I walk away with the money. It's over.
Gabriel reaches across and takes my hand. Neither of us speaks. The city slides past the windows, lit up now in the amber and pink of early evening, and I think about how strange it is that the most important day of my life is ending with a sunset over the MacArthur Causeway.
Back at La Sirena, our upstairs suite smells like the coffee Gabriel made this morning, hours ago, a lifetime ago.
Gabriel sits at the small table with a pen and paper, handwritten, the kind of letter nobody writes anymore. His penmanship is careful, measured, each word chosen like evidence.
I don't read over his shoulder, but I can see the formal structure. "Most Reverend," it begins. The Church language of requesting laicisation. Proper Latin terms threading through English sentences.
I move around him, giving him space while staying close. The counter needs clearing — those cold pancakes, the morning's coffee mugs. Small tasks that keep me present without intruding.
He signs his name with deliberate strokes, then sets down the pen.
He doesn't fold the letter immediately. He sits for a moment with his hands open on the table, looking at what he's written.
Eight years of daily mass. Of hands that knew the weight of the chalice, the texture of the stole, the silence of a church at dawn.
Two paragraphs to end it, and his penmanship didn't even waver.
I watch him breathe through it — one long exhale, eyes closed, the way he used to breathe before he stepped into the confessional. Putting something down.
Then he folds the letter. Precisely, two creases, the way he does everything.
"I need to call Tomás," he says, sealing the envelope. "Let him know before the diocese does."
"Will he be surprised?"
"No. He saw this coming before I did. Always knew I was running, not following." A ghost of a smile crosses his face. "He said God doesn't live in buildings. Never has."
I fold a teatowel and place it on the table. "What will your father say about you leaving the church?"
Gabriel finishes addressing the envelope, then looks up and shrugs. "He'll probably say it's about time."
I make a small humming sound, not sure how to feel about Gabriel leaving the priesthood. I should feel guilty, probably, but I don’t.
"So now you’re an unemployed bum," I say.
His lips twitch. “Lucky I’ve got a rich girlfriend.”
The reality sits in the air between us. I have thirty million dollars in my bank account. Mine. Not Delgado money. Not Markovic money. Money I extracted from the machine that caged me.
"You're completely free," Gabriel adds, like he's reading my thoughts. "No obligations. No debts. No one hunting you."
The money means I could disappear. Tokyo, maybe, or some Oregon town where the Markovics are just a bad dream. Six months of running taught me I can survive alone anywhere.
Gabriel's chair scrapes back, and within the space of two heartbeats, he is in front of me, filling my vision, his hand gripping my chin.
"You're not fucking going anywhere, angel," he growls.
I grin up at him.
"No," I agree, "I'm not."
He makes coffee he doesn't drink. Stands at the window with the cup going cold in his hands, and I know that posture now — the stillness of a man building toward something he doesn't know how to start.
"Just say it," I tell him.
He turns. Sets down the cup.
"In the hotel. What I said about Elena and Cristian — about my hands being the same—" He stops. "I need you to know I don't believe that anymore. That I can see the difference now."
I wait.
"Elena was loss of control. I was twenty and I didn't know my own strength and there was no thought, just—" the word costs him— "aftermath.
Cristian was a choice. I knew what I was doing.
I could have stopped." He looks at his hands the way he's been looking at them since he was twenty years old.
"I spent eight years deciding those were the same thing.
That the wanting itself was the danger."
"They're not the same thing," I say.
"No."
"One was a tragedy. One was a war." I cross the room and put my hand flat against his chest, feel his heartbeat under my palm. "You're allowed to know the difference."
He covers my hand with his. We stand there while his pulse steadies under my fingers — slower than the hotel, slower than the church, slower than every moment of crisis that brought us here.
"You're not afraid of me," he says.
"I know exactly who you are," I tell him. "I made a list."
The laugh that comes out of him surprises us both. It's the real one — the one that transforms his face — and I file it away with all the others.