Dante Moretti stood at the edge of the open grave, his face a mask of sculpted marble. He did not feel the bite of the wind against his neck or the dampness seeping into his bespoke wool coat. His amber eyes-the color of aged bourbon and just as intoxicatingly lethal-were fixed on the polished mahogany casket holding the remains of his father.
Beside him, Enzo Ferraro leaned in, his voice a low, academic murmur that barely carried over the roar of the rain. "The Commission is watching, Dante. Ricci hasn't looked away from you for ten minutes. He's looking for a flicker of hesitation."
Dante didn't blink. "He'll find only a grave."
The priest's Latin rites were a distant drone, secondary to the internal rhythm of Dante's own pulse. It was a heavy, slow beat. The beat of a predator. As the service concluded, a man stepped forward from the inner circle. He carried a heavy, ornate ring-the Moretti Seal-set with a deep, blood-red ruby encased in 24-karat gold.
Dante reached out. As the ring slid onto his finger, the metal felt unnaturally cold, then searingly hot. It was more than jewelry; it was a shackle. It was the "Gilded Chain" that bound him to a life of shadows, blood, and the crushing responsibility of Moretti Holdings.
One by one, the Capos stepped forward, bowing their heads.
"Don Moretti," they murmured, the title tasting like copper on their tongues.
When Antonio Ricci finally approached, the air between them turned electric. The older man, his hair a shock of silver, offered a smile that didn't reach his predatory eyes. "A heavy burden for such young shoulders, Dante. Your father was a titan. Try not to let the empire slip through your fingers."
Dante met the gaze of the man who had haunted his family's history. He didn't offer a handshake. "The empire isn't in my fingers, Antonio. It's in my blood. And I don't bleed easily."
Ricci's smile faltered, a momentary fracture in his Neapolitan poise, before he vanished into the mist.
Hours later, the weight of the day had settled into a throbbing ache at the base of Dante's skull. He was behind the wheel of his black Lamborghini Aventador, the engine's growl the only thing keeping him grounded. He had left the wake early, unable to endure another minute of sycophants toasted to "the new Wolf."
The streets of the Brera District were a blur of neon lights reflected in the puddles. The rain had intensified, turning the windshield into a sheet of distorted glass. Dante pushed the car harder, the needle climbing, seeking a release from the suffocating pressure of the funeral. He was Il Lupo Oro now. The Golden Wolf. But tonight, he felt like a man being hunted by his own legacy.
He swung the car around a sharp corner near the Accademia di Belle Arti.
Suddenly, a flash of white darted into the road.
"Cazzo!" Dante roared, slamming his foot onto the brake.
The ceramic brakes screamed, a high-pitched wail that pierced the night. The car hydroplaned, the tail fishtailing wildly before the tires finally found purchase. The Lamborghini lurched to a halt, the headlights cutting through the downpour to reveal a figure frozen in the middle of the street.
Dante's heart hammered against his ribs-not from fear, but from a sudden, jagged surge of adrenaline. He threw the door open, ignoring the rain that instantly soaked his shirt.
"Are you looking for a grave?" he shouted, his voice gravelly with rage as he rounded the hood of the car. "You nearly died!"
The figure moved. It was a woman. She was clutching a large, flat portfolio case to her chest as if it were a shield. Her dark hair was plastered to her face in silken ropes, and her simple trench coat was sodden.
She looked up, and the breath left Dante's lungs as if he'd been struck in the solar plexus.
Her eyes were a startling, vibrant green-the color of a forest after a storm. They weren't filled with the terrified subservience he was used to. They were wide, yes, but glowing with a fierce, indignant spark.
"I was in the crosswalk," she snapped, her voice trembling but clear. "You were the one driving like a demon. You could have killed me!"
Dante froze. No one spoke to him this way. Not the men in the syndicate, not the CEOs in the boardrooms. He moved closer, his shadow falling over her, his amber eyes scanning her face. She was ethereally beautiful, a creature of light caught in the grime of a Milanese midnight. He could smell her through the rain-something soft, like lavender and oil paint.
"You're shaking," Dante noted, his voice dropping an octave, losing some of its edge.
"I'm cold, I'm wet, and I'm late," she retorted, adjusting her grip on her portfolio. She stepped around him, her shoulder brushing his arm. The contact felt like a literal electric shock, a jolt of pure, unadulterated energy that raced straight to his gut.
She didn't look back. She marched toward the sidewalk, her head held high despite the deluge.
Dante stood by his idling car, the rain washing the funeral's ash from his skin. He watched her until she disappeared into the shadows of an arched doorway. He felt a strange, territorial pull in his chest-a sensation he hadn't felt in years. He didn't even know her name, yet the thought of her walking away felt like a loss.
He reached into his pocket and touched the Moretti ring. The weight didn't feel quite as heavy anymore. He had a lead, a flicker of something other than blood and gold to follow.
The Golden Wolf had found something he wanted. And Dante Moretti never let his prey escape.