The Betrayed Princess's New Reign

Elena Vitiello POV:

The moment the wheels touched down at JFK, we didn't go to the estate. We went straight into the earth.

The Outfit’s underground intelligence center in Manhattan was a sprawling bunker of glass and steel. Hundreds of monitors cast a pale blue glow over the frantic analysts.

I sat at the primary terminal, my fingers flying across the mechanical keyboard. Lines of code and banking ledgers scrolled rapidly across the massive curved screen in front of me. I was hunting the last scraps of the Roman families' money, tracing the digital breadcrumbs they had tried to hide in American shell companies.

"Got you," I whispered.

I hit a key. Three red dots appeared on the digital map of New York—two in Brooklyn, one in Queens.

I tapped my earpiece. "Dante. Sending you the coordinates. Three warehouses. Heavily armed."

"Received," Dante’s voice crackled in my ear, dark and hungry.

***

In the pouring rain of Brooklyn, Dante kicked the reinforced steel door of the warehouse so hard it tore off its hinges.

He stepped inside, wearing a black tactical vest over his dress shirt, a heavy pump-action shotgun in his hands. The warehouse was an illegal casino and armory. The Roman guards didn't even have time to unholster their weapons before Dante’s strike team dropped them with suppressed headshots.

Dante walked slowly through the chaos. He found the Roman capo trying to crawl out a back window.

Dante racked the shotgun. He aimed low and fired.

The capo’s kneecap exploded into red mist. The man collapsed, screaming in agony, clutching his ruined leg. Dante walked over, his face an emotionless mask, and pressed his heavy combat boot directly onto the bleeding stump.

"What is Rome's final play?" Dante demanded.

The capo sobbed, spilling everything he knew about their remaining safe houses. When he finished, Dante didn't blink. He pulled the trigger again, blowing the man's head off.

Within a week, the purge was complete. The East Coast was entirely ours.

***

Back in the Intel Center, Julian walked in carrying three heavy cardboard boxes. He dropped them onto the table next to my console.

"The physical ledgers we seized from the Brooklyn armory," Julian said, adjusting his tie. "The digital books matched, but I thought you'd want to see the hard copies."

I took a sip of my black coffee and pulled a ledger from the top. I flipped through the pages, my eyes scanning the columns of handwritten numbers.

I stopped. I traced my finger over a recurring entry. *Special Freight - Pier 44.*

"There's a massive hole here," I said, frowning. "They were spending two hundred thousand dollars a week on 'freight' arriving at a derelict Brooklyn pier at 3:00 AM, but there are no corresponding sale entries. It's a pure loss."

I turned back to my keyboard. I hacked into the Department of Transportation's mainframe and pulled the archived security footage for the intersection outside Pier 44.

I scrubbed through the grainy footage from three nights ago. Four unmarked, heavy-duty refrigerated trucks rolled through the gates.

"Enhance the rear doors of the third truck," I commanded the system.

The image zoomed in, pixelating before the AI smoothed it out. The heavy latch on the refrigerated truck wasn't fully secured. Through the narrow, dark gap in the metal doors, I saw it.

A hand.

It was small, deathly pale, and a heavy, rusted iron shackle was locked around the slender wrist.

My coffee mug slipped from my fingers. It shattered against the desk, hot liquid splashing across my keyboard.

The air vanished from my lungs. I was suddenly back in the dark attic in Chicago, the heavy lock clicking shut, treated like an object to be sold and traded.

Julian leaned over my shoulder to look at the screen. All the blood drained from his face. "Elena... that's a human trafficking ring. The cartels run that."

I stood up so fast my chair crashed backward onto the floor. I grabbed my black trench coat and snatched my ivory-handled pistol from the desk.

"Elena, wait," Julian said, stepping in my path. "If the South American cartels are involved, we need to assess the risk. Wait for Dante to get back."

I stopped. I looked at Julian, my eyes so cold he physically took a step back.

"I make the rules in this city now," I said, my voice lethal. "And my rule is simple. Anyone who sells people dies."

I slammed my hand onto the red emergency button on the wall. Klaxons began to blare. "Give me fifty men from the alpha strike team. Full tactical gear. Five minutes."

I strode out of the room. In my earpiece, I heard Dante’s voice. He had been listening to the open channel. He didn't yell. He didn't tell me to stand down. He just let out a low, dark chuckle.

"Turn the cars around," Dante ordered his driver over the comms. "We're going to Brooklyn. My Queen is going to war."

Ten minutes later, a convoy of seven armored SUVs tore through the torrential rain, flying toward the waterfront.

I sat in the back of the lead car, staring at the tactical tablet. "Cut the hardlines. Jam the cell towers. I don't want a single cockroach crawling out of that pier."

The hardened killers in the car looked at me with absolute, fanatic devotion.

The convoy killed its headlights and rolled to a silent stop five hundred yards from the rusted gates of Pier 44. The rain was coming down in sheets.

I pulled my night-vision goggles down over my eyes. I pushed the heavy door open and stepped out into the freezing storm.

I racked the slide of my pistol.

"Leave no one alive."

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