The terrain is rough in this part of Caserta. We drive for a long time over a bumpy dirt road before turning onto a highway dotted with potholes. Weâre about fifty kilometers from the location of one of Salâs safe houses. Calisto sent De Rossi a tip that Sal will be spending the weekend there with about thirty guards. With Calistoâs help, I was able to hack into the cameras and determine their positions, so the two cars full of De Rossiâs soldiers driving ahead of us will clear most of them before we even arrive.
I eye Rasâs hands on the wheel of the Mercedesâhand actually. Heâs using his other one to type out a text, only half-paying attention to the road.
âHands on the wheel or let me drive.â
He flicks his gaze up to mine in the rearview mirror. âWhat are you? Our safety police?â
âWould be a shame if De Rossi died in a car accident on his way to Sal because you were too busy typing out a lame sext.â
He rolls his eyes and tosses his phone down on the console. âIâll have you know the lucky few whoâve received my sexts called them erotic masterpieces. Iâm thinking about publishing a book.â
De Rossi chuckles. âIs that what you plan to do in retirement?â
âSure.â Ras smirks. âNot like thatâs happening anytime soon, so I have plenty of time to collect new material.â
Retirement. A strange concept when it comes to men like us. Made men donât retire. We die. Some lucky few who get too old for the game are given a chance to disappear into obscurity, but itâs rare.
Iâve never really thought that far into my future until recently.
For the last few days, Iâve noticed the strangest thing. When I think of whatâs to come after this business with De Rossi is done, the only thing I see is Martinaâs face. If I force myself to exclude her, I see nothing.
Sheâs the only thing that matters now.
Itâs a shame it took me so long to see it.
I wanted to say goodbye to her before we left, but I decided not to at the last moment. She hasnât left her room since she screamed at me in front of her brother. I donât think sheâs read my letters either. Sheâs still angry, and I want to give her space, even though itâs killing me to be apart from her.
At least I have all the motivation I need to get back to De Rossiâs in one piece.
I adjust my cufflinks and gaze out the window.
Weâre getting close now.
Our phones ping with status updates every few minutes from the cars ahead, and so far, everythingâs going smoothly.
Too smoothly if you ask me.
Calisto turning on Sal was something few would have ever predicted, but I have a feeling Salâs paranoia could have extended to his right-hand man, especially after their argument.
If Sal has set some kind of a trap, weâll know it soon.
After another ten kilometers, the side of the road turns dense with foliage.
De Rossi peers out toward the trees. The close we get, the quieter he is. If thereâs anyone who hates Sal as much as me, itâs Damiano, and I suspect his head is as heavy with memories as mine was a few days ago.
Iâve managed to let go of them since.
Now, all I seem to think about is Martina.
âIâm going to dance on that fuckerâs grave,â De Rossi mutters, his elbow hanging out the window, and his fist pressed against his lips.
Ras pulls over and gives his guy a call. âAre you in position?â
I assume the answer he receives is yes, because the next word out of his mouth is, âEngage.â
The first shots are fired.
Salâs not going to be the only person to die tonight. Weâre not taking any prisoners from his squad. Those men have been with him for a long time, and nothing good would come from keeping them alive.
As shots ring out in the distance, we climb out of the car and pop the trunk to get all the equipment. Bulletproof vests, knives, guns, ammo. I canât remember the last time I was armed to the teeth like this, but the occasion warrants it.
While De Rossi is going to be squeezing the life out of the don, Ras and I will need to make sure no one comes to the fuckerâs rescue.
When weâre ready, we get back into the car and move much slower than before. Soon, we see bodies littering the driveway.
âI counted twelve,â Ras says when the house is in sight. Itâs surprisingly modest by Salâs standardsâthe man likes to show off his moneyâbut I suppose thatâs the kind of sacrifice you have to make when youâre fighting for your life. A one-story concrete building, bulletproof windows, armored doors.
âFourteen,â I correct him. âYou missed two lying by the trees.â
âTheyâre clearing the back of the property now. We should wait until we get the green light.â
De Rossi shakes his head. âLetâs go. If heâs got an escape tunnel in there, I donât want to give him enough time to crawl through it.â
We hop back out, our weapons pointed and ready. The crew did a good job here, so we reach the front door without getting into any scuffles.
Ras and De Rossi step aside for me to take a look at the mechanism on the door. I frown. Weâve got a problem on our hands.
âGet back.
.â
To their credit, they move without a word, trusting me to know what Iâm doing. When weâre a safe distance away, I turn to them. âDoor is rigged with explosives. Itâll blow if we tamper with it without disengaging the mechanism first.â
âTell me you know how to do that,â Ras says.
âI know how to detect them, but Iâm not an explosives expert. We need to look for another way in.â
De Rossi nods. âIâll call Calisto. He might know of a weak point.â
âIâm going to check the perimeter to see if thereâs anything I couldnât see on the camera feed.â There has to be another way in.
I keep my gun close as I round the house and make it to the backyard. De Rossiâs guys are all over it, but theyâre too busy with Salâs men to help. I press my back against the wall and take it all in. Thereâs no back door, and the windows arenât big enough to squeeze through even if we could get through the glass.
Thatâs when I see it. A patch of grass just ahead of me thatâs got a slightly different hue than the rest.
I run to it, get down on my haunches, and drag my hand around the perimeter. The handle is hidden, but the bite of its cold metal surface is impossible to miss. I jerk on it a few times until I feel it shift. On the next tug, it swings open.
Below is a dark tunnel that disappears into the ground.
I send a message to Ras and De Rossi, telling them where to go. Then I climb down into the shaft.
Itâs not deep, and my shoes hit what feels like packed dirt only moments later. The tunnel splits in two directions, and itâs easy enough to work out which one leads to the house.
I move aside to let De Rossi and Ras descend the ladder. âIf Sal ran as soon as he heard the shots, he would have passed this point by now,â I say. âWe should follow the tunnel out.â Iâm sure thatâs where he went. He doesnât want to die, even if heâs rapidly running out of options.
âLetâs go,â De Rossi says.
We move as fast as we can, given this thing is fucking tiny and we all have to run crouched over. Thank God, it doesnât take too long for light to appear ahead. Judging by the length of the tunnel, its purpose is simply to get Sal to a vehicle hidden nearby, so that he can use it to escape.
When we burst out into the woods, my hunch is confirmed.
âHeâs there!â
Salâs barrel-shaped form is just ahead and heâs running for his life. We book it after him, but fall back when a shot rings out.
âHe canât have many men with him,â Ras says from behind a tree. âNearly all of his guys were back at the house.â
âFuck it,â De Rossi snarls. âIâm ending this.â
He runs low to the ground even as shots sound through the air. Itâs reckless, but I can imagine how he feels being so close to victory.
Ras and I follow.
Thereâs shout. Another shot.
We burst into a clearing and finally find our target.
Sal is crouched behind a fallen tree trunk, peering at us with a gun in his hand. Beside him is another man.
Polo.
My vision bleeds red. So Sal took him in after all. Does Polo know heâs cannon fodder?
Looks like Iâll be getting a kill tonight after all.
âItâs not too late to surrender, gentlemen,â Sal calls out as we take positions behind some trees.
âThree against two,â De Rossi says. âYouâre finished.â
Sal laughs. âOdds can turn quickly. Giorgio, I have to thank you for the part you played getting me in touch with my son. Weâve spent a lot of time together over the last few days, and I have to say, Poloâs impressed me with his ambition. Iâm sure he learned it all from you. Weâve been talking about how weâll do things differently if we get a chance to really shake up the organization.â
âYou can handle this like a man,â De Rossi shouts, âor you can die like a cunt. Choose quickly or Iâll make the choice for you.â
âGiorgio, son, donât forget weâre family,â Sal shouts. âCome to my side. Itâs not too late. Do me this favor, and we will rule the Casalesi together. Me and my boys.â
âYour boys lie scattered all over the driveway to your house, and Polo will join them soon.â Thereâs no point in mincing my words. âYouâre both fucking dead.â
âGio! Donât do this!â that traitorous fuck dares to shout. His head pops up from behind the tree. âIâm sorry, I didnât mean for things to get so ugly with Martina. Forgive me, brother. We all make mistakes, donât we? Letâs start over.â
Heâs never called me brother before. Does he think that word means anything to me?
âPolo, youâre a fucking piece of trash,â I bite out. My gaze moves to Ras by my side. âWe have to go around them, take them from the back.â
He nods.
We move quickly, but Polo and Sal catch on. They abandon their positions and start running deeper into the woods.
âTheyâre splitting up,â I shout to Ras. âIâm going after Polo.â
I hope he feels the terror Martina must have felt when he was chasing her. By now, he must realize thereâs no way heâs making it out of here alive.
We exchange a few bullets and miss. The foliage is too thick. I see flashes of him between the branches up ahead, and since I donât want to risk losing him, I barrel through until he comes into full view.
He whirls around, points his gun at me, and shoots.
I jump aside, but it grazes my arm, spearing pain through it. When I return fire, I aim at his knee, and he goes right down.
âFuck!â he shouts, his voice ravaged with pain.
I walk until Iâm towering above him. Blood is dripping down my arm, staining the gun in my hand. I take in his shriveled form and feel a flash of disgust.
âI didnât mean for it to go this far.â He pants, his panicked eyes fixed on my face.
I step on his hand, working a scream out of him. âSucks being on the losing side, doesnât it? You know, before you betrayed me, I was considering putting a word in for you with Damiano. I was going to ask him to take you on.â
That glance at a future heâs never going to get now makes his expression twist with hatred. âYou had everything Iâve ever wanted. If youâd shared willingly, I wouldnât have been forced to try and take it from you.â
I crouch down and take him by the collar. âI had but hatred and pain. Nothing until . And you dared to try to harm her.â
He chokes beneath my grip. âIâm sorry!â
âSorry. How fucking sorry were you when you slit Tommasoâs and Allegraâs throats? Two years, they lived with you. Two years, they treated you like you were their own. And you killed them for a delusion.â His eyes bulge as I tighten my hold on him with each word. âI donât think youâre sorry at all for what youâve done. Youâre only sorry for failing to accomplish what you tried to.â
Polo jerks his arm, and a sharp pain shoots through my leg. I let go of him and look down to see a knife sticking out of my thigh.
He coughs, grabbing his throat with his hands and trying to get back up despite his bad knee.
I lift my gun and point it at his head.
His eyes meet mine.
âGioââ
The gunshot echoes through the air.