Silent Vows (Bonds of Betrayal): Chapter 30
Silent Vows: A Dark, Mafia Romance (Bonds of Betrayal)
The war room buzzes with carefully controlled chaos as Matteoâs captains gather to plan our response to Marioâs threat. From my place at my husbandâs right hand, I catalog details with an artistâs eyeâthe way shadows from tactical screens paint faces in shifting blues, how each captain arranges themselves around the massive table with practiced precision. They move like dancers in a deadly ballet, everyone knowing their exact position.
Except for one chair that remains conspicuously empty. At the head of the table opposite MatteoâGiuseppeâs old place. No one acknowledges it, but no one sits there either. The vacuum it creates feels like a haunting, the ghost of Matteoâs father still presiding over every decision. I notice how the older captainsâ eyes occasionally drift to that empty seat, decades of conditioning still governing their movements.
My father taught me to read these subtle power plays, these unspoken traditions that govern our world. âWatch how they arrange themselves, bella mia,â heâd say during family gatherings. âEvery empty space tells a story.â
âThe Irish connection changes everything,â Antonio explains, drawing my attention to the map dominating the main screen. Red markers dot the Brooklyn waterfront like bloodstains, each one representing property acquisitions weâve only just discovered. The pattern makes my stomach clenchânot from morning sickness this time, but from growing dread.
âUsing Marioâs old network,â Matteo adds, his voice carrying that edge that makes younger captains flinch. âThe captains who stayed loyal to him, the businesses that never fully accepted my leadership â¦â
I study the map, my fatherâs lessons about territory and influence surfacing in my mind. âEvery stronghold needs a supply line, bella mia. Find that, and you find their weakness.â The markers form a clear pattern, creating a corridor from the docks inland like a river of blood flowing through our city.
âThese properties form a pattern,â I say, moving closer to the display. âTheyâre creating a corridor from the docks inland.â
Several captains look at me with surpriseâthese strategy sessions have always been male territory. But Matteo smiles grimly, pride mixing with concern in his eyes. âFor weapons shipments. The Irish are well-connected with European arms dealers.â
âBut thatâs not Marioâs endgame,â Bianca speaks up from her position near the door. Even though sheâs changed into torn jeans and a T-shirt she looks every inch the Mafia princess, her spine straight despite the tension in the room. âHe doesnât care about weapons or territory. This is personal.â
âVery personal.â My hand moves unconsciously to my stomach. âHeâs targeting the future of the family. Especially with threats against the baby.â
Matteoâs hand finds mine under the table, squeezing gently. Before he can respond, a guard enters with a packageâanother delivery, this one marked specifically for Bianca. The box is wrapped in expensive black paper with a bloodred ribbon, an echo of the one that exploded in Matteoâs study.
The room erupts into controlled chaos. Vicente crosses himself, muttering in Italian. Two younger captains reach for weapons. Matteo moves with lethal grace, putting himself between the package and us. But itâs the older captainsâ reactions that catch my eyeâthe way they look at that empty chair at the head of the table, as if seeking guidance from Giuseppeâs ghost.
âClear the room,â he orders, his voice carrying that tone that brooks no argument. âNow.â
âDadââ Bianca starts to protest, but Matteo cuts her off.
âAntonio, get them to the panic room.â His eyes never leave the package as he pulls out his phone. âFull containment protocol. No one in or out until weâre sure.â
Antonio appears at my elbow, trying to guide us toward the door, but I resist. âMatteoâ ââ
âPlease, piccola.â The rare plea in his voice makes me pause. âI canât think if youâre in danger. Let me handle this.â
I let Antonio lead us to the reinforced room down the hall, designed specifically for situations like this. Through the security feeds, we watch Matteo coordinate with precision born of experience. The bomb squad arrives within minutesâtheyâve been on standby since the first explosionâin full protective gear. The package is moved to a containment unit, scanned with equipment that looks military grade.
Only after they confirm itâs clean does Matteo allow us back in. But those ten minutes of waiting, of watching him handle another threat to our family with such lethal efficiency, remind me exactly who I married.
Not just the don who commands respect, but the man who would die to protect whatâs his.
The bomb squadâs equipment confirms what their initial scan suggestedâno explosives, no chemical agents, nothing overtly dangerous. Just a single photograph that makes my blood run cold when they finally clear us to open it.
A preteen Bianca tied to a chair in what appears to be a warehouse, Mario standing behind her with a gun to her head. The image is dated five years agoâthe night that led to his exile. The harsh fluorescent lighting catches every detail my artistâs eye wishes it couldnât seeâBiancaâs slumped over body, the rope burns on her small wrists, the casual way Marioâs finger rests on the trigger.
But itâs his expression that haunts me mostâthat DeLuca smile twisted into something cruel, something that speaks of carefully planned revenge rather than spontaneous violence.
âI never saw â¦â Biancaâs voice catches beside me, her face draining of color. Her hand finds mine, squeezing hard enough to hurt. âHe knocked me out before taking that picture. I didnât know â¦â
I watch Matteoâs reaction, see the muscle jumping in his jaw as he studies the photo. His hands clench at his sidesâthe only visible sign of how close he is to violence. The older captains exchange knowing looks, and once again their eyes drift to Giuseppeâs empty chair.
âHeâs playing mind games,â Vicente growls, his scarred hand clenching on the table. âTrying to destabilize us with old wounds.â
âNo.â I embrace my stepdaughter. She feels fragile in my arms despite her fierce facade, trembling slightly as she leans into me. Unlike the confident young woman of moments ago, she suddenly feels like that twelve-year-old girl again. She canât hide how she shakes, how the past reaches out with cruel fingers to grab her all over again.
âHeâs showing his hand,â I continue, holding her closer. âThis isnât about territory or powerâitâs about family. About what he lost when Matteo chose Bianca over him.â
âAnd now thereâs another child coming.â Matteoâs voice carries that deadly quiet that usually precedes violence. His eyes meet mine across the room, dropping briefly to where our baby grows beneath my heart. âAnother choice he thinks he can force me to make.â
A new message appears on the screens: Remember the warehouse, brother? History has a way of repeating. But this time, you have so much more to lose.
I feel Bianca stiffen in my arms as Salvatore breaks the tense silence. âThe OâConnors wonât just provide weapons. Theyâre worse than any of usâno code, no honor. Just chaos and blood.â
âTell me,â I say, keeping my arms around Bianca. âWhat makes them so dangerous?â
The older captains exchange loaded glances before Vicente speaks, his voice heavy with old memories. âThe OâConnors make the worst of our world look civilized. They started in Boston during the Troubles, running guns to the IRA. But it wasnât just weaponsâthey specialized in making people disappear. Politicians, witnesses, entire families. No bodies ever found.â
âSeamus OâConnor runs things now,â Antonio adds, pulling up surveillance photos. A man with steel-gray hair and cold eyes fills the screen. Despite his expensive suit, thereâs something feral about himâlike a wolf in designer clothing. The kind of predator that plays with its food before killing it. âHe modernized their operation, made it global. But they still prefer the old ways when it comes to handling problems.â
âWhat old ways?â I ask, though something in my gut tells me I donât want to know. Beneath my arms, I feel Biancaâs slight tremor at the question.
âThey believe in sending messages,â Matteo says quietly. His eyes never leave the photo of young Bianca. I hear the strain in his voice, the effort it takes to maintain control. âFive years ago, when a rival family challenged them in Boston, the OâConnors didnât just kill the don. They took his entire familyâwife, children, even his elderly mother. Made him watch as they â¦â He glances at Bianca and stops, but the unfinished sentence hangs heavy in the air.
âThatâs why Mario chose them,â Salvatore adds, his scarred face grim. âThey share his taste for psychological warfare. For making it personal.â
âThereâs more,â Vicente says, looking uncomfortable. His eyes dart to Giuseppeâs empty chair before returning to me. âThe OâConnors have a particular interest in pregnant women. They believe taking a familyâs future is the ultimate power play.â His eyes meet mine briefly before darting away. âThatâs why Mario told them about the baby. He knows they canât resist that kind of target.â
My hand moves protectively to my stomach as the implications sink in. The warehouse photo suddenly takes on new meaningânot just a reminder of past trauma, but a blueprint for future violence.
âThe photo,â I say suddenly, my tactical mind racing. âAntonio, can you pull up property records from five years ago? Find out who owned that warehouse?â
Minutes tick by as Antonioâs fingers fly over keyboards. Screens fill with property deeds, shell companies, offshore accountsâa complicated web designed to obscure ownership. But there, buried in the paperwork, a connection appears. OâConnor Holdings LLC, registered in the Cayman Islands.
âThe same warehouse where Mario held Bianca,â Vicente breathes, crossing himself again. âIt belonged to the OâConnors even then.â
âWhich means this whole thingâMarioâs exile, the five years away â¦â I look at Matteo, seeing understanding dawn in his eyes. âHe wasnât just running. He was planning. Building connections. Waiting for the perfect moment to strike.â
âLike now,â Bianca says softly. Sheâs moved away from me to study the warehouse photo, her spine straight despite her pallor. âWith a new baby coming. A chance to recreate that night, but with higher stakes.â
âHeâs going to try to make me choose,â Matteoâs voice carries that lethal edge. âBetween my empire and my family. Again.â
âNo.â I move to stand beside him, letting my strength flow into him through our joined hands. âThere will be no choice this time. No games. Mario wants to use the past against us? Fine. But heâs forgotten something important.â
âWhatâs that?â Bianca asks, moving to join us. Despite everything, she looks more like her father than everâthat same dangerous grace, that same ability to transform fear into tactical advantage.
âThe warehouse is still there,â Antonio reports, bringing up recent satellite images. âRecently purchased through another shell company linked to OâConnorâs Dublin office.â
âThen we know where heâll make his move.â My mind races through possibilities, through angles and approaches like I would with a complex painting. Every detail matters. Every shadow holds potential. âHeâll expect you to send us away, to try to protect us. Thatâs when heâll strike.â
âWhich is exactly why youâre staying in the compound,â Matteo starts, but I cut him off.
âNo. We make him think weâre separated. Make him think his plan is working.â I meet my husbandâs eyes steadily, seeing the war between love and strategy play out in their steel-blue depths. âLet him think heâs recreating the past. But this time, we control the game.â
Understanding dawns on Matteoâs face as the pieces align. Because this is what Mario never understood about meâIâm not just an artist playing at being a donna. Iâm Giovanni Russoâs daughter, raised on strategy and survival even when I tried to escape it. And now, with everything I love at stake, those lessons surface like muscle memory.
âTogether,â Matteo says finally, and itâs both a promise and a battle cry. His hand finds mine, then Biancaâs, forming an unbreakable circle.
âTogether,â I agree, one hand still protective over our child, the other holding Bianca close.
Because Mario and the OâConnors have made a fatal mistake. They think love makes us vulnerable, that family ties can be used as weapons. But they donât understand that real strength comes from what we choose to protect. What we choose to fight for.
And I choose thisâthis complicated, dangerous, beautiful family weâve built. This future growing beneath my heart. This love that transforms fear into power.
Let them come with their games and threats. Let them think they understand family bonds and blood debts.
Weâll show them what real family means.
Together.