The Mafia's Undoing-Chapter 38: Old Enemies

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Chapter 38: Old Enemies

My hand hovers over my phone, but I don’t run.

Running is what he expects, what he wants. Marcus Davidson sits across from me like we’re discussing quarterly earnings, not my potential destruction, and that smug certainty in his eyes tells me he’s already won.

So I sit.

"Smart girl." Davidson signals the waiter and orders a Barolo, as if this were a celebration. "You always were the smart one, Katherine. That’s why Angelo wants you."

"Angelo Torrino is dead." I keep my voice steady, fold my hands on the white tablecloth to hide their trembling. "I was there when he-"

"Died?" Davidson’s laugh is quiet and cultured. "No, you were there when he performed. Angelo’s many things - brutal, ruthless, unforgiving, but he’s also a man who understands theater." He leans forward. "The coroner was paid fifty thousand dollars to switch bodies. The autopsy report? Fiction. Angelo spent six weeks in a private clinic in Grand Cayman recovering from what were, admittedly, very real gunshot wounds. But he’s alive and he’s coming back."

My mind races through implications while my fingers slowly, carefully, activate the voice recording app on my phone beneath the table. Need evidence, I need proof.

"You’re lying."

"Am I?" Davidson pulls out his own phone and swipes through photos. "This was taken yesterday."

The image shows Angelo Torrino - thinner, scarred, but unmistakably alive- standing on what looks like a yacht deck, Manhattan’s skyline visible in the distance.

My blood turns to ice.

"He’s already here," Davidson continues. "Has been for three days. Staying quiet, rebuilding connections, calling in old debts." His smile widens. "Including mine."

"You work for him."

"I’ve worked for him for three years. Since before you even knew Premier Financial existed." Davidson accepts the wine from the waiter and swirls it appreciatively. "Angelo needed someone inside legitimate banking. Someone who could move money through clean channels, create layers of transactions that would survive federal audits."

"Money laundering," I said, stone-cold.

"Such an ugly term. I prefer ’creative financial management.’" He sips his wine. "Here’s how it works, Katherine. The client opens a legitimate account, such as a corporation, trust fund, or investment vehicle. Money comes in from seemingly legitimate sources. Gets moved across several accounts, institutions, and jurisdictions. By the time it reaches its final destination, the original source is buried under so many transactions that even forensic accountants give up."

My stomach turns as I recognize accounts I managed. "Premier Financial."

"It was perfect. Respected institution, solid reputation, minimal federal oversight." Davidson’s eyes gleam. "Your accounts specifically were valuable - you were meticulous, detail-oriented, and never questioned legitimate-looking transfers. The perfect unwitting accomplice."

"I never-"

"Knowingly participated? Of course not. That’s what made it perfect." He slides a manila folder across the table. "But try proving that."

My hands shake as I open it. Bank statements with my signature. Email chains discussing "offshore investment strategies." Transaction approvals bearing my employee ID. All fake and perfectly, expertly forged.

"Every signature was traced from your actual documents," Davidson explains, almost proudly. "The emails were backdated and inserted into Premier’s servers. We even have recorded phone calls - voice synthesis technology is remarkable these days. You’d be amazed at what AI can do with just a few hours of sample audio."

The room tilts slightly. "This is fabricated."

"Prove it in court. While federal prosecutors parade your ’accomplice’ history in front of a jury." He leans back. "Or, alternatively, you work for Angelo. Use that brilliant financial mind to help rebuild what you helped destroy."

"I didn’t destroy anything."

"You got close to Anthony Marvin. Made him weak. Vulnerable." Davidson’s voice hardens. "Angelo had plans. Careful, long-term strategies. Then you walked into that nightclub and smiled at the wrong man. Everything collapsed. Victoria Sterling’s death, the FBI investigation, the organization exposure - all because Tony Marvin decided love was worth more than power."

The venom in his voice was real. Personal.

"This was never about banking," I say slowly. "You fed me the Marvin account specifically-"

"To create chaos. Angelo wanted Tony destabilized, distracted. I made sure you received that assignment and ensured Richard Blackwood put maximum pressure on you. We knew you’d approach Tony. We knew he’d be intrigued - beautiful woman, genuine need, that combination of vulnerability and strength he finds irresistible." Davidson’s smile turns cruel. "What we didn’t anticipate was him actually falling in love."

My hands clench beneath the table. "So what now? Angelo wants revenge?"

"Angelo wants his empire back, and he wants you as insurance." Davidson signals toward the bar with two fingers. "The gentlemen behind me- trained professionals, very discreet. They’ll escort you to a car. You’ll have a conversation with Angelo and he’ll make you an offer."

I glance at the bar. Two men in dark suits, positions blocking both exits. Hands resting near jacket pockets in that particular way that screams concealed weapons.

My phone feels heavy in my lap. Recording everything. But evidence doesn’t matter if I don’t survive to share it.

"And if I refuse?"

"Then federal prosecutors receive this file tomorrow morning." Davidson taps the manila folder. "Katherine Blaire, financial analyst turned money launderer, knowingly facilitates millions in illegal transactions. Conspiracy, fraud, racketeering. You’re looking at a minimum of twenty years. Elliot loses his guardian; his benefits, his support system, his stability." He pauses. "Angelo’s generous - half a million dollars and immunity from prosecution. Protection from federal investigation. All you have to do is use your expertise to help rebuild financial networks. Clean, professional work. No violence necessary."

"Just betraying everything I believe in."

"Believing in things is a luxury you can’t afford anymore." Davidson’s phone buzzes. He glances at it, frowns slightly. "Time to decide, Katherine. Walk out with my associates willingly, or they’ll help you. Either way, you’re having that conversation with Angelo tonight."

The men at the bar stand, moving with synchronized precision. Closing in.

Every instinct screams to run, but there’s nowhere to go. The window exits lead to a busy street - too public for shooting but perfect for forcing someone into a car. The kitchen exit is staff-only and likely covered.

I walked right into this. Trying to prove I could handle threats alone, trying to show Tony I was capable, trying to be an equal partner by making all the same mistakes he made - keeping secrets, taking risks solo, confusing independence with partnership.

My finger finds the panic button app Elliot installed after the last kidnapping. The one that sends my GPS location to preset contacts.

I trigger it.

Somewhere, Tony’s phone is screaming an alert. So is Luca’s.

But they’re both at least fifteen minutes away in Manhattan traffic. Davidson’s men are fifteen feet away and closing.

I stand slowly, buying seconds. "You really think Angelo can rebuild? After everything that’s happened? After his own son-"

"Luca?" Davidson’s smile is pitiful. "Luca knows nothing. Thinks his father is dead, thinks he’s running the family now, playing at legitimacy. Touching. Angelo’s been operating around him for weeks."

The restaurant door opens.

Luca Torrino walks in with four armed men in tailored suits, moving with the kind of controlled violence that makes other diners instinctively shrink back. His eyes scan the room, lock on our table.

On Davidson.

On the two men frozen between the bar and me.

"Katherine." Luca’s voice is cold, controlled fury. "I got your message about the meeting. Urgent family business, you said." His gaze shifts to Davidson. "These gentlemen weren’t on the guest list."

Davidson’s face goes pale. "Mr. Torrino. This is just a business discussion-"

"With my father’s money launderer? Using my name to arrange meetings?" Luca’s men spread out, hands inside jackets. "I’m very interested in hearing about this business."

The two men at the bar calculate odds, see four weapons trained on them, and very carefully raise their hands away from their pockets.

Luca crosses to our table, pulls out the chair beside me, and sits. His presence feels like a blade being drawn - all contained threat and lethal grace.

"Start from the beginning, Davidson." Luca’s voice was cold as ice. "And explain why you’re using Torrino resources without my authorization. Explain why my dead father is apparently conducting operations behind my back." He glances at me, expression softening fractionally. "And explain why you’re threatening someone under my protection."

Davidson’s smugness crumbles. "I was just following orders. Angelo said-"

"My father," Luca interrupts quietly, "is dead. I watched him die. Unless..." His eyes narrow dangerously. "Unless someone wants to tell me a very different story."

The restaurant went silent. Other diners pretend not to watch while clearly watching everything.

My phone records it all.

And somewhere in the city, Tony is racing toward this address, probably ready to burn Manhattan down to reach me.

Davidson looks between Luca and me, calculating, and I see the moment he decides to gamble everything on one truth.

"Angelo Torrino is alive," he says. "And he’s three blocks from here. Waiting for me to bring her to him."

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