The Mafia's Undoing-Chapter 44: Just business
Luca inhales sharply behind me.
"I spent those first weeks after Grand Cayman planning revenge," Angelo continues. "Elaborate schemes to destroy the Marvin family, to punish you for costing me my empire. I paid people like Davidson, manipulated your brother, built networks to hurt everyone you love." He pauses. "Then I watched it all fall apart. Watched my son become a better man than I ever was. Watched you handle every threat with intelligence instead of violence. Watched Anthony Marvin choose love over power."
His eyes, so like Luca’s, fill with something that might be regret.
"I’m tired, Miss Blaire. Tired of violence, tired of revenge; tired of being the monster my son believes I am." He looks directly into the camera. "I’m here to surrender. Provide evidence against everyone in my organization - corrupt FBI agents, judges I’ve bought, politicians in my pocket. I’ll dismantle the entire network. Give you everything." 𝚏𝕣𝐞𝗲𝐰𝕖𝐛𝐧𝕠𝕧𝚎𝚕.𝐜𝚘𝗺
"In exchange for what?" Katherine asks quietly.
"One conversation with my son." Angelo’s voice cracks. "Luca. I want to say goodbye properly. Explain things he deserves to understand. Ask forgiveness I don’t deserve." He coughs again. "Public location with FBI present. Completely supervised. Just... let me speak to my boy one more time before I die."
The room goes silent.
Luca stares at the screen, his face unreadable. Years of anger and abandonment warring with the reality of a dying father.
Katherine looks up at me, and I read the question in her eyes: What do I do?
I lean down and speak quietly near her ear. "Your call. But if you say yes, we will do it in maximum security. Federal building, full FBI presence, complete surveillance."
She nods slowly, then turns back to the screen.
"Mr. Torrino, I can’t make decisions for your son. But I’ll ask him to consider it." Her voice softens fractionally. "Everyone deserves a chance to say goodbye."
Angelo’s eyes close briefly. "Thank you."
"In exchange, you provide all evidence immediately. Names, dates, account numbers, everything. You cooperate fully with federal prosecution. And you never contact my brother Elliot again."
"Done."
Katherine looks over her shoulder at Luca. "It’s your choice. No one will judge you either way."
Luca’s silent for a long moment. Then: "Federal building. Tomorrow morning. Two FBI agents are in the room at all times. He tries anything, I walk out."
"Agreed," Angelo says immediately. "Miss Blaire, Agent Morrison - I’m ready to be taken into custody now. My men are unarmed; we’ll cooperate fully."
Morrison coordinates with the FBI units outside. Within minutes, they have Angelo and his men in custody - hands cuffed, rights read, evidence bags being filled with phones and documents.
Katherine sags in her chair as the tension breaks. I pull her up into my arms, feel her trembling against my chest.
"You did good," I murmur into her dark hair. "Ending it without more violence. That took courage."
"Or stupidity." But she’s smiling slightly against my shirt.
Through the window, I watch FBI agents load Angelo into a vehicle. He looks small. Defeated. Nothing like the terrifying crime lord who built an empire on fear.
Then, just before the car door closes, Angelo turns. Looks directly at our window like he knows exactly where we’re standing.
His lips move. Morrison, standing beside the vehicle, leans in to hear. Her face goes pale. She looks up at the house, at me, and I see fear in her eyes.
She pulls out her phone and types rapidly.
My phone buzzes with her text: Need to speak with you. Privately. Urgent. Angelo just said something about Vincent.
Ice floods my veins.
The FBI car pulls away, taking Angelo toward processing and interrogation. But Morrison stays behind, walking purposefully toward the brownstone entrance.
Vincent stands three feet from me, weapon still drawn, positioned to protect Katherine.
My most trusted man. The one who’s been with me for five years. Who coordinates all security? Who knows every plan, every location, every vulnerability.
Morrison enters, crosses straight to me. Speaks quietly so only I can hear.
"Angelo’s last words before we closed the door: ’Tell Anthony Marvin that Vincent has been my insurance policy for two years. Every move Tony made, I knew. Every plan, every location. Vincent reported everything.’" She pauses. "’He still is my insurance. Good luck.’"
The world crystallizes into sharp focus.
Every kidnapping. Every ambush. Every time Angelo was one step ahead.
Vincent knew Katherine would be at the restaurant because I told him where she was going.
Vincent arranged security at the brownstone, knew its every weakness.
Vincent is standing between me and Katherine right now, armed, trusted, perfectly positioned.
I turn slowly. Look at the man I’ve called a friend for five years.
Vincent meets my eyes.
And I see the truth there. The guilt. The resignation.
The confirmation.
"Boss," he says quietly. "Let me explain."
Katherine looks between us, confusion shifting to horror as she realizes. "Tony?"
My hand moves toward my weapon. Vincent’s does the same.
And for three endless heartbeats, no one moves. No one breathes.
"Vincent." My voice is dead calm. "Put down your gun. Slowly."
"Can’t do that, boss." His weapon clears his holster in one smooth motion - not pointing at me, but not holstered either. "I’m walking out of here. You try to stop me, this gets messy. People get hurt."
"You’ve been reporting to Angelo for two years." Not a question.
"Since the beginning. He recruited me, placed me with you, paid me more than you ever did." Vincent backs toward the door, gun steady. "Nothing personal. Just business."
"He’s dying," I point out. "Your employer just surrendered to the FBI. Who’s paying you now?"
Vincent smiles, cold and empty. "Life insurance, boss. Angelo set up accounts and contingencies. I’m taken care of whether he lives or dies. That’s what loyalty buys."
Thomas appears in the doorway, blocking Vincent’s exit. Gun drawn, aimed at the center mass.
"You’re not leaving," Thomas says quietly.
"Then someone’s dying today." Vincent’s gun moves - not at Thomas, not at me, but at Katherine. "Let me walk, or she doesn’t."
Everything inside me goes cold.
The mafia boss, the calculated killer, the man who built a reputation on ruthless violence - all of it crystallizes into a single, lethal focus.
"You point that weapon at her," I say, voice like winter, "and dying is the best thing you can hope for."
Vincent’s hand trembles slightly. He knows what I’m capable of, has seen it firsthand.
But desperation makes people stupid.
His finger tightens on the trigger.
And the world explodes into violence.







