The Mafia's Undoing-Chapter 58: Protocol Seven

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Chapter 58: Protocol Seven

The city becomes a war zone within hours.

My phone won’t stop ringing from friends, former colleagues, people I haven’t spoken to in years, all getting the same message: You’re associated with the Marvin family. You have 24 hours. Run or die.

I’m in the back of an armored SUV with Tony beside me and Luca driving like we’re fleeing an active shooter. And because we are - multiple active shooters, actually.

"Three confirmed attacks in the first hour," Luca reports, weaving through traffic. "Two Marvin Industries executives - one dead, one critical. And someone tried to car bomb the parking garage at your old apartment building."

My old apartment. Where I lived before Tony... before all of this.

"Was anyone-"

"Four casualties. Three dead, one critical." Luca’s voice is grim. "They were at the wrong place at the wrong time. The bomb was meant for you."

The guilt is immediate and crushing. Three people are dead because the Commission wants me silenced. Three families destroyed, three lives ended because I exposed Margaret Liu.

Tony’s hand finds mine and squeezes it. "It’s not your fault."

"Isn’t it?" I stare at our joined hands. "Those people died because-"

"Because the Commission are murderous criminals." His voice is stern. "You didn’t plant that bomb, Katherine. They did."

But it doesn’t feel that way.

My phone buzzes from an unknown number, and I almost don’t answer, but Tony nods - it could be important information.

"Hello?"

I hear gunshots and screaming, then a digitally distorted voice: "Katherine Blaire, we’re coming for you. It might take hours, might even take days. But we’re coming - run all you want... hide all you want. You’ll die screaming."

The line goes dead, and I’m shaking.

Tony takes my phone and shuts it off completely. "They’re trying to scare you. To make you panic."

"It’s working." My voice is too high. "Tony, how many people are they targeting? How many-"

"Hundreds," Luca answers before Tony can soften it. "Maybe over a thousand if they’re being thorough. Everyone connected to Marvin’s operations - employees, partners, vendors, family. Protocol Seven is scorched earth."

The scale of it steals my breath.

We arrive at the safehouse - a high-rise apartment building in Midtown, forty floors up, security that would make a bank vault jealous. Thomas’s backup property was kept off all official records.

The apartment itself is sterile and functional, with a steel-reinforced door, bulletproof windows, and security cameras covering every angle. Just like a cage. A very expensive and very secure cage.

Elliot arrives twenty minutes later, escorted by FBI agents. He’s carrying three laptops and his noise-canceling headphones, looking terrified.

"Katherine." He doesn’t make eye contact, but his voice cracks with emotion. "They evacuated my entire dorm. Said there was a bomb threat, the FBI brought me here."

I pull him into a hug despite his discomfort with physical contact. "You’re safe now. We’re all safe here."

"For how long?" He pulls back and starts setting up his equipment. "Protocol Seven targets aren’t safe anywhere. It’s a mathematical certainty, given enough time and resources, they’ll breach any security."

"Then we don’t give them time," Tony says. "Elliot, show us what you found about the Commission servers."

Elliot’s fingers fly across his keyboard, pulling up data. "Margaret’s encrypted communications used five primary server nodes across New York. Physical servers, not cloud-based. They needed direct access for this level of security."

He displays a map, five locations marked in red across the city.

"These servers handle all Commission communications. Which means whoever controls them are the Commission members, the five families Margaret referenced."

"Can you identify them?" I ask, my banking instincts kicking in to focus on the problem and find the solution. Don’t think about the innocent people dying.

"I can trace the server ownership through shell companies." Elliot pulls up financial records. "But I need someone who understands corporate structures."

"That’s me." I move to his side to start analyzing. "Show me the ownership documents." 𝐟𝗿𝐞𝚎𝚠𝐞𝚋𝕟𝐨𝚟𝐞𝕝.𝕔𝕠𝚖

The following two hours blur into intense focus with Elliot providing digital forensics and me tracing financial patterns. Each server was owned by a different shell company, but all received funds from the duplicate offshore accounts, which were Margaret’s.

Five major recipients emerge from the data:

Marcus Wei - Chinatown operations, owns a restaurant and a real estate empire

Viktor Petrov - Russian operations, controls shipping and import business

Eduardo Santos, Latin operations, runs a construction and transportation network

Sean O’Brien - Irish operations, dominates union and labor connections

And one name that makes my blood run cold: Ricardo Ramírez

"Ramírez," Tony says quietly. "That family was supposed to be eliminated."

"The records show one survivor," Elliot says, pulling up old files. "Ricardo Ramírez, age twelve at the time of the massacre. He was in boarding school abroad, disappeared after his family’s death, presumed dead or witness protection."

"He rebuilt." Thomas’s voice came from the doorway - his arm in a sling, and face pale from blood loss, but refusing hospitalization. "He changed his name and identity. Came back to reclaim his family’s position."

"Under what name?" I ask.

Thomas shakes his head. "That’s what we need to find out."

Morrison arrives with a tactical team an hour later. We spread out evidence across the dining table - financial records, server locations, communication logs, everything we have on the five Commission families.

"This is enough for warrants," Morrison says, studying the documentation. "Barely. Some of it might not be admissible given how it was obtained, but combined with Margaret’s testimony-"

"She won’t testify," Tony interrupts. "She’s too smart. She’ll lawyer up, stay silent, and protect the Commission."

"Then we raid without her testimony." Morrison starts making calls. "Coordinated strike across all five locations. Simultaneous arrests. We’ll need SWAT, tactical teams, bomb disposal-"

"And Torrino family intelligence," Luca adds. He’s been on his own phone, coordinating with his people. "My sources confirm Wei is at his restaurant tonight, Petrov at his warehouse, Santos at the construction site, and O’Brien at union headquarters."

"And Ramírez?" Thomas asks.

"No confirmed location." Luca’s face is grim. "That’s the problem, we have four solid targets and one ghost."

Tony’s jaw tightens. "Then we take the four we can get. Force Ramírez’s hand to make him reveal himself."

"That’s a risk," Morrison warns. "If he escapes-"

"He’s already escaped for decades," I point out. "At least this way, we dismantle most of the Commission. Cut off his resources and his network."

Morrison considers, then nods. "We move at dawn with coordinated raids. FBI, NYPD, federal marshals in full force."

The tactical planning continues - entry points, backup teams, contingencies. But I find myself drifting away, overwhelmed by the scope of what we’re attempting.

Tony finds me in the bedroom, staring out the bulletproof window at the city below. Somewhere down there, people are hunted and being killed because of the choices I made.

"Hey." His arms come around me from behind, solid and warm. "Penny for your thoughts?"

"Three people died in that parking garage." My voice is low. "People I never met, never even knew existed. They’re dead because the Commission wants me silenced."

"They’re dead because the Commission are monsters." Tony turns me to face him. "Katherine, look at me, you didn’t cause this. Margaret Liu built this system over the course of thirty years, and Angelo Torrino fed it. Vincent betrayed us to maintain it, but you exposed it. That’s not causing evil, that’s fighting it."

"By getting innocent people killed."

"By giving them a chance at a future where the Commission doesn’t exist." His hands frame my face. "How many people has the Commission killed over thirty years? Hundreds? Thousands? Maybe more, but we’re finally ending that. And yes, they’re fighting back... viciously. But we’re winning, Katherine... we’re actually winning."

I want to believe him. Want to see this as a victory, not carnage.

"You’re giving up everything," I say quietly. "Your family’s businesses, your legacy. All of it to expose the Commission, to choose integrity over survival."

"I’m not giving up everything." His forehead touches mine. "I’m choosing what matters. You... our freedom. A life where I’m not owned by criminals who ordered my mother’s circumstances. That’s not sacrifice, that’s winning."

Behind us, the door opens...