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Chapter 1 - The Ghost In The Rain

The rain didn't just fall; it punished the city. It was a cold, relentless drizzle that turned the skyline into a blurred charcoal sketch. From the rooftop of the derelict hotel, the streetlights below looked like drowning amber eyes. 

"They're late," Marco muttered. He was leaning against a rusted vent, his sneakers squeaking nervously against the wet concrete. He checked his watch for the fourth time in ten minutes. "Twelve minutes late, the Don thought. ,The Romanos aren't late because they're lazy. They're late because they're arguing in the car. Someone's heart isn't in this. Someone is looking for an exit.

The syndicate is never late. Not when there's blood on the line."

The man in the black trench coat didn't move. He stood at the very edge of the roof, his boots inches from the drop. He didn't need a watch. He was tucked so deeply into the shadows that he seemed less like a man and more like a tear in the fabric of the night. 

They called him the Silent Don. It was a title born of fear, not a lack of vocabulary. 

"Boss?" Marco tried again, stepping closer. The kid was young—talented with a blade but even better at filling silence with useless noise. "My contact says they're bringing extra heat. They think this is a sit-down about the harbor territory."

The Don's eyes—sharp as a surgeon's blade—never left the black sedan that finally crawled into view below. It braked hard, splashing gray slush onto the sidewalk. Three men climbed out. They moved with the stiff, jerky confidence of guys who had guns tucked into their waistbands and hearts beating too fast in their chests.

"Amateurs," the Don whispered. It wasn't a judgment; it was a diagnosis.

Marco let out a jagged breath. "You really think they're gonna try something? Out in the open?"

The Don finally turned his head. The movement was slow, deliberate. A stray beam of light caught the jagged white line of a scar running along his jaw—a souvenir from a war the world had forgotten. He didn't answer. He just looked at Marco until the younger man felt the urge to apologize for breathing.

"You talk," the Don said, his voice a low, gravelly hum, "because you're afraid of what the silence tells you."

Marco swallowed hard, his throat clicking in the quiet. "I just... I like to be prepared, Boss."

A faint, ghost-like smirk touched the Don's lips. He turned back to the ledge and pulled a small, battered radio from his pocket. 

"Position?"

"Sniper set. Holding breath," a voice crackled through, metallic and cold.

"South exit plugged. Nobody's leaving," another added.

Marco squinted through the rain, trying to see into the dim warehouse across the street where the targets had disappeared. "So we go in now? Take them while they're arguing?"

"Wait," the Don said. 

"Wait for what? They're all inside—"

"Look." The Don pointed a gloved finger toward the far end of the street.

A fourth man appeared, sprinting through the rain, his coat flapping like a broken wing. He wasn't with the main group. He was scurrying toward the side door, looking over his shoulder every three seconds like a man who knew he was walking on glass.

Marco's eyes widened. "Wait... that's the kid from the inner circle. Why is he—"

"The traitor always arrives last," the Don interrupted softly. "He wants to make sure the trap is sprung before he claims his seat at the table."

I remember the day I gave Luthuli that coat. I told him it would keep him warm. I didn't tell him it would make him easier to spot in the dark.

Marco felt a cold chill that had nothing to do with the rain. The realization hit his stomach like a lead weight. 

The Don pressed the radio again. His expression didn't change. He looked like a man watching a game of chess he'd already won hours ago.

"Begin."

The warehouse lights didn't just flicker; they died. A heartbeat of pure, heavy darkness followed, and then the night fractured. Muffled pops—the distinct thud of suppressed gunfire—echoed against the brick walls. Flash-bulbs of orange light winked in the windows.

Marco watched, paralyzed, as the shadows of men scrambled behind the frosted glass. "How did you know it was him, Boss? He was one of ours."

The Don slipped the radio back into his coat and finally stepped away from the ledge. He walked past Marco, his coat brushing against the kid's knees.

"I don't just have an ear, Marco," the Don said, his voice disappearing into the wind. "I listen. There's a difference."

A low explosion shook the rooftop, vibrating through the soles of their boots. The Don didn't even flinch. He headed for the stairwell, his silhouette merging with the darkness of the doorway.

"Come," he commanded.

. "The city is crying. Let's go before it gets loud."

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