Chapter 8: The Scent Of Betrayal
Four days later, the rain was coming down in sheets over Manhattan.
Adrian was sitting behind the massive oak desk in his private study. He hadn’t shaved. Dark, heavy bags hung under his eyes. He was staring at a blank wall, spinning a crystal whiskey glass in his hand.
The heavy double doors swung open.
Marcus walked in, closely followed by a man in a cheap, rumpled trench coat. The man was Vance, the most expensive, ruthless private investigator on the East Coast.
“Boss,” Marcus said, his voice tight with anticipation. “Vance found something.”
Adrian sat up straight, the glass hitting the wooden desk with a sharp clack. “Speak.”
Vance stepped forward, dropping a thin manila folder onto the desk.
“She covered her tracks like a professional, Mr. Moretti,” Vance began, pulling off his wet hat. “She dumped the phone. She avoided all major airports. She didn’t touch the banks. Leo’s tech sweep was never going to catch her because she went completely analog.”
“I don’t care what she didn’t do,” Adrian growled, leaning forward. “Tell me what she did.”
“She made a human error,” Vance smiled grimly. “We started tracking pawn shops. Not the high-end jewelers in the city—the gritty, cash-only spots on the outskirts. Yesterday, a broker in Boston flagged a unique piece.”
Vance opened the folder and slid a photograph across the desk.
Adrian looked down. It was a security camera still of a cheap, unpolished silver locket resting on a glass display case.
Adrian’s breath hitched. Her mother’s locket.
“She pawned it for exactly three hundred dollars in cash,” Vance explained. “Just enough to buy a secondary, untraceable bus ticket under a fake name. The broker remembered her. Said she looked like high society trying to play dress-up in a cheap sweater.”
“Where did the bus go, Vance?” Adrian asked, his heart hammering violently against his ribs.
“It went north, boss. To a tiny coastal fishing town in Maine. Oakhaven.”
Adrian stood up slowly. The exhaustion instantly vanished from his body, replaced by a surge of pure, lethal adrenaline.
“Marcus,” Adrian commanded, his eyes fixed on the photograph of the silver locket.
“Yes, boss?”
“Pack the SUVs. We leave in twenty minutes.”
Marcus nodded, pulling out his radio. “I’ll assemble the tactical team. How much firepower do we bring, sir?”
Adrian’s head snapped up. His green eyes were completely devoid of warmth.
“None,” Adrian whispered dangerously. “No weapons. No tactical gear. If a single one of your men draws a gun in that town, or if anyone does anything to scare my wife, I will personally bury them in the woods. Do you understand me?”
“Loud and clear, boss.”
As Marcus and Vance rushed out of the study, Adrian slowly picked up the photograph of the locket.
She had sold the only piece of her mother she had left, just to get far away from him. The realization felt like a knife twisting directly into his gut.
He walked over to the safe behind his bookshelf, entered the combination, and pulled out a small, velvet box. Inside was the platinum wedding ring she had left on her vanity.
He slipped it into his jacket pocket.
Adrian Moretti walked out of the mansion and stepped into the freezing rain. The convoy of black, armored SUVs was already idling in the driveway, their headlights cutting through the darkness.
He was coming for her. And he wasn’t coming as a mob boss.
He was coming as a man begging for his life.