Chapter 5: The Empire’s Blind Spot
The basement of the Moretti syndicate headquarters was a soundproof, concrete fortress hidden beneath a legitimate Manhattan shipping firm. It was a room where men entered with secrets and left without them.
At 3:00 AM on Monday, the room was suffocatingly hot.
Adrian paced the length of the concrete floor like a caged, starved predator. He had stripped off his tuxedo jacket hours ago. His white dress shirt was unbuttoned at the collar, his sleeves rolled up over his bruised forearms.
Sitting at the metal table in the center of the room was Leo, the syndicate’s chief cyber-intelligence architect. Leo was sweating profusely, his fingers flying across three glowing laptops.
“I need an absolute goddamn miracle, Leo!” Adrian roared, slamming his fist onto the metal table so hard the laptops jumped. “You have the financial resources of a small European country at your fingertips! How the hell does a woman vanish off the face of the earth?!”
Leo swallowed hard, not daring to look away from his screens. “Boss, I am running her facial recognition through every TSA database, every toll booth camera, and every ATM in the tristate area. I’m pulling nothing. It’s like she’s a ghost.”
“People do not become ghosts!” Adrian barked, grabbing the back of Leo’s chair and spinning him around. “Where did she use her credit cards?”
“She didn’t, Mr. Moretti,” Leo stammered, his voice cracking. “I froze the joint accounts exactly like you ordered, but it didn’t matter. She hasn’t swiped a single piece of plastic since she left the estate.”
“Her phone?”
“Turned off and dumped in a public trash can on 5th Avenue.”
Julian, Adrian’s underboss, stepped out of the shadows. He looked exhausted, holding a tablet with a grim expression. “Adrian, you need to calm down and look at this logically. She didn’t take the private jets. She didn’t take the cars. We checked the security logs.”
“I don’t care about logic, Julian! I care about finding my wife!” Adrian screamed, his green eyes blazing with a terrifying, unhinged fury.
“Boss,” Julian said softly, stepping closer. “I just ran a full audit on the safe in the master bedroom. The emergency cash reserves… the two hundred thousand dollars we keep for extractions?”
Adrian froze. “Did she take it?”
“No,” Julian whispered. “She didn’t take a single dollar. She didn’t take her diamonds. She didn’t take the bearer bonds.”
The words hit Adrian like a physical blow to the chest. The anger suddenly drained out of him, replaced by a cold, paralyzing dread.
“She didn’t take the money,” Adrian muttered, staring blindly at the concrete wall.
“Why would she run without funding?” Leo asked nervously. “How is she surviving?”
Adrian backed away from the table, raking both hands through his dark hair. For fifteen years, he had believed that his wealth, his power, and his untouchable status were the things keeping Claire tethered to him. He thought his money was the ultimate safety net.
“Because she didn’t want anything from me,” Adrian whispered, his voice completely devoid of its usual commanding strength. “She wasn’t trying to secure a future, Julian. She was just trying to survive me.”
Julian shifted uncomfortably. “So what’s the next move, boss? The families are starting to ask questions. A boss whose wife disappears overnight looks weak.”
“Let them ask,” Adrian snarled, his lethal edge returning in a violent flash. “You tell the capos that if anyone breathes a single disrespectful word about my wife, I will personally cut their tongues out.”
Adrian grabbed his jacket off a chair.
“Keep searching,” Adrian ordered Leo, his voice dropping to a deadly whisper. “Hack the bus terminals. Hack the cheap motels. I don’t care if you have to rip up the fiber optic cables of this entire city with your bare hands. Find her.”
Adrian realized his money meant absolutely nothing to Claire. If you were leaving a toxic situation, would you take the emergency cash, or would you leave with nothing just to cut all ties? Tell us in the comments!