Chapter 4: The Poison Box Confession
Silence, thick and suffocating, pressed against the cracked walls. Dust motes drifted in the weak light slicing through the frosted window.
“Clara,” Dominic choked out, the name tasting like ash on his tongue.
She was supposed to be waterlogged bone at the bottom of the Atlantic. Instead, she was here, breathing, clutching the solid gold proof of their past like a talisman. Anger, white-hot and blinding, flared in his chest. It was an old, familiar friend, far easier to handle than the crushing weight of grief.
“You lied to me,” Dominic said, his voice a dangerous, trembling rasp. “I tore this city apart looking for you. I tortured men to death thinking they took you. And you were hiding?”
His hand twitched toward the leather holster under his left arm. It was a muscle memory response to sheer, unadulterated betrayal.
“Don’t touch her!” the little girl screamed, wedging herself between Dominic and the mattress. She shoved her small, dirty hands against Dominic’s chest with feral instinct. “Leave her alone! The man said if we showed the ring, you give us money for the doctor!”
“What man?” Dominic asked, his eyes never leaving Clara’s pale, dying face.
Clara coughed again, a wet, tearing sound that ripped her lungs apart. A speck of bright crimson sprayed across her pallid lips. “Victor,” she gasped, her eyelids fluttering as she struggled to stay conscious. “Victor… brought the food.”
Dominic froze. The name hit him like a freight train. Victor was Rossi’s personal cleaner, the man who made problems disappear without leaving bullet holes or blood spatter.
“Rossi knew,” Dominic whispered, the horrific reality finally taking root in his mind. “He didn’t kill you. He locked you away.”
“He found out I was pregnant,” Clara sobbed, her voice dropping to a raw, ragged whisper. Tears cut clean tracks through the grime on her sunken cheeks. “He said… your bloodline was a threat. He told me he would kill you. He would wait until the baby was born, make you watch him drown it, and then put a bullet in your head.”
Dominic felt the blood drain from his face. The air left the room.
“He gave me a choice,” Clara gasped, clutching the blankets with skeletal fingers. “Disappear. Let everyone think I was a rat. Let you hate me… and he would let you live.”
“So you let Victor lock you in a poison box?” Dominic shouted, his anger finally breaking through his iron composure. “You let him slowly murder you for six years while I sat in my mansion thinking you betrayed me?”
“I kept her alive!” Clara fired back, a sudden, desperate strength flashing in her cloudy hazel eyes. She tried to lift her head, but the effort was too much. She fell back, panting heavily. “Victor brought food, water. It was poisoned, Dom. All of it. The dust, the air. It was a defunct lead factory. I knew what it was doing to me.”
“Clara, my God…” Dominic fell to his knees, his hands hovering over her fragile frame, terrified he would shatter her bones if he touched her.
“I ate less,” Clara wheezed, her chest heaving violently. “I drank less. I gave her the clean bottles. I traded my body… so she could breathe.”
How far would you go to protect the person you loved? Would you endure six years of slow, agonizing torture in the dark just to guarantee their survival?
“We have to get you out of here,” Dominic said, frantically pulling out his phone. “Paulie! Get up here now! Bring the trauma kit! We’re moving her to Doc Miller’s clinic right now!”
“It’s too late, Dom,” Clara whispered, her eyes rolling back slightly, fighting the heavy darkness pulling her under. “The lead… it’s in my marrow. My organs are failing. I’m dying, Dominic.”
“You are not dying today!” Dominic roared, grabbing her icy, skeletal hand and pressing it to his forehead. “I won’t allow it! Do you hear me? I won’t allow it!”
“Promise me,” Clara forced out, her voice barely a scrape against the freezing air of the apartment.
“Anything,” Dominic wept, the ruthless mafia boss shattering entirely on the dirty linoleum floor. “Anything, Clara. Name it.”
“She is yours, Dominic. I named her Mia,” Clara gasped, her grip on his fingers suddenly tightening with terrifying, final strength. “Promise me… you won’t turn her into you. Promise me you won’t let her live in the dark.”
Dominic looked at the little girl, Mia, who was watching him with wide, terrified eyes. She was a byproduct of Rossi’s cruelty, a child raised in a toxic cage just to punish him. The grief in his chest solidified instantly into something far more dangerous.
“I can’t promise that, Clara,” Dominic whispered, leaning down so his lips brushed her ear.
“Why…?” Clara choked out.
“Because the only way to keep her safe now,” Dominic said, his eyes going pitch black with absolute, murderous rage, “is to drag this entire city into the dark with me. I’m going to kill Rossi. I’m going to kill Victor. I’m going to burn the Commission to the ground.”
Clara’s eyes widened in horror, her mouth opening to scream, but before she could force the sound out—