Chapter 9: The Coffee Shop Confession
I held the handwritten note for a long time, reading Dante’s words over and over. Every logical part of my brain screamed at me to barricade the door, to stay as far away from Dante Moretti as humanly possible.
But my heart, that stupid, traitorous organ, desperately demanded answers.
At exactly eight o’clock, I pushed open the glass door of the small, independent coffee shop on 5th and Main. Dante was sitting at a corner table, his back securely against the brick wall.
He looked absolutely terrible. Dark, bruising circles hung heavily under his eyes, and rough stubble lined his usually immaculate jaw. The perfectly controlled, untouchable mafia boss I knew had completely shattered.
When he saw me limping toward the table, pure relief washed over his exhausted face.
“You actually came,” Dante breathed, standing up quickly.
“I want answers,” I said, keeping the small wooden table between us like a physical barrier. “That is all I am asking for.”
He gestured to the empty chair. “Please, sit.”
For a long moment, he just looked at me, taking in my heavily bruised face and the careful, painful way I held my taped ribs.
“I am so incredibly sorry,” Dante whispered, his voice cracking. “For everything. For not telling you the truth about my mother. For dragging you into this violent world.”
“Stop apologizing and start talking,” I demanded coldly. “Tell me everything.”
Dante took a deep, ragged breath. “My mother’s name is Angela. She is fifty-eight years old, and she has severe early-onset dementia. It started five years ago. Slowly at first—forgetting names, losing track of conversations—but then it rapidly deteriorated.”
He stared down at his untouched black coffee, his hands gripping the ceramic mug.
“When my father was murdered, Salvatore came to me with a devastating ultimatum,” Dante explained grimly. “Take over my father’s illicit territory and swear absolute loyalty to him, or watch my mother rot in a decaying state facility with zero care and zero dignity.”
“So he bought your loyalty with her medical care,” I realized, the horrifying truth settling in my chest.
“He had her moved to an elite, highly private care home,” Dante confirmed. “The absolute best doctors, round-the-clock nursing, everything she could possibly need. But it all vanishes the second I step out of line.”
“That is why you bow to him,” I whispered, the anger draining out of me.
“That is why I run his errands, manage his illicit businesses, and pretend I am grateful for his protection,” Dante said, his dark eyes meeting mine. “Because if I don’t, my mother suffers.”
“Why didn’t you tell me this from the beginning?”
“Because everyone I tell becomes leverage!” Dante argued, his voice rising slightly. “Salvatore already owns my mother. I could not let him own you, too.”
He reached across the table, his fingers stopping just inches from my own.
“I failed,” Dante admitted bitterly. “He found out about you anyway, and now you are in mortal danger because of my selfishness.”
“I chose to fight Leonardo. I chose to have dinner with you,” I reminded him. “Those were my decisions.”
“Decisions you made without knowing you were stepping into a warzone,” Dante countered. “If you had known I was being blackmailed by the most dangerous man in Chicago, would you have gotten involved with me?”
I thought about it honestly. “I don’t know.”
“I was selfish enough to want you in my life anyway, even knowing the immense risk,” Dante confessed. “But after watching what Salvatore did to you in that warehouse, I cannot keep being selfish.”
He reached into his jacket pocket and pulled out a thick manila envelope, sliding it across the table.
“You need to get away from me,” Dante ordered softly. “Run away. Disappear entirely.”
“What is this?” I asked, staring at the envelope.
“I have money set aside in untraceable accounts,” Dante explained. “Enough to pay off your medical debt and give you a completely fresh start somewhere else. A new identity. A new life.”
I stared at him, a sudden, hot flash of anger sparking in my chest. “You want me to just vanish?”
“I want you to live, Claire,” Dante pleaded. “Really live. Not just survive in the dark shadows of my violent world. You deserve so much more than this.”
If the person you loved told you the only way to stay alive was to leave them forever, would you take the money and run, or would you stay and fight a war you might not win?