Caleb’s POV
The Thorne family compound had beco my fortress over the recent weeks, and honestly, I thrived in the chaos of running our operations from within these walls. Every day brought new challenges, new territories to secure, new opportunities to expand our influence. My lieutenants respected my thods, and my partnership with our veteran consigliere Adler had evolved into sothing irreplaceable. The old-tir treated like the son he never had, ntoring with the kind of wisdom that only cos from decades in the family business. His reputation was spotless, his loyalty unquestionable. But one thing gnawed at constantly - Rossi’s father remained a ghost in the wind.
I pushed through Adler’s office door, balancing a box of those cheese croissants he’d beco obsessed with. The man had simple pleasures, and I’d learned that small gestures went a long way in maintaining the bonds that kept our family strong.
"Morning, Adler! Brought your addiction fuel," I announced, setting the box on his cluttered desk.
His weathered face broke into a genuine grin. "You’re golden, kid. The whole family’s talking about how you’ve stepped up since taking over." He stood, moving to the ancient espresso machine that sohow still produced perfect Italian brew. "Actually, your timing’s perfect. Got sothing that might interest you, besides the caffeine."
Adler poured two steaming cups, the rich aroma filling his cramped office. He settled back into his chair, selecting a croissant and taking an almost reverent bite, eyes closing in appreciation.
"These things are dangerous. Your lady has ruined my diet completely." Ever since the family had witnessed Zoe take charge during Ivy’s crisis, Adler had dubbed her "boss lady" with obvious admiration. Their friendship had grown naturally, and he never missed a chance to sing her praises. "That woman’s got steel in her spine."
"She’s sothing else entirely," I agreed, warmth spreading through my chest at the thought of her. "So what’s this gift you ntioned?"
"Rember Rossi’s daughter?" Adler’s tone shifted, becoming more serious.
"Hard to forget that performance. Woman could shatter glass with those sobs." The mory of her dramatic breakdown when we’d captured her still made wince.
"Warden from the private facility reached out recently. Seems our dramatic princess wants an audience with you specifically." He leaned forward, elbows on his desk. "Apparently she’s been demanding this eting for so ti. Warden finally took notice because she’s... different sohow. Even requested a cell transfer to get away from Monica."
That detail caught my attention imdiately. Rossi changing her behavior voluntarily seed impossible, yet here we were.
"Different how?"
"Calr, according to the warden. Participating in programs, working in the craft shop, playing nice with other inmates. Complete personality flip." Adler shrugged. "Could be an act, could be genuine. Either way, she claims she has important information about her father."
The possibilities raced through my mind. Rossi had always been our wild card, unpredictable and self-serving. But if she genuinely had intel on her father’s whereabouts...
"I’m heading over there now."
The private correctional facility always felt oppressive, all concrete and steel and barely contained tension. The warden confird what Adler had described - Rossi’s transformation seed legitimate. She’d beco a model prisoner almost overnight, participating in rehabilitation programs and maintaining peaceful relationships with other inmates. When they brought her to the warden’s office, the change was imdiately visible.
Gone was the hysterical, entitled mob princess who’d sobbed her way through previous encounters. Her hair was neatly pulled back, her posture composed, her voice steady when she spoke.
"Don Thorne, thank you for coming." She settled into the chair across from with surprising grace.
"You’ve certainly made an impression here, Rossi. What’s prompted this change?"
"Prison has a way of forcing perspective, doesn’t it?" Her smile was sad but genuine. "I was spoiled, Don Thorne. Completely out of touch with reality. I thought the family owed everything I wanted, and I hurt people trying to take it." She paused, hands folded in her lap. "But I’m here now, and I need to face what I’ve done."
Her sincerity caught off guard. This wasn’t the manipulative performance I’d expected.
"I appreciate your honesty. What did you want to discuss?"
"I want you to catch my mother’s killer." Tears welled in her eyes, but she didn’t let them fall. "I want justice for her."
"Rossi, we both know who killed your mother."
"That monster who calls himself my father." Her voice hardened with genuine hatred. "I can’t believe he murdered the woman who stood by him for decades, then abandoned his own daughter like garbage. He’s a coward who deserves to rot in hell."
The pain in her voice was raw, real. Whatever ga Rossi had been playing before, this wasn’t part of it.
"We’re doing everything possible to locate him, but he has resources. We suspect he might have fled the country."
"He didn’t run." Her certainty was absolute, sending ice through my veins. "I guarantee it."
"How can you be so sure?"
"Because he won’t leave until you and your entire family are dead." The casual way she delivered this death sentence made my blood freeze. "He’s obsessed, Don Thorne. This isn’t over for him."
"Do you have any idea where we might find him?"
"He kept a place for his affairs. A little apartnt where he’d et his mistresses, including that witch Monica." Rossi’s disgust was palpable. "I can give you the address."
"How did our surveillance miss this property?"
"It’s not in his na. I only discovered it because I suspected he was cheating and followed him one evening." She looked almost embarrassed by the admission. "I was so naive then, thinking infidelity was the worst thing he could do."
For the next while, Rossi provided detailed intelligence about her father’s habits, contacts, and resources. She gave addresses, nas, behavioral patterns - everything she could rember. It was more progress than we’d made in recent weeks.
Before leaving, I promised to keep her inford about our hunt and to ensure her father faced justice for her mother’s murder. Her gratitude was genuine, and I left feeling cautiously optimistic for the first ti in days.
I called Adler before I’d even reached my car, briefing him on Rossi’s information. By the ti I returned to the compound, he’d already assembled our tactical approach. We’d conduct surveillance until we could take the old man down cleanly.
The target building was an upscale residential complex in the city’s financial district. We positioned our team strategically while Bella handled reconnaissance at the front desk. His report confird our worst fears and best hopes simultaneously.
"He’s here, registered under Max Fox." The sick irony of using my son’s na as an alias made my stomach turn. "Shaved head, full beard. Left earlier according to the concierge, but the security footage confirms it’s definitely him."
"Perfect. Bella, did you get the master key?"
He handed over the key card and room number. "Got it, boss. And this place isn’t exactly a fleabag motel - penthouse accommodations. Bastard’s living like royalty."
"Adler, Burke, Lopes - let’s search his hideout."
The apartnt revealed Rossi’s father’s desperation and resources in equal asure. We catalogued docunts, electronic devices, cash, and weapons - enough evidence to build a solid case. But as we prepared to leave, fate handed us an unexpected gift.
The old man appeared at the building entrance, oblivious to our presence. I signaled the team, and we moved to intercept. But the bastard was quick, bolting toward an adjacent parking garage the mont he spotted us.
We swept that structure systematically, checking every level, every hiding spot, every possible escape route. Rossi’s father had vanished like smoke, leaving us with nothing but frustration and the certainty that he wouldn’t return to the apartnt.
We planted surveillance equipnt throughout his room and positioned unmarked units for continuous monitoring. It was a long shot now, but sotis long shots paid off.
Back at the compound, I imdiately contacted our network, updating them on Rossi’s cooperation and our near-miss with her father. The hunt was intensifying, and I could feel we were closing in.
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