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Chapter 1 VINCENZO's EMPIRE

The Milan skyline glittered like a crown of jagged diamonds, its spires piercing the twilight. High above the city, in a penthouse office of glass and steel, Vincenzo Li Fonti stood at the head of a polished mahogany table. His presence filled the room-sharp as a blade, cold as the marble floor beneath his bespoke leather shoes. At thirty-two, he was a force of nature, a billionaire whose name struck fear into boardrooms and back alleys alike. His dark hair was swept back, his jawline carved from granite, and his eyes, a piercing gray, held the weight of a man who had never known defeat.

The boardroom was silent, save for the faint scratch of a pen. Vincenzo's hand moved with surgical precision, signing the final document that would dismantle Rossi Enterprises, a rival company that had dared to challenge his empire. The contract was a death sentence, and he delivered it without a flicker of remorse. Around the table, his board of directors sat rigid, their faces a mix of awe and unease. No one spoke. No one dared.

"Gentlemen," Vincenzo said, his voice low and smooth, like velvet draped over steel. He leaned back in his chair, the document sliding across the table toward his chief counsel. "Rossi is finished. Their assets are ours by morning. I expect flawless execution."

A murmur of assent rippled through the room. Vincenzo's gaze swept over the men, lingering on a young executive whose tie was slightly askew. Paolo, his name was. New. Ambitious. And careless. Vincenzo's eyes narrowed, and Paolo froze, his Adam's apple bobbing.

"Paolo," Vincenzo said, the word dripping with quiet menace. "Your report on the Rossi acquisition was late. Explain."

The room held its breath. Paolo's fingers twitched, clutching a folder as if it were a lifeline. "S-sir, I was finalizing the projections-"

"Projections?" Vincenzo cut him off, his tone icy. "I don't pay for projections. I pay for results. You had one task, and you failed."

Paolo's face paled. "I'll make it right, Mr. Li Fonti. I swear."

Vincenzo leaned forward, his hands steepled. "You'll do more than that. You'll deliver the revised report to Damiano by midnight, or you'll be out of a job. And trust me, Paolo, no one in Italy will hire you after I'm done."

Paolo nodded frantically, his career hanging by a thread. The others averted their eyes, grateful to be spared Vincenzo's wrath. Damiano Russo, Vincenzo's assistant, stood by the door, a shadow in a tailored suit. At twenty-nine, Damiano was an enigma-calm, calculating, with eyes that saw everything. His loyalty to Vincenzo was absolute, bordering on obsession. He gave Paolo a faint, almost pitying look, but said nothing.

"Dismissed," Vincenzo said, rising. The board scrambled to their feet, filing out like soldiers retreating from a battlefield. Damiano lingered, his tablet glowing faintly in his hands.

"Anything else, sir?" Damiano's voice was soft, but there was an edge to it, a hint of the "sane psychopath" that lurked beneath his polished exterior.

Vincenzo waved a hand. "Ensure Paolo doesn't waste my time again. And check on the Naples deal. Luca's report was vague."

Damiano nodded, already typing. "Consider it done."

As the door clicked shut, Vincenzo turned to the floor-to-ceiling windows. Milan sprawled before him, a kingdom he had conquered through sheer will. His empire spanned tech, real estate, and shipping, a web of power that made him untouchable. Yet, as he stood alone, his fingers brushed the cufflink on his left sleeve-a silver piece etched with a faint design, worn from years of touch. It was an unconscious habit, one he barely noticed, but it carried a weight he couldn't name.

The silence was broken by a soft thud and a child's laughter. Vincenzo turned, his expression softening in a way that would have shocked his board. Alessio, his eight-year-old son, stood in the doorway, clutching a broken toy car. His dark curls and gray eyes were a mirror of Vincenzo's, but where Vincenzo was steel, Alessio was sunlight.

"Papà!" Alessio ran forward, undeterred by the office's grandeur. "It broke again."

Vincenzo knelt, his suit creasing without a second thought. He took the car, inspecting the cracked wheel. "You've been racing it too hard, piccolo."

Alessio grinned, unrepentant. "It's fast like Sandro's cars!"

Vincenzo's lips twitched, a rare almost-smile. Alessandro Moretti, his billionaire friend who built luxury cars, would no doubt be thrilled by the endorsement. "Let's see what we can do."

He pulled a small toolkit from his desk-kept there for moments like this-and set to work. Alessio watched, leaning close, his chatter filling the room with warmth. For these brief minutes, Vincenzo was not the ruthless titan of Milan. He was a father, patient and precise, fixing a toy with the same focus he applied to billion-euro deals.

"There," Vincenzo said, handing the car back. "Good as new."

Alessio hugged him, small arms tight around his neck. "Grazie, Papà!"

Vincenzo ruffled his son's hair, the gesture tender but restrained. "Go find Liam. He'll take you home."

Alessio scampered off, pausing at the door to wave. Liam, Vincenzo's driver, waited outside-a reserved man of forty-five with the bearing of a former intelligence operative. His nod to Vincenzo was curt, professional, as he guided Alessio toward the private elevator.

Alone again, Vincenzo returned to the window. The city lights blurred, his mind drifting to a memory he couldn't quite grasp. A woman's face, fleeting and faceless, from a night eight years ago. A club in Palermo, a moment of reckless passion. He shook his head, banishing the thought. Such distractions were weaknesses, and Vincenzo Li Fonti had none.

Yet his fingers found the cufflink again, tracing its edges. Damiano re-entered, his tablet now tucked away. "Sir, the Naples deal is on track. Luca's handling the... complications."

Vincenzo nodded, his gaze still on the city. Luca De Santis, his mafia lord friend, was as ruthless as he was loyal. Together with Alessandro, they were the only men Vincenzo trusted with his life. "Good. Keep me updated."

Damiano inclined his head. "Anything else?"

Vincenzo's eyes flicked to him, then back to the city. "Not tonight."

As Damiano left, Vincenzo sank into his chair, the cufflink glinting under the desk lamp. Milan was his domain, Alessio his heart, his enemies his fuel. But the cufflink, a relic of a night he couldn't forget, stirred something restless in him. A shadow of a past he'd buried.

The king of Milan had no time for shadows.

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