Serena didn't sleep that night either.
She lay in the darkness, Egyptian cotton sheets tangled around her legs, staring at the ceiling's ornate molding until the patterns blurred into meaningless shapes.
Her mind wouldn't stop spinning—an endless loop of code, passwords,
firewalls, and the cold promise in Dante's eyes when he'd said: "If you
disappoint me, there will be consequences." She held her hands up in the
dim moonlight filtering through the barred windows.
They trembled.
When had they started shaking like this?
Back in college, this kind of challenge had been exhilarating.
Breaking into secured systems, outsmarting professors' defenses, earning
the respect of her peers in the white-hat hacking club.
Back then, it had been a game.
The worst consequence of failure was a bad grade. Now?
Now her life depended on it. I can do this.
I have to do this. But beneath the determination lived a coiling dread.
What would she find in Dante Moretti's systems?
What secrets lurked in the digital shadows of a crime empire?
And more terrifyingly—what would she become if she succeeded?
If she proved herself useful to a monster? When dawn finally bled
through the windows, Serena gave up on sleep.
She showered, letting scalding water pound against her skin until it
turned pink.
Today required armor.
She chose a black blazer and tailored pants instead of the demure
dresses Martha had been leaving for her.
Pulled her hair back into a severe ponytail.
Looked at herself in the mirror. The woman staring back almost looked
like the old Serena Miller.
Columbia scholarship student.
Bright future.
Unlimited potential. That girl is dead. Serena turned away from her
reflection. At exactly seven a.m., knuckles rapped against her door.
Enzo. "Ready?" Serena's throat was too dry to speak.
She just nodded. Enzo led her through the mansion's labyrinthine
corridors, then down a narrow staircase she hadn't known existed.
With each descending step, the temperature dropped.
Fluorescent lights flickered overhead, casting everything in harsh,
clinical brightness.
The air smelled like concrete and ozone and something metallic that made
Serena's stomach turn. The basement corridor was tight.
Claustrophobic.
Serena's breath came faster as memories of that first night crashed over
her—being dragged through underground passages to meet Dante for the
first time.
The cigar smoke.
The cold appraisal in his eyes. "Here." Enzo stopped before a reinforced
steel door.
Punched in a code—Serena's eyes tracked the sequence instinctively:
7-4-2-9-1-6.
The lock disengaged with a heavy thunk. The server room was larger than
she'd expected.
Racks of blinking equipment lined the walls like sleeping sentinels.
Multiple monitors covered one entire surface, displaying scrolling data
feeds and security camera angles.
A massive desk dominated the center, topped with high-end computers that
probably cost more than her entire education. And in the corner, arms
crossed, watching her with those unreadable dark eyes—Dante Moretti.
"Begin." The single word hit like a judge's gavel. Serena swallowed.
"You're staying?" "You think I'd let anyone touch my systems
unsupervised?" One eyebrow arched.
"What's wrong, Little Bird?
Nervous?" "…No." Liar.
Serena was terrified.
She could feel Dante's gaze boring into her back like a physical weight.
Like being pinned under a microscope while something cold and analytical
studied every movement, every breath, waiting for her to prove herself
or fail spectacularly. She forced herself to move.
Sat at the main terminal.
Flexed her fingers.
The keyboard was mechanical—she could tell by the weight of the keys.
Good.
Mechanical keyboards gave better feedback. The login screen glowed
before her. "Password?" "Don't play dumb.
You're a hacker, aren't you?" Dante's voice held dark amusement.
"Break in." Serena glanced back.
He was smiling, but there was nothing warm in it.
This was a test.
Everything was always a test. "Fine." Her fingers found the keys. At
first, her hands shook.
The tremor made her miss keystrokes, had her backspacing and retyping.
But gradually—like muscle memory awakening after a long sleep—the rhythm
returned.
Code flowed across the screen in cascading lines of green text.
The familiar dance of penetration testing.
Probing for weaknesses.
Finding the cracks in the armor. The clicking of keys became a staccato
symphony.
Serena's world narrowed to the screen, to the logic puzzles unfolding
before her.
Dante disappeared.
Enzo disappeared.
The cold basement and her fear all faded into background noise. There
was only the code.
Only the challenge.
Only the hunt. Ten minutes later, the login screen dissolved. She was
in. Behind her, Dante's low laugh sent shivers down her spine.
"Interesting." Serena didn't respond.
She was already diving deeper, her mind working three steps ahead.
System architecture first—understand the skeleton before examining the
organs.
File structures next.
Security protocols.
Encryption standards. And then she saw them. Vulnerabilities.
Everywhere. Serena's hands froze over the keyboard.
She stared at the screen, disbelief and horror warring on her face. This
is…
this is a disaster. Dante's systems were worse than outdated—they were
archaeological.
The firewall was five-year-old commercial software with known exploits.
Encryption used deprecated algorithms any decent hacker could crack in
hours.
And the backdoors—Jesus Christ, there were multiple backdoors left wide
open like unlocked windows in a house full of valuables. Any competent
hacker could waltz into these systems and own them completely within an
afternoon. But that wasn't the worst of it. Serena opened a directory
and her stomach dropped. Transaction records.
Money laundering routes mapped in meticulous detail.
Weapons shipment manifests.
Drug distribution networks.
Bribes paid to politicians, cops, judges—names, dates, amounts, all
documented with damning precision. Every crime Dante Moretti had
committed.
Every dirty deal.
Every drop of blood money.
All stored here, in this laughably insecure system. This is suicide.
This is digital suicide. If law enforcement got their hands on this
data, Dante's empire would crumble overnight.
He'd spend the rest of his life in a federal supermax. Serena's pulse
hammered in her ears as she dug deeper.
And that's when she found it. Someone else had already been here. The
traces were subtle—nearly invisible.
But Serena's trained eyes caught them.
Log file inconsistencies.
Timestamp anomalies.
Data packets routing through proxy servers.
Someone had been siphoning information from these systems for months.
Slow.
Careful.
Professional. Who? She tried to trace the intrusion back to its source,
but whoever it was knew what they were doing.
The trail led through multiple proxy servers, bouncing across three
continents.
Finding the actual origin would take time and serious forensic work.
"What did you find?" Dante's voice in her ear made Serena jump so
violently she nearly fell out of the chair. He'd moved behind her
without a sound.
Now he stood so close she could feel the heat radiating from his body.
Could smell whiskey and expensive cologne.
His hands gripped the back of her chair, caging her in. "Talk to me,
Little Bird.
What did you find?" His breath stirred the hair near her ear.
Serena's entire body went rigid. "…Vulnerabilities." Her voice came out
barely above a whisper. "What kind?" "Multiple.
Your firewall is obsolete.
Encryption is weak.
And you have—" She had to force the words out.
"You have backdoors.
Several of them.
Wide open." Dante's body went absolutely still behind her.
The temperature in the room seemed to drop ten degrees. "Backdoors." It
wasn't a question.
It was the low growl of a predator realizing it had been wounded without
noticing. "Yes.
And…" Serena hesitated.
If she told him this, there was no going back.
She'd be diving headfirst into the darkest parts of his world. "And
what?" The edge in his voice made her flinch. "Someone's already inside.
They've been extracting data.
For months, probably." Silence. Heavy.
Dangerous.
The kind of silence that preceded violence. Then Dante laughed—a sound
devoid of humor, full of rage barely leashed. "Who." "I don't know.
They covered their tracks well.
But given time, I can trace them." Dante pulled away.
Serena heard him pacing, heard the controlled fury in each footstep.
When she risked a glance back, his hands were opening and closing into
fists repeatedly.
He wanted to hit something.
Break something.
Kill something. "How much?" "What?" "How much data was compromised?"
Serena turned back to the screen.
Checked the logs with mounting horror. "…A lot.
Transaction records, distribution routes, contact information…" She
swallowed hard.
"Almost everything." "Fuck." Dante's fist slammed into the concrete
wall.
The impact echoed like a gunshot.
Serena flinched, hunching her shoulders. "Can you fix it?" "Yes." "How
long?" "Closing the backdoors?
A few hours.
But completely upgrading your security architecture will take days.
Maybe a week." "Start now." "But I—" "Now, Serena." His eyes locked on
hers.
Black.
Fathomless.
Absolutely unyielding. Serena nodded and turned back to the keyboard.
Hours blurred together. Serena's eyes burned, dry and gritty from
staring at screens.
Her fingers ached.
Her back screamed from hunching over the desk.
But she didn't stop.
Couldn't stop. Dante never left.
He paced.
Made calls in rapid Italian that sounded like threats.
Conferred with Enzo in low, urgent tones.
But always, always, his attention circled back to her.
Watching.
Assessing.
Waiting to see if she'd deliver or fail. The pressure was suffocating.
Serena felt like she was defusing a bomb while someone held a gun to her
head. But gradually, line by line, she rebuilt Dante's digital fortress.
Closed the backdoors.
Updated the firewall.
Implemented military-grade encryption.
Created intrusion detection systems that would scream bloody murder if
anyone tried to breach the network.
By the time she finished, these systems would be harder to crack than
most government installations. At 2:47 p.m., Serena finally leaned back
in her chair.
Every muscle in her body protested. "Done." Her voice was hoarse from
disuse and dehydration. Dante approached.
"Show me." Serena ran diagnostics.
The new security architecture lit up green across multiple monitors.
Backdoors sealed.
Encryption active.
Threat detection online.
This system was now a fortress. "No one can get in now.
And if they try, you'll know immediately." Dante studied the screens for
a long moment.
His jaw worked.
Then, slowly, he nodded. "Good work." Those two words felt like winning
an Olympic gold medal and narrowly avoiding execution at the same time.
He looked at her—really looked at her.
And something in his expression shifted.
Not quite softness, but…
recognition.
Like he was seeing her as a person instead of a possession for the first
time. "You're useful, Little Bird.
More useful than I expected." Serena didn't know whether to feel proud
or terrified.
Probably both. "My freedom?" She forced herself to meet his eyes.
"You said if I proved my value—" "I did." Dante reached into his pocket.
Pulled out a small brass key.
"Your room.
The lock won't engage anymore." He placed it in her palm.
The metal was warm from his body heat. "And twice a week, you can leave
the estate.
With Enzo as escort, obviously.
But you'll get fresh air.
See the city." Serena stared at the key.
It was tiny.
Insignificant.
But it weighed like the world. "Thank you." "Don't thank me yet."
Dante's hand caught her chin, tilting her face up.
"This isn't charity, Serena.
It's a transaction.
You remain useful, you earn privileges.
But if you become a liability…" He didn't finish.
Didn't need to. Serena understood perfectly.
She'd graduated from toy to tool.
From property to asset.
But assets that lost their value got liquidated. "I understand." "Good."
He released her.
Turned toward the door.
"Dinner tonight.
With me.
We'll celebrate your…
promotion." He left.
Enzo followed, but not before giving Serena a brief nod that might have
been respect. Alone in the server room, Serena looked at the key in her
hand.
Closed her fist around it.
And laughed—actually laughed, for the first time since becoming Dante
Moretti's prisoner. I did it.
I actually did it. But the triumph was short-lived. Because Serena
understood what she'd really accomplished today.
She'd made herself indispensable to a monster.
She'd gained a measure of freedom by chaining herself even more tightly
to his world. And now she had a new problem. Someone inside Dante's
organization was betraying him.
Selling his secrets.
And finding that person?
That would be her job now.
She'd have to dig into the ugliest corners of this criminal empire,
uncover which of Dante's trusted men had turned traitor. She'd have to
become part of the darkness to survive it. I'm sinking deeper. Serena
thought, staring at the code still scrolling across the monitors. But
maybe…
maybe that's the only way out. The key felt heavy in her hand.
Freedom and imprisonment all at once. The game was changing.
And Serena Miller was no longer just a player—she was becoming a piece
on Dante Moretti's board. Whether that meant she was winning or losing,
she honestly couldn't tell.
