Page 30 of Ghost of the Mafia Spy

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My body goes rigid. The instinct to snap my teeth, to silence her, flares hot and bright. But it is her. I do not lash out at her. I protect her.

"I know what the numbers suggest." I keep my voice dead level. "Decades of access. Deep structural knowledge. Elder level clearance. The pattern indicates elder-level access."

There. The category is spoken. The poison is in the room.

Imani does not flinch. She just holds my gaze. "Are you going to tell Dominic?"

I look at the heavy steel door. Beyond it lies the rest of the compound. My brothers. The War Room. The explosive reality of a decades-long betrayal from somewhere deep inside our own house. If I walk through that door and present the data, the Costa family will tear itself apart. Dante will lose his mind. Matteo will demand blood. Dominic will have to put down one of our own.

I look back at Imani.

"No." The decision settles in my gut, cold and final.

Her eyebrows draw together. "Vincenzo. If someone is feeding intel to the Bellantis, your family is in immediate danger."

"My family is always in danger." I counter, my grip on her hips tightening until she shifts closer. "The data is circumstantial. It is a digital footprint. It can be spoofed. It can be manipulated. Until I find the physical origin point, the actual device routing the leak, I will not detonate that bomb."

She searches my face. She is calculating the risk, reading my logic the way she reads a complex server architecture.

"You're protecting them from the truth." She understands. She always understands.

"I am preventing a civil war based on unverified code." I correct her. Then, the deeper, far more selfish truth claws its way out. "And I'm choosing not to leave this room right now."

Her breath hitches. The sound is a quiet gasp in the silent room.

"For eight years, I chose the screens." I lift one hand, tangling my fingers in her dark hair. I tilt her head back. "I chose the data. I chose the isolation. I refused to let anyone in because it hurt too much to exist in the same space as another human being."

I lean down. My lips hover a fraction of an inch from hers. The heat radiating between us is staggering.

"I am not choosing the data tonight." My voice drops low and rough, stripped down to bare possession. "I am choosing you."

Imani's hands slide up from my chest to wrap around my neck. Her body presses flush against mine. The chaotic noise of the world, the looming threat of the Bellanti hit squads, the devastating betrayal of the internal mole—all of it is pushed back, muted by the force of her presence.

"Then choose me." Her voice is a command. Fierce. Unyielding. "Show me you are really here, Vincenzo."

I crush my mouth to hers. The kiss is deep, punishing, and consuming. I devour her sigh. I sweep my tongue past her lips, claiming the heat inside, marking her as mine over and over again.

She kisses me back with equal ferocity. She does not break. She does not yield. She matches my demand with her own strength.

I back her up. My boots thud against the concrete floor. I pull her in against the cool steel of the workstation, my body blocking the chill from reaching her. My hands find her waist, fingers digging hard into the fabric of the flannel shirt. I anchor her there, pressed fully against her, no space left between us.

I pull back just enough to look at her. Her lips are swollen. Her eyes are dark, blown wide with desire and unshakable trust.

"You are the only signal." I breathe the words against her mouth. "You are the only thing that makes sense."

"I'm not a variable," she whispers, her hands sliding into my hair, pulling me back down. "I am yours."

"Mine." The word rips out of my throat. Then the Italian comes after it, low against her temple. "Tutta mia." A permanent classification. A blood oath.

I scoop her up. She wraps her legs around my waist. I carry her across the room to the bare mattress in the corner. I drop tomy knees, taking her with me, keeping her in my arms. We hit the mattress together.

I do not push for more. I do not strip the clothes from her body or demand physical release. I simply hold her.

She settles against me, locked inside the circle of my arms. I wrap my arms around her, sealing her there against me. She rests her head over my heart. The steady rhythm of her breathing aligns with my own.

The room is dark, save for the faint blue glow of the monitors. The servers continue their endless, mechanical hum. The data streams flow across the screens, cataloging the war raging outside these walls.

But for the first time in eight years, I do not care about the data.