
I Let Scarlett Die So Siena Could Burn His Empire
Chapter 3
I came back to consciousness in pieces—a flicker of light behind my eyelids, the sharp taste of metal on my tongue, the dull throbbing ache in my fingertips. For a long moment I wasn’t sure if I was alive or if this was the last, obscene joke: a purgatory of pain and antiseptic stench. My first breath was shallow, labored, edged with the unmistakable bite of hospital-grade air. I tried to move, but my body felt heavy, awkward, as if I’d been poured into someone else’s skin and left to settle.
A faint beeping—steady, insistent—cut through the fog. IV drip. Machines. The air hummed with electricity and the low, muffled voices of men speaking Russian somewhere nearby. I forced my eyes open, squinting against the harsh fluorescence overhead.
I was in a windowless room. Not the Vault. Smaller, colder. The walls were tiled white, but the grout lines were stained brown and the corners smelled faintly of bleach and blood. At the foot of the bed, a steel tray gleamed under the lights, set with instruments that belonged in nightmares: scalpels, bone saws, syringes fat with chemicals.
I tried to sit up. Pain lanced through my abdomen, tearing a groan from my throat. My wrists—bandaged, not strapped. My hands—shaking, but free. I caught my reflection in a scrap of metal on the tray: bloodless lips, a constellation of bruises blooming over my cheek, my hair clumped against my skull in a tangled black mess. My face—still mine, but only just.
The door clicked open.
Damien Voss entered, trailed by a woman in scrubs and a hulking man whose face I couldn’t see. Damien moved with the same predatory calm as he had in the alley, his suit immaculate, his eyes fixed on me with that same glacial calculation.
He stopped at the end of my bed, hands clasped loosely behind his back. For a long moment, he said nothing. He let the silence stretch, let me feel the weight of his attention, let me remember exactly who held my life in his hands now.
Finally, he spoke. His voice was smooth and cold, a scalpel in velvet. “Your face is gone, sweetheart. Let’s decide what the new one looks like.”
A chill ran the length of my spine. I tried to swallow, but my mouth was too dry. “What… what do you mean?”
Damien’s lips twitched—almost a smile, but not quite. “You have two choices. You can disappear. Live out the rest of your miserable days in some hole, hidden, hunted, waiting for Dante to send another man to finish the job.” He leaned in, his eyes boring into mine. “Or you can become useful to me. I need a knife that cuts both ways. A ghost with no past. I can give you a new face, a new name, and a purpose. But you won’t be Scarlett anymore. You’ll be whatever I make you.”
The woman in scrubs—her nametag read ‘Darya’—set a mirror on the tray. She looked at me without pity, her eyes assessing, clinical. “We can erase you,” she said, her accent thick but precise. “No one will know who you were. No one will find you, unless you want them to.”
The words pressed at the edges of my mind, intrusive and seductive. Disappear. Or become something else. Not Scarlett. Not the girl who loved Dante, who bled for a family that had never been hers. The pain in my gut throbbed, a reminder of all I’d lost. The love, the child, the hope—burned away, leaving only rage and the hollow echo of my own name.
I stared at Damien. “And if I refuse?”
He shrugged, unbothered. “Then you can walk out that door.” He jerked his chin toward the exit. “The city will eat you in a week. Or Dante will. Either way, you’ll never trouble me again.”
A heavy silence settled over the room. Even the machines seemed to dim, their beeping receding, replaced by the thundering of my own pulse.
I thought of Harper’s satisfied eyes, Dante’s cold indifference. The Vault, the blood on the floor, my child leaking away while everyone watched. I thought of the man in the alley, scanning for my corpse. The life I’d built—burned to ash.
I looked at my hands—pale, trembling, stained with memories I couldn’t scrub away.
“Do it,” I said. The words tasted like iron. “Erase her. Erase Scarlett. Make me someone else.”
Damien’s smile was thin and sharp. He gestured to Darya, who immediately began prepping the instruments, laying them out in a precise, menacing line. The hulking man approached, holding something that looked like a high-tech branding iron and a small box of chemicals.
Damien stepped closer, lowering his voice so only I could hear. “This is not mercy, Siena. This is opportunity. I don’t keep broken things. You will become the sharpest edge I own, or you will not survive.”
Siena. The name landed in my chest like an electric jolt. Not Scarlett. Siena. A name with no history. A name with teeth.
“Scarlett was weak,” I whispered, reaching for the surgical marker Darya offered. My hand barely shook as I pressed it to my own cheek, drawing a line from jaw to temple, marking the flesh that would be cut away. “Make me a monster.”
Darya nodded, her eyes softening for just a second. “It will hurt,” she murmured. “But you will not die.”
“Good,” I said.
The next hours dissolved into a blur of agony and numbness. I felt the heat of the chemicals as they burned away my fingerprints—one by one, the pads of my fingers dissolved until they were nothing but raw, red flesh. I felt the cold bite of the scalpel as Darya reshaped the bones of my face, the pressure and crack of cartilage, the distant tugging and stitching. I drifted in and out of consciousness, sometimes floating above the pain, sometimes drowning in it. I did not cry out. Not once.
When it was done, Darya propped a mirror in front of me. My reflection stared back—familiar and alien. My cheekbones were sharper, my jaw more angular, my lips fuller, my eyes set deeper in their sockets. The bruises had faded, replaced by surgical swelling and thin, neat lines of stitches. My hands looked like someone else’s—bandaged, smooth, blank.
I traced the unfamiliar contours of my new cheekbones, my pulse steady and cold. Siena. Not Scarlett. The girl who loved was dead. This woman—this weapon—would never beg, never bleed, never break for anyone again.
Damien stood behind me in the mirror’s reflection, his eyes approving. “Welcome to the world, Siena.”
Five years later.
The sharp, metallic scent of gunpowder hung in the air, mingling with the ghost of cigars and the faint thrum of jazz from the club upstairs. My fingers curled around the grip of the Glock, my breathing even. Target after target slid downrange—ten shots, ten clean holes at the center mass, dead center, no hesitation. The rhythm of recoil was soothing, a heartbeat I controlled.
A shadow fell across the lane. Damien appeared at my shoulder, his presence as solid and inevitable as gravity. He watched the last target flutter, a ragged black circle where the heart should be.
He didn’t smile. He never did. But there was satisfaction in the way he handed me the envelope—black, thick, stamped with the syndicate’s seal. “Tonight. There’s a gathering.”
I glanced at the invitation. The words were elegant, impersonal: ‘La Famiglia Nera cordially invites you…’
My pulse ticked up, just once, as I read the name at the bottom. Dante Russo.
Damien’s voice was quiet, almost gentle. “You ready?”
I tucked the invitation into my jacket, my mouth curving into a smile that didn’t reach my eyes.
“I’ve been waiting five years for this.”
Somewhere deep inside, the last traces of Scarlett’s ghost finally faded. Siena rose in her place—cold, precise, and hungry for vengeance.
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