
Mafia’s Angel of Vengeance
Chapter 3
The scent of antiseptic and something darker—blood, perhaps—filled my nostrils as I settled into the leather chair in the corner of Dr. Finch's private recovery room. The space was sterile, clinical, all white walls and gleaming instruments that caught the harsh fluorescent light. But it was the figure on the bed that held my attention.
Anna lay motionless beneath crisp white sheets, her face wrapped in bandages that left only her dark eyes visible. Those eyes—even now, clouded with morphine and exhaustion, they burned with an intensity that made my chest tighten. She'd been unconscious for eighteen hours while Finch worked his magic, and I'd been here for most of it, watching her breathe, waiting for her to wake up and make her choice.
The newspaper crinkled in my hands as I unfolded it, scanning the headline that had made the morning edition: "Tragic End for Nowak Heiress: Beautiful Bride Takes Own Life on Wedding Day." The accompanying photograph showed a radiant young woman in an elaborate wedding gown, her smile bright and trusting. Nothing like the broken, furious creature I'd pulled from the lake.
A soft groan drew my attention back to the bed. Anna's eyes fluttered open, unfocused at first, then sharpening as they found mine across the room. I could see the moment awareness returned—the way her body tensed, her breathing quickened, her fingers clutching at the pristine sheets.
"Where..." Her voice was a rasp, barely audible.
"Safe," I said, rising from my chair with deliberate slowness. No sudden movements. She was like a wounded animal right now—dangerous in her desperation. "Dr. Finch's private clinic. You've been unconscious for almost a day."
She tried to sit up, wincing as the movement pulled at her bandages. I made no move to help her. This was her choice to make, her strength to find or lose.
"My face..." Her fingers moved toward the bandages, then stopped.
"Will heal." I approached the bed, the newspaper still in my hands. "Though you might be interested in this morning's news."
I placed the paper on the bed beside her, watching as her eyes moved across the headline. The photograph. The detailed account of how the beautiful Anna Nowak, overcome with despair at her impending marriage, had thrown herself from the Michigan Avenue Bridge in her wedding gown.
"Quite a tragic story," I continued, my voice deliberately casual. "The whole city is talking about it. Your poor fiancé is beside himself with grief, apparently. Blames himself for not seeing the signs of your... distress."
Something cold and sharp flickered across her visible features. Her fingers pressed against the newspaper, and I could see her knuckles whiten beneath the hospital lighting.
"They think I'm dead," she whispered.
"You are dead." I pulled my chair closer to the bed, studying her reaction. "Anna Nowak died in Lake Michigan yesterday. The question is—what do you want to do about it?"
She stared at me for a long moment, and I could practically see the wheels turning behind those dark eyes. This was the moment of truth, the crossroads where she would either break completely or transform into something harder, more useful.
"I could return you to your family," I said, lighting a cigarette and letting the smoke curl between us. "Call it a miracle. Anna Nowak, saved by a passing fisherman, suffering from amnesia but alive. You could walk back into that world, back to the people who tried to erase you."
Her breathing quickened. We both knew what that would mean—whoever had put her in that cage would simply try again, more carefully this time.
"Or," I continued, taking a long drag, "you can accept your death. Anna Nowak stays buried in the obituaries, and you become something new. Something they'll never see coming."
"What's the price?" The question came out sharp, direct. Smart woman. She understood that nothing in this world came free.
"You become mine." I met her gaze steadily, letting her see the predator beneath the civilized veneer. "My asset, my responsibility, my weapon if needed. I give you the means for revenge, protection, a new identity. In return, you belong to me."
The silence stretched between us, heavy with possibility and threat. I could see her weighing her options—the known hell of returning to her betrayers versus the unknown dangers of binding herself to a man like me.
Slowly, deliberately, she picked up the newspaper and stared at her own photograph. The innocent, trusting face of a woman who no longer existed. When she looked up at me again, something fundamental had shifted in her expression. The desperate, broken creature from the dock was gone, replaced by something colder, more calculating.
A single, sharp nod.
The bargain was struck.
I stubbed out my cigarette, feeling a satisfaction that had nothing to do with business and everything to do with the recognition of a kindred spirit. "Dr. Finch will be pleased to hear you're awake. He's been quite eager to discuss the next phase of your... transformation."
As if summoned by my words, the door opened to admit a thin, precise man in wire-rimmed glasses. Dr. Adrian Finch moved with the careful efficiency of a surgeon, his hands already reaching for Anna's chart.
"Ah, Miss..." He paused, glancing at me with raised eyebrows.
"She'll need a new name," I said. "Something appropriate for her new life."
Finch nodded, making a note. "The facial reconstruction went well. The gash has been cleaned and sutured—it will heal with minimal scarring. However, per Mr. Kowalski's specific instructions, we'll be making one additional modification."
Anna's eyes flicked between us, wariness creeping into her expression.
"A small mark," Finch continued, his voice clinically detached. "A perfectly round mole, positioned just below your left chin. It will appear entirely natural, but distinctive enough to serve as... identification."
"A maker's mark," I added, watching her process this information. "So there's never any question about who you belong to."
For a moment, I thought she might refuse. The old Anna, the sheltered princess, would have been horrified at the idea of being branded like property. But this new creature, this phoenix rising from her own ashes, simply nodded again.
"When?" she asked.
"Tomorrow," Finch replied. "Once the swelling subsides. It's a simple procedure—you'll be recovered within a week."
As Finch left to prepare for the surgery, I remained in my chair, studying my newest acquisition. She lay back against the pillows, her eyes fixed on the ceiling, but I could see the fire burning behind her composed facade.
"Any regrets?" I asked.
She turned to look at me, and for the first time since I'd pulled her from the lake, she smiled. It was a cold, sharp thing that promised retribution.
"Only that I trusted them in the first place."
Perfect. Absolutely perfect.
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