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The Cold Compromise  Novel Cover

The Cold Compromise

He looks at me like he already knows the truth I’ve spent a lifetime hiding. Ethan Vance—lawman, predator, believer in a system I learned to outthink before I could drink wine. His eyes don’t burn with hate. They study, measure, almost… understand. They call him incorruptible. Maybe he is. But I’ve seen incorruptible men fall, not to money or power, but to fascination. The kind that crawls under your skin and makes you wonder if the person chasing you might be the only one who truly sees you. He hunts me by the book. I survive by rewriting it. But somewhere between the pursuit and the silence, between his questions and my lies, the line blurred. And now, I can’t decide which is more dangerous, losing to him, or wanting him to catch me. --- He isn’t what I expected. Luca Vitale walks into every room like he owns it, and maybe he does. Calm. Calculated. Dangerous in ways that don’t show up on a rap sheet. He should be just another target, another name I take down and file away. But there’s something about the way he looks at me. like he already knows I’m not as untouchable as I pretend to be. I tell myself it’s strategy, curiosity, control. It’s not. It’s a problem. Because every time I think I’m closing in, I realise he’s already two steps ahead—and for the first time in my career, I’m not sure if I’m hunting him, or if he’s letting me try.
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Chapter 1

Chapter 1: The Call Back

The call had come at 4:03 a.m. EST, its icy intrusion cutting through Luca Vitale’s meticulously ordered life like a dropped stiletto. He hadn't bothered to check the screen; only one number, one voice, was capable of carrying that particular gravity.

Luca stood now in the sprawling entry hall of the Vitale Estate, a mausoleum of Florentine marble and dark, unforgiving wood. It was not a home; it was a fortress disguised as a palazzo, built fifty years ago on the highest hill in the tri-state area, far from the city but close enough to cast a long, cold shadow over it.

He still wore the suit he’d been wearing twelve hours earlier, a navy-blue, three-piece Savile Row that now felt like a cage. He hadn't slept, spending the journey upstate from Manhattan in the back of the silent, armoured Mercedes, watching the pale suburban dawn bleed over the horizon. Every mile had been a step back into a life he had spent a decade legally, morally, and geographically dismantling.

“Luca.”

The voice was Enzo, the family driver and Luca’s unwilling babysitter since childhood. Enzo’s face was a road map of old loyalties and harder living, a living testament to the kind of life Luca had traded for spreadsheets and quarterly reports.

“The Don?” Luca’s voice was low and clipped, already slipping into the formality required by these walls.

“Stable. For now. Dr Gallo is with him, but it was bad. The stroke. He won’t be leaving the room for a long time, maybe never.” Enzo didn't need to elaborate. Don Leo Vitale was not a man who lived stably or for now. He was a monolith of absolute authority. His sudden removal created a vacuum that was not just dangerous, but actively predatory.

Luca glanced up at the ceiling, three stories above, where a fresco depicting the Judgment of Paris looked down with the smug indifference of ancient gods. His family preferred to paint over their history rather than acknowledge it.

“Where is Marco?” Luca asked. Capo Marco was the logical, if barbaric, successor, a man Luca considered a relic of a bygone era, all brute force and no foresight.

“In the study, with Giuseppe and the others. They’ve been here all night. Waiting.” Enzo’s tone was carefully neutral, but the unspoken message hung in the air: Waiting for you to fail. Waiting for the chance to strike.

Luca nodded once. Waiting. The fundamental occupation of a Mafioso. They didn't build or create; they waited for others to falter, for opportunities to bleed dry, for the moment of weakness.

He moved toward the study, the scent of stale espresso and old cigar smoke growing heavier with every step. He didn’t belong here. He was the exception, the clean one, the one with a degree from Wharton and an office on Wall Street that dealt in billions, not just bullets. He was the shield the Family used to legitimise their ill-got gains. He was their banker, their consigliere on paper, and their deep-seated resentment in reality.

He paused before the heavy, mahogany study door. This was the threshold. Once he pushed it open, his carefully constructed life, the quiet apartment, the legitimate career, the distance from the blood, would be contaminated.

He took a slow, deliberate breath, adjusting the cuffs of his expensive shirt. He was not here because he wanted power. He was here for Elena, his sister, who deserved a future free of this inherited toxicity. He was here because if Marco took over, the Vitale name wouldn't just be dirty; it would be extinct within a year, wiped out by Marco's reckless violence or federal indictments.

Luca pushed the door open.

The study was a cave of testosterone and tension. Three Capos, Marco, Giuseppe, and a stoic older man named Silvio, stood around a massive, antique desk, nursing tumblers of whiskey. The wall behind the desk was dominated by a framed photograph of a young Leo Vitale, standing next to a smiling politician, a piece of blatant blackmail masquerading as memorabilia.

“Well, look who decided to join us,” Marco sneered, his thick, imposing frame shifting slightly. Marco had the eyes of a starving wolf and a suit that always looked slightly cheap, no matter the price. “The prodigal son. Does Wall Street have a dress code for funerals yet?”

The insult was designed to provoke. Marco wanted the physical confrontation he understood; he wanted Luca to drop the pretence of civility.

Luca did not react. He closed the door softly behind him, the sound an almost mocking contrast to the heavy atmosphere.

“Good morning, Marco,” Luca said, his voice flat, his gaze steady. “I understand you were the last to see my father before he collapsed.”

Marco bristled. “What the hell is that supposed to mean?”

“It means you had an audience with the Don,” Luca clarified, walking around the desk to stand not opposite Marco, but directly beneath the portrait of his father. He took command of the room's energy without raising his voice. “I am inquiring as to his state of mind before the medical emergency, as I am now acting on his behalf.”

Giuseppe, a nervous man who had risen through the ranks solely by being agreeable, cleared his throat. “It was a heated conversation, Luca. The old man was… agitated. About the Chicago deal.”

The Chicago deal. That was the first domino. The source of the financial haemorrhage Luca had only seen in ledger reports.

“Agitated enough to suffer a major stroke?” Luca pressed, looking directly at Marco, who was gripping his whiskey glass hard enough to crack the crystal.

“The old man is old, Luca. Don’t try to make this my fault. It’s the way life is. And since you’re here now,” Marco slammed his glass onto the desk, “let’s talk about the real problem. The feds are hitting us everywhere. Our revenue streams are cut by half. We need a show of force. We need to remind people who we are.”

Marco’s solution, Luca thought, was always a shovel: dig a hole, fill it with a problem, and bury it. It was unsustainable.

“We don’t need a show of force, Marco,” Luca said, pulling a thin, black-bound ledger from the inner pocket of his coat. He placed it on the desk. It was a simple, stark contrast to the guns and gold surrounding it. “We need an accounting. We are not suffering from a lack of muscle; we are suffering from a lack of money. And that means we have a rat.”

The silence that followed was heavier than the mahogany. Marco’s eyes narrowed, not in confusion, but in calculation. Luca’s pronouncement had just changed the terms of the power struggle. He wasn't just here to advise; he was here to hunt. And the hunt always started internally.

The banker had returned to clean house.

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