Rocco followed the girl down the hallway, past rooms that looked as if they had been ransacked. In the kitchen, cabinet doors hung open, revealing nothing but dust and mouse droppings. The refrigerator was unplugged, its door held open with a wooden spoon.
They found Emma’s mother lying on a pile of old blankets in the corner of what had once been the living room.
When she looked up and saw Rocco, fear flashed across her face.
“Please,” she whispered, struggling to sit up. “Please don’t hurt us. We don’t have anything left to take.”
Rocco knelt slowly, keeping his hands visible.
“Ma’am, I’m not here to hurt you. Your daughter told me what happened. I need to know who did this.”
The woman looked between him and Emma, confusion replacing fear.
“You’re… the boss, aren’t you? The one they work for.”
“Some people claim to work for me,” Rocco said carefully. “But what happened to you wasn’t authorized. It wasn’t business. It was cruelty.”
The woman—Sarah—began to cry. Quiet tears born from exhaustion rather than relief.
“They said I owed money to your organization,” she said. “My husband had borrowed from you before he died.”
She shook her head.
“But Marcus never borrowed money from anyone. He worked 3 jobs just to avoid debt.”
Rocco felt his jaw tighten.
“Tell me exactly what they said. Every word you remember.”
“The tall one had a scar across his cheek. He said Marcus signed papers. Said the debt transferred to me when he died. $15,000 plus interest.”
Sarah wiped her nose with the back of her hand.
“When I said I didn’t have it, they started taking things. Said they’d come back every week until it was paid.”
“Did they show you any papers?”
“Just a piece of paper with Marcus’s signature. But it didn’t look right. His handwriting was different.”
She looked at Emma, who had sat beside her and was holding her hand.
“They took everything in 2 trips. Furniture, appliances… even Emma’s toys. They said if I called the police, they’d come back for something more valuable.”
Rocco understood the threat immediately. In this world, when material things ran out, people paid with their bodies, their dignity, or their children.
“The man with the scar,” Rocco said calmly. “Did he give you a name?”
“Vincent,” Sarah whispered. “He said his name was Vincent.”
Rocco’s blood turned to ice.
Vincent Caruso.
One of his lieutenants. A man trusted with collections and territory management.
Emma spoke again.
“Mommy… the man with the scar hurt Mrs. Patterson too. And the family with the new baby. I see them crying sometimes.”
Rocco looked at the child with new understanding.
This wasn’t one incident.
Vincent had been running his own operation, using the Moretti name to extort money from families who had nothing left to give.
“How many families?” Rocco asked.
Emma counted slowly on her fingers.
“7 that I know about. Maybe more.”
Seven families. Seven homes destroyed.
Rocco stood, already calculating what needed to happen next.
First, he made a phone call.
“Tony, bring groceries to an address I’m about to send you. Enough food for a week. And bring cash. $500.”
He paused, glancing at Emma and Sarah.
“Make it $1,000. And bring it now.”
He hung up and looked back at Sarah.
“Food will be here within the hour. Electricity will be restored tomorrow morning. Someone will fix your door.”
Sarah stared at him.
“I don’t understand. Why are you helping us?”
Rocco glanced at Emma.
“Because someone used my name to hurt your family.”
His voice hardened slightly.
“And that makes it personal.”
What he didn’t say was that Vincent Caruso had just signed his own death warrant.
But first, Rocco needed to understand how deep the betrayal went.
Because in Rocco’s world there were rules.
And the most important rule was simple.
You never target innocent families.
You never steal food from children.
You never leave mothers choosing between medicine and meals.
Vincent had broken that rule.
And now he was about to learn why Rocco Moretti had earned his reputation as the most feared man in the city.
Part 2
As Rocco left Sarah and Emma’s house that night, his phone buzzed with a message from Tony confirming the groceries had been delivered.
But Rocco’s mind was already several steps ahead.
Men like Vincent always had informants, always had eyes watching. By morning he would know that Rocco Moretti had personally visited one of his victims.
Rocco drove through rain-soaked streets, his knuckles white against the steering wheel.
For 30 years he had built his organization—30 years of careful rules and clear lines that his men knew never to cross.
Vincent had shattered those lines for what? A few thousand stolen from families who barely had enough to survive.
His phone rang.
The name on the screen made his blood pressure rise even higher.
Vincent Caruso.
“Boss,” Vincent said casually. Too casually. “Heard you were in my neighborhood tonight. Everything all right?”
Rocco kept his voice level.
“Just checking on some business, Vincent. Nothing that concerns you.”
“Of course not, boss. Just making sure nobody was causing problems in my territory. You know how protective I get about the families under my watch.”
The audacity nearly made Rocco laugh.
Vincent was bragging about protecting the same families he had been destroying.
“Speaking of families,” Rocco said slowly. “I met an interesting woman tonight. Sarah Thompson. Name ring any bells?”
The silence on the other end lasted just long enough to confirm everything.
“Thompson,” Vincent finally said. “Doesn’t sound familiar, boss. Should it?”
“Her husband Marcus apparently owed us money before he died. $15,000 plus interest. You handled the collection personally.”
“Oh… right. Yeah. That Thompson. Sad case. Husband left her with a mountain of debt. Had to recover what we could.”
Rocco pulled into the parking garage beneath his office building.
“Vincent, I need you to meet me tonight. Bring the paperwork on the Thompson account.”
“Tonight? Boss, it’s almost midnight.”
“Tonight.”
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