The Mafia King's Deadly Wife
Chapter 93: She Used Me
Sebastian was already in the war room when she arrived.
He was never early. He arrived precisely when the work required him, not before. Early meant he had been sitting with something and had decided this was the morning it got said.
She came through the door and read him in one pass—the set of his shoulders, the evidence package on the table in front of him, the specific quality of stillness that was not his operational stillness but the other kind, the one that meant something had cost him and he was not going to let it show any more than necessary—and she crossed to the table and sat down without preamble.
He walked her through it. No lead-up, no softening. Six months of routing discrepancies, origin fingerprints, three specific instances where intelligence had been sanitized before it reached the operational chain. The eastern access read before Pier Eleven. The northern defensive positioning three operations back. A supply chain flag that had gone quiet in a way that had looked like resolution and was not resolution.
She read as he talked. The evidence was not circumstantial. It was not a pattern that could be explained by clerical error or systemic failure. It was deliberate, practiced, and timed to Caruso’s operational windows with a precision that required knowledge of both sides of the information chain.
"She fed them the Pier Eleven positioning," Sebastian said. Flat. The specific flatness of a man stating a fact he is not going to let himself react to in front of anyone.
Raven looked at the timestamp on the eastern access read. Three days before the operation. The corridor she had taken Adrian and Leonid through, cleared on intelligence that had been sanitized before it reached her. She held that for a moment—the cold of it, the specific cold of understanding exactly how close it came—and then she set it down and moved to the next page.
"How long has she been feeding them."
"Active betrayal confirmed six months. Passive—information available to her and not actively routed, but accessible—possibly from the beginning." A pause. "She had full clearance from month one. I gave it to her."
She looked at him. He met it without flinching, which was the only way Sebastian met anything.
"You built the case," she said.
"It took me too long."
She did not tell him otherwise. It had taken him too long. That was true and he knew it and he did not need her to soften it. What she said instead was: "You built it. That’s what matters now."
He held her gaze for one beat. Then he looked back at the evidence package.
Vincent came through the door. He ran the room in one pass—Sebastian’s posture, the package on the table, her face—and crossed to the table without speaking. Sebastian walked him through it a second time, the same flat recitation. Vincent listened without moving. When Sebastian finished the room held its quiet.
"Where is she," Vincent said.
"Logistics office. Morning shift started forty minutes ago."
Vincent looked at Raven. She looked at him. One beat.
"Lucian," she said.
Lucian was already at the door.
Val came in twenty minutes later.
She had not been summoned. She never needed summoning—she moved through the mansion on her own calendar, and this morning her calendar had brought her to the war room with something about a logistics update she had been meaning to pass along. She came through the door with her event binder under one arm and stopped.
She read the room. Val was not operationally trained but she had grown up inside this world and she knew what a war room looked like when something had gone wrong on the inside. She knew the quality of Sebastian’s stillness. She knew what it meant when Lucian was not at his station.
She looked at Raven. "What happened."
Not a question. She already knew something had. She was asking for the shape of it.
Raven told her. Straight, no frame around it—because Val did not want a frame, and because she had earned the information without one. Leni. Six months confirmed, possibly longer. The routing. The Pier Eleven positioning. What she had fed Caruso and when, and what that meant for the operations that had run on that intelligence.
Val listened without moving. Her hands were at her sides, still—not tense, just still, the specific stillness of someone receiving something that is rearranging several things at once and who is not going to let the rearranging happen on the outside where other people have to manage it.
When Raven finished, Val was quiet for a moment.
"She asked me about your schedule," Val said. Quiet. Following a thread backward, the same way Raven followed threads, the same intelligence in a different register. "Early on. In the kitchen. I told her your morning timing." Her jaw moved. "I thought she was being helpful."
"I know," Raven said.
"She used me to get to you." Flat. Not a question. The fact, stated, the full weight of it accepted without decoration.
Raven did not say it wasn’t her fault. She did not say Val couldn’t have known. She held Val’s gaze and let her have the truth of it, because Val was standing in this room without flinching and she had earned the truth.
"Yes," Raven said.
Val nodded. Small, tight. Something moved through her face—not tears, something harder than tears, the specific expression of a person who has just understood something about the world that they cannot unknow—and then she straightened. She looked at Vincent. He was watching her with the particular quality of attention that did not intrude but was entirely present. She looked at him the way she looked at him when something was serious: directly, without the usual warmth performing as armor.
"What happens to her," Val said.
Vincent held her gaze. He did not answer. He did not need to. She had been his niece long enough to understand the answer.
She looked back at Raven. "Are you going out tonight."
Raven looked at the map. The Falcone-Caruso strike window, the seventy-two hours that had come down to hours now. "Yes."
Val set her binder on the nearest chair. She crossed the room and she put both arms around Raven, brief and tight, the deliberate embrace of someone who has decided the situation requires it and is not going to ask permission. Raven went still—the trained instinct, the body cataloguing and preparing—and then before she could redirect it Val was already stepping back.
"Come back," Val said. Plain. No decoration.
She picked up her binder and left. The door closed quiet.
The room held the shape of her for a moment. Nobody spoke.
Raven looked at the map. "The window’s up," she said. "We go tonight."
The secondary freight corridor ran exactly as mapped.
That was the first thing she confirmed on approach—the layout the Viper had described, the geometry she had rebuilt after the Tracker’s intelligence, the narrow channel between the Falcone-controlled loading infrastructure and the corrugated warehouse walls. It matched. She marked the confirmation internally and moved.
Two units. Raven and Dante on the main approach with two soldiers. Adrian on the northern position against the bounty professionals the third raise had drawn. Leonid on the eastern false line—the decoy position, real enough to commit bodies to, not real enough to matter. Gabriel on the mansion perimeter. Standard comms, thirty-second checks, no deviations unless called.
The false eastern response worked. Caruso committed a full unit to a position De Luca had already vacated, which meant fourteen minutes of clean movement in the secondary corridor while Caruso’s attention was split. She moved through it without incident—first contact neutralized, second, the schedule running exactly as the Viper had described from his cell, the intelligence holding.
Then Isabella came out of the south loading door. 𝚏𝕣𝕖𝚎𝚠𝚎𝚋𝚗𝐨𝐯𝕖𝕝.𝕔𝐨𝕞
Not one of the mapped approach vectors. The south door had been designated clear on the pre-operation intelligence—the intelligence that had passed through Leni’s routing chain. Raven registered the angle first, the specific wrongness of it, and then she registered who it was and the two recognitions arrived at the same instant and produced the same cold.
She had not seen Isabella in four years. The Widowmaker. She had heard the name at the Council, tracked it through the gala, built a model of the threat from across rooms where she had been reading her the way she read everything she expected to eventually have to survive. The model was detailed. It was also built on the version of Isabella that existed in Raven’s memory—the woman who had put her through the Caruso training gauntlet at seventeen, who had broken her and rebuilt her and broken her again until what remained was the thing that was standing in this corridor now.
What Raven had not accounted for was that Isabella had kept building her own model in the years since.
She came in without announcement, without the performance some fighters used to signal their confidence. Just the movement—clean, economic, the specific efficiency of a woman who had not wasted a motion in twenty years. Raven moved to meet her and Isabella adjusted before the adjustment was complete, redirecting into the space Raven had been moving toward rather than the space she’d left. She had anticipated the adjustment. She had anticipated the anticipation.
Raven broke left. Isabella was already there.