Mafia Boss Saw His Son in My Restaurant, Then the Window Exploded-eirian

Noah was gone.

For one second Emery’s body refused to believe the sentence. It had carried her through fever nights, overdue rent, double shifts, cardiology waiting rooms, and the kind of fear that teaches a mother to sleep with one ear open. It had learned to move first and feel later.

But in the parking structure, with Reyes bleeding against a concrete pillar and the SUV door hanging open, her body stopped.

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Then Dante said, “They took him north.”

And she moved.

Reyes had fought hard enough to split his knuckles and take a bullet through the side. His voice was hoarse when he told them Noah had kicked one man in the knee and bitten another before they used a sedative cloth. Emery heard that and felt two opposite things at once. Pride so sharp it hurt. Terror so wide it had no edges.

“Where?” she asked.

Dante looked at his phone. His men were already pulling camera feeds, traffic plates, dock cameras, every piece of the city that could be made to talk.

“A private pier facility,” he said. “Serrano’s operator is there.”

“And Marco?”

Dante did not answer quickly enough.

Marco was his second-in-command. The man who had stood beside him through six years of violence and negotiations and quiet rebuilding. The man Dante had trusted to manage responses while he searched for leaks. The man who had known where Emery lived, where Noah went to school, which vehicle held him, and which guard would rather die than surrender a child.

“Marco is there,” Dante said.

Emery looked at him and understood the rest without being told.

Marco had not only betrayed Dante.

Marco had managed Dante’s response to the betrayal.

Every move.

Every route.

Every protective measure.

All of it had been handed across to Serrano before Dante’s people could use it.

The boat came from under a maintenance dock ten minutes later, low and black against the water. Emery stopped asking where Dante’s resources came from. Some answers would matter later. Right now, only one answer mattered.

Noah was breathing somewhere.

She was going to reach him.

The pier facility stood under a cold morning sky, three industrial buildings on old pilings, sodium lights glowing inside the center structure. Dante gave orders in a voice so controlled it should have scared her. It did not. What scared her was the look underneath it.

Not anger.

Not even fear.

Recognition.

He had become a man who knew exactly what rooms like that did to children.

“You stay behind me,” he said.

“I stay close enough to see my son.”

His eyes cut to hers. For a moment the past stood between them: the boy he had been, the girl she had been, the lie that buried him, the eight months he had known where she was and stayed away trying to neutralize a threat he had not neutralized at all.

“Close enough,” he said.

They entered from two sides.

Dante walked through the main door with three men and empty hands lifted just enough to show he had come to talk. Emery slipped through a side service entrance a few seconds later, staying behind a row of rusted shelving. The room smelled of salt, metal, and old oil.

She saw Noah immediately.

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