Current location: Novel nest The Mafia King’s Collateral Girl Chapter 34

"The Mafia King’s Collateral Girl" Chapter 34

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Vincent Hale arrived during snowfall.

Which already felt ominous.

Large white flakes drifted slowly across the mansion windows while evening settled cold and blue over the city. The first real snowstorm of the year wrapped Manhattan in eerie silence beneath glowing streetlights.

Ivy stood alone in the library staring out at it when Marta quietly entered.

“There’s a visitor.”

Ivy frowned slightly.

“At nine at night?”

Marta hesitated.

Interesting.

Very interesting.

“Federal visitor.”

Oh no.

Absolute oh no.

Lucien was still downtown handling meetings with three increasingly nervous councilmen and one shipping crisis Matteo described as “annoyingly illegal.”

Which meant Vincent Hale had timed this intentionally.

Of course he had.

Ivy crossed slowly toward the foyer while snow drifted softly outside the tall windows.

Vincent stood beside the fireplace in a dark wool coat dusted white at the shoulders.

Calm.

Elegant.

Dangerous in that quiet prosecutor way that made every conversation feel like testimony.

His eyes lifted toward her immediately.

“There you are.”

Ivy crossed both arms.

“You showing up at night now feels legally threatening.”

Hale smiled faintly.

“You’re recovering.”

“That wasn’t a question.”

“No.”

The foyer settled quiet around them.

No guards nearby.

Interesting.

Very interesting.

Either Lucien trusted Hale more than he admitted—

or Hale had already manipulated his way past security.

Both felt concerning.

Ivy stopped several feet away.

“What do you want.”

Hale removed leather gloves slowly.

Straight to business tonight.

Interesting.

“I need five minutes.”

“You had those at the café.”

“And now I need honesty.”

The sentence landed heavier than expected.

Ivy’s stomach tightened slightly.

Snow tapped softly against the windows while the fire crackled low nearby.

Hale reached slowly into his coat pocket.

Ivy stiffened instantly.

He noticed.

“Relax.”

“That’s your second failed attempt at saying that.”

Hale pulled out a thin manila folder and placed it carefully on the foyer table between them.

No sudden movements.

No pressure.

Worse.

Professional calm.

“What’s that.”

“Your future.”

Interesting phrasing.

Very threatening phrasing.

Ivy didn’t touch the folder.

Hale watched her quietly.

“You know what Lucien is.”

The sentence came soft.

Not cruel.

Almost tired.

Ivy’s jaw tightened slightly.

“He’s not on trial right now.”

“No.” Hale’s eyes sharpened. “But eventually he will be.”

Silence.

The fire cracked softly behind them.

Ivy looked down at the folder.

Then back at him.

“What’s inside.”

“Immunity.”

The word hit cold.

Immediate.

Hale continued before she could answer.

“For you. For Rosie. Full federal protection.”

Ivy stared at him silently.

Snow drifted slower outside now.

Beautiful.

Quiet.

Completely opposite the violence sitting inside this conversation.

“You want me to betray him.”

Hale didn’t blink.

“I want you alive.”

There it was again.

That same argument.

Protection dressed differently.

Interesting.

Very interesting.

Ivy laughed weakly under her breath.

“You and Lucien really are more alike than either of you admits.”

Something flickered briefly across Hale’s face.

Gone quickly.

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Still there.

Interesting.

“He’s escalating,” Hale said quietly. “Russo’s people are disappearing weekly now.”

Ivy’s stomach twisted immediately.

Because she knew.

Lucien never told her directly.

But blood followed him more heavily after the kidnapping.

More guards.

More bruised knuckles.

More silence after midnight phone calls.

Hale stepped closer slowly.

“You think love changed him.” His voice lowered slightly. “It didn’t.”

The words landed sharply.

“He was violent before me.”

“Yes.” Hale’s eyes stayed fixed on hers. “Now he has motivation.”

Silence.

Ivy hated how much that scared her.

Not enough to leave.

That was the terrifying part.

Hale noticed her hesitation immediately.

“Do you know what he did the night Russo took you?”

Ivy looked away first.

Bad sign.

“I know enough.”

“No.” Hale stepped closer. “You know what he lets you see.”

The sentence slid cold beneath her ribs.

Hale opened the folder slowly.

Photos.

Reports.

Bodies.

God.

Ivy physically recoiled.

Lucien stood captured in grainy surveillance stills soaked in blood outside abandoned warehouses. Men carried into rivers. Burned vehicles. Crime scene photos marked with federal timestamps.

The monster.

Fully visible now.

Ivy’s chest tightened painfully.

Hale watched her carefully.

“He tore through half the city in four hours.”

The memories hit instantly.

Lucien shaking in the SUV afterward.

Lucien clutching her like oxygen.

Lucien whispering I thought I lost you.

And suddenly the photos hurt worse.

Because she understood exactly why he did it.

Interesting.

Very heartbreaking.

“He loves you,” Hale said quietly.

Ivy looked up sharply.

Hale gave one faint nod.

“No point pretending otherwise now.”

The honesty startled her.

“But love like his…” Hale closed the folder softly. “Eventually destroys everything around it.”

The foyer fell silent again.

Snowlight reflected pale silver across marble floors.

Ivy stared down at the folder.

Immunity.

Protection.

Freedom.

A future without blood.

Without fear.

Without becoming collateral damage in wars she barely understood.

And somewhere deep down—

a tiny terrified part of her wanted it.

That was the unbearable thing.

Hale noticed the conflict immediately.

Of course he did.

“You don’t owe him loyalty,” he said quietly.

The sentence hit hard.

Because maybe she didn’t.

Lucien lied.

Manipulated.

Controlled.

Burned cities for her.

Loved her in ways that frightened everyone around them.

Maybe even himself.

Ivy looked toward the snowfall outside the windows.

Then softly:

“You know what’s funny.”

Hale stayed silent.

“The night I met Lucien…” A faint laugh escaped her weakly. “He was bleeding in the snow pretending not to need anybody.”

Hale’s expression shifted slightly.

Interesting.

Very interesting.

“And now?” he asked carefully.

Ivy looked down at the photos again.

The blood.

The violence.

The devastation.

Then remembered Lucien asleep beside her with one hand wrapped tightly around hers like nightmares waited every time he closed his eyes.

Remembered him begging.

Please don’t walk away from me.

God.

Hale stepped closer one final time.

“If you give me access to his accounts, safehouses, shipping routes—”

“No.”

The answer surprised both of them.

Ivy stared at the folder quietly.

Then slowly picked it up.

Hale watched carefully now.

Tense.

Hopeful.

Interesting.

Very interesting.

Ivy crossed toward the fireplace.

And without another word—

dropped the entire folder directly into the flames.

Fire swallowed the pages instantly.

Photos curled black.

Names disappeared.

Evidence burned gold and orange beneath rising heat.

Hale froze.

Actually froze.

Ivy watched the papers collapse slowly into ash.

Then whispered softly:

“You were wrong about one thing.”

Hale’s voice came quiet now.

“What.”

Ivy looked back at him through firelight.

“I already know exactly what Lucien is.”

The silence afterward felt enormous.

Hale stared at the burning evidence.

At the ashes collapsing inward.

At Ivy standing beside the fireplace choosing the monster anyway.

And for the first time since meeting him—

Vincent Hale looked genuinely disappointed.

Not angry.

Worse.

Sad.

“You love him too,” he murmured quietly.

The truth landed softly between them.

Ivy didn’t answer.

Didn’t need to.

The fire already had.

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