Chapter 56 The Weight of the Crown
The air in the Roman safehouse was thick with the scent of old wood and the metallic tang of high-end surveillance gear.
Outside, the city was waking up, oblivious to the fact that its most powerful "silent partners" were about to be dragged into the light. Lisa sat at the scarred oak table, her eyes fixed on the digital map flickering on the wall.
It had been seventy-two hours since they landed in Italy. Seventy-two hours of living like ghosts, moving between shadows, and realizing that the Foundation was no longer just an office it was a battlefield.
"The money trail is looping again," Leo said, his fingers flying across his keyboard. He looked exhausted, the boyish light in his eyes replaced by a hard, calculating glint that made Lisa’s heart ache.
"They’re using a Vatican-linked clearing house to mask the final destination. Every time I get close to the master account, the system flushes itself."
"Because it’s not just a bank, Leo," Silvio said, standing by the window with a pair of binoculars. "It’s a network of favors. You can't hack a handshake."
Silvio turned around, the morning light catching the deep lines on his face. He looked older today.
The mountain air of Patagonia had softened him, but Rome was hardening him back into the man he used to be.
Lisa hated it. She hated that they were back in the belly of the beast, and she hated that their son was the one holding the scalpel.
"I found the signature," Leo whispered, his voice cracking slightly. He turned the monitor toward them. "It’s not a corporation. It’s a person. One name tied to every single loan we 'cleared' last year."
Lisa leaned in, her breath hitching. The name on the screen wasn't Vane or any of the usual suspects. It was a name from her childhood, a name she hadn't heard since her father’s first bankruptcy.
"Cardinal Moretti," she read aloud.
The silence that followed was heavy.
Silvio let out a long, ragged breath, sliding into the chair opposite her.
"My uncle," Silvio whispered. "The one who went into the Church to 'cleanse' the family blood. I thought he died in the purge twenty years ago."
"He didn't die," Leo said, his face pale. "He just moved the throne.
He’s been using the Church’s immunity to run the most sophisticated predatory lending scheme in Europe.
We didn't save those families, Mom. We just moved their debts into his 'holy' ledger."
Lisa felt a wave of cold fury.
This was the master’s hand. This was why the Carver had been so confident. They hadn't been fighting a syndicate; they had been fighting a religion of greed.
"Are we ready for this?" Silvio asked, looking at her.
He didn't sound like the invincible Don who had once commanded a city with a flick of his wrist.
His voice was a raw, jagged whisper that almost got lost in the hum of the servers. He reached out, his hand trembling just slightly as he brushed a stray lock of hair from her face.
His skin was rough, weathered by years of labor, but his touch was as tender as a bruise. In his eyes, Lisa saw the reflection of her own exhaustion the weariness of a woman who had spent half her life fighting for a peace that seemed determined to slip through her fingers.
He looked at her not as his Queen, but as the girl he had once pulled from the wreckage of a burning villa. He was asking if her soul could take another round of shadows, or if the light they had finally found was too precious to risk losing again.
She took a deep, shuddering breath, the Roman air feeling heavy with the weight of centuries of secrets. She looked at Silvio, seeing the gray in his beard and the deep fatigue in his eyes, and realized they weren't just fighting for a legacy anymore they were fighting for the right to finally stop being brave.
"Tired of fighting," she whispered.
"Still here, though," he replied softly.
"Always for you," she promised.
"We were never ready for any of it, Silvio," she said, her voice cracking before she steadied it. She leaned into his touch, closing her eyes for a brief second to memorize the warmth of his palm.
"We weren't ready for the debt, or the fire, or the child we had to hide in the snow. But we did it anyway.
We survived because we didn't have a choice. And we’re going to survive this because those families in Rome don’t have a choice either."
She opened her eyes, and the Iron Queen was back, but she was different now. She wasn't fighting for a throne; she was fighting for a clearing.
"Leo," she said, turning to her son. "Can you trace his private residence?"
"I don't need to," Leo said, standing up and grabbing his coat. "He’s at the Basilica. He’s giving the morning mass.
He thinks he’s untouchable because he’s standing behind an altar."
"Then we’ll meet him there," Silvio said, his voice regaining its edge of steel. "No guns. No masks.
Just the truth. We’re going to show his 'sheep' exactly what kind of wolf is leading them."
They walked out of the safehouse, the Roman sun blindingly bright. They didn't look like heroes; they looked like a family going to church.
But as they crossed the Tiber, Lisa felt the weight of the golden lemon brooch on her coat. It felt heavy, like a real lemon, a piece of the earth they had fought to own.
The final debt was no longer a number on a page. It was the man in the red robe, and today, the collection was coming due.
His presence filled the room before he even spoke, a shadow that made the air feel colder. Every step he took echoed like a promise of reckoning, and I could feel my heartbeat racing against the inevitability of it.
There was no hiding, no delaying, only the quiet dread that whatever came next would leave nothing untouched.
And as his eyes met mine, I understood that this was more than repayment; it was a reckoning written in flesh and fire.