They Hung My Mom On A Tree, Save Her!” Little Girl Begged the Mafia Boss — What He Did Next…
Betrayal and Despair
But then Harrison’s phone rang. Not the burner; his personal cell.
He pulled away, the moment shattering. He looked at the screen.
His expression turned to stone.
“It’s Krell,”
he said.
Ila froze. Harrison answered, putting it on speaker.
“Harrison.”
Krell’s voice was smooth, oily.
“You made a mess of my downtown today. You shouldn’t have been playing in my yard.”
“Victor,”
Harrison replied coolly.
“I want what belongs to me,”
Krell said.
“The accountant’s widow and the data.”
“Come and get them,”
Harrison challenged.
Krell laughed. It was a dry, humorless sound.
“Oh, I don’t need to come to you, Harrison. I think you’ll come to me.”
“Why would I do that?”
“Because,”
Krell said, his voice dropping to a whisper,
“while you were playing hero at the pawn shop, who was watching the house?”
Harrison’s blood turned to ice.
“What did you do?”
“Your man Rigs is good,”
Krell said.
“But my team is better. We hit the manor ten minutes ago.”
Ila screamed, lunging at the phone.
“Molly! Where is Molly?”
“Ah, the mother,”
Krell said.
“She’s fine for now. She’s with me. If you want to see the little girl again, bring me the chip alone tonight at the shipyard.”
The line went dead. Harrison stared at the phone.
The color drained from his face. He looked at Ila.
She wasn’t crying. She was staring at him with a look of absolute betrayal.
“You said she was safe,”
Ila whispered, her voice breaking.
“You promised me she was safe.”
She began to hit him, pounding her fists against his chest.
“You promised! You promised!”
Harrison caught her wrists. He didn’t defend himself.
He deserved it. He had left the manor lightly guarded to ensure the mission succeeded.
He had gambled, and he had lost.
“Ila, stop,”
he commanded, shaking her slightly.
“Panic won’t save her. I will.”
He pulled her close, staring into her wild, terrified eyes.
“I will get her back,”
Harrison swore, his voice a low growl that shook with lethal intent.
“And then I am going to peel the skin off Victor Krell’s bones. But I need you to trust me one last time.”
Ila looked at him, tears streaming down her face.
“If she dies, I will kill you myself.”
“If she dies,”
Harrison said darkly,
“I’ll hand you the gun.”
He turned to the driver.
“Call everyone. Every hitter, every soldier, every favor I’m owed. We’re going to the shipyard.”
Harrison checked his gun. The negotiation was over.
This was war.
The Trojan Horse Plan
The convoy didn’t return to the manor. That location was burned, figuratively and perhaps literally.
Instead, the SUVs descended into the bowels of the city, entering a subterranean parking garage beneath the Velvet Room, an exclusive high-end nightclub Harrison owned in the financial district.
It was a fortress disguised as a playground for the rich. Harrison helped Ila out of the car.
She was trembling, but it wasn’t from the cold anymore. It was a vibrating, terrified energy that radiated off her in waves.
“We have four hours,”
Harrison announced to his team, his voice echoing off the concrete walls.
“I want full tactical loadouts, heavy armor, night vision, and get me the blueprints for the shipyard sector four.”
He guided Ila into a private elevator. As the doors slid shut, sealing them away from his soldiers, the silence between them was deafening.
“You have a plan.”
It wasn’t a question. It was a desperate plea for reassurance.
Harrison hit the button for the penthouse office.
“I have a strategy. A plan implies I know all the variables. I don’t.”
They stepped into his office, a space of dark wood, leather, and dim amber lighting. Harrison went straight to a wall safe hidden behind a painting.
He spun the dial rapidly.
“He has my daughter, Harrison,”
Ila said, her voice rising.
“He has Molly. She’s six. She’s scared of the dark. She needs her bear.”
She choked on a sob, leaning against the heavy oak desk for support. Harrison pulled a heavy matte black case from the safe.
He slammed it onto the desk and opened it. Inside lay two custom-made pistols, extra magazines, and a combat knife.
“Krell made a mistake,”
Harrison said, his back to her as he inspected a weapon.
“A mistake?”
Ila cried incredulously.
“He won! He has the leverage! We have nothing!”
Harrison turned slowly. His face was a mask of cold fury, but his eyes burned.
“He took a child. In our world, there are rules even among thieves. You don’t touch families.”
“By taking Molly, Krell has lost the support of the other families. He’s isolated himself. He thinks he’s strong, but he’s desperate.”
He walked over to Ila. He reached out, taking her chin in his hand, forcing her to look at him.
“I need you to listen to me,”
he said, his voice low and intense.
“I am going to get her back, but tonight is going to get violent. I need to know if you can handle that.”
Ila stared at him. She thought of the men laughing under the tree.
She thought of her husband’s car going off the bridge. She thought of Molly screaming for help.
Something inside her fractured and hardened. The fear evaporated, replaced by a cold, sharp resolve that mirrored Harrison’s own.
“Give me a gun,”
she said.
Harrison paused, assessing her. He saw the shift in her eyes.
She wasn’t a victim anymore. She was a mother cornered.
He reached into the case and pulled out a smaller, compact 9 mm. He checked the chamber, engaged the safety, and handed it to her, handle first.
“It’s loaded,”
he said.
“Point and squeeze. Do not hesitate. If anyone other than me or Rigs comes near you, you put them down.”
Ila gripped the cold metal. It was heavy.
“I won’t hesitate.”
“Good.”
Harrison turned back to the desk.
“Now we need to talk about the chip.”
He picked up the locket Ila had retrieved from the pawn shop. He pried the chip out and inserted it into a reader connected to his laptop.
“We can’t give him the real copy,”
Harrison said, typing rapidly.
“If Krell gets this list, he becomes untouchable. He’ll kill us both the second he has it.”
“So we give him a fake?”
Ila asked, moving to stand beside him.
“No, he’ll have a tech expert on site to verify it. A fake won’t pass the scan,”
Harrison explained.
“But we can give him a Trojan horse.”
He pulled up a coding interface. Lines of green text scrolled rapidly down the screen.
“I’m uploading a mirror file,”
Harrison said to his tech guy.
“It will look like the real ledger: names, dates, bank accounts. But buried in the root code is a tracker and a partition worm.”
“The moment they plug this into their main server to download the data, it will brick their entire network. It will fry Krell’s accounts, his communications, everything.”
“Will it happen fast enough?”
Ila asked.
“It needs two minutes to propagate,”
Harrison said.
“We have to stall him for two minutes.”
The Mole Revealed
Just then, the office door opened. Rigs walked in.
He looked grim. He was wearing full body armor, an assault rifle strapped to his chest.
“Boss,”
Rigs said.
“We have a problem.”
Harrison looked up.
“What?”
“I reviewed the security footage from the manor,”
Rigs said.
“The team that hit the house, they didn’t break in. They used a keypad code to disable the perimeter alarm.”
Harrison went still.
“Which code?”
“Yours, boss,”
Rigs said quietly.
The air in the room seemed to vanish. Harrison stood up slowly.
“That code is known by three people.”
“Me, you, and Vance,”
Rigs finished.
Vance, Harrison’s lieutenant. The man responsible for intelligence and internal security.
The man who knew where the safe house was. The man who knew the patrol schedules.
“Where is Vance?”
Harrison asked, his voice dangerously soft.
“He’s downstairs,”
Rigs said,
“prepping the beta team. He insists on leading the flank at the shipyard.”
Harrison laughed, a dark humorless sound.
“Of course he does. He wants to make sure we walk into the killbox.”
Ila watched the realization wash over Harrison.
“He betrayed you.”
“For money, likely,”
Harrison said, holstering his weapon.
“Krell probably offered him my seat at the table.”
“What do we do?”
Ila asked.
“If he’s the mole, we’re walking into a trap.”
“We use the trap,”
Harrison said.
He looked at Rigs.
“Don’t tip him off. Let Vance think everything is normal. Let him lead the flank team but cut his comms to the main network. Give him a dummy channel.”
“And the flank?”
Rigs asked.
“There is no flank,”
Harrison said.
“We’re going in the front door. Just the three of us.”
“Three?”
Rigs frowned.
“Boss, that’s suicide. Krell will have fifty men.”
“Vance will tell Krell we’re bringing a small army,”
Harrison reasoned.
“Krell will position his men to counter a siege. He won’t expect three people to walk into the center of the arena.”
Harrison turned to Ila. He adjusted the collar of her jacket, his fingers brushing her neck.
“This is the gamble,”
he told her.
“We walk in, we hand over the chip, we wait two minutes for the virus to upload. Then, when the lights go out, we kill everyone.”
Ila nodded. She checked the gun in her pocket.
“Let’s go get my daughter.”
