The Mafia King's Deadly Wife
Chapter 50: The Eighth Blade
Raven stood at the edge of the war room, arms loose at her sides, posture straight.
The long table stretched in front of her, maps glowing under the overhead lights, red markers showing the crippled Caruso supply line. All seven Guardians were already seated. No one had left. That alone felt different.
Gabriel sat at Vincent’s right hand, arms folded across his broad chest, the Iron Wall giving nothing away except the single nod he offered when their eyes met. Dante leaned back in his chair, one boot propped on the table edge, a faint grin playing at the corner of his mouth that said he had already decided she belonged here.
Adrian watched her with that quiet, forensic stare, the Reaper’s rivalry finally burned down to something cleaner. Sebastian tapped a pen against the table, the rhythmic click the only sound breaking the low hum of the ventilation, his usual sarcasm nowhere in sight. Lucian and Matteo remained silent, expressions unreadable, but their posture had eased in a way it never had before. Leonid sat at the far end, massive frame taking up space, but he didn’t speak. He simply stayed. That was his endorsement now.
Vincent entered last. The door closed behind him with a soft click. He didn’t sit. He stood at the head of the table, dark eyes moving across every face before settling on her. The air changed when he looked at her. It always did.
"Casualty report," he said, voice low and even.
Gabriel spoke first, tone measured and factual.
"Zero. The port defense held. The offensive was flawless. Supplies secured, two secondary trucks destroyed, Caruso’s eastern route severed for at least three weeks. No injuries on our side."
Sebastian’s pen stopped clicking. A slow smile curved his mouth, but the sarcasm that once laced every word was gone.
"Your Majesty has earned her seat at the table. Permanently."
Raven felt the words settle against her ribs. She didn’t smile back. She simply nodded once.
Leonid said nothing. He didn’t need to. His silence carried weight now. He had stopped pushing for her removal the night she dragged him out of the Butcher’s reach. Tonight he remained in his chair, heavy arms resting on the table, eyes on the maps. That was enough.
Vincent let the quiet stretch. The overhead lights hummed above them. The air carried the faint trace of gun oil from the armory and the leather of the chairs. Then he looked directly at her.
"The Crown’s Blades have always been seven. Today we name an eighth."
The room went still. Raven felt the shift in the air, thick and deliberate. She kept her hands loose at her sides even as her pulse kicked harder behind her sternum. Her jaw stayed steady. The choice she had made to lead instead of run had brought her here. She had not known, then, that it would look like this.
Vincent’s gaze never left hers. "She came here to kill me. She stayed because Caruso betrayed her. She fights because she chooses to."
The words landed heavy. Raven’s throat tightened. She met his eyes across the table. "I didn’t choose this."
Vincent’s mouth curved, not quite a smile.
"You chose to save Leonid. You chose to protect me. You chose to lead last night."
He let the pause breathe. The Guardians watched. No one spoke. No one shifted. Not even Sebastian, who had an opinion on everything and had spent months auditing every word she said in this room. The silence was different now — not evaluation, not a test. Something closer to acknowledgment. It pressed against her skin, warm and complete.
"That’s enough."
Raven felt the statement settle into her bones. They called her the Eighth Blade. She didn’t correct them. She wasn’t Caruso’s anymore. She wasn’t sure she was fully De Luca’s either. But she was something.
Something she hadn’t been before. She was choosing. Every step, every order, every life she took or spared. The choice lived in her hands now. That was the part that made her throat tighten — not the danger, not the war, but the fact that it was hers. Her fingers curled at her sides. She didn’t flinch.
Gabriel gave one short nod of acknowledgment, the Iron Wall’s version of applause. Dante’s grin flashed quick and warm, the Tempest leaning forward like he had been waiting for this moment since the first time he called her princess. Adrian’s eyes held a new level of respect, the Reaper’s forensic stare softening into something closer to partnership. Sebastian leaned forward, the last traces of testing gone from his posture, the Serpent finally sheathing his fangs. Lucian and Matteo remained neutral, but their silence had shifted from evaluation to acceptance, the Phantom and the Judge offering nothing more and nothing less than the space she had earned. Leonid simply stayed seated. That was his vote.
Vincent stepped around the table. Stopped beside her. Not in front of her. Not across from her. Beside her, exactly one step off her shoulder, the way a partner stood rather than an owner. His hand brushed the small of her back, light enough that only she felt it.
"The Eighth Blade," he said quietly, for her ears alone. "Welcome to the table, Raven."
She didn’t answer. The title sat on her shoulders like new armor. Not comfortable yet. But hers.
Later, when the meeting ended and the Guardians filed out one by one, Vincent remained behind. Dante caught her eye as he passed — just a look, the grin already gone, something steadier in its place. Adrian moved past without a word, but his shoulder brushed hers at the door. Not accidental. Raven lingered in the doorway a moment longer, watching the way the overhead lights cast long shadows across the maps. The red markers showing Caruso’s broken supply line. The empty chair at the far end where Leonid had sat. The room felt different now. Larger. Hers in a way it never had been. Then she turned and left him to the quiet.
*
Alone in the study, Vincent crossed to the locked drawer. He pulled out the old Caruso ledger. The page he needed was already marked. The clinical lines that spelled out Raven’s disposability in black ink. Use her. Deny her. Discard her. Never meant to survive. And beneath it, in a different hand — the margin note he had not shown her. The one that changed what the ledger actually was. Not just a record of her discard. A contract. Her name. A buyer. A price.
He stared at the words for a long moment. The fire in the hearth crackled softly behind him. Then he carried the ledger to the flames. The edge of the paper caught, curling black. He watched until every line turned to ash, the smoke rising thin and bitter.
She didn’t need to know. Not yet.
He closed the empty drawer. The fire crackled once, then settled. Outside the tall windows the city lights burned on, unaware that the war had just gained a new blade at its center.
And Vincent De Luca had just burned the last proof that she had ever been disposable.