The black sedan glided to a halt outside the precinct's barricades, its tinted windows reflecting the chaotic mosaic of flashing lights and surging bodies like a dark mirror to the city's unraveling soul. Cathy Moretti sat in the back seat, one leg crossed over the other, her skirt riding up just enough to reveal the edge of a holster strapped to her thigh—a subtle reminder that even in vulnerability, she was armed. The engine's hum faded, replaced by the muffled roar from outside: a symphony of rage, grief, and vindictive glee that pressed against the glass like an invisible tide. She didn't move at first, her fingers drumming a lazy rhythm on the leather armrest, cigarette dangling unlit from her lips as if the world beyond was merely an entertaining sideshow.
Inside the car, the radio crackled with the relentless drone of live news coverage, the anchor's voice slicing through the static with practiced urgency. "Breaking developments at the downtown precinct where Vincenzo Moretti, the alleged kingpin behind a decade of terror, remains in custody. Crowds have gathered in unprecedented numbers, a mix of victims' families, activists, and ordinary citizens demanding justice for the man they call 'the Devil of the Shadows.' Live on the scene, our reporter Mia Torres is speaking with those affected by Moretti's reign. Mia?"
The broadcast cut to the field reporter, her tone breathless amid the clamor. "Thanks, Tom. The atmosphere here is electric—raw emotion spilling over as people who've lost loved ones to what they describe as Moretti's inhuman empire finally see a crack in his armor. We're hearing stories that chill the blood, tales of disappearances, tortures, and atrocities that have scarred this city for years. Let's talk to Maria Gonzalez, whose husband vanished three years ago after crossing paths with Moretti's operations."
Cathy leaned forward slightly, her bright eyes narrowing as she peered through the tint, the smoke from a freshly lit cigarette curling lazily around her face. Outside, the crowd was a living entity—hundreds strong, pressed against police barriers, signs waving like battle flags: "Justice for the Forgotten," "Burn the Devil," "No Mercy for Monsters." Some faces were twisted in savage satisfaction, fists pumping the air as if the arrest were a personal victory snatched from the jaws of despair. Others wept openly, tears carving paths down dirt-streaked cheeks, their bodies wracked with sobs that spoke of wounds never healed. The air vibrated with their curses, a cacophony that bled through the car's insulation: "Rot in hell, Moretti! You deserve every chain they slap on you!" "Kill him! String him up like he did to my boy—left him hanging in that warehouse like trash!"
Maria Gonzalez's voice broke through the radio, trembling with a rage honed over years of sleepless nights. "My husband... he was just a mechanic, fixing cars for the wrong people. Moretti's men took him one night—dragged him away screaming. We found his body weeks later, dumped in an alley. Fingers missing, eyes gouged out. They said it was a message: don't talk. But I know it was him—Vincenzo. The devil himself. He eats lives like candy, and now? Now he's where he belongs. I want to see him fry!"
The reporter's follow-up was swift, microphone thrusting forward like a weapon. "And what about the rumors of his deeper cruelties, Maria? We've heard whispers..."
Gonzalez's sob turned into a snarl. "Whispers? It's truth! My neighbor's daughter—little Sofia, only twelve—she was snatched from school. They found a video later, leaked on the dark web. Tortured for days, skin peeled like an onion, screaming for her mama. And at the end... God, they said he... he ate parts of her. Cannibal devil! Filmed it to break spirits. That's the man they arrested. Inhumane? He's not human at all!"
Cathy's lips curled into a faint, amused smile, her posture relaxed as if lounging at a theater watching a poorly acted tragedy. The radio pivoted to another interviewee, a burly man with tattoos snaking up his arms, his voice gravelly with suppressed fury. "My kid brother crossed him—owed a debt from a bad deal. Moretti didn't just kill him; he made it art. Strung him up alive, hooks through the flesh, left him bleeding out for hours while his goons watched and laughed. Video surfaced too—brother begging, skin flayed in patterns like some sick tattoo. They say Moretti watched it later, like a movie. Devil? Worse. He's the pain we all carry. Kill him slow—let him feel what he dished out!"
The crowd surged with each story, their chants swelling: "Justice now! Hang the beast!" A woman in the front, clutching a faded photo of a young girl, collapsed to her knees, wailing. "My daughter... raped, broken, then burned alive in that factory fire he set to cover tracks. They found her teeth scattered like dice! He deserves worse—rip him apart!" Beside her, an elderly man shook his fist, tears streaming. "My husband challenged his rackets—ended up in a barrel of acid, dissolved to nothing but bones. Video sent to me as 'proof.' Inhumane? He's the monster under every bed in this city!"
Reporters swarmed like vultures, cameras rolling live, microphones extended to capture the raw vitriol. "Tom, the hatred here is palpable," Mia Torres reported, her voice steady but edged with performative outrage. "These are not just accusations; these are lived horrors. Moretti's empire allegedly involved not just drugs and extortion, but ritualistic killings—videos of victims dismembered alive, organs harvested while hearts still beat, children force-fed their own blood before the end. The public calls him inhumane, a devil incarnate, and they're demanding not just trial, but execution. As the sister of a victim, how does this arrest feel?"
A young woman stepped forward, eyes hollow with trauma. "My sister was taken for his 'parties'—tortured on camera, limbs twisted until they snapped, then... eaten piece by piece while she screamed. The video ended with laughter—his laughter, they say. He's the cause of our pain, the architect of nightmares. Kill him! Let us do it—tear him apart like he did to us!"
Cathy exhaled smoke slowly, her amusement deepening into a quiet chuckle that echoed only in the car's confines. These fools, she thought, spinning tales like children around a campfire, inflating rumors into legends. Her cousin wasn't the monster they painted; he was smarter, subtler—a force that shaped the world without the crude theatrics they imagined. But let them rage; their fury was music, a testament to the fear Vincenzo inspired even in chains. She watched as a father broke through the line briefly, restrained by police, screaming, "You took my son—fed him to dogs after breaking every bone! Devil! We'll kill you ourselves!" The cops pushed back, their faces grim, helmets visor-down, batons ready—human barriers against the tide of vengeance.
The broadcast droned on, anchors in studios dissecting the "inhumane deeds" with clinical detachment laced with sensationalism. "Viewers, these accounts paint a picture of a man beyond redemption—tortures involving live vivisections, where victims were cut open conscious, organs toyed with like puzzles; children allegedly boiled in vats after weeks of starvation, videos circulated to enforce silence. The kingpin's arrest is a turning point, but the scars run deep. Public sentiment is clear: justice means death."
Cathy's eyes gleamed, her mind racing not with fear, but with delicious anticipation. These insects, buzzing in their impotent anger—did they really think a cell could hold him? She flicked ash onto the floor mat, her smile widening as another voice pierced the radio: an activist, voice cracking. "My niece—kidnapped, violated in ways no child should endure, then her body displayed on a bridge, entrails hanging like decorations. Video claimed it was art. Moretti's the devil causing our endless pain—kill him before he escapes!"
The mob echoed, a wave of bodies pressing forward, some throwing makeshift projectiles—bottles, stones—that clattered against barriers. Police lines tensed, radios crackling with urgent calls for backup. Reporters captured it all, live feeds beaming to the world: "The anger here is justified," one said. "Moretti's deeds—inhumane experiments, like sewing victims' mouths shut after force-feeding glass, videos leaked to terrorize communities. He deserves every curse."
Cathy listened, her reaction a cocktail of disdain and delight— no panic, no tears, just that signature amusement, as if the world's hatred was a joke only she got. But slowly, her hand moved to the door handle, curiosity piquing. Time to step into the circus.
As the radio looped into another harrowing testimony—a mother recounting how her twin daughters were allegedly buried alive after days of electric shocks, their screams recorded and sent as "gifts" to rivals—Cathy's fingers tightened on the handle. The crowd's energy pulsed like a heartbeat, their curses evolving into a rhythmic chant: "Devil down! Devil down!" A man in the thick of it, face contorted with years of bottled fury, shoved forward, bellowing, "You ruined my wife—locked her in a room with rats after the assault, filmed her losing her mind! Inhumane beast— we'll gut you like you did her!" The police strained, batons swinging to maintain the line, their own faces etched with a mix of duty and disgust—whispers among them revealing shared hatred: "Bastard's finally caged; heard he dissolved bodies in lye while they begged, videos for his collection."
Cathy's bodyguards—four shadows in tailored black, earpieces buzzing—flanked the car doors, their presence a silent wall against the storm. They scanned the mob with predatory efficiency, hands hovering near concealed weapons, minds attuned to threats in the sea of faces. One nodded to her through the window, a subtle signal: path clear, but volatile.
With a slow, deliberate push, Cathy opened the door, stepping out into the crisp air laced with sweat, smoke from flares, and the metallic tang of impending violence. Her boots clicked against the pavement, skirt swaying with casual grace, cigarette still smoldering between her fingers. The transition was seamless, her posture unbowed, that sharp smile playing on her lips like a secret weapon—amused, detached, as if the hatred washing over her was a warm breeze rather than a torrent.
The shift was instantaneous. A ripple spread through the crowd, heads turning like dominoes falling: first the front-liners, their curses dying mid-breath; then the reporters, cameras swiveling with mechanical precision; the angry mob freezing in their surge; even the police, helmets tilting, hands tightening on shields. Silence crashed down, broken only by the distant wail of sirens and the radio's faint echo from the open car door: "...accounts of victims skinned alive, flesh fed to strays while families watched via livestream—Moretti's legacy of pain ends today."
Eyes locked on her—the Moretti name incarnate, a viper in their midst. Reporters surged forward, microphones thrusting like spears: "Miss Moretti! Any comment on your cousin's arrest? Do you deny the atrocities?" "Cathy Moretti, as a family member, how do you respond to these victims' stories—the eaten children, the vivisected innocents?" Live broadcasts captured the moment, anchors in studios gasping: "And now, Cathy Moretti emerges—sister to the accused, known for her own controversial ties. Will she defend the devil?"
The mob's reaction fractured: some snarled anew, "Like cousin, like kin—another monster!" Others recoiled in fear, whispers rippling: "She's as bad—heard she runs the schools like her playgrounds, kids vanishing." A woman clutched her photo tighter, screaming, "Your family destroyed mine—daughter's bones ground to dust after the torture tape! Justice for all Morettis!" Police formed a hasty cordon around her, batons raised, their own unease palpable: "Moretti kin—watch her; girl's unpredictable."
Cathy stood there, unfazed, exhaling smoke into the faces of the nearest reporters. Her eyes scanned the crowd with playful curiosity, landing on the weepers, the ragers, the silent haters. Inside, no fear stirred—only that gleeful detachment, seeing their pain as fuel for the game. She flicked her cigarette away, stepping closer to the barriers, bodyguards shadowing like extensions of her will. "Oh, darlings," she murmured, voice carrying just enough to tease, her smile widening into something feral. "You think chains hold legends? Keep screaming—it's music to our ears."
The mob erupted again, but now directed at her—curses blending Vincenzo's deeds with hers: "You'll join him soon—torturer's blood!" Reporters pressed: "Miss Moretti, the public demands answers—the inhumane videos, the eaten victims, the buried alive—does your family regret?" Police tensed, one muttering into his radio: "Moretti girl's here—crowd's turning; send riot gear."
Cathy laughed then—loud, genuine, cutting through the din like a blade. Her reaction was pure her: no defense, no denial, just amusement at their folly, a queen surveying peasants. As flashes popped and chants resumed, she turned slightly, whispering to a bodyguard, "Let them bark. The real show's just starting."
She had just finished speaking when suddenly police station's door open.
Vincenzo handcuffed walked out with police surrounding him
