The Widow was effusive in her gratitude for Massimo saving Lucia’s life. I had never heard her so emotional before.
 
 Without my asking, she volunteered to send a private jet to our property to pick us up. She said she would meet us at herpalazzoin two hours and then accompany us back to the hospital.
 
 I told everyone to get ready to travel, then remembered Roberto. I needed to tell him to meet us in Venice rather than come back home.
 
 But when I checked my messages, he hadn’t responded to my text.
 
 I tried calling.
 
 It went directly to voicemail.
 
 SHIT.
 
 Fighting back panic, I texted him,Call me as soon as you get this.
 
 By the time the private jet got to our property’s landing strip, I still hadn’t received a reply.
 
 The flight was uneventful. Rachel made fast friends with Alessandra despite having tried to kill her husband the prior week. And Bianca was impressed that Rachel had been a secret agent.
 
 They all bonded by makingmethe villain, albeit in a comical way.
 
 I went along with it…
 
 Although I was internally panicking about Roberto.
 
 As soon as we landed, I checked my messages again.
 
 No answer.
 
 FUCK!
 
 I refused to let my imagination get the best of me, but it was hard not to picture him being dumped into Hong Kong Harbor by a bunch of Asian gangsters.
 
 When we got to Marco Polo Airport outside Venice, Rolls-Royces were waiting for us on the tarmac, accompanied by the Widow’s foot soldiers.
 
 Rachel gave me a questioning look.
 
 “Courtesy of the woman whose granddaughter Massimo saved,” I explained.
 
 “Can we trust these people?” she whispered.
 
 I thought that was rather funny, considering what she’d attempted to do last week.
 
 “I certainly hope so, but if they try anything… kill them for me, will you?” I joked.
 
 She looked out seriously at the foot soldiers as though taking stock of what she would need to do. “Okay.”
 
 “Uh… I was joking.”
 
 “Iwasn’t.”
 
 I chuckled. “Suddenly, I’m glad we brought you along.”
 
 Now, if I could only send you to Hong Kong…
 
 The cars took us to a dock by the water, where we boarded two speedboats that ferried us across the bay. Then we entered a private canal that led directly to the guarded entrance of the Widow’s palace.
 
 I had never met the Widow in person, only seen her at a meeting ofconsiglieresthat Fausto had brought me to when I was a teenager. She looked older and more frail than ten years ago, but she still had the same indomitable gravitas that matched any don in theCosa Nostra.