Tonight, Ada wasn’t laughing. She nursed a sfogliatella , letting the ricotta chill her tongue while her fury burned hot. Her phone buzzed. A text from an unknown number: “The GPS data is in the glovebox. He lied about the airport run. He was at the Vomero villa. Again.”

She stood up, leaving a €5 note under the plate. The barman, old Gegè, nodded. “Signora Ada. My condolences.”

“For what you’re about to do.”

She smiled. It was a terrible, beautiful smile. Ciro’s taxi, a gleaming white Mercedes with the license plate TAXI-NA-777 , sat idling in their driveway. He was inside, preening in the bathroom mirror. Ada slipped into the driver’s seat. The leather still held the faint scent of that other woman’s perfume—a floral, cheap thing from the Vomero profumeria.