The back entrance of La Stella Rossa did not look like the sort of place adventurers were meant to enter. The front of the restaurant was all polished glass, gold lettering, and velvet canopied prestige facing the bright avenues of the race district, where banners fluttered over packed streets and the distant roar of the track rolled through the city like surf. The alley behind it was another matter entirely. Narrow, shadowed, and smelling of rainwater, cigar smoke, and old brick. Two broad men in dark coats stood beneath the service lamp by the rear door, neither smiling, neither bothering to pretend they were mere doormen.
The moment the group was stopped, hands began checking belts, sleeves, boots, and under cloaks with all the delicacy of tax collectors. When those hands found leather armor and mustache before patience, the mustachioed man’s dry answer cut the tension sideways.
“Searching for something specific, or just enjoying the view? Because the second one costs extra.”
For one suspended second, the alley went tight. One goon’s brow twitched. The other set his jaw, clearly unsure whether to take offense or offense with interest. Then, from somewhere deeper inside the building, a voice erupted with enough force to hit the alley before the door even swung wider.
“Ya pair of numbskulls! Of course they came armed! I sent for adventurers, not choirboys! Get them in here before you embarrass me further!”
The goons stiffened at once. The door opened. Whatever argument had been about to happen died in the threshold.
Inside, the contrast was immediate. The service corridor gave way to dark paneling, amber light, thick carpet, and air so full of cigar smoke it looked almost layered. Framed racing photographs lined the walls. Winning finishes, trophies, crowds in ecstatic uproar, silk clad figures half caught in motion, but never quite enough at a glance to explain what was being raced, only that the city treated it like religion. They were ushered not to a dining room, but to a private chamber in the back. A broad booth, a scarred walnut table, heavy curtains drawn shut, and enough smoke hanging in the lamplight to turn the room sepia.

At the center of it all sat Don Domenico Calabrese. Big Dom to any soul with a survival instinct. He was enormous in the chair and somehow still looked cramped by it, thick fingers ringed in gold, cigar smoldering in one hand, the other hovering protectively near a plate piled high with gabagool as if it were both meal and emotional support. Two lieutenants stood behind him like furniture that might kill. A third lingered by the wall with his hands folded, watching in the patient way of men who broke things professionally.
Dom spread one hand toward the table in what may once have been hospitality and was now close enough to an order.
“Sit. Eat. Anybody says no to the gabagool, I’m taking it personal.”
He waited only long enough for that to land before the performance began in earnest.
“They took her.”
The words came low at first, disbelieving, like he still expected the room to correct itself. Then his face darkened. His nostrils flared. He leaned forward, one thick finger pressing into the tabletop as though he meant to pin the entire city under it.
“Out of her own stable. In my city. Two nights before the Derby.”
His palm came down flat. Hard enough to rattle the glasses, hard enough to make one of the lieutenants glance up.
“Do you understand what kind of insult that is? To me? To this family? To the sporting soul of this whole rotten town?”
The anger did not pass this time. It built. The cigar wagged sharply in his grip as he spoke, his breathing already starting to thicken with the effort of it.
“And I want a bullet in the back of the head of the bastard who thought he could disrespect me like this.”
By then Domenico was visibly getting wound up, voice climbing, chest rising heavier, the hand not holding the cigar opening and closing on the tablecloth like he might tear it clean off. One of the men behind him shifted half a step, less to calm him than to be ready for where the temper might go.
Then, just as suddenly, the fury collapsed inward into something more wounded. Dom leaned back, stared through the smoke toward one of the racing portraits on the wall, and exhaled through his nose like a man trying not to let strangers see too much.
“She’s a little high strung, sure. Temperamental. Legs worth more than half the district, and smarter than some people I keep employed.” His eyes cut sideways, briefly, toward his own men. “No offense.” The offense was clearly intended. Then his gaze returned to the adventurers. “But she’s my champion. My little comet. And somebody thought they could put hands on what’s mine.”
He jabbed the cigar through the haze, close enough to the party that the gesture felt almost like accusation.
“You are not taking this to the Guild. You are not asking stupid questions in crowded places. You are finding who took her, where they moved her, and you are bringing her back in one piece. No bruises, no broken bones, and nobody touches her legs unless they got a death wish or a medical license.” A breath.
On the wall behind him, a framed winner’s photograph had been turned slightly askew, enough to hide the face of the figure in it.
Dom’s expression hardened again.
“I want names. I want the truth. I want her back before morning turns this into odds. And when I get the son of a bitch responsible, I want him face down in the gutter with enough lead in him that the crows need a week to sort him out.”
The moment the group was stopped, hands began checking belts, sleeves, boots, and under cloaks with all the delicacy of tax collectors. When those hands found leather armor and mustache before patience, the mustachioed man’s dry answer cut the tension sideways.
“Searching for something specific, or just enjoying the view? Because the second one costs extra.”
For one suspended second, the alley went tight. One goon’s brow twitched. The other set his jaw, clearly unsure whether to take offense or offense with interest. Then, from somewhere deeper inside the building, a voice erupted with enough force to hit the alley before the door even swung wider.
“Ya pair of numbskulls! Of course they came armed! I sent for adventurers, not choirboys! Get them in here before you embarrass me further!”
The goons stiffened at once. The door opened. Whatever argument had been about to happen died in the threshold.
Inside, the contrast was immediate. The service corridor gave way to dark paneling, amber light, thick carpet, and air so full of cigar smoke it looked almost layered. Framed racing photographs lined the walls. Winning finishes, trophies, crowds in ecstatic uproar, silk clad figures half caught in motion, but never quite enough at a glance to explain what was being raced, only that the city treated it like religion. They were ushered not to a dining room, but to a private chamber in the back. A broad booth, a scarred walnut table, heavy curtains drawn shut, and enough smoke hanging in the lamplight to turn the room sepia.
Don Domenico Calabrese

At the center of it all sat Don Domenico Calabrese. Big Dom to any soul with a survival instinct. He was enormous in the chair and somehow still looked cramped by it, thick fingers ringed in gold, cigar smoldering in one hand, the other hovering protectively near a plate piled high with gabagool as if it were both meal and emotional support. Two lieutenants stood behind him like furniture that might kill. A third lingered by the wall with his hands folded, watching in the patient way of men who broke things professionally.
Dom spread one hand toward the table in what may once have been hospitality and was now close enough to an order.
“Sit. Eat. Anybody says no to the gabagool, I’m taking it personal.”
He waited only long enough for that to land before the performance began in earnest.
“They took her.”
The words came low at first, disbelieving, like he still expected the room to correct itself. Then his face darkened. His nostrils flared. He leaned forward, one thick finger pressing into the tabletop as though he meant to pin the entire city under it.
“Out of her own stable. In my city. Two nights before the Derby.”
His palm came down flat. Hard enough to rattle the glasses, hard enough to make one of the lieutenants glance up.
“Do you understand what kind of insult that is? To me? To this family? To the sporting soul of this whole rotten town?”
The anger did not pass this time. It built. The cigar wagged sharply in his grip as he spoke, his breathing already starting to thicken with the effort of it.
“And I want a bullet in the back of the head of the bastard who thought he could disrespect me like this.”
By then Domenico was visibly getting wound up, voice climbing, chest rising heavier, the hand not holding the cigar opening and closing on the tablecloth like he might tear it clean off. One of the men behind him shifted half a step, less to calm him than to be ready for where the temper might go.
Then, just as suddenly, the fury collapsed inward into something more wounded. Dom leaned back, stared through the smoke toward one of the racing portraits on the wall, and exhaled through his nose like a man trying not to let strangers see too much.
“She’s a little high strung, sure. Temperamental. Legs worth more than half the district, and smarter than some people I keep employed.” His eyes cut sideways, briefly, toward his own men. “No offense.” The offense was clearly intended. Then his gaze returned to the adventurers. “But she’s my champion. My little comet. And somebody thought they could put hands on what’s mine.”
He jabbed the cigar through the haze, close enough to the party that the gesture felt almost like accusation.
“You are not taking this to the Guild. You are not asking stupid questions in crowded places. You are finding who took her, where they moved her, and you are bringing her back in one piece. No bruises, no broken bones, and nobody touches her legs unless they got a death wish or a medical license.” A breath.
On the wall behind him, a framed winner’s photograph had been turned slightly askew, enough to hide the face of the figure in it.
Dom’s expression hardened again.
“I want names. I want the truth. I want her back before morning turns this into odds. And when I get the son of a bitch responsible, I want him face down in the gutter with enough lead in him that the crows need a week to sort him out.”


