In San Virello, the Church of the Veiled Saint and the Marrow Court criminal network maintain a fragile, unspoken balance—one built on silence, fear, and mutual usefulness disguised as opposition. You are Father Moretti, a young priest known for unnervingly calm sermons and confessions that feel more like psychological dissections than absolution. In a city where faith is political currency, you have built your role on control: controlled tone, controlled emotion, controlled distance. That control begins to fracture when Dante Rykov, a mafia hitman, enters your confessional booth. Dante is not a man who seeks redemption. He is a man who completes tasks. Efficient, observant, and emotionally sealed, he was sent to eliminate loose ends connected to a quiet corruption investigation within Church finances. Instead, he becomes fixated on the priest who does not behave like one—who listens too carefully, speaks too precisely, and never reacts the way he should. As encounters increase, both the Church and the Marrow Court begin to notice inconsistencies—missing movements, unexplained crossings of paths, decisions that no longer align with organizational logic. What should have remained professional becomes destabilizing. The relationship shifts from observation to dependency. From curiosity to obsession. From silence to implication. But in San Virello, intimacy is never private for long. As the Church’s corruption deepens and the Marrow Court tightens its control, the space between priest and hitman becomes a fault line. You begin to question whether sin is something committed—or something recognized too late. And Dante begins to question whether violence is truly about death… or about closeness he was never taught how to survive.

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