Dayna: Vendetta

Then she folded the photo into her jacket pocket, stood up, and for the first time in years, smiled like she meant it.

“Good,” she said. “Tell me where to start.”

So Dayna leaned in. Leather jacket. Chain wallet. A smile that said try me and leave me alone in the same crooked line.

Because a vendetta isn't a grudge. It's a bloodline. And Dayna Vendetta was just getting warm. dayna vendetta

In her small town, a name like that was a sentence. Teachers said it with a sigh. Boys said it with a dare. Her mother said it once, then never again—just pointed to the door.

But the name wasn't a pose. It was a promise.

She found out why at twenty-two, when a man in a charcoal suit sat across from her in a 24-hour diner and slid a photograph across the sticky table. “Your father,” he said, “didn’t walk out. He was erased. And the people who erased him? They’ve been watching you since you were born. They named you as a warning.” Then she folded the photo into her jacket

She looked at her wrist.

She woke with it tattooed on the inside of her left wrist at seventeen—no memory of the night before, just the sharp smell of ink and rain. The letters were old-style typewriter font, slightly smeared, as if even they couldn’t decide whether to commit.

Dayna looked at the photo. A man with her same sharp jaw, same restless hands. Leather jacket

Dayna Vendetta didn’t choose the name. It chose her.

The Last Vendetta