A girl sold her bicycle to buy food for her mother—and accidentally turned to a man everyone feared.
Rocco stopped in the rain at a store when a little girl approached him with a rusty pink bicycle. She was trembling and begging him to buy it: they hadn’t had anything to eat at home for days. It turned out that some “debt collectors” had stolen everything from their house—furniture, belongings, even the baby’s crib. When she tried to stop them, they hit her.
Rocco became wary: such things weren’t his style. He took the girl home and found the empty, ransacked house. Her mother lay exhausted—hunger and fear had taken their toll. She explained that the debt was fictitious and her husband’s signature forged.
It became clear: one of his men was using his name to rob the defenseless.
Rocco immediately helped the family—food, money, repairs. But he didn’t stop there. He found the culprit: his own subordinate, who was profiting from poor families.
From there, it wasn’t just about business anymore—it became personal.







