As morbid as it may be, this is something SkyGem and I were discussing the other day and I could not get it out of my head. After all, bosses are so important to their famiglias in KHR that a proper resting place is only expected. So this will be a drabble-type series. I will add different instances where the 'Vongola Catacombs' become a focal point throughout Tsuna's life in this AU. Some will be short, some might be entire fics in their own right. However, I hope you enjor and review.

This chapter is to lay the scene, of the catacombs, and what is happening in this Au. Because I already want it to be much longer than I intended.


Summary: Angels guard the doors, dying will flames burning eternally in their hands, because even in death, the will of the Boss forever burns bright. When a Vongola boss dies, he is put into the catacombs, and every loyal subordinate to fall has a place to rest there, forever lining the hallways of their dead boss final resting place; protecting them even in death. This is where a Boss goes to rest once his reign is done, in Vongola.


Beta'd by my wonderfully overworked Beta - Pure Red Cane.


Vongola Catacombs.
And Angels Guard the Doors of the Sleeping.


Tsuna had always been morbidly curious about the deaths of Mob Bosses. Even when he was a screeching, terrified fourteen-year old learning about the death of the Ninth's sons, he had curiously wondered where Dons and their families went when they died.

"Well, it differs between famiglia." Timoteo had relented a little solemnly when Tsuna had let his curiosity slip during one of their routine visits together.

It had become a habit after Tsuna moved to Italy. It was earlier than planned. Tsuna and his guardian weren't even eighteen yet. But after the Arcobaleno had been released from their curse, the entire Mafia knew of Tsuna's position. It had started a manhunt, one that had the Ninth frantic.

Tsuna couldn't stand to see the man so worried about him. He was the last heir after all. So when he turned sixteen, half way through high school, Tsuna made the decision to move to Italy and finish his education there. The Ninth was free to watch Tsuna both grow and learn, but also had the freedom of making sure he was protected. Of course, Tsuna didn't go alone.

Hayato hadn't so much as blinked. He was much calmer now than when he and Tsuna first met. After a few years of constant companionship and assurance, the man settled down. He no longer worried about being abandoned by Tsuna, or the others, and had kicked at least most of his self-sacrificial tendencies, though not where Tsuna was concerned. However, the same could be said for all the guardians. In regards to the move to Italy, Hayato had little tie to Japan other than Tsuna and was quick to start planning their move, as well as ensuring Tsuna's Italian lessons, which was an impossibility. As soon as any guardians started learning Italian, they spoke little else in each other's presence, or at least when they weren't conversing in Hayato's G-language or whatever was on the learning itinerary at the time. With all that help, Tsuna eventually learned everything. Hayato had smiled when he asked to join Tsuna to Italy. The brunet boy had replied calmly, but with a quizzical eyebrow. "Well, I thought you coming with me was a given."

Takeshi had been rather indecisive. After all, he was leaving behind his only family. Tsuyoshi had understood his son too well and clapped him on the back. "Now, boy." He had chastised, "Since when do you hesitate?" But of course, Takeshi still did. He would be leaving the only home he ever had, and the only family. So Tsuna sat with Tsuyoshi, he offered him a place within Vongola, or at least in Italy and had been surprised by the pride and approval behind his eyes. Tsuyoshi had agreed to follow Tsuna within the year, the only condition was that Tsuyoshi be able to take up at least a part-time version of his old occupation. His sword technique would be valuable to worthy Vongola members. He had joked that Squalo would enjoy seeing him again. He wondered how the little punk had grown. While it stunned both Tsuna and Takeshi, the rain guardian lost all inhibitions about moving away with Tsuna and the others. The hug Tsuna had received later made him feel much better about talking to Tsuyoshi. "I can't wait to see our new home, Tsuna!"

Mukuro and Chrome had taken a few days to decide. Chrome had felt a pull to stay with the girls and Mukuro had learnt that he felt no comfort far away from Tsuna, even if he wouldn't admit it. They were of one soul really, and though they loathed to be separated, they knew what would make them comfortable. Chrome would remain with the girls, living with the Sasagawas. They were both in a shared room since Kyoko was uncomfortable at home, and Haru had left home years ago. Hana had also joined them. They were close enough to Nana's house so that Tsuna didn't need to worry about whether they were well fed or not, or his remaining siblings and mother. In fact, Chrome had plans to teach the girls about their world, to get them ready for the time they all joined Tsuna. Mukuro went with Tsuna, laughing and taunting all the way, but Tsuna made no comment about the clinginess during the first few months, or the possessive illusions that haunted anyone who got too close.

Kyouya had been very adamant that he would not be going with Tsuna, at least immediately. He had a responsibility to Namimori, to protect it. Though he had moved on from ensuring the security of the schools, the entire town knew that Kyouya wasn't to be messed with. They also knew that he protected them. Tsuna understood that Kyouya couldn't possibly leave without someone powerful enough to protect the town in his absence. Tsuna told Kyouya this, and the man had scoffed. "Don't misunderstand me. I will join your herd once I have made sure my committee will run without me for a while. But Namimori will always be my base. Do not forget that or I will bite you to death." Tsuna had grinned like a loon. Kyouya had cooled over the years. He wasn't so ferocious now that he had six people always willing to spar with him, or at least three who could make him sweat and the rest who were willing to fight through the lessons he gave. It made the interesting interactions that Tsuna loved. Kyouya didn't pull punches (conversational or in battle) and Tsuna always knew where he stood with the man. Tsuna always knew that Namimori would be Kyouya's home, but to know that he was willing to follow Tsuna, warmed something in him.

Ryohei had taken the longest to decide. He had been out of school and learning the ways of a healer and representative for almost two years by this time and was taking it in stride. He was as loud and brash as ever, still leaking sun flames when he wasn't concentrating, but he had taken a note from Takeshi's book. Now he could hide his exuberance in meetings and whenever it pleased him, looking more like a hitman or a member in the Mafia –with his scars and broadness– than even Hayato when he was dressed to the nines. In the end, after talking with this sister and convincing Kyoko and Haru to move in with Chrome, he actually went to Italy ahead of Tsuna. He said he was running observation, making sure he knew the dangers and exits before letting his boss arrive. Hayato had looked extremely proud of the older man.

Lambo was hysterical from the moment Tsuna told the boy he was to stay. At seven, the child was opinionated, passionate, and had already determined that he was going with Tsuna. His big brother, almost father figure, had talked him down from the hysterics, but it took weeks before Lambo agreed that he was being silly. Tsuna reminded the boy every day that he was never going to be replaced. Tsuna still cried when he left Lambo, pressing a kiss to his forehead and promising to come back for him soon. Lambo cried for months. It was only when he was twelve some six years later that he was allowed to move to Italy permanently with I-pin on his tail. Until that time, Lambo fought and learned and came into his own, making his brother-father proud. The reunion had been tearful. "Welcome home, Lambo." Returned with, "I'm home, Baka-tou-san."

Fuuta was the wildcard. Tsuna had assumed that the child would remain in Japan with his two adopted siblings and his adopted mother. However, once he learned that Tsuna was leaving for an undisclosed amount of time, a grim look had dominated his face. He had been adamant, as sad as it was, that he belonged beside Tsuna no matter where he went. His ties, while strong with Nana and I-pin, were strongest with Tsuna and Lambo. Fuuta was Vongola now, and he saw Tsuna as far more than a brother to him. When Tsuna had begged him to think it over, maybe even consult the ranking star for the best course of action, Fuuta had smiled with a curve of his lips far too wizened for a twelve year old. "I don't need the star to know that I need to remain with you, Papa-Tsu." The title was mostly a joke, but as Tsuna passed eighteen years, Fuuta would begin calling him by that title more often, confusing not only the young man, but also much of the mafia. However, Tsuna couldn't argue after that.

All of this, of course, led to a mass movement. Nana remained in Japan with I-pin and Lambo, and Iemitsu –thank fucking god, because Tsuna wasn't sure he could handle having to see his face every day – remained in Japan to help the woman cope. Almost three years later, he was still there. The CEDEF had a new base built and it was working well, seeing as Vongola's influence in Japan was rising with the new heir's heritage broadcasted and well known through the Mafia.

Everyone else, except Nana and Iemitsu, joined Tsuna in their twenties. Lambo moved when he turned twelve, adamant that if Fuuta was allowed to move at that age, he was too.

This all ended up sailing smoothly, and after eight months of awkward conversations, many embarrassing moments of asking for directions (in and outside the mansion), and a few rather nasty spars, everyone was mostly settled into a routine. Each guardian had lessons with the Ninth's guardians and with Reborn and the other Arcobaleno. They often relaxed in their own private wing. Tsuna and the Ninth had also developed a repertoire of trust and respect. Tsuna trusted the Ninth to lead him correctly, to withhold nothing that would harm Tsuna's growth or family. The Ninth respected Tsuna's opinions and ideals and that the boy would listen to everything the Ninth had to say, regardless of said opinion.

Which was why Tsuna was comfortable enough to ask the man about what happened to Bosses and their famiglia once their reign was done.

"I didn't realise it was such a big deal." Tsuna mused aloud, sipping on the expresso that had been brought in somewhere between talking about how the Shimon famiglia was doing and how expensive clothing had gotten.

"Oh my child," the Ninth had exasperated, "Do you still not realise how important we are to our family?" Tsuna obviously didn't if the confusion marring permanently golden-brown eyes was anything to go by. "We are the guardians of the guardians. We run not only the famiglia, but also the emotions and bonds within it. When a boss comes into power, prior subordinates make a gruesome decision about whether to bow out of the family or take on a new boss. Even then, a lot of the time their loyalties are laid with the previous boss, and their decision to stay stemmed from wanting to protect the prior ideals."

Tsuna was shocked. He had no idea that he had such importance to his famiglia. But thinking of the times that training or a battle had laid him up in a hospital, it was a wonder he hadn't seen it before. Whenever he was released, or woke up from a long sleep, the relief in his family's faces were so deep that they seemed to be carved there forever. The stories of strife amongst the ranks of his guardians made his soul hurt. The memories from ten years in a future that would never happen had Tsuna regretting that he didn't see it before.

He was the centre of his family, of his guardians, of his friends. He supposed it would make sense that when a Boss died, they were paid the utmost respect.

"So what happens to Vongola Bosses?" Tsuna finally asked, looking into the brown eyes of the Ninth. The man looked pleased. Tsuna could only think it was because he finally realised at least a little more of his worth.

"They go into the catacombs, child. Come," the man said as he stood. "Let us take a walk. I suppose it's about time you meet your predecessors."


The walk was a long one, almost twenty minutes from the mansion. They trailed through ruins of old buildings and gardens, feeling the calmness of the trees that made up the acreage of the Vongola estate. They walked silently, not that Tsuna minded. He took in the sights and the directions so that he could learn the lay of his land should anything demand that skill.

The Ninth didn't explain much. However, when they made it to the clearing, Tsuna was surprised to see the lines of angels and doorways scattered amongst the field. They stretched long and far. Tsuna had expected the Ninth to start with the one closest to them, but he instead led the brunet down an unobvious path to a dirt hole in ground farthest from the mansion.

"This, Tsunayoshi will be your catacomb one day." And the thought had Tsuna's mouth drying. He shouldn't be surprised. With his coronation less than two years away –on his twentieth birthday– he knew that measures must be made for his death.

"So soon." It wasn't a question, and the Ninth knew this.

"It would have been built already, had my sons taken my place when they should have." He was sad, but accepting. It had been almost ten years already, but grief had a way of settling to a dull throb in that time. "This is my catacomb."

Tsuna's breath left his lungs as his eyes rested upon the entrance. It was grand. The doorway was made of stone, a medium grey and formed a small room above ground. However, for all the beauty of the stone work and design –for the Ninth's emblem stood out bright and large on either of the side of the walls– it was the sentinel that drew Tsuna's awe. An angel guarded the door. It was a young man dressed not in swaying fabrics, but a military style uniform that Tsuna recognized amongst the Ninth's subordinates. One hand was holding a spear that crossed the top left side of the door way, and the other hand held out to the side as if holding or catching something. It seemed out of place, and unbalanced. The Ninth seemed to recognize this and drew Tsuna's gaze to the nearest catacomb to the left.

"Each tomb has two sentinels, my boy. They are not just any statue though, but the most loyal of all subordinates." He grew very sorrowful here, his voice tight as he brought Tsuna back to his own catacomb. "This young man here was the first man to lay down his life for me, Anthony. He died at my inheritance ceremony when an assassin thought he could get lucky. He died in my arms, a grin on his face. He was the one to train me before my mother died. He was twenty nine."

Tsuna was silent for a long time, watching the man who saved his grandfather's life. It was sobering, but it made sense. Nothing seemed more right than the first person to die for a boss to be given the honour of guarding his tomb. But that begged the question of why only one stood guard of such a sacred place.

"When I am dead, I will be laid here." the Ninth continued, "And the last man or woman to die for my ideals and rein will join Anthony to guard my place. Then, when I am finally sleeping, they will hold my flame in their hands, a proof of my resolve in life and death."

Tsuna didn't comment on the tears in the Ninths eyes and the current Vongola boss returned the favour of Tsuna's own tears. Instead, they walked down the stairs and into the hallway lit with bulbs and stagnant with damp air. Tsuna watched as they walked, as the faces of men and women lined the path towards the end. At their feet were urns and Tsuna knew that the people buried here were buried with pride. Tsuna instinctively knew that each one of these people had served the Ninth well. Each one had earned a place amongst their boss and guardians. Each one was to be respected.

When they reached the end of the path, Tsuna was amazed by the sheer size of the room. It was oval in shape, with seven alcoves lining the walls on the far side. In the centre, directly before the door, was a stone throne. Tsuna noted, as the Ninth gestured for him to explore, that every alcove had a large hole in the centre, large enough for a coffin, Tsuna realised.

"My guardians and I will rest here when we pass." The Ninth smiled softly as he watched Tsuna explore and noted the amount of respect Tsuna blessed the room with as he walked around with pride. "All immediate family rest here with us. Wives have a place here too, unless their wills speak otherwise. My own wife decided she wished to return home, and I could not help but respect that."

Tsuna listened, but he stopped before the throne and frowned, he did this because of the three, large, stone blocks that lay at its feet. He knew instinctively who they were. Bowing on his knee before them, he kissed his fingers and pressed them to each box.

"Rest well, Cousins mine." Because no matter their actual relation, Tsuna saw these men as more than distant uncles. They were brothers in the Mafia and cousins in such a close family. Tsuna thought of Xanxus as the same, despite the fact that the man as old enough to be his uncle.

The young boss knew he had done right by the boys because the Ninth's shoulders had bunched up when Tsuna stopped by the three resting places were now resting easy again. "Come, Tsunayoshi."

Standing and brushing his light, suit pants, Tsuna followed after the aged boss. Walking out into the light was startling. Tsuna had to blink back tears as the light assaulted him. When he was adjusted, Tsuna watched as the Ninth gave a final look at his catacomb. Tsuna felt obligated to look at his own.

Grass was just about growing over the large expanse. He knew that the underground section must have been completed very recently. The entrance, he knew, couldn't have been completed until very recently after his coronation. After all, he couldn't officially develop his insignia until his coronation. It was morbid, but Tsuna thought that he would spend much time at his catacomb once it was built, if for no other reason than to respect every life given to him.

He wished with all his heart that he could realistically say his catacomb would have the least amount of guards, but he couldn't. There was no way for him to ensure all of his subordinates' safety, especially when he was aiming to turn the mafia around.

"Come, Tsunayoshi. You have much to see."

Tsuna followed, but as he stopped before the Eighth boss' tomb, the Ninth continued to walk. "Nono?"

"I have seen these many-a-time, my dear boy. Now it is your turn to walk in peace." the Ninth explained, "I have explained all I think is necessary, so if you have more questions, see me when you are done." The Ninth smiled softly at Tsuna curious expression. "I shall tell the staff to keep a meal aside for you. Do not worry, I shall not let your guardians worry too much."

With that, the Ninth started to slowly walk away, leaving Tsuna in the centre of the glade amongst stone angels and dying will flames.


Given the time between the Eight's death and now, her tomb was completed long ago. While it was obvious that each tomb was cleaned regularly, the wear –though minor– was obvious on the wingtips of the angels that stood guard.

Vongola Ottavo's flames were soft. There was the bite of dying will, but the softness there was a motherly instinct within the will that called out to Tsuna's. It was the first time Tsuna had met a sky flame of a Mother and it was intense. But it lit the angels with a soft hue. It burned with a steadiness Tsuna had not witnessed in any other. He wondered if it was the will of a mother, or of Ottavo herself.

As Tsuna walked into the Guardian's dome at the end of the tomb, he was curious to find that five out of Octavo's six guardians were female. While Tsuna knew for a fact that the Mafia viewed women with a kind of reverend awe –especially born and bred mafia women and wives– they were still viewed with a kind of dominant patriarchal view. That was to say, daughters were still wed off like cattle, and women were raped and killed to teach men a lesson. So given this, it made Tsuna inexplicably happy to see a room full of women, all of whom looked as terrifying and gorgeous as any of the guardians whose portraits lined the mansion.

It also made Tsuna just a little more settled on yet another change he had thought about bringing about within Vongola. Women, while he was in power, were to be treated equal to men.

Tsuna took his time strolling through Settimo to Trezo's tombs. Each one he paid extreme respect to. He was saddened to see that almost each boss had at least one casket in their tomb. Each boss had lost one child before the end of their reign. Quatro lost two boys, Settimo lost four. Only Octavo and Sesto had no caskets. Each boss had a hard life and it made Tsuna's gut twist. It made Tsuna want to destroy the walls of the mansion. That mansion was built on the blood of the children of the bosses. Tsuna refused to lose a son or daughter to this world, even if he knew again that this was going to be a promise was almost impossible to keep.

Secondo's tomb was a quiet affair. Tsuna knew this was the change in Vongola. This was the closest Tsuna was going to get to seeing the original Vongola in its entirety. Tsuna felt so many emotions walking past the sentinels of the Second boss. They were both young boys, eyes closed, and hands full of flames of wrath that poured to the ground and lit the stone in a fierce red-orange. Tsuna had to wonder what happened as he passed group upon group of loyal family members. As he understood it, Secondo was raised beside Primo, within his family, as a distant cousin and first son of the First boss. So he couldn't understand why Secondo led them into such a bloodbath of a history, or how Secondo's descendants could follow on. That brought Tsuna to Secondo and his guardians. The man sat in his throne, lazily and with little care for posture. His guardians stood like gargoyles at his sides, and at his feet were three boxes. It made Tsuna's gut churn.

Now that Tsuna had made his way through all but one of the tombs, he realised something. Secondo had many subordinates lying with him, but they were all very young. Some seemed as young as Fuuta and the oldest, Tsuna had observed, was no older than Kyouya at twenty. It was unnerving and sad. The Ninth, on the other hand, had barely any one in his tomb below the age of thirty. The youngest, perhaps, was his own son, who was twenty three at the time of his death and the oldest looked as if he were in his sixties.

Tsuna imagined that both Primo and Tsuna himself would follow after Secondo with their subordinates. The Ninth was part of both a long regime and a long standing way of life. But in relative terms, Primo, Secondo, and Tsuna would have all brought in a new age for the Vongola. Tsuna was almost sure already, that while the men and women in the Ninth's squads would never harm him, they would not be Tsuna's subordinates. No, Tsuna was bringing in a regime that the Mafia would not like, and thus, his people would be young and new, and open to their Boss' ideals.

It was a truly sad thought. It hurt to think like this already. But even before his reign was to begin, Tsuna knew he was in for a tough time convincing his family of his vision.

With that thought, Tsuna moved onto the final catacomb. Primo's tomb stood out among the rest, but for the worst reasons. Tsuna knew immediately that Primo wasn't here. He knew this tomb was not for respect but for show, a memorial rather than a tomb.

His two angels stood out, grinning to each other across the threshold, their hands lacking the beautiful flame that Tsuna had seen in memory and dreams. The stone was worn away, but it was obvious that it was cleaned most often and most carefully. It looked as close to new as something four-hundred-some-years old could look. As soon as he stepped into the tomb, a chill pressed against him. Without the flame feeding the walls and lighting the air, the chill of Italian soil was one of the few to make Tsuna's breathe visible. Tsuna hadn't noticed the chill of the night settling in and he realised that the will of the Bosses wasn't just there to decorate the hands of angels, but to signify the life of occupants, to remind all visitors that while they were dead, they had died for a cause, and that the cause burnt brightly.

It made the subordinates that lined the hallways so eerie and lonely. Their boss never came home.

After a walk that seemed to take an eternity, the guardians stood before Tsuna. All of them stood with their weapons, closer than all the statures that followed them, to their boss. They looked more like a portrait. Their sanctum was smaller, less ornate, and much cruder than even Secondo's crypt. Tsuna could tell, and pride fluttered in his chest, that Giotto put time and money into the statues and resting places of his subordinates rather than himself.

Very much like Primo, Tsuna thought.

He continued to walk around the room, taking in every detail of every guardian, he touched the hand of each one, a silent prayer in his mind and thanks given to them. He hoped, somehow, his will and thoughts transferred through his rings to the men.

Tsuna almost choked when he looked over to Daemon's place. While every other casket within the guardians' chambers stood before the boss, this casket sat at Daemon's feet. The man wasn't looking out at Tsuna, as all the other guardians of all the other boss had. No, his eyes were glued to the casket. The statues' faces may have been a smoother version of its usual smirk, but Tsuna could feel the flames in the man burning with fury even now. The casket was Elena's, his one love who was killed for no good reason and started a trickle of horror and pain.

In fact, looking now, Primo's tomb wasn't just slightly different from all the others. It was vastly different. Each of Primo's guardians –except Daemon– looked towards Primo rather than towards the guests of the tomb. Primo himself gazed out at the guest with a smirk on his face. Each guardian held a pocket watch in their hands, and Daemon's, at the end of the oval, was lit with a sparkling mist flame.

All of this struck Tsuna hard in the chest and he lowered himself to the floor at Giotto's feet, as if he were still a child and his grandfather had called him over.

Tsuna sat before the Primo generation graves for a while longer. He didn't care about the dust on his suit or the stagnant air that felt almost like a strangling hold. He stared the statues of the first generation and couldn't help but feel a deep sadness. Each one represented each guardian perfectly. Even Giotto, sitting in his throne seemed to embody the entirety of the man's history. However, though the stone flames represented his power, there was no power there. Tsuna knew that these ruins were the memorial of the man.

He had heard, from Timoteo, before the man left Tsuna to his wanderings, that Daemon was the only guardian laid to rest in Primo's tomb. Though he had been a guardian for Secondo, the Boss had known where Daemon's first and true loyalties lay and couldn't bring himself to make the man rest forever more in his own catacomb. It gave Giotto's angels something to guard, but their boss would never come home.

It hurt to think about that. Tsuna couldn't imagine the horror in his soul if he were buried elsewhere while his subordinates waited for him. It made him wonder why someone hadn't done something about it.

Perhaps, he mused as he ran his hands over Giotto's stone face, he was the only one that understood. They were two men born into normal families and living difficult lives, who weren't used to the idea of someone giving their lives over to them. Tsuna knew that no matter his wish now to be buried in his home land one day, he would be adamant about laying to rest within the Vongola catacomb that was already in construction for him. It made Tsuna resolute in a way he hadn't been before.

He bowed before Primo, lighting his ring in a soft orange flame. A promise to the soul within his ring that he knew was listening.

"I promise to bring you home, Grandfather." Tsuna whispered in solemn tones. "You and your guardians, I will bring you home." Then turning to the lines of men and women who guarded the walk to the Primo generation's resting room, Tsuna bowed. "Thank you for your hard work, I will bring your Bosses home."

And Tsuna knew he would keep this promise. He knew Giotto would never truly rest until his body was where it should be. With the famiglia that gave everything for him.