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ADRIANA’S POV
The hospital room smelled of antiseptic and exhaustion. My heart hammered painfully as Doctor Cassian flipped through Luca’s chart with a grave expression that made my stomach twist. Rain pattered against the window, blurring the city lights outside into streaks of neon. “Miss Rossi,” he said quietly, his voice steady but heavy with urgency. “We’ve stabilized Luca for now with the latest round of medication, but his hypertrophic cardiomyopathy is progressing faster than we anticipated. As you know the genetic markers point strongly to inheritance from the paternal side. We really need his biological father involved. Genetic confirmation from him could open doors to targeted therapies, possibly even identify compatible options if we reach the point of considering a transplant evaluation. Without that connection, we’re fighting with one hand tied behind our backs.” I clutched the edge of Luca’s bed rail, my knuckles turning white. The words landed like stones in still water, sending ripples of fear through me, even though this wasn’t the first time I’d heard it. Luca lay small and pale against the white sheets, his chest rising and falling in shallow rhythms after the sedative. His silver-gray eyes hidden behind closed lids. Those eyes that mirrored the man I had run from. “I understand,” I whispered, forcing my voice not to crack. “I’ll find him. I promise I’ll reach out and bring him in.” Doctor Cassian studied me for a long moment, his warm brown eyes softening with pity he tried to hide. “We can manage a little more time, but not much. His heart muscle is thickening too rapidly. Every day counts.” I nodded, swallowing the lump in my throat. He patted my shoulder once before leaving the room, the door clicking shut behind him with a finality that echoed in my chest. Find him. As if it were that simple. As if Alessandro Orsini would even let me speak before the hatred in those steel-gray eyes turned lethal. He believed I had destroyed him willingly. Betrayed him for power and another man’s bed. If I walked back into his world now, he would see me as nothing but the whore who shattered his trust. He might kill me before the first sentence left my lips. And even if he listened, why would he believe a single word about the son he never knew existed? I had been in this city for two months already, scraping by, searching for any safe way to approach him. Yet every time I came close to picking up the phone or stepping into one of his territories, terror rooted me in place. The man I once loved with every fragile piece of my soul now ruled as Don with an iron fist and a heart turned to stone. My stone. I turned toward my son and brushed a damp curl from his forehead. His skin felt too warm, too fragile under my fingers. Leaning down, I pressed my lips gently to his temple, breathing in the faint scent of hospital soap and the innocence that still clung to him despite everything. “Sleep well, my love,” I murmured against his skin. “Mommy’s got you.” My throat burned as I straightened and grabbed my worn coat. The clock on the wall glared at me. Late again. I slipped out of the room before the tears could fall, my heels clicking down the sterile hallway toward the exit. Outside, rain poured in relentless sheets, soaking through my coat as I flagged down a cab. I slid into the back seat, water dripping from my hair onto the cracked leather. The driver muttered something about the weather, but I barely heard him. My mind raced between Luca’s fragile heartbeat and the mountain of debts waiting like wolves at our door. My phone buzzed in my pocket, sharp and insistent. An unknown number flashed across the screen. My blood turned to ice. I stared at it as it vibrated again and again, the ringtone cutting through the patter of rain on the roof. Roman. It had to be him. Ever since I fled his prison of a marriage with my son, his calls had chased me like ghosts. What if he had finally tracked us here? What if picking up meant hearing his venomous threats again, or worse, discovering he already lurked around the corner? My hand trembled as I silenced the call and shoved the phone deep into my bag. The cab smelled of stale cigarettes and damp wool. I pressed my forehead against the cool window, watching blurred streets slide past. Freedom had tasted so sweet for those first few weeks. Now it felt like the opening act of another nightmare. The strip club loomed ahead, its neon sign flickering through the downpour like a cheap beacon of desperation. I paid the driver and dashed inside through the back entrance, my shoes squelching with every step. The familiar thump of bass vibrated through the walls as I climbed the narrow stairs to the staff area. In the cramped dressing room, I peeled off my wet clothes and changed quickly into the required uniform: a short black dress that hugged my curves too tightly and heels that made my calves ache. I wasn’t a dancer. Never had been. I served drinks, kept my head down, and survived. That was all. I pinned my long hair into a messy bun, loose strands already escaping to frame my face. As I reached for the door, it swung open and nearly hit me. “Adriana.” My boss, Marco, blocked the doorway with his bulky frame. Sweat beaded on his forehead under the harsh lights. “Thank God you’re here. I need you in the VIP section tonight.” I froze, one hand still on the doorframe. “VIP? But I’m scheduled for the main floor. Maria usually handles VIP.” “Maria called in sick. You’re the only one I trust not to fuck it up.” He wiped his hands on his shirt and gave me a pointed look. “We’ve got big spenders tonight. I’m willing to pay triple the pay if you act right. Remember, no complaints, no spills, and keep your mouth shut about whatever you see.” Triple the pay. The words dangled like a lifeline. Luca’s next treatment loomed, and the hospital bills kept piling higher. Yet dread coiled tight in my gut. I knew exactly what VIP meant in a place like this. Men with power and no conscience. Guns tucked under tailored jackets. Deals made in shadows while blood dried on the floor. I had counted too many body bags carried out the back alley in just two months. Born into the Rossi syndicate, I had breathed mafia violence since childhood. I had loved a man forged in it. Married another who wielded it like a blade. Two months here had only sharpened those memories. I had watched life end with casual indifference in these very walls. Still, Luca needed medicine, food, and a fighting chance. “I’ll do it,” I said, my voice steadier than I felt. Marco nodded once, already turning away. “Good. Get out there. They’re waiting for their drinks.” I lingered for a second in the doorway, heart pounding against my ribs. Part of me wished for a quiet night on the main floor. Another part, the exhausted mother part, clung to the extra money. But as I descended the stairs toward the pulsing lights and velvet ropes of the VIP area, a darker fear whispered in my mind. Please God, let me not run into Roman. Not tonight. Not when I carried too many secrets and too little strength left to face him.ADRIANA’S POVI sat in the passenger seat and watched the city blur past the window. Exhaustion pulled at every bruised muscle in my body, yet a new determination settled in my chest. I had carried this secret long enough. Luca’s relapses came more often now. His little heart could not keep fighting without proper help. Alessandro needed to know the truth. He needed to know Luca was his son and that our boy might not survive another crisis without his father. I planned to tell him the moment we reached the hospital.Alessandro gripped the steering wheel tightly. His jaw stayed locked and his shoulders looked rigid. At first I thought the tension came from our argument, but then I noticed the way his breathing changed. It grew shallower. His forehead glistened with sweat even though the air conditioning blew cool across us. Something was wrong.“Are you okay?” I asked quietly.He nodded once without looking at me. “I am fine. Just focus on Luca.”I did not believe him. His knuckles tur
ALESSANDRO’S POVI stood over the hospital bed with my blood still boiling. Adriana looked small against the white sheets, her face swollen and bruised, yet her eyes held a stubborn fire that only fueled my frustration. I leaned in closer, my voice low at first but gaining heat with every word. “Tell me what really happened five years ago. Why did you marry Roman after everything we shared? I deserve the truth, Adriana.”She turned her head away and stared at the wall. Her fingers gripped the blanket until her knuckles paled. “You do not want to know any of it. Alessandro, please leave the past where it belongs.”“The hell I will leave it.” I slammed my hand on the side rail of the bed. The metal rattled under the force. “The night before your wedding, do you remember? You showed up at my door. We tore each other’s clothes off like the world was ending. You moaned my name for hours while I was inside you. I held you afterward and thought we had forever. Then I woke up alone. No note.
ADRIANA’S POV “Adriana,” a voice called out. “Adriana, open your eyes.” I heard my name drifting through the darkness. It was Alessandro calling my name again and again, his voice rough with worry. The sound pulled me upward until my eyes snapped open. I jolted upright with a gasp, fear flooding my chest like ice water. A strong hand closed around my wrist and held me in place. My heart slammed against my ribs. Roman. It had to be Roman. He had come back to finish what he started. I turned my head slowly, every movement sending sharp pain through my skull. But it was not Roman. It was Alessandro. He sat beside the hospital bed with his head resting near my hip and his fingers wrapped gently around my wrist. His eyes stayed closed and his breathing came deep and even. Bruises and dried blood still marked his knuckles. He looked exhausted yet somehow peaceful in sleep. I stared at the lines of his face and remembered how he had burst through that warehouse door like vengeance itse
ALESSANDRO’S POVI gripped the steering wheel so hard my knuckles turned white. The engine roared beneath me as I pushed the car faster through the crowded streets. Horns blared around us but I did not slow down. Red lights flashed past in blurs. I swerved around a slow truck and cut across the intersection without a second thought. Rocco sat in the passenger seat beside me. He kept his mouth shut. The others in the back stayed silent too. They knew better than to speak when rage like this consumed me. My men had tracked the signal from her phone. I’d put a tracker on it since the day I found her and I never thought I would have to use that to find her, but here we are. Roman’s idiots left a trail a blind man could follow. Sloppy routes, no signal jammers, and no decoy cars. Only one fool operated with that kind of arrogance. Roman De Santis. The realization burned like acid in my veins. He had taken her again. We reached the old warehouse district on the edge of the city. I slammed
ADRIANA’S POV“Make sure you eat something today,” Cassian said. “And don’t forget to call me when you get there. Have a nice day, Adriana.” And with that the call ended. I stared down at my phone for a moment, a small smile touching my lips despite everything. I could still hear the concern in his voice. For the past week, that had become normal. Cassian checking on me, Cassian making sure Luca was okay, Cassian reminding me that I wasn’t completely alone.I ended the call with Cassian and slipped the new phone into my bag as I set out to leave for the hospital. Luca had been admitted back into the hospital two days ago after collapsing unexpectedly. The doctors said his condition had stabilized, but that didn’t stop the fear that lived permanently inside my chest. Every phone call terrified me. Every hospital visit felt like walking toward a possible goodbye. I hated it. God, I hated it. I just wanted my son healthy, I just wanted one normal day.I flagged down a taxi and climbed
ALESSANDRO’S POVI sat behind my desk in the dim light of my office and stared at the photograph on the screen. Adriana walked beside that doctor in the market, her head slightly tilted as she listened to him. Cassian looked at her with open adoration in his eyes, the kind of look that made my blood simmer. It’s been one week. She had run from me seven days ago and already another man hovered close enough to smile at her like she belonged to him. I gripped the edge of the desk until the wood creaked. No one had the right to look at her that way. Not while she still carried my mark on her skin and my ring on her finger, even if she had tried to sell it.The tracker in that ring had led my men straight to the jeweler. They recovered it within hours. She thought she could erase me so easily. The thought brought a cold smile to my lips before the anger returned. I enlarged the photo and studied Cassian’s face again. He wanted her. I could see it in the way he angled his body toward her,
ALESSANDRO’S POVI sat at the head of the long mahogany table and barely heard a word the men said. The senior syndicate members of the Orsini Syndicate filled the room with their smoke and opinions while Valentino leaned back in his chair like he owned the place. I kept my face blank and rolled th
ADRIANA’S POVI paced the locked room like a trapped animal, my bare feet silent on the cold marble floor. The guards had shoved me inside and slammed the heavy door, the click of the lock echoing like a final judgment. My chest tightened until each breath hurt. Luca. My little boy lay in that hosp
ALESSANDRO’S POVI walked out of that room and left her chained on the bed without a backward glance. My dick throbbed painfully against my trousers with every step down the corridor. Each movement sent a fresh wave of frustration through my body. I wanted nothing more than to turn around, bury my
ADRIANA’S POV“Five years, Rosa. Five years, and you’re still exactly the same,” he whispered, his voice low and calm. I lay spread open and chained to the bed, my chest heaving, body drenched in sweat and my own cum. I couldn’t answer him. My nipples throbbed like fire from the clamps. My pussy f







