MasukThe first full day at the Lake Como villa dawned bright and serene. Sunlight danced across the water, visible from every grand window, turning the surface into liquid gold. Eve stood on the private terrace of the master suite, wrapped in a silk robe, breathing in the crisp morning air. The events of the attack back in America felt distant here — but the guilt and fear stayed lodged deep in her chest regardless. Alex was already up, moving through the room with determined energy despite his injured shoulder."You should be resting," she said, turning as he approached.Alex wrapped his good arm around her waist, pulling her against him. "Resting won't keep the Russians away, amore. I need to show strength now, more than ever." His golden eyes held hers with that familiar intensity. "Besides. Having you here makes the pain easier to ignore."Giuseppe appeared at the doorway with perfect timing, carrying a silver tray. "Buongiorno, Signor Voss, Signora Sophia. Espresso with a touch of lem
The Lake Como estate was quiet in a way the mansion back home never had been — no scorched east wing, no yellow tape, no ghosts built into the walls. Just water, stone, and the low hush of staff who'd learned not to hover. Eve sat on the edge of the bed in the master suite, watching Alex sleep off the last of the sedatives the private doctor had given him, his bandaged shoulder rising and falling in a rhythm she'd counted a hundred times since the flight.She should have felt safer here. Instead the silence just gave the guilt more room to breathe.Alex stirred near midnight, golden eyes opening slow and unfocused before they found her. "You're still up," he murmured, voice rough with sleep and painkillers."Couldn't sleep." She reached out, brushing his hair back from his forehead. "How's the shoulder?""Manageable." He caught her wrist before she could pull away, holding it there against his skin, like he needed the contact more than he needed the answer to his own question. For a l
The jet touched down just before dawn, wheels kissing a private runway ringed by dark hills and the first silver hint of morning over the water. Eve hadn't slept. She'd spent the whole flight with Alex's head heavy against her shoulder, his breathing shallow from the pain medication Lila had pushed on him somewhere over the Atlantic, his bandaged shoulder rising and falling in a rhythm she'd counted like a rosary.Alive. Alive. Alive.The villa waited at the end of a cypress-lined drive, pale stone against the blue-black lake, shutters closed like sleeping eyes. Alex insisted on walking in under his own power, waving off the two security men who moved to flank him, though his jaw tightened with every step and a fine sheen of sweat broke across his forehead by the time they reached the door."You should be lying down," Eve said, looping his good arm over her shoulders anyway, taking more of his weight than he'd admit to needing."I should be a lot of things," he muttered. "Alive isn't
# Chapter 13: Twisted TruthEve sat on the edge of the bed, her fingers still trembling from the fake panic attack she'd used to cover Marcus's latest threat. Alex held her close, his strong arms a shield against the world, while Lila prepared tea in the kitchen. The envelope from the mysterious figure burned in her hidden drawer, calling to her like a live wire. Everything felt like it was spiraling faster than she could control.Later that afternoon, while Alex was in his home office handling urgent calls, Eve slipped away to the sunroom. She tore open the envelope with shaking hands. Inside were old documents, photographs, and a handwritten letter. Her eyes widened as she read. The twist hit her like a physical blow. Sophia had not died in the fire. She had faked her death with help from the mysterious figure — who was, it turned out, Sophia's former lover and business partner. The real Sophia had been running a much larger con against Alex for years, quietly draining offshore acco
Eve padded softly down the stairs, the wooden steps cool beneath her feet. Alex stood at the counter, sleeves rolled halfway up his forearms, quietly focused as he buttered toast. The morning light pooled around him, turning the edges of his silhouette gold. For a moment she simply watched him — the man who had fought his way back from scars both visible and hidden, the commanding billionaire whose empire spanned continents, yet who now moved with quiet, deliberate care in their kitchen, like even breakfast was something he intended to master."You're up earlier than I expected," she said gently.Alex turned, surprise flickering into a slow smile. "I didn't want to wake you. You looked peaceful." His gaze softened in a way that made her heart warm — and, underneath it, in a way that still made her feel owned. "Breakfast is almost ready."She moved closer, sliding her arms around his waist from behind. He stilled for just a moment — he always did, a leftover reflex from the fire — then
Eve stood firm in the charred ruins of the east wing, her heart hammering against her ribs as the mysterious figure remained half-hidden in the shadows. The acrid smell of old smoke clung heavily to the air, mixing with the damp night breeze that whispered through broken glass panels and collapsed beams. She kept her posture straight and Sophia-like, wiping any flicker of fear from her face with practiced skill. Alex could never know about this meeting, or any of the dangers circling them like wolves in the dark. The memory of his warm embrace from earlier that evening, his trusting golden eyes as they talked on the couch, fueled her determination to hold everything together."You know my real name," Eve said, voice low and steady, refusing to waver. "That means you've been watching for a while. What do you want from me, exactly? Blackmail, like Marcus? Another cut of the money, like KJ?"The figure stepped slightly forward, revealing a tall, slender silhouette dressed in dark clothin
Eve woke tangled in sheets that didn’t belong to her, the unfamiliar softness cocooning her limbs. The morning sun, bold and intrusive, leaked through gauzy curtains, painting the room in gold. For a moment, she floated in that liminal space between sleep and waking, lost to time and place. This wa
Eve struggled to breathe.It wasn’t because Alex was holding her too tight—though he definitely was. Every second in his arms chipped away at the walls she’d spent years building. He looked just like the photos, just like Sophia had always described. Tall. Broad shoulders. The scent of his cologne,
Alexander Voss stood at the windows of his penthouse, gazing down at Manhattan’s sprawl. The city didn’t care if he was watching or not. It just kept going, the same as always. Lately, though, everything felt far away. Like he was watching it all through glass.Two years. That’s how long it had bee
Rain pounded the cemetery, washing the gravel paths into muddy rivers. Evelyn Harlow hunched under her useless black umbrella, teeth chattering as the last shovelfuls of dirt landed on her mother’s casket. The preacher had finished ages ago. Eve just couldn’t make herself walk away. Not yet.Now it







