LOGINSome weapons are made of silence. Others, of memory.
Chess, in Elena’s memory of her father, had never been just a board game.
It was a ritual of prolonging breath.
“The man who rushes will die first, Issa. Waiting is the quietest weapon. And the most lethal.”
This morning, in Dante’s study, that advice throbbed again at Elena’s temples.
Folders stacked like soldiers. Provenance documents. Certificates of authenticity. High-resolution photographs of paintings, every crack catalogued in pixel-perfect detail.
Dante sat directly across from her. Shirtsleeves rolled to the elbows. Morning light falling at the precise angle of his jaw. His eyes hadn’t left the screen since she walked in.
“You’re too calm,” Dante said without looking up. “Usually, an art consultant would start a small war by tossing expensive opinions around.”
“I’m studying it. Observation demands silence.”
“Then what are you doing right now?”
Elena set down a photograph—an eighteenth-century French landscape—without ceremony.
“Threading both together. This one is a forgery.”
Dante finally looked up. That darkness in his eyes: the kind that waited for a story.
“Prove it.”
“The brushwork is too obedient to the line. Painters of that era used wild natural bristles. Their strokes always left traces of small rebellion. But this—this is too clean. Synthetic brushes. Made within the last three to five years.”
A beat of silence.
Then Dante’s lips curved—the expression of a man who had just realized a pebble was solid gold.
“You’re right.” He closed his laptop. “A dealer in Brussels sold it to me two years ago. Swore on his life it was authentic. I only pretended to believe him.”
“Pretended?”
“I kept it to test the world.” Dante leaned back, fingertips pressed together in a small pyramid. “You are the first person to pass that test.”
Elena wasn’t sure if that was a compliment or a new trap.
Most likely, both.
Two hours. The rhythm of water seeping into parched earth.
They dissected paintings, sculptures, ancient artifacts. Dante asked sharp questions that forced her to dig past technical theory. At times, his gaze shifted into something finely calibrated—a radar that scanned not only the objects on the table, but the architecture of secrets Elena had built at great cost.
When the sun reached its peak, Dante closed all the files.
“Break. My brain has raised the white flag.”
He crossed to the black piano in the corner. Touched the keys with a gentleness that looked wrong on him. Coaxed a melody that sounded like a confession made in the dark.
“My mother taught me,” he said without stopping. “She said music is the only thing that cannot be deceived. It reveals truth without asking permission.”
“Because music has no agenda,” Elena said.
“People have far too many.”
“Including us.”
Dante’s fingers went still.
The silence that followed was heavier than any melody he’d just played.
“You speak as though you were born from a wound, Elena.”
Her alias in his mouth felt like a borrowed coat that had begun to choke her.
“Everyone has secrets they tend to, Dante.”
He turned. One step between them. The air as thick as a wall of steel.
“What intrigues me is how you can stand before me without flinching.”
“Fear only slows you down.”
“Then what, exactly, are you staying vigilant about?”
The question pierced into the part of her no one was allowed to touch.
“Too many things,” she finally said. Simple words. Explosive enough to bring the building down.
Dante held her gaze for a moment. Then said nothing.
✘ ✘ ✘
Dante retrieved a wooden chess set from the bottom drawer.
“Do you play?”
“My father taught me before my feet could reach the floor.”
They sat. White in Elena’s hands, black in Dante’s. Their opening moves were clean. Almost formal.
The atmosphere became a small battlefield requiring cold blood.
Elena lost her queen. Then a knight. But her father’s heartbeat had migrated into her chest—reminding her that loss was sometimes the price for a final victory.
Elena moved her king back two squares.
Dante’s eyebrow arched. “You’re choosing retreat?”
“There’s rarely a straight road in a game that truly matters.”
Then, on the twenty-eighth move—
The universe stopped spinning.
Dante moved his black knight. Sideways. Then back. That unusual L-shape. A move that sealed a gap in his defense while opening a devastating counter-attack.
The same tactic Elena had watched every Sunday morning in her father’s study.
Roberto Moretti’s signature move.
Elena’s fingers froze. Her breath snagged. “Who taught you that move?”
“A good man, some years ago. He had a house full of paintings, an extensive library, and a strange sense of humor.” Dante studied the board. “His name was Roberto Moretti.”
Elena’s world shattered. A glass mask slammed against a stone floor.
Dante continued, unaware he had just unsealed a sacred grave.
“My father sent me to his home several times. Roberto taught me chess, piano, even how to see art as something that breathes.”
Elena gripped the edge of her chair.
“He had a daughter,” Dante went on. “Very young then. Long black hair, wide eyes. Terribly shy—but her courage always surfaced at the most unexpected moments.”
A pause. Something softening in his voice.
“Her name was Isabella. We called her Issa.”
The memory hit like a sledgehammer: herself as a small child, peering through a doorframe. Bursts of laughter every time teenage Dante made a strange chess move. The knock on her bedroom door—their secret code. Knock knock.
“I used to call her Belladona,” Dante continued. “She hated the name. But I couldn’t stop.”
Elena bowed her head. She had to. One more second of eye contact and everything would collapse.
“What happened to that family?”
She already knew the answer. The way a monster crouches under a childhood bed.
“Gang war. A massive explosion. At least, that’s what my father told me.” Dante exhaled slowly. “No one survived.”
A beat.
“I missed her. Issa, I mean.” His voice dropped. “My first love.”
Something inside Elena split in two.
Fifteen years of vengeance on one side. A longing that had never truly died on the other.
She wanted to scream: Your father killed them.
She wanted to weep: I’m here, Dan-Dun. I’m still alive.
Instead she drew a slow breath and said:
“I’m so sorry for your loss.”
Dante looked at her for a long moment. Searching for something tucked between the strands of her lashes.
“You remind me so much of her,” he said. “The way you hold the world at bay—as though you’re cradling a bomb that could detonate at any second.”
Elena wanted to laugh. Or tear this entire performance apart right now.
“Everyone carries wounds. Some people simply choose to hide them very well.”
Dante stepped back. Picked up a sheet of paper. “This is the list of paintings for tomorrow.”
Elena accepted it without reading it. Moved toward the door.
“Elena.”
She turned slowly.
“Thank you for being willing to listen,” Dante said. “Not many people are willing to sit with someone else’s ghosts.”
Elena offered a thin smile. “We’re all walking alongside our own ghosts, in the end.”
Then she left.
The door closed. The corridor swallowed her.
Elena pressed her back against the wall, shut her eyes, and let a single tear fall.
I’m here, Dan-Dun.
I’m your Belladona.
And I hate the fact that I still remember you the way something should have died long ago.
The Genovese ballroom had a way of making people forget they were baring their throats to wolves.That was Suede’s first thought as her heels met the marble, glossy enough to throw back the glow of three dozen Murano chandeliers. White ranunculus crowded every vase, their scent too thick to be anything but artificial. A string ensemble worked through Debussy on the far stage—loud enough to bury a conspiracy, soft enough to let the smallest friction slip through. Civility wrapped around everything in the room like silk over a blade.Five dynasties. One room. One night thick with intrigue.Suede lifted a glass of champagne from a passing tray, fingers closing around the stem only for cover, and let her gaze begin its sweep.✘ ✘ ✘The Carvajo faction owned the round table against the eastern wall the way harbor lords owned a dock. Fenrir Carvajo threw out a joke, hard-faced, and three men laughed too wide, too fast. Not humor
Suede froze. One full second.One second that stretched and rewound four weeks of operations in a frantic blur—every step down a deserted corridor, every gap she had slipped through undetected, every calculation she had trusted without question. But at the end of that reel, reality hit her with the same stark awareness: Elena Lafayette had been standing here first.Of course. That woman was always one step ahead.“Where have you been?” Elena asked.Suede pulled her coat tighter. “None of your business.”“True.” Elena didn’t shift so much as a centimeter from the wall. “But your room might become everyone’s business now—if the door wasn’t locked properly.”Suede went still.The words landed squarely in the blind spot she had convinced herself was safe tonight. She had been too fixed on timing, on escape routes and calculated probabilities of exposure, to remember one small and utterly fatal detail. The door. A latch that hadn’t caught because her hand never doubled back after she grabb
Twelve thirteen in the morning.Suede moved through the east wing corridor without a sound. Shoes dangled from her left hand. The soles of her feet, wrapped in socks, knew every inch of that floor—which boards were safe, which would groan under the wrong pressure. She’d mapped it all in her first week: three danger points along the main hallway, one more on the back staircase landing. She avoided every single one with surgical precision, like a bomb disposal expert navigating a minefield she couldn’t see but could feel through something deeper than instinct.The back gate yielded with a single touch on the keypad. The result of watching Dante’s fingers from two meters away the day he’d let the gardener through—the right angle, the right light, a muscle memory that operated somewhere beneath conscious thought. The rest was nothing but simple mechanical calculation.The night swallowed her whole the moment she stepped outside.✘ ✘ ✘A dark cab carried Suede toward the edge of the di
Their footsteps struck the dock in unison—Dante in the lead, Elena half a step behind him, Lorenzo and Suede sealing the rear.On either side of them, rows of luxury yachts swayed lazily over dark, swollen water. Their bow lights fractured against the surface, scattering like shards of burning glass. The night wind rolling off the Mediterranean was sharp with brine, laced with the residual tension of the casino that still clung to their skin.Elena drew her cashmere coat tighter. Her hands needed something to do—something other than counting the distance between each lamp post along the dock. Four blind spots. Two shipping containers at the right corner. One iron crane—the gap behind its support legs wide enough to conceal two adults.She had never learned to silence it: her mind always ran ahead, mapping threats before they had the chance to materialize.“Ferrantelli won’t let this end at the card table,” Dante said without slowing or turning his head.“He left too quickly for a man
In the labyrinth of Elena’s mind, the numbers had been falling into formation since the fourth card changed hands. She’d already mapped the probability distribution from a half-spent deck, tracked the shift in Luca’s betting rhythm across three rounds, and arrived at a cold conclusion that was simply waiting for the right moment to be executed.Luca Ferrantelli played with the arrogance of a man who had forgotten what it felt like to lose. Men like that were always the most fragile prey.“This round,” Dante murmured, his breath grazing the shell of Elena’s ear, “finish him.”Elena gave no sign of agreement. Didn’t even blink. They had long since moved past the stage where confirmation required a sound.Her fingers reached toward the card box with a deliberate flash of hesitation—a visual performance designed to convince everyone at the table that she was nothing more than decorative, a woman far
The Salon Privés of the Casino de Monte-Carlo operated on a single unwritten law, worn into its velvet carpet through decades of quiet ruin: the most dangerous people in the room were always the ones who received their losses with a straight spine and a steady breath.Elena locked that understanding into place the moment her heels struck the heavy mahogany threshold. The baccarat tables had been arranged with an intimidating precision—row upon row, leaving just enough aisle space for two bodies to pass each other without shifting their shoulders. Above them, amber light smoked through the air, engineered specifically to kill the awareness that a different world was spinning outside on a different clock. The air was thick with premium tobacco, bespoke cologne, and something older beneath it all—a residue that existed in places like this: ambition handed down so many generations it had started to smell like authority.Dante stopped three meters from th
Pretending always demanded an exhausting price.The woman claiming to be Isabella Moretti had spent three consecutive days rearranging the foyer flowers—always choosing the clusters Dante favored most. She positioned herself at every strategic corner: the breakfast table, the sitting
The summers in that bay always exhaled salt.The air held a vast silence that demanded nothing—never pressed you into becoming anyone, never noted your tardiness, never glanced at the family photos on the wall just to remind you of how far short you fell.Feliks Rostova, age t
Lorenzo stood in the doorway, clutching the thick jacket he hadn’t yet managed to put on. From beneath the blankets, Aria read him instantly. Her face was pale and drawn, but a faint flicker of dry amusement moved through her sharp eyes, carefully concealed.“Go,” Aria cu
The steering wheel was just leather and metal. Dante knew that. His knuckles didn’t care. He drove like a man trying to outrun the inside of his own skull—foot merciless on the accelerator, brake a concept he’d stopped believing in. Streetlights strobed through the cabin. One flash: the hard set







