LOGINAURORA'S POV
The laptop showed up at six-fifteen. Some staff girl I didn’t know...not Maria, dropped it on the corner desk and bounced without saying shit. I waited till her footsteps disappeared down the hall before I moved. Brand new, still wrapped in that plastic sleeve. Top-of-the-line shit, the kind that costs more than my dad made in three months back in the day. I ran my fingers over the edge and snorted. Nico’s face when he’d said it.. “It’ll be in your room by tonight”...like he was throwing a bone to a stray and already forgetting about it. I fired it up, set it under a fake name, a fresh email, and a VPN that bounced through four countries before it even got serious. My hands knew what to do. Muscle memory from all those nights back home, Mom snoring down the hall, Jake doing homework on the floor next to my bed. Eleven minutes and I was poking around their outer network. Nothing deep, not yet. Just the boring stuff they let people see...vendor payments, utility bills for the building, some shell company called Meridian Group that owned this penthouse and a few others. I didn’t touch shit, just looked. I felt out the shape of it, like running your hand along a locked door, figuring out where the weak spots are. I shut it down at eight-thirty, slid it under the bed, and took a long, hot shower. Standing under the spray, I let myself grin. That little rush of fuck you for doing the exact thing they told me not to do, less than twelve hours after they said it. You don’t go looking for things that aren’t yours. Cute. Everything was mine to find now, I was already in bed pretending to sleep when I felt it. That low hum, like a guitar string getting plucked then going quiet. The bond thing, I’d felt it before, but this time it didn’t come with heat or phantom hands. Just… unease. Like someone breathing on the back of my neck. Someone was right outside my door. I stayed frozen, staring at the ceiling. The penthouse was dead quiet...rich-people quiet. No creaks, no nothing. But I could hear breathing, slow and controlled. Then it stopped. Footsteps padded away down the hall, and I didn’t move for a long time after that. Thursday hit faster than I wanted. By ten in the morning, two women rolled in with racks of dresses and were already set up in the bedroom like they owned the place. Polite smiles, zero eye contact. Everything on those racks was gorgeous and clearly picked by someone who wanted Nico’s wife looking like a trophy. I went for the least slutty one. Nico’s assistant, Sable—sharp as hell in her charcoal blazer...clocked my choice and didn’t say a word. Her silence said plenty. By six I was back in front of the mirror. Midnight blue dress, fitted as fuck, hugging my waist, neckline right on the edge of dangerous. Hair up, makeup smoky and expensive. Diamond earrings that weren’t mine sat cold against my skin. I looked like Mrs. Black. I practiced keeping my face blank while the thought sat heavy in my stomach. You’re doing this for Mom, for Jake. The door opened, and Nico stepped in, already suited up, dark tie, every hair in place. He looked at me in the mirror the way he always did, like he was adding me to some mental spreadsheet. Then something flickered across his face, gone too fast to catch. “You’ll do,” he said. “Damn, high praise,” I shot back. His mouth twitched...that almost-smile thing he does. He held out his hand, I took it because that’s what Mrs. Black would do, and we walked out into a night I’d only ever seen in movies. The gala was at some hotel so bougie it made the penthouse look basic. Chandeliers dripping like ice, flowers that probably cost more than Jake’s whole school year. Suits that screamed old money. Women dripping in silk and rocks, smiling those plastic smiles that don’t reach their eyes. I wore mine too. Nico kept one hand at the small of my back, guiding me through the crowd without looking like he was. We stopped to chat with guys whose names and faces I filed away like receipts. I laughed when I was supposed to, kept my wine glass barely touched. I was too busy mapping the place. Four exits, visible security at three spots, two more I spotted by how certain guys moved...like they were working, not partying. Cameras standard. Wait staff too polished. This wasn’t a party, it was a meeting with expensive lighting. I was still scanning when Nico’s hand tightened on my back. His whole body shifted, just a little, not tense exactly. Alert. “My father,” he murmured against my ear. I turned. Dante Black wasn’t what I expected. I’d pictured some cold, scary old-school mob boss type. Instead the guy coming toward us was warm, big shoulders, silver hair, still carrying that same vibe Nico and Matteo would have in thirty years. Gray eyes, but softer. Laugh lines, he moved like he owned the room, because he did...but he actually stopped for people. Touched shoulders, remembered names. When he reached us, his face lit up with a real smile. “Nico.” He pulled his son into one of those manly hugs...hand on the back of the neck, quick and firm. Then he turned to me and the smile stayed full wattage. “And this must be Aurora.” “Mr. Black,” I said. “Dante,” he corrected, taking my hand in both of his. Warm. Strong. “Mr. Black is for people who want something from me, you’re family now.” I smiled back, and it wasn’t even fake at first. “Dante,” I repeated. He held my hand a second longer, eyes scanning my face. “She’s lovely, Nico. And those eyes…” He shook his head, half-laughing. “Sharp.” “She keeps me on my toes,” Nico said. That actually surprised me. Dante laughed, low and easy, and steered us toward a quieter corner, already chatting about random shit. For a minute I was actually… charmed. He was funny, magnetic. Told a story about Nico at fourteen that made Nico’s jaw flex and made me genuinely grin. He asked about my mom, sounded like he actually gave a damn. He knew her name, but I hadn’t said it. The smile stayed glued on my face while I took a tiny sip of wine. Inside, something cold clicked into place. He already knew her fucking name. Men like Dante Black don’t remember details about people they’ve never met unless those details matter. Unless they’ve already looked into them. I smiled at him over the rim of my glass and thought, I see you. The gala kept glittering around us. But the real game? That shit had just started.The door to the penthouse had barely clicked shut behind us when the air changed. The event had left a charge on all three of us that the car ride home couldn’t burn off. Not the usual post-gala exhaustion or the sharp edge of adrenaline. This was thicker, deeper. The kind of heat that had been building since the lodge, since the quiet files Matteo kept leaving on my nightstand, since Nico started watching me like I was a map he was still trying to read but no longer fully controlled. Tonight, after watching me work that room like I belonged there, the heat between us had a different quality. Less about possession, less about who owned who. More about something that didn’t have a clean name yet. Something that felt dangerously close to real. I kicked off my heels in the entryway. The burgundy dress clung to my skin, still warm from the night, the slit up my thigh flashing as I moved. Nico’s hand found my lower back immediately, warm through the thin fabric. Matteo closed the door a
The biggest social obligation so far was at the old Metropolitan Club, the kind of place where the chandeliers had been hanging since before most of the guests were born. Heavy velvet drapes, marble floors that clicked under heels, air thick with expensive perfume and older secrets. This wasn’t a simple gala. This was where the real strings got pulled. Where families like the Blacks reminded everyone else who still ran the table. I wasn’t the same woman who had walked into that first event months ago. Back then I’d been mapping exits and memorizing faces while trying not to drown in the dress and the role. Tonight I walked in like I belonged in the dress. Like the role had grown into my skin. The deep burgundy gown hugged every curve, slit up one thigh just enough to draw eyes without screaming for attention. My hair was up, diamonds at my ears and throat that weren’t mine but felt like armor now. Nico’s hand rested at the small of my back as we entered, warm and steady, but I d
Nico felt it before I even realized how obvious it had become. We were in the living room that evening. Nothing special. Matteo and I had been trading another quiet look across the kitchen island earlier, the kind that carried the weight of another file left on my nightstand and the silent alliance we were building. Nothing romantic, just understanding. Shared purpose. But the bond didn’t care about intentions. It carried the new closeness between us like a signal. Nico was on the couch with his laptop when it hit him. I felt the exact moment through the connection... his cool presence sharpening suddenly, turning colder, then flaring hot with something raw and complicated. Jealousy. Not the clean, controlled kind he usually kept locked down. This was messy, immediate. The kind that comes when you think someone is taking what’s yours. He closed the laptop slowly. Too slowly, his gray eyes lifted and locked on me where I sat curled up with a book I wasn’t reading. Then they slid t
It started small. Two days after Irina left, I found a plain white envelope on my nightstand. No name, no note. Just a USB drive inside. I knew it was from Matteo the second I saw it. The bond carried a quiet warmth when I picked it up, like he was somewhere in the penthouse watching to see what I’d do. I locked myself in the bathroom, plugged it in, and opened the files. Nothing huge. Nothing that would get him killed if someone found it. Just small pieces, a port manifest from seven years ago with my father’s old company name listed as the receiver. A payment note with Elias Vale’s initials next to a transfer that matched the one I’d already found. A single line from an old email chain: “Thompson becoming difficult. D says handle it quietly.” I sat on the cold tile floor and stared at the screen until my eyes burned. Matteo had been watching this empire with the same eyes I had for much longer. He didn’t say anything when I came out of the bathroom. Just gave me a small nod ac
Irina arrived like she owned the afternoon. The elevator chimed mid-afternoon, and I heard Maria’s surprised greeting from the kitchen. I was on the couch with a book I wasn’t reading, legs tucked under me, when Irina stepped into the living room. Charcoal coat draped over one arm, dark hair swept up, that same razor-sharp elegance she carried everywhere. She looked like she could cut glass with a smile. “Aurora,” she said, voice smooth as good whiskey. “I was in the area, thought I’d drop by.” I set the book down slowly. “You don’t strike me as the type who just drops by.” Her smile curved. “Smart girl. I don’t. But some conversations deserve to happen in private.” Maria hovered near the doorway, uncertain. I gave her a small nod. “We’re fine, Maria. Thanks.” The older woman disappeared into the kitchen without another word. Smart as always. Irina dropped her coat over the back of an armchair and settled onto the couch across from me like she belonged there. She crossed her le
Matteo found me in the library the next afternoon. I was curled up in the big leather chair by the window, pretending to read the same page for the third time. The sun was coming in low and golden, catching dust in the air. My mind was still replaying the way Nico had gone completely still in that meeting room, the flush on his neck, the way Carlo had narrowed his eyes like he could smell something off but couldn’t name it. The door clicked shut behind Matteo. I looked up. He stood there for a second, hands in his pockets, just watching me. Not angry, not even annoyed. Just... assessing. Like I was a new map he was trying to read. “You did something yesterday,” he said quietly. No hello. Straight to it. I closed the book and set it on the small table beside me. “Yeah, I did.” He crossed the room slowly and dropped into the chair across from me. The same one he’d sat in when we talked about the bond before. He leaned forward, elbows on his knees, dark eyes steady on my face. “Du
I waited until the meeting was already underway. The conference room had that one-way glass wall on the east side. From the hallway you could see straight in, but they couldn’t see out. Perfect. I stood just far enough back that I blended with the shadows, arms crossed, heart beating steady but fa
I waited until the penthouse went dark. Nico had been especially possessive all evening... pulling me into his lap during a movie, hand between my thighs under the blanket while Matteo pretended not to notice. The weekend at the lodge had changed the temperature between all three of us, and Nico
The city felt louder when we got back. The elevator doors opened into the penthouse and the weekend at the lodge suddenly seemed like something that had happened to other people. The stone fireplace, the cold lake water, Matteo’s quiet words by the shore, the way the three of us had come apart an
Carlo Rossi showed up at the penthouse like he owned the elevator code. I was in the kitchen helping Maria chop vegetables for dinner, or at least pretending to. My knife moved in steady, mechanical slices while my head kept spinning around Elias Vale’s name and that cold transaction record. Two w







