LOGINZyran
When Luca asked me, I didn’t react. My face, as always, was a blank page. But inside, the world cracked open.
We were in the back room of The Vault, the Kingsmen’s most secure lounge. The meeting was over. Cristian was pouring drinks, telling a loud, crude story. Lorenzo was checking his phone. Dante was just a shadow in the corner as always. Luca had pulled me aside, his usual charm replaced by a raw, desperate energy.
“I need a favor, Vin. A big one.”
I paused, but then continued sipping my bourbon.Luca wasn't known for asking for many Favors so it made me wonder what the matter was. Favors in their world were currency. I expected a request for some ammunition, for a strategic strike against a rival, for a problem to disappear, a strategy fo their next attack on those serpents.
“It’s Myra.”
The name was a live wire dropped into still water. I didn’t flinch. I took another slow sip, letting the burn ground him. “What about her?”
Luca ran a hand through his hair, a gesture of pure agitation. “My father is selling her off. To Damon Sokolov. The old Bratva bastard. She’s to be married next month.”
A cold, precise fury settled in my veins. I had known this day might come. I had calculated the probabilities, the alliances, the inevitable moment when her family would use their most beautiful asset. I had files on Sokolov. I knew the man’s habits, his reputation with women, his declining health. The thought of Myra in that house, with that man, made the darkness in me stir, hungry and violent.
“I can’t let it happen,” Luca hissed, leaning in. “You know I can’t.”
“So stop it,” I said, his voice low and flat. “You have resources.”
“Not like that. Not without starting a war we can’t afford right now. But there’s another way.” Luca’s eyes locked onto mine. “You.”
I remained perfectly still.
“Marry her.”
The words hung in the smoky air. To anyone else, it would have sounded insane. To me, it sounded like a prayer I had never dared utter.
“Hear me out,” Luca rushed on, misreading my silence for refusal. “A contract marriage. You’re more powerful than Sokolov. My father can’t refuse. You keep her safe, under your name, you're family hasn't had a marriage tie with mine yet, making your marriage to her valid, just for a year. Just until the heat is off, until Sokolov backs down and my father’s obsession with the alliance dies. Then… you let her go. A quiet divorce. She gets her freedom, and her safety. It’s clean.”
A contract husband.
The phrase was a joke. A beautiful, painful joke.
Luca was still talking, about loyalty, about friendship, about the favor he was owed from a mess I had cleaned up years ago. I heard none of it.
My mind was seven years in the past. The first day I’d come to the Rossi mansion with Luca from a meeting. I been in the foyer,calculations and strategic mind mapping and sharp edges, when she’d come down the stairs. Myra. Nineteen, with a book in her hand and a smile for her brother that lit up the whole damn marble hall. I felt it then—a seismic shift, a crack in my foundation. I had known instantly that wanting her was a catastrophic idea. She was light. I was nothing but wiring rust and danger.
So, I had built a wall. A fortress of indifference. For years, I had perfected the art of not-looking. I would visit Luca, and she would be there—a soft presence in the periphery. I trained him myself to never meet her eyes, to offer only a nod if she spoke, to make myself a statue in her presence. I thought if I pretended she didn’t exist, the wanting would fade.
It did the opposite.
It became an obsession, quiet and all-consuming. I had a room in my penthouse she would never see. A room with photographs. Her graduating college. Her laughing with a friend at a café he’d had watched from across the street. Her buying flowers at a market. I knew her schedule, her favorite books, the music she played when she thought no one was listening. I knew she was more than the beautiful doll the world saw; she was thoughtful, surprisingly witty in her texts to Luca that he’d… acquired, and possessed a quiet steel beneath the gentleness.
I stopped visiting as often because it was torture. Watching Cristian flirt with her, seeing the easy way other men were drawn to her smile—it lit a fuse of a jealousy so pure and violent it scared me I, who felt so little, felt that too much.
She was my best friend’s sister. She was innocence. She was a line I had drawn in the sand of my own soul.
And now Luca was asking me to cross it. To not just cross it, but to have it handed to me, wrapped in a bow of duty and loyalty.
Luca finished his pitch, his eyes pleading. “She’ll agree. She’s terrified of Sokolov. She’ll see you as the safer option.”
The safer option. The words were almost funny.
I finally moved, placing my empty glass on the table with a soft click. I looked at Luca again, the brother of the woman who haunted me. I saw the fear for her in Luca’s eyes.
I would not be doing this for the favor. I would be doing it because the thought of any other man, especially a decaying monster like Sokolov, putting a hand on her was enough to make him want to paint the city red.
But I also wouldn’t be doing it to let her go.
“A year,” I said, his voice giving nothing away.
Luca’s shoulders slumped in relief. “Yes. Just a year. You won’t have to… you know. It’s just for show. You can even live separately if you want, I just need your name to protect her.”
I almost laughed at the idea. Live separately? 'yeah that wasn't happening'. If she was mine, even just in name, she would be under my roof. In my space. Where I could ensure her safety. Where I could… observe.
“I’ll do it,” I said.
Luca grabbed my arm, gratitude pouring off him. “Thank you, Vin. I owe you everything for this.”
You have no idea what you’ve just done,
As Luca walked away, already pulling out his phone probably to call Myra with the " good news,” I stayed by the table. The noise of the room faded. The question Luca had unwittingly asked echoed in the silent, calculating chambers of my mind.
A contract husband.
I had agreed to be her shield. Her temporary protector.
But as the image of her—my Myra—finally living in my home, being my wife, seared itself behind my eyes, I faced the real, terrifying question.
Could I really let her go after having her, or could I stop myself from even having a taste?
"Attention is the rarest and purest form of generosity."MYRAIt was sitting on my pillow when I came to bed.Not wrapped elaborately, not presented with any kind of ceremony. Just there, on my side of the bed, a flat rectangular package wrapped in plain brown paper with a small piece of twine around it. No bow. No card.I stood at the edge of the bed and looked at it for a moment.Zyran was in the bathroom, I could hear the shower running, and I had the particular feeling of someone who'd walked into a room and found something they hadn't been prepared for. Not alarming. Just — unexpected, in the specific way that made your heart do something before your brain had caught up enough to explain why.I sat down on the bed and picked it up.It was lighter than I expected. And slightly irregular in shape, not perfectly flat, which ruled out most obvious guesses. I turned it over in my hands once.Then I unwrapped it.The brown paper came away carefully, because I had always been a careful
"The most romantic thing isn't grand gestures. It's being remembered in the small, ordinary details."MYRAHe knocked on my door at seven in the evening on a Wednesday.That was already unusual. Zyran didn't knock on my door at seven on Wednesdays. Wednesdays were call nights — he had standing meetings with various people that ran from five until sometimes ten, the kind of back to back scheduling that meant I usually saw him briefly at dinner and then not again until late. I'd learned the shape of his week the way you learned the layout of a house you lived in, knowing which rooms would be occupied at which hours without having to check.So when the knock came I was already slightly confused before I even opened the door.He was standing in the hallway in dark jeans and a black jacket instead of the work clothes he'd been in all day. No tie. His hair was slightly less formal than usual. He looked — almost casual, which on Zyran was a significant departure from the baseline."Get dress
"The hardest thing about being wrong is watching the evidence pile up before you're ready to admit it."LUCAI'd been avoiding the Theon estate.That was deliberate. Three weeks of deliberate, conscious avoidance that I'd justified to myself in a dozen different ways — too busy, too much happening with the Serpents situation, too many things requiring my attention that weren't my sister and my best friend and the mess I'd made by putting them in the same house together.The real reason was simpler and less flattering.I wasn't ready to see them together and know what I knew now.Zyran had broken the one promise that had mattered. I'd built the entire arrangement around my certainty that he was incapable of wanting Myra the way he apparently wanted her, and I'd been wrong in a way that made every decision I'd made since look different in hindsight. I'd handed him the one person I'd spend my life protecting and told myself it was safe because he wouldn't feel anything.The man felt some
"Sometimes the bravest thing is not fighting the dark. Sometimes it's just walking toward the light in someone else's room."MYRAThe nightmare was the same one.It was always the same one, or close enough to the same one that the differences didn't matter. The details shifted sometimes — the room changed, the lighting changed, the specific words were different — but the feeling was identical every time. That particular helpless quality, the sensation of being very small in a space that had decided to close around you, and no matter which direction you moved the walls were already there.I woke up at two forty seven in the morning with my heart going too fast and my hands clenched so hard that the palms ached.I lay there for a moment doing the thing I always did after nightmares — orienting myself. Ceiling. Window. The weight of the covers. The familiar smell of the room. Real things, present things, the inventory of right now rather than whatever my sleeping brain had been building.
"The most dangerous place a person can live is inside someone else's mind. Because no one can follow them there to get them out."ZYRANHe was home.I'd known he would be. Nikolai's surveillance had established his patterns with the kind of precision that came from ten days of careful, patient observation, and Tuesday evenings Jeremy Torrence spent at his apartment. Alone. Consistent as clockwork, which was the particular irony of men who believed themselves untouchable — they stopped varying their routines because they'd stopped believing their routines needed protecting.The building was exactly as described. Midtown, mid-range, the kind of place that suggested comfortable rather than wealthy. A single camera at the entrance that I walked past without concern because I'd had Marcus loop the feed twenty minutes ago. A doorman who was currently on a break that would last exactly as long as I needed it to.I took the stairs.Fourth floor. Apartment 4C. I stood outside the door for a mo
"There is a particular kind of man who looks at something gentle and sees something to destroy. And there is a particular kind of consequence for that."ZYRANI stood in the kitchen for four minutes after she left.I know it was four minutes because I watched the clock on the wall without meaning to, my eyes fixing on it the way eyes fixed on things when the brain needed something simple and external to anchor itself to while it processed something it wasn't ready to process.Four minutes.Then I picked up my phone and called Nikolai."I need everything you have on Jeremy Torrence and self-harm," I said. "Specifically whether he knew. Whether he was aware of it during the relationship."A pause. "That's in the supplemental file. Section four. I flagged it but you hadn't asked about it specifically so I didn't push.""Send it now.""Already sending."I hung up and waited.The file arrived in three minutes. I opened it standing at the kitchen counter in the quiet house and read it the w







