MasukRomano’s POV
The car remained quiet after Aria got inside, the quietness was heavy and awkward; those kinds that followed a toxic conversation. Milan’s lights blurred past the tinted windows while she sat beside me still wearing the wedding dress she had run away in. Her hands stayed folded tightly in her lap as though holding herself together required physical effort. Most people fell apart after betrayal, but Aria seemed determined not to and seeing that interested me more than it should have. “You always pick up strangers from the street?” she asked suddenly. I glanced at her. “No.” “Then why me?” A reasonable question, I looked out the window. “You stepped in front of a car.” “That explains why you pulled me back.” Her gaze narrowed. “It doesn’t explain why I’m in your car.” A faint smile threatened to appear, she asked too many questions. “I haven’t decided whether that was a mistake yet.” For the first time since I met her, something resembling amusement flickered across her face but the expression disappeared almost immediately. Her phone buzzed again, I could see it was Luca, she ignored it, again and again. I watched her silence all the calls. “You should block him.” Her fingers tightened around the phone. “I want to.” “But?” She stared down at the screen. “I think part of me wants him to suffer first.” A short pause followed. “For cheating on me with my best friend.” The words were calm, too calm; like she had not fully accepted that it was real. “I think you’ve earned the right to be angry.” Her eyes lifted to mine. “You say that like revenge is normal.” “It is.” Something unreadable crossed her face. The city lights moved across her features before she looked away again then she asked quietly. “Who are you?” “There it is.” “What?” “The question you’ve wanted to ask since getting in.” A tiny huff escaped her. “I know your name.” “Then we’re making progress.” “I meant what do you do?” I leaned back slightly. “You ask a lot of questions for someone who got into a stranger’s car.” “You avoid a lot of answers for someone who offered.” That actually made me laugh, I let out a short laugh, barely noticeable but she grasped it, her eyes widened. “You can laugh.” “You sound surprised.” “I am.” I shook my head. “You don’t look like someone who runs away from her own wedding.” The words landed harder than intended, immediately her expression tightened. The amusement disappeared, I could see regret, humiliation and pain on her face. I saw all three. “You regret leaving?” “No.” The answer came instantly, then more quietly; “I regret loving someone who made leaving necessary.” For a moment neither of us spoke. Something about the honesty in her voice settled heavily between us, I understood it more than I wanted to because people always talked about love as if it were something beautiful. Nobody talked about the damage it left behind. Aria turned toward the window again. “I thought I knew exactly what my future looked like.” Her voice had softened. “Three hours ago I knew where I’d be living, who I’d spend my life with, what the next ten years looked like.” She laughed once, a broken one. “Now I don’t know if any part of it was real.” The words hit unexpectedly hard, not because I cared but because I understood. The feeling of discovering your life had been built on lies wasn’t unfamiliar. My phone vibrated, it was Father. I muted it immediately, not tonight. Aria noticed. “Your wife?” “No.” “Girlfriend?” “No.” “Why?” I looked at her. “You ask too many questions.” “You keep answering them.” Fair. The driver slowed as traffic built ahead. Aria shifted slightly, she kept turning like the seats were uncomfortable, for some reason, I couldn’t stop looking. Dangerous, that was the word, not because she threatened me but because distractions always were and she was distracting me. My phone buzzed again, father; I ignored it again then Aria’s phone lit up. Unknown Number, she frowned, the crease on her forehead showed as cracks formed as she let her face down. “Ignore it.” She nodded. The phone buzzed again, again and again, same number. This time she opened the message. I watched the exact moment the color drained from her face, she turned pale, almost too pale. “What is it?” No answer. “Aria.” Slowly she turned the phone toward me and a single message filled the screen. YOU RAN STRAIGHT INTO THE WRONG HANDS. The atmosphere inside the car changed instantly, I took the phone, read it again. Unknown number, no identifying information, no explanation, just a threat or rather, a warning. Neither possibility interested me, whoever sent it clearly knew two things. Aria had left the wedding and nd she was with me. My expression hardened. “Dante.” The driver immediately glanced into the rearview mirror. “Boss?” “Trace the number.” His eyes sharpened immediately. “Understood.” Beside me, Aria stared at the phone in my hand, fear had finally broken through, not fear of Luca, not heartbreak, something else, something deeper. “How would anyone know where I am?” she whispered. I didn’t answer. Because I was wondering the same thing, whoever sent the message had been watching but the question was why. Across Milan, another phone buzzed. Thomas Rinaldi looked down at the photograph that had just arrived, for a long moment, he said nothing. Aria Vale sat inside the back of a black car, beside Romano Ciel. His jaw tightened, years, years of planning, years spent keeping her exactly where she needed to be. Watching, waiting and preparing but, in the space of a single evening, everything had changed. A man standing nearby shifted uneasily. “Sir?” Thomas continued staring at the photograph, Romano’s attention was entirely on Aria, protective and interested, none of which Thomas liked. “Where are they headed?” he asked. “We’re still tracking them.” Thomas placed the photograph on the desk,slowly and carefully; the way people of his kind handled dangerous things. “This wasn’t supposed to happen.” “No, sir.” His gaze returned to the image, the last thing he needed was Romano Ciel becoming involved; of all people, not him. A cold smile appeared on the corner of his lips. “Find her.” The room went silent. The man nodded. “Immediately.” Thomas looked down at the photograph one final time. “For twenty-two years,” he said quietly, “I kept her exactly where I wanted her.” The smile disappeared. “I’m not losing her now.” And for the first time in years, Thomas felt something dangerously close to concern.Aria’s POVThe first thing I noticed when I woke up was that I was smiling, the second is that I know is that I’m smiling because of Romano, which was annoying, very very annoying. I stared at the ceiling for several seconds before groaning and burying my face in a pillow, this was exactly why contract marriages were terrible ideas. One almost-kiss and suddenly my brain had forgotten how to function.The worst part was that Romano hadn’t even brought it up afterward, not once, not a single comment about it as if he hadn’t nearly kissed me in the middle of a garden; as if my heart hadn’t spent the entire evening behaving like a complete idiot; he’s such a hard boiled egg.A knock sounded on the door.“Come in.”One of the staff stepped inside.“Miss Vale, someone delivered this for you.”My brows furrowed.“For me?”The woman nodded and handed over a small envelope before leaving, I stared at it suspiciously, then opened it. Inside it was a handwritten note. Lunch?No lawyers, no con
Aria’s POVAll guests for the charity had to stay in the hotel overnight. I wasn’t avoiding Romano.I was simply choosing not to be in the same room as him.There was a difference.At least that was what I kept telling myself as I wandered through the hotel the next afternoon carrying a book I hadn’t actually read in twenty minutes.My thoughts kept drifting back to the dinner night.To Enzo.To the way his expression changed when he heard my surname.To the strange conversation I had overheard afterward.None of it made sense.And whenever something didn’t make sense, my brain refused to let it go.“You look like you’re trying to solve a murder.”I nearly jumped.Thomas stood a few feet away holding a cup of coffee.I hadn’t even heard him approach.“That’s concerning.”His smile appeared immediately.“That you look like you’re solving a murder?”“No.”I crossed my arms.“That people keep sneaking up on me.”“Maybe you’re distracted.”Unfortunately he was right.Thomas fell into step
Aria’s POVI had officially become suspicious of everyone in the Ciel family.Romano was secretive.Dante enjoyed causing problems.And Enzo Ciel looked at me like I was a puzzle he couldn’t solve.Ever since the council dinner, I couldn’t stop thinking about the way his expression had changed when he heard my surname.Vale.Just Vale.A name I had lived with my entire life.A name that apparently had the power to make one of the most feared men in Italy look unsettled.Which meant there was something I didn’t know.And I hated not knowing things.I found Romano in his office later that morning. He was sitting behind his desk surrounded by documents, looking exactly like the intimidating businessman he pretended to be.I walked in without knocking.He didn’t even look up.“You’re developing a bad habit.”“What?”“Entering rooms like you own them.”I sat down opposite him.“I learned from you.”That got his attention.His eyes lifted from the paperwork.“You’ve become annoying.”“I’ve
Aria’s POVI regretted agreeing to this marriage the moment I opened my phone, my face was everywhere.News articles, social media, blogs, and even vdeos.Comment sections filled with people who had apparently made it their life’s mission to discuss my terrible decisions.RUNAWAY BRIDE FINDS NEW FIANCÉ.MYSTERY WOMAN ENGAGED TO ROMANO CIEL.LOVE OR STRATEGY?I groaned and dropped the phone onto the bed.Three days ago I had been planning a wedding and today half of Italy apparently had an opinion about my engagement.A knock sounded on the door.“Come in.”Dante stepped inside carrying a tray of breakfast which he dropped on my bed before speaking. “Good morning, future Mrs. Ciel.”I immediately threw a pillow at him, but unfortunately he caught it, Dante has been more like the brother I never had, a sense of relief in the mansion. “Violence already?” he asked. “The marriage hasn’t even started.”“Get out.”“No.”He sat comfortably in one of the chairs.“I came to warn you.”I narro
Romano’s POV“I’ll marry you.”For a moment I genuinely thought I had heard her wrong.Aria stood in front of my desk with her arms folded and determination written across her face, the signed contract sat between us, waiting and real.I looked at the signature again, then at her, then back at the contract.“You said yes.”“I noticed.”The answer came dry and immediate; a strange feeling settled in my chest, a sense of relief but followed immediately by suspicion. “Are you sure?”Her eyes narrowed.“You proposed the marriage.”“And now I’m asking if you’ve lost your mind.”That earned a laugh, a real one; brief but genuine. “Too late,” she said. “I already signed it.”I leaned back in my chair, for the first time in weeks, one problem already had a solution, a dangerous and complicated one, even possibly disastrous but it’s a solution. Aria shifted her weight slightly. “I have conditions.”“I assumed you would.”She pulled a folded paper from her bag and dropped it onto my desk. I
Aria’s POV“Marry me.”For a second I genuinely thought Romano was joking, then I looked at his face and he clearly wasn’t. I stared at him, then I laughed, a long and real laugh, loud enough to echo across the balcony.Romano didn’t react.That was when my laughter slowly died.“Oh my God.”“I’m serious.”“No.”His expression remained unchanged.“No?”“No.” I folded my arms. “Absolutely not.”Romano nodded once as if he had expected that answer.“Fair.”Fair? That was all he had to say?I stared at him in disbelief.“You can’t just ask someone to marry you like you’re offering them coffee.”“It wasn’t coffee.”“That isn’t the point.”A faint look of amusement crossed his face. Unfortunately, it only made me more annoyed.“Romano, I just ran away from my wedding.”“I know.”“My life is falling apart.”“I know.”“My fiancé cheated on me.”“I know.”“My apartment was broken into.”“I know.”I pointed at him.“So why would marriage sound like a good idea right now?”His expression harden







