MasukRomano’s POV
“Do you know what your problem is?” My father’s voice cut through the room like a blade, I didn’t answer, I remained silent.. I stood near the floor-to-ceiling window of his hotel suite, one hand inside my pocket while the city of Milan glowed beneath us. Midnight lights beaming around; a sight I was used to in a city that belonged to men like him– Men like us. Behind me, I heard a very loud noise, glass slammed against the table. “You have everything a man could want,” he continued. “Power, fear, control, respect. Fear. Yet you walk around like someone stole something from you.” My jaw tightened slightly. Enzo Ciel hated silence unless it came from him. “You called me here to insult me?” I asked calmly. “No.” His tone sharpened. “I called you here because you’re running out of time.” I looked over my shoulder slowly. My father sat in his chair like a king on a throne. Gray slowly took over his dark hair now, but age hadn’t weakened him not even a bit, if anything, it made him colder, more dangerous. “You think because you’re my son, the empire automatically becomes yours?” he asked. “That isn’t how this works.” I said nothing, I know how much he hated my silence. “You’ve spent years building fear around your name, Romano, good. Fear keeps people obedient.” He leaned back slightly. “But men don’t follow ghosts forever, they follow stability.” I scoffed at the irony, nothing about us or our world was stable. “You want the empire?” he asked quietly. “Then get married.” The words sat heavily in the room, I was waiting for a follow up, to take back or rephrase, but none came. It’s the one thing I had avoided for years. Not because I couldn’t have it, because I had seen exactly what it did to people. Love made people like us weak, marriage makes us predictable and vulnerable, which gets us killed. My mother proved that. A woman my father once claimed to love buried because enemies discovered she mattered to him. Enzo leaned forward. “The council thinks you’re unstable.” I laughed once. “They’re afraid of me.” “No,” he replied. “They’re afraid of what happens after you.” My expression hardened. “You have no wife, no children, no political alliances, no successor. You’ve spent years hunting ghosts and making enemies.” He let the words settle. “The men on that council don’t care how feared you are, they care about continuity, they want proof that when you inherit this empire, it won’t die with you.” “ So you’re asking for a wife,” I said flatly. “I’m demanding one.” Silence stretched between us. “You have one month,” my father continued. “After that, there is nothing for you.” That finally made me look at him. Enzo held my gaze for a moment before speaking again. “Do you think this is about inheritance?” I said nothing. “If you refuse, the council will need another successor.” A cold feeling settled in my chest, I already knew where this was going. “There are men who would be happy to take your place,” he continued. “Men who understand loyalty, men who understand stability.” One face immediately came to mind. A face I had spent years trying to forget, the same man whose betrayal had put my mother in the ground. The same man who should have died for it, how could they forget so easily what he had caused us. My jaw tightened. Enzo noticed. “Exactly,” he said quietly. “Refuse this marriage, Romano, and I won’t stop them from putting him where you should be.” The words should not have affected me, but they did. Not because I needed his approval, I stopped needing that years ago; but because no matter how powerful I became, every conversation with Enzo Ciel still felt like being fifteen years old again standing in front of a man impossible to satisfy. I stared at him for a long moment before reaching for my coat. “You already planned this before calling me here,” I said. “Of course I did.” I gave a humorless smile. Control, that was all he understood, that was how I grew up. As I walked toward the door, his voice stopped me one last time. “Marriage isn’t about love,” Enzo said. “It’s about stability. It tells the council you’re capable of building something instead of simply destroying it.” I left without answering. The penthouse doors shut behind me quietly. But my father’s words followed anyway, “One month” I muttered silently. Marry or lose everything. The private elevator ride down felt suffocating, by the time I stepped outside the hotel, the cold air barely helped. Milan’s streets glowed beneath the city lights while expensive cars lined the entrance. People moved around me carefully, most recognized me immediately but no one approached. I started walking, no security, no driver, I needed silence more than company. My hands stayed inside my coat pockets as I crossed the street, my father’s voice replaying in my head over and over again. You need a wife, the thought irritated me more than it should have. A contract, a performance, another business arrangement pretending to be something real. Across the street, another luxury hotel overflowed with wedding guests dressed in expensive suits and gowns. White flowers decorated the entrance. A wedding, perfect timing, seemed like the universe was telling me something. I looked away immediately. Then I felt someone’s shoulder brush mine walking towards the busy road. Soft and unsteady, my reflexes reacted before my brain did. I grabbed her wrist hard and pulled her backward just as a black car sped past us. The horn blared loudly down the street. “What the hell are you doing?” The woman looked up instantly. And for one strange second, everything around me went quiet. A bride. White dress, smudged makeup, glossy eyes filled with shock and heartbreak. Even in her current state, she was impossible not to notice, she looked beautiful. There was something about her expression, like she had just lost something important and was trying not to let the world see it. Then I noticed she was trembling. My eyes moved over her slowly taking in the abandoned veil, the wedding dress dragging against the pavement. Runaway bride. “You almost got yourself killed,” I said flatly. She swallowed hard like my face scared her but for some reason, I couldn’t stop looking at her. Because standing in front of me was a woman who looked exactly how I felt, trapped.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







