LOGINOne witnessed murder. One ruthless mafia king. One ballerina who became his beautiful obsession. They say you can’t fall for your captor. They’ve never met Enzo Santini. He locks me up and tells me I mean nothing. Then touches me like I’m everything. His brother wants to save me. But I’m starting to wonder if I want to be saved.
View MoreNina's POV
The lights were burning hot against my skin, but I barely noticed anymore. My body moved through the steps without thinking. Turn. Extend. I’d done this dance a hundred times. Maybe more. It was muscle memory now. But tonight was different. Tonight, I could feel him watching me. I didn’t need to look at Box Five to know he was there. I felt it the second I walked on stage. That pull. Like someone had reached across the theater and touched me even though we were fifty feet apart. He’d been coming to my shows for six months now. Always in the same spot. Always with those men in suits standing behind him like guards. And always, always staring at me like nobody else existed. I only know his name. Didn’t know anything about him. But I danced, maybe part of me was dancing for him anyway. The music swelled and I went into my solo. Thirty-two turns, one after another. My vision blurred. My ankle screamed. But I kept going. Because he was watching. When I finally stopped, the audience went crazy. Clapping, some of them standing. I bowed like I was supposed to. Graceful. Humble. All the things Madame Caruso drilled into us. But when I looked up, my eyes went straight to his box. He wasn’t clapping. Just sitting there with his hands on the railing, leaning forward like he was trying to get closer. Our eyes met. Two seconds. Maybe for three. Then the curtain dropped and I could breathe again. “Nyx!” Sophia grabbed me, practically screaming. “Oh my god, that was perfect! Did you hear them?” “Yeah, it was good.” “Good? Are you kidding? Come on, everyone’s going out. You have to come this time.” I shook my head. “I can’t. I need to practice.” “Practice what? You just killed it out there!” “My extensions were off in the second act.” Sophia stared at me like I was insane. “You’re crazy, you know that?” Maybe I was. But I didn’t care. She left with the others. I could hear them laughing down the hallway, making plans, living normal lives. I went to change. Practice clothes. Hair still up. My body was still humming with adrenaline even though I was exhausted. The small studio on the third floor was empty. It was always empty this late. Just me and the mirror and the barre. I started working on my extensions. One hour. Two hours. Three. My feet were bleeding. I could feel it, warm and sticky inside my shoes. But I kept going. Higher. Cleaner. Better. Again. By the time I stopped, my phone said 1:43 AM. The theater was dead silent now. Everyone is gone. Even security was probably up front. I grabbed my bag and headed for the back stairs. My legs felt like lead. Everything hurts. The back door was heavy. I had to push hard to get it open. Cool air hit my face as I stepped into the alley. It was dark except for one streetlight at the end, flickering like it was about to die. I started walking toward the street. Then I heard voices… coming from somewhere behind the dumpsters. I should have kept walking. I should have minded my business and gone home. But I stopped. Took a few steps toward the sound. Just enough to see around the corner. Four men. Three holding someone on his knees. One standing in front with his back to me. The man on his knees was crying. “Please, I didn’t say anything, I swear…” “Liar.” The standing man’s voice was cold. Empty. “No, please, my family…” The standing man raised his hand. Gun. Oh god, he had a gun. My heart slammed against my ribs. The man on his knees started begging. Words tumbling out so fast I couldn’t understand them. The standing man pressed the gun to his head. “Traitors don’t get second chances.” BANG. The sound cracked through the alley like lightning. I screamed. I couldn’t help it. The sound just came out. All four men whipped around. The standing man’s face came into the light. No. No no no. I’ve seen this face before, a man from the theater. He stared at me. Gun still in his hand. Blood on his sleeve. For one second, we just looked at each other. Then his face changed. It got hard. “Get her.” I ran. I did not look back. I did not scream again. I just ran. My lungs burned almost immediately, sharp and painful, like they were tearing apart inside my chest. My shoes slapped against the floor, the sound too loud, echoing between the walls of the narrow alleyway. I knew these streets. I had walked them a hundred times after late rehearsals, memorized every turn, every shortcut, every dead end. That was the only reason I survived. I turned left, then right, then cut through a passage barely wide enough for one person. My shoulder scraped against the wall, skin burning, but I did not slow down. I could hear footsteps behind me. Shouting. Italian, sharp and angry, words tumbling over each other. They were close. My heart was beating so hard I thought it might actually break my ribs. I pushed harder, legs screaming, body moving on pure instinct now. Dance has taught me endurance. Pain meant nothing. You could always push past it. I had done it my whole life. Tonight, that discipline was the only thing keeping me alive. I ducked through a rusted gate and into another alley, darker than the last. The streetlight overhead flickered, then went out completely, plunging everything into shadow. I slowed just enough to pull my hood up, then ran again, quieter now, controlled. I heard the footsteps overshoot the turn. I did not stop. I took another turn, then another, zigzagging through streets I knew better than my own apartment. When I finally reached my building, my legs were shaking so badly I nearly missed the door code. My fingers slipped twice before I managed to punch it in. The door buzzed open. I slipped inside and slammed it shut behind me, pressing my full weight against it like that might somehow keep the world out. For a long moment, I just stood there, gasping for air. Then I ran upstairs. I locked my apartment door and twisted the deadbolt until it clicked. Once. Twice. Three times. Only then did I slide down against the door, my body folding in on itself. My hands were shaking so badly I had to grab my wrists to keep them still. I had seen his face. The man with the gun. He was covered in tattoos. Arms, neck, disappearing beneath his shirt collar. I did not know his name. I did not know anything about him. But I had seen him before. Countless times. At the theater. Standing near the back. Near the box. Always there when he was there. The realization made my head ache. This was not random.“What she did,” I repeated carefully. “What exactly did she do?”“Victoria told me everything,” my mother said. “Giulia had an abortion. About how she got rid of your child without even telling you. After you were still foolish to chase after her—”“Stop.” The word came out hard and flat.My mother blinked.“None of that is true,” I said.“Dimitri—”“None of it.” I turned to Victoria. “What do you think you’re doing? Are you really this manipulative?”Victoria stood up slowly. That careful expression on her face. “Dimitri, she’s your mother. She deserves to know the truth about the woman you’ve been—”“The truth.” I took a step toward her. “You want to talk about truth.”“She was worried about you—”“You sat in this room and lied to a woman in a hospital bed.” My voice was low and somehow controlled. “About a private matter that has nothing to do with you. You dare listen to a conversation that has absolutely nothing to do with you, then you overheard and decided to turn it upside do
DIMITRI’S POV One month down. One more to go. That’s what I kept telling myself every morning when I woke up and every night, when I came home to an apartment that had Victoria in it and Giulia’s absence. One more month and the contract marriage ends quietly. One more month and I go to Giulia and tell things I'm not yet sure I would want her to know. One more month and I fix what I’ve spent the last thirty days breaking. One more month. I’d been saying it so long it had started to sound like something I was trying to convince myself of rather than something I actually believed. The call about my mother came in the afternoon. She was rushed to the hospital. Chest pains. Stable but they wanted her monitored. I was already grabbing my jacket when Victoria appeared in the doorway of the study. “I’ll come with you,” she said. “No.” “Dimitri—” “No Victoria.” I didn’t stop moving. “Stay here.” “She’s my mother in law—” “She’s not.” I turned to face her. “She’s
“Get your hands off her. You have no business here.” Dimitri’s voice cut through the space, a bit loud anddangerous in that way that meant he was holding himself back. Matteo looked at him slowly and completely unbothered. “Actually, I was here for business,” he said, glancing around the room like he was already done with it. “And I’m done.” Then he turned to me. “Leaving?” I picked up my clutch and stood without looking at Dimitri. I walked out with Matteo. The car was silent as we drove down the street. Matteo held the wheel with one hand, relaxed, as if the tension didn’t cling to my skin. After a few minutes, he asked gently, “You want to talk about it?” “No,” I said. He nodded but didn’t push the issue.Another stretch of silence passed. Then, without drawing attention to it, he moved his hand from the ge
The auction house was the kind of place that reminded you just how much you loved beautiful things. With its high ceilings, cozy lighting, and the lively chatter of people who clearly had an eye for art and a bit of cash to spend, it had a vibe that was hard to resist.I got there early and snagged a seat in the middle... just the right spot to see everything without feeling too much like I was on display. Before long, Matteo found me.“Hey, I’m glad there’s a spot next to you,” he said, plopping down in the chair like he’d been invited.“I didn’t save it for you,” I shot back playfully.“I know,” he grinned. “But here I am anyway!”I glanced sideways at him. He looked sharp in a well-fitted dark suit and seemed genuinely into the catalog. I figured arguing about the seat wasn’t worth it when the auction was about to start. I had saved it for Dimitri, but he was running late.“Alright, fine,” I conceded with a smirk.Matteo smiled back and didn’t press it. We flipped through our catal
The mention of my mother, of what Santoro had done, made rage burn in my chest. But underneath it was something else now, something complicated by three months of having Nina in my life, in my bed, in my heart. “I’ll handle it,” I said, keeping my voice steady. “How?” “I have sources. Connection
Five minutes later… Giulia appeared beside me, her face pale, one hand on her stomach. “I’m heading back to the guest house. My stomach’s upset.” I looked at her more closely. She did look sick, worse than earlier. “You need the doctor?” “No, I just need to lie down. Too much food, probably
GIULIA’s POV The phone wouldn’t stop ringing. I stared at it from the bed in the guest house, watching Dimitri’s name flash across the screen for the third time this morning. My finger hovered over the answer button, then moved to decline. Again. I couldn’t talk to him. Not yet. The guest ho
NINA’s POV I stood in front of the full-length mirror, adjusting the red dress one final time. It fit perfectly, hugging every curve, the color rich and bold against my skin. My makeup was light, natural, except for the red lipstick that matched the dress exactly. My hair was pulled up in an elega
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