MasukOCEAN'S POV
I don't plan to go back to Ethan's house. I have no reason to. The business meeting is done, and I have other matters that need my attention. But Daniel's information sits heavy in my gut. The housekeeper who quit. The rumors. The way everyone who's been to that house describes Lola as quiet, covered up, nervous. And those eyes. I can't stop thinking about those haunted, empty eyes. It's been two days since I was there. Two days of trying to focus on work while my mind keeps drifting back to my son's wife. Two days of telling myself it's not my business, that I shouldn't interfere, that I'm probably reading too much into things. But I didn't get where I am by ignoring my instincts. And my instincts are screaming that something is very, very wrong. So on Tuesday afternoon, I find myself driving back to Ethan's house without calling ahead. I tell myself it's a legitimate visit. I need to discuss some organizational business with my son. Territory adjustments in South London that affect his crew. It's not a lie, exactly. We do need to have that conversation. But it's not the real reason I'm going. I pull up to the house at two in the afternoon. Ethan's car is in the driveway, which means he's home. Good. I walk up to the front door and ring the bell. Wait. No answer. I ring again. Still nothing. Frowning, I try the door. It's unlocked. Careless. I've told Ethan a thousand times about security, about always keeping doors locked, but he never listens. I push the door open and step inside. "Ethan?" I call out. "It's your father. We need to talk." Silence. But not complete silence. I can hear something. A faint sound coming from upstairs. Like… crying? My jaw tightens. I move toward the stairs, my footsteps quiet on the hardwood floor. The crying gets louder as I climb. It's coming from one of the rooms at the end of the hall. I follow the sound to a closed door. Knock once. "Hello? Is someone there?" The crying stops abruptly. There's a long pause, then a voice. Lola's voice, but so quiet I can barely hear it. "Mr. Moretti?" "Yes. Are you alright?" Another pause. "I'm… I'm fine. Just give me a moment, please." But she doesn't sound fine. She sounds terrified. "Lola, open the door." "I can't, I'm not… I'm not dressed properly, I..." "Open the door." My voice comes out harder than I intended. "Now." I hear movement. Shuffling. Then the lock clicks and the door opens just a crack. And I see her face. Jesus Christ. She's not wearing any makeup. Her face is bare, and the bruises are stark and brutal against her pale skin. Her left cheek is swollen and discolored, purple and yellow and green. There's a cut on her cheekbone that looks infected. Her lip is split. Another bruise on her jaw. And her eyes. Those eyes that were haunted before are now completely dead. She looks down immediately, like she can't bear to meet my gaze. "I'm sorry, I didn't know you were coming, I would have… I would have made myself presentable…" My hands curl into fists at my sides. It takes every ounce of my control not to react, not to show the rage that's building in my chest like a wildfire. "Who did this to you?" She flinches. "I… I fell. Down the stairs. I'm so clumsy, I—" "Don't lie to me." My voice is quiet but there's steel in it. She looks up at me briefly, and I see the fear in her eyes. But also something else. A desperate plea. Please don't make me say it. Please don't make this worse. "Where is Ethan?" "His office. But please, Mr. Moretti, please don't… it was an accident, I really did fall, I—" I'm already walking away. I hear her call after me, panic in her voice, but I don't stop. Can't stop. Because if I stay there one more second looking at her battered face, I'm going to do something I can't take back. I storm down the stairs and throw open Ethan's office door without knocking. Ethan is at his desk, on his phone, feet propped up like he doesn't have a care in the world. He looks up, startled. "Father? What are you..." I close the door behind me very carefully. Very deliberately. When I turn to face my son, I know my expression must be terrifying because Ethan's face goes pale. "Get off the phone." "I'm in the middle of..." "Get. Off. The fucking phone." He mumbles something to whoever he's talking to and hangs up. Sets the phone down with a shaking hand. "What's wrong? Did something happen with the business?" I walk slowly toward the desk. Each step measured. Controlled. Because if I move too fast, if I let go of my control for even a second, I'm going to kill my own son. "I just saw your wife." Ethan's jaw tightens. "And?" "And her face looks like someone used it as a punching bag." "She fell down the stairs. She's always been clumsy..." I slam my hand down on the desk so hard Ethan jumps. Papers scatter. The phone bounces. "Don't you dare," I say, my voice deadly quiet. "Don't you fucking dare lie to me. I know what a beating looks like, Ethan. I've given enough of them in my time. Those bruises didn't come from a fall."He looks away. "It's none of your business what happens between me and my wife." "None of my business?" I lean forward, planting both hands on the desk. "You're my son. She's part of this family. That makes it my business." "She's my wife..." "She's a human being!" The words come out as a roar before I can stop them. I take a breath, forcing myself back under control. "She's a human being, Ethan. Not a punching bag. Not something you can destroy because you're angry or frustrated or whatever the fuck is wrong with you." Ethan's face twists into something ugly. Resentful. "You don't understand. She's… she provokes me. She does things wrong, she doesn't listen, she—" "So you beat her?" "She needs discipline. She needs to learn..." "She needs to be protected!" My voice cracks like a whip. "That's what a husband does. He protects his wife. He takes care of her. He doesn't…" I stop, trying to find words adequate to express my disgust. "I raised you better than this." Ethan laughs bitterly. "You didn't raise me at all. You were too busy building your empire to give a shit about me." The words hit like a physical blow. Because they're true. I know they're true. But that doesn't excuse this. "You're right," I say quietly. "I wasn't there for you the way I should have been. I failed you as a father. But that doesn't give you the right to hurt an innocent woman. That doesn't give you the right to beat your wife because you're angry at me." "This isn't about you...this isn't." "Isn't it?" I straighten up. "You're taking out your anger at me on someone who can't fight back. Someone who has no power, no family, nowhere to go. You picked her because she was vulnerable. Because you knew no one would stop you." Ethan's silence is answer enough. I turn away, running a hand through my hair. I need to think. Need to figure out what to do here. I can't just walk away. Not now. Not after seeing what he's done. But I also can't interfere directly. Not without making things worse for Lola. If I push too hard, if I threaten him, he'll take it out on her the moment I leave. I turn back. When I speak, my voice is cold. Controlled. The voice I use when I'm making it clear that disobedience means death. "You're going to stop. Right now. Today. You're never going to touch her in anger again. Do you understand me?" Ethan's jaw clenches. "And if I don't?" "Then you'll find out what happens when you cross me." I take a step closer. "I've overlooked a lot of your mistakes, Ethan. Your incompetence. Your attitude. Your complete lack of respect for this organization. I've made excuses for you because you're my son. But this?" I gesture toward the door, toward where Lola is upstairs. "This I won't tolerate. You lay hands on that girl again, and I will make you regret it. Am I clear?" For a long moment, we stare at each other. Father and son. So much history and resentment between us. So much anger on both sides. Finally, he looks away. "Fine. I'll… I'll be more careful." "Not more careful. Stop. Completely." "Okay. Okay, I'll stop. I promise." But I don't believe him. I can see the lie in his eyes. The resentment. He's telling me what I want to hear, but the moment I leave, he'll probably take his anger out on Lola again. I need a better solution. But what? I can't be here all the time. Can't monitor him twenty-four seven. And if I push too hard, threaten too much, it'll only make things worse. "I mean it, Ethan. If I find out you've hurt her again...." "You won't. I promise. It won't happen again." I want to believe him. Want to think that my son has some shred of decency left. But the evidence is upstairs, hiding in a bedroom, her face a map of violence. "I'll be checking," I say quietly. "I'll be coming by regularly. Unannounced. And if I see any new bruises, any signs that you've broken your word…" I don't finish the sentence. Don't need to. "I understand." "Good." I head for the door, then stop. Turn back. "That girl upstairs? She's terrified. Broken. And it's your fault. I hope you can live with that." He says nothing. Just stares at his desk. I leave the office and close the door. Stand in the hallway for a moment, trying to get my rage under control. I should go back upstairs. Should check on Lola, make sure she's okay. But what would I say? What could I possibly say that would make any of this better? Instead, I head for the front door. Need to leave before I do something I can't take back. Before I go back in that office and beat my own son the way he's been beating his wife. But I pause at the door. Look up the stairs toward where I know Lola is hiding. I'll fix this, I think. Somehow, I'll find a way to fix this. I don't know how yet. Don't have a plan. But I'm not going to let this continue. I'm not going to let my son destroy that girl. I walk out to my car, get in, and sit there for a long moment. My hands are shaking. Not from fear. From rage. From the helpless fury of seeing something wrong and not being able to fix it immediately. I need to think. Need to figure out the right move here. Because confronting Ethan directly hasn't worked. He just lied and made promises he won't keep. I need a different approach. But what? I start the car and pull away from the house, my mind racing. One thing is certain: I'm not done with this. Not even close. That girl deserves better. Deserves safety. Deserves someone to protect her. And if her own husband won't do it, then maybe her father-in-law will have to step in. The thought is dangerous. Complicated. Could cause all sorts of problems. But I've never backed down from a problem before. And I'm not about to start now. Not when I can still see those dead, haunted eyes every time I close my own. Not when I know that girl is suffering in silence with no one to help her. I'll find a way. Somehow. I have to.Sophia I fell head over heels for Storm Moretti on a Wednesday afternoon in March. Not the polite, fake kind of love adults do when they’re supposed to find a baby cute. The real deal. The sudden, goofy, can’t-help-it kind that hits you out of nowhere. He was four months old the first time I properly held him. Lola brought him over to the Romano estate for lunch. Just the two of them, like the old days when she used to stay with us. But everything felt different now. She carried herself differently. Walked through rooms like she owned the ground under her feet. That old wariness she used to have was gone, replaced by this calm confidence of a woman who finally knows where she stands. She put Storm in my arms. He looked at me real serious, like he was sizing me up. Then he made this little sound. I glanced at Lola. “What does that mean?” “Approval, I think,” she said. “Probably.” “He’s got a whole bunch of sounds. I’m still learning what they all mean.” I looked back at Stor
CHAPTER ONE HUNDRED AND FORTY-SEVEN Various POVs Ocean Storm laughs for the first time on a Tuesday morning in February. Not a full laugh. Not yet. It’s the preliminary version... that bright burst of air and delight babies make before they’ve developed the full machinery of laughter. It lasts maybe two seconds and then disappears, like he’s still figuring out what this sound is for. I’m the one who causes it. I don’t even know how. I’m sitting on the floor of the sitting room with him lying on his back on the play mat Sophia brought last month. I’m making some ridiculous face, the kind I would never make in any professional setting anywhere on earth, and he looks up at me and makes that sound. I freeze. He does it again. I make the face again. He makes the sound again. We go back and forth like this for a solid four minutes. Same ridiculous face from me. Same delighted burst from him. Like we’ve stumbled onto a private frequency only the two of us can hear. Lola appears i
Third Person Willow Hart is arrested on a Thursday morning in November. Not dramatically. There are no kicked-in doors, no shouting, no theatrical display of authority. Just two men from Vincent Caruso’s organization arriving at her flat in Kensington at nine o’clock and knocking politely. When she opens the door, they tell her quietly that her presence is required. She stands there in a silk robe with a coffee cup in her hand and looks at them for a long moment. Then she steps back and lets them in. She knew this was coming. She’s known since the morning the recording surfaced and Michael Santos’s name tore through the organization like lightning. She understood immediately what it would mean for her. When Michael’s conspiracy began to unravel, every thread connected to it would be pulled. Every person who had played any part, no matter how they had justified it to themselves. She had spent three weeks waiting. The first week she drank. The second week she stopped drinking a
Lola's POV He doesn’t look away. That surprises me. The Ethan I knew always looked away from things he couldn’t control. He looked away from consequences, from discomfort, from anything that required him to sit inside his own mess rather than throw it onto someone smaller. This Ethan looks at the gun, then at my face, and holds my gaze. Maybe weeks sitting alone in a room in South London does something to a person. Strips the avoidance away until what’s left is just the bare fact of who you are and what you’ve done. I look at him for a long moment. I let myself really look. Four years of this face. This face leaning over me in the dark. This face cycling through charm, cruelty, indifference, and rage. This face that was the first thing I saw every morning and the last thing I saw every night for four years of my life that I can never get back. I look at it now. I’m not afraid. I said that to myself in the bedroom before we left the house this morning. Standing in front of th
Lola's POV The room is waiting on me. I can feel it in the air...the weight of every single eye at that long table. Vincent at the head, his face carved with exhaustion. Dmitri composed and watchful, probably still trying to rewrite his own role in all of this. The neutral parties who have now sat through two tribunals, seeing more of this family’s ugly truth than most outsiders ever do. Daniel beside Ocean. Caruso standing with his hands folded, having just handed me something no one in my life has ever handed me before. A real choice. Real authority over what happens next. I look down at Storm. He’s asleep against my chest, completely indifferent to the gravity pressing down on everyone else in the room. His small fist is curled near his cheek the way it always curls when he’s deep in that committed newborn sleep. Four weeks old. He has no idea that the man at the far end of this table once told me, four years ago, that he hoped I’d die alone and unloved because no one decent
Third Person The tribunal convened on a Tuesday in the same Mayfair room that had hosted every significant judgment in this organization’s recent history. This time the room was fuller than it had been in months. Faces filled the seats around the long table and lined the walls...more eyes than usual watching, more weight in the air. Vincent Caruso sat at the head where tradition placed the family bringing the grievance, though this time the grievance belonged squarely to Ocean himself. Dmitri Volkov was present, composed and careful as always, no doubt spending the past two months trying to make people forget how closely he had once aligned himself with Michael Santos. The neutral parties had turned out in full...four families represented... their attendance no longer a mere formality but a clear sign of active interest in seeing this matter resolved correctly after the mistakes of the last tribunal. Caruso stood at the position he had occupied for fifteen years. He looked tired i
Third Person Paolo Romano is found on a Thursday morning. He’s sitting in his car on a quiet side street off Cannon Street, just three blocks from the same little restaurant he’s visited every single Thursday for breakfast for the last eleven years without fail. Same tabl
Michael's POV The bar is tucked away in Bermondsey. Exactly the kind of dirty, low-key spot nobody from our world would ever get caught dead in. No fancy white tablecloths, no pretentious wine list, no neutral ground soaked in decades of history. Just a dark, st
Ocean's POV She's been gone for six days. I know exactly because I’ve been counting every single one. Not on purpose, but the days have a different shape now. A hollow, empty shape I thought I’d forgotten and never wanted to remember again. I get up at five in t
Sophia's POV I've been living in this world for thirty-four long years. I came into it the same way a lot of women do...young, stupidly in love, and convinced that the man I chose was worth every single risk that came with him. Vincent was thirty-two when we got married. I was twenty-four. I tho







