LOGINThe apartment felt colder after Damien left.
Not physically. Emotionally. Like his presence had poisoned the air itself. Ava stood motionless near the kitchen counter, staring at the photograph of her apartment building while rain battered the broken doorway. Somewhere below, New York continued moving like nothing had happened. Cars honked. Sirens wailed. People laughed. Meanwhile her entire life had just been ripped apart in four hours. “You should’ve told me,” she whispered. Luca stayed silent. That silence hurt more than she expected. Ava turned toward him sharply. “You’re in the mafia.” “It’s complicated.” “No,” she snapped. “Complicated is cheating on someone or forgetting anniversaries. This is criminal empire level insanity.” Luca rubbed a hand over his face, exhausted. “I was trying to keep you out of it.” “You dragged me into gunfire!” “And I kept you alive.” The words hit hard because they were true. Ava hated that. She hated the way part of her still felt safer standing near him despite every warning screaming inside her head. Luca walked toward the shattered entrance and checked the hallway carefully before locking what remained of the door. “Your apartment isn’t safe anymore,” he said quietly. Ava laughed bitterly. “Apparently nothing is.” She grabbed her purse from the couch with shaking hands. “I’m leaving.” Luca turned instantly. “No.” “You don’t get to tell me what to do.” “If you walk out that door tonight, you’ll be followed.” “Then I’ll go to the police.” “That won’t protect you from my family.” His family. The words sounded darker every time. Ava stared at him in disbelief. “How can you say things like this so calmly?” “Because panic gets people killed.” Silence. Luca stepped closer carefully, like approaching a frightened animal. “I know you’re scared.” “You should be scared too.” His expression darkened. “I am.” That caught her off guard. Luca rarely showed emotion, but now she saw it clearly beneath the surface—anger, exhaustion… guilt. And something else. Something dangerous. He cared. Ava looked away first. That felt even more terrifying than the guns. “What happens now?” she asked quietly. Luca hesitated. Then he answered honestly. “Now they watch you.” A chill crawled through her. “Why?” “Because enemies use weaknesses.” “And I’m your weakness?” The question hung heavily between them. Luca’s eyes locked onto hers. “You shouldn’t be.” The tension in the room became unbearable. Ava’s pulse quickened. She knew she should hate him. Run from him. Fear him. Instead she noticed ridiculous things—like the tiny cut beneath his lip, or the way his shirt clung to his chest, or how his voice softened whenever he spoke directly to her. It was insane. He was insane. But attraction didn’t care about logic. Luca moved closer slowly. Too close. “Ava…” Her breath caught. Then suddenly— A loud buzz echoed from the security panel near the elevator. Luca instantly stepped away from her, every wall returning at once. He checked the monitor. His expression hardened. “Who is it?” Ava asked. “A doctor.” “What?” “I called him earlier.” Before she could respond, the elevator doors opened. An older man in a gray suit stepped into the penthouse carrying a medical bag. He looked completely unfazed by the destroyed doorway and armed atmosphere. “Rough night?” the man asked dryly. “You could say that,” Luca replied. The doctor’s eyes landed on Ava briefly. Interesting. Curious. But not surprised. “That her?” he asked Luca quietly. Luca’s jaw tightened. “Don’t start.” The doctor smirked knowingly. Oh God. Even strangers could see whatever this thing was between them. “I’m Dr. Moretti,” he told Ava gently. “And you look one panic attack away from collapsing.” “Accurate,” she muttered. For the next twenty minutes, the doctor cleaned Luca’s injuries while Ava sat silently on the couch trying to process reality. Mafia families. Shootings. Surveillance. Weakness. The word repeated endlessly in her head. Finally Dr. Moretti finished stitching Luca’s shoulder. “You need rest.” “I’ll survive.” “You say that every time someone tries to kill you.” Ava looked up sharply. “Every time?” The doctor blinked like he’d revealed too much. Luca glared at him. Helpful. Dr. Moretti cleared his throat awkwardly before gathering his supplies. Then he turned toward Ava. “Miss Sinclair.” “Yes?” His expression became serious. “You should leave this city.” Luca’s eyes snapped toward him. The doctor ignored him. “I’ve known Luca since he was a boy,” he continued carefully. “And people around him…” He paused. “They rarely stay untouched by his world.” A painful silence followed. Ava looked at Luca. He didn’t deny it. That hurt more than she expected. Dr. Moretti sighed softly and headed for the elevator. Before the doors closed, he gave Luca one final look. “Your father’s making moves,” he warned quietly. Luca went still. “How soon?” “Soon enough.” The elevator doors shut. Silence returned. Ava stood slowly. “What does that mean?” Luca stared toward the elevator for a long moment before answering. “My father doesn’t forgive betrayal.” “And you betrayed him.” “Yes.” Ava swallowed hard. “What did you do?” Luca looked at her finally. And whatever she saw in his expression made her heart sink. “Something unforgivable.” Before she could ask another question, his phone rang. Luca checked the screen. For the first time since she met him— He looked genuinely shaken. Ava’s stomach tightened. “Who is it?” Luca answered quietly. “My father.” Then the phone stopped ringing. A text message appeared instead. Luca read it once. And all the color drained from his face. “What?” Ava whispered. Slowly, Luca turned the phone toward her. One photograph filled the screen. Ava’s mother. Standing outside her house. Taken less than an hour ago. Underneath the image was a single message:Ten years later.The world had fundamentally changed. It hadn't transformed through the brutal mechanics of war, nor through the grand, crushing weight of destiny, and certainly not through the intervention of cosmic miracles. It had changed through the quiet, steady accumulation of life.It was, in every possible way, the best kind of change.The DeLuca family home was significantly louder than it had ever been. Children had an inherent, natural capacity for generating noise—a chaotic, wonderful vibration that echoed through every room. Especially when there were three of them with enough energy to power a small city.Ava stood in the middle of the kitchen, laughing as the afternoon routine descended into predictable chaos. A little girl in a tutu raced through the room, clutching a half-finished, glitter-covered science project like a precious relic. A young boy sprinted right behind her, laughing, and the youngest member of the clan was currently attempting to convince a very exasp
The news spread through the family network with terrifying velocity.Very quickly. Mostly because Marco possessed the emotional self-control of a highly caffeinated golden retriever."YOU'RE HAVING A BABY?!"The booming, ecstatic exclamation reverberated off the walls of the upscale Manhattan restaurant, causing every single diner in the establishment to instantly freeze and turn to stare at their table.Luca slowly closed his eyes, leaning back in his chair as he rubbed the bridge of his nose in sheer resignation. Ava, on the other hand, simply burst out laughing at the sheer predictability of it all.Marco was already openly crying. Again. For the second time in forty-eight hours."I'M GOING TO BE AN UNCLE!" he bellowed, completely unbothered by the stares of the wealthy patrons around them."Marco, you already are an uncle to several kids in the family," Luca pointed out in a deadpan, flat tone."I KNOW!" Marco countered, slamming his hands onto the white tablecloth and pointing dr
The honeymoon was absolute perfection.Which meant, by the very laws of nature, that it couldn't last forever.It didn't come to an end because an unexpected disaster struck, or because the delicate fabric of the universe was suddenly unraveling at the seams again. It concluded simply because real, beautiful, everyday life eventually called them back to reality.Ava and Luca arrived back in Manhattan two weeks later. The grand city welcomed them home with open arms; the iconic skyline glittered like diamonds against the twilight, the bustling streets buzzed with an infectious, chaotic energy, and an unwritten future waited for them just beyond the horizon.And for the very first time since they had met, that future felt wonderfully, beautifully ordinary.Three months passed in a blur of domestic bliss. Then six.Life smoothly settled into a perfect, comforting rhythm. There were quiet mornings spent sharing stolen sips of coffee, late-night conversations that lasted until the stars be
The morning after the weddingLuca woke up well before Ava.This was a highly unusual occurrence. Mostly because over the course of their relationship, Ava had absolute, undisputed mastery over the art of stealing blankets and systematically forcing him into increasingly uncomfortable sleeping positions. Luca genuinely considered it an undocumented superpower. A highly dangerous one.He looked down at his side. Ava was still deeply asleep, buried beneath a fortress of white linen sheets. She looked completely peaceful. Content. Happy.*His wife.*The weight of the thought still felt entirely surreal, sending a sudden wave of warmth straight to his chest. A genuine smile appeared on his face before he could even think to suppress it.Then, Ava lazily opened one silver eye, a tiny, knowing smirk tugging at the corner of her lips. "I completely saw that."Luca blinked, adjusting his arm beneath her head. "You were supposed to be asleep.""No," she murmured into his shoulder, her voice th
The reception was nothing short of magnificent.It wasn't because of the lavish floral arrangements decorating the grand columns, nor was it because of the gourmet five-course dinner. It wasn't even because of the breathtaking, floor-to-ceiling view of the Manhattan skyline illuminated against the night sky.It was magnificent because every single person who truly mattered in the world was gathered under one roof. Family. Friends. Survivors. The fierce, unyielding people who had walked stubbornly beside Ava and Luca through every dark, painful, and beautiful chapter of their lives.Bright, genuine laughter filled the grand ballroom, competing with the soft, melodic music echoing from the live band. Crystal champagne glasses clinked together in endless, joyful toasts. For the first time in what felt like absolute centuries, nobody in that room was fighting to secure tomorrow. Tomorrow had finally, peacefully arrived.Ava stood near the edge of the polished hardwood dance floor, her sim
The morning arrived.A breathtaking canopy of golden sunlight poured generously across the Manhattan skyline, painting the concrete and glass in brilliant hues of amber and rose. The air felt crisper, the skyline sharper, and the city itself seemed infinitely brighter somehow. It was as though even the relentless, bustling streets of New York understood that today was a sacred deviation from the norm.Today was the wedding.Ava stood perfectly still before the towering, three-panel mirror in her dressing room. Silent. Stationary.For a long, quiet moment, she barely recognized the woman staring back at her from the glass. It wasn’t because of the dress, though the elegant fabric cascaded around her like a waterfall of starlight. It wasn’t because of the makeup, though every line and highlight was flawless. It was entirely because of the journey.The woman reflected in the mirror wasn’t the lonely, isolated girl who had once hidden her true self behind polite, distant smiles. She wasn’
The Sleeper waited.The universe waited. Creation itself held its breath, suspended in a fragile, terrifying equilibrium.And down on Earth, a little girl smiled. It was the very same girl whose simple desire for a birthday had become an unyielding symbol of hope across the fractured network. She l
One eye opened.And existence forgot how to breathe.The eye was larger than galaxies, larger than dimensions, and larger than the very concept of physical scale itself. It stared down from the yawning abyss beyond the shattered Boundary, beyond the void, and beyond the outer limits of everything t
"What... happened to me?"The trembling question echoed through the deep architecture of creation.A profound, absolute silence followed. It was not a silence born of paralyzing fear, nor was it the breathlessness of sudden shock. It was sadness. It was a heavy, suffocating wave of collective grief
New York never slept.Not really.At two in the morning, the streets still pulsed with yellow taxis, flashing billboards, and strangers chasing things they couldn’t name. Dreams. Money. Love. Revenge.Sometimes all four.Ava Sinclair stood outside Club Rouge with her arms folded tightly across her c







