LOGINDahlia’s POV
It was the middle of the night when I felt someone shake my shoulder. I opened my eyes and saw Denise kneeling beside me. Her hair was loose, her face pale but determined.
“Dahlia,” she whispered quickly, looking toward my door. “Wake up. I’m leaving.”
I blinked, confused. “What do you mean, leaving?”
She pointed to the small bag beside her. “I can’t do it. I won’t marry him,” she said, her voice sharp and trembling. “I’d rather die than belong to Luca Romano.”
My chest tightened. “Denise, you can’t,” I whispered, terrified. “They’ll kill us if you don’t go through with it.”
Her eyes softened for a moment, but she held my hand tight. “You’ll save them,” she said quietly. “You’ll take my place. Remember your promise.”
And just like always, I couldn’t say no to her. I nodded weakly. “I promise.”
She gave me a small, sad smile, then stood up and slipped out of my room. I watched her go, too scared to move, too numb to stop her. The sound of the door closing felt final.
Now, standing in her empty room, the memory haunted me. Mum was crying, clutching Denise’s letter, and Father was staring at me with cold, expectant eyes.
“I’ll do it,” I whispered finally.
Mum gasped softly, and Father nodded once, like it was already decided.
And just like that, my fate was sealed.
The hardest part was still ahead. The part where I would have to become her.
Put on her dress. Her smile. Her voice. And walk straight into the arms of the most feared man in Chicago—
Luca Romano—My hands trembled as Mum lifted the gown from its box—the same gown Mr. Romano had sent days ago. Denise’s wedding dress. My sister’s. Not mine.
The silky white fabric shimmered under the light, too perfect, too pure, like it didn’t belong in this house or on me. To everyone else, it was beautiful. To me, it looked like a cage.
Mum held it out carefully, her hands shaking as she said softly, “Come on, Dahlia. We don’t have time.”
I swallowed hard and reached for it. My fingers brushed against the lace, and something inside me twisted. The dress was light, but it felt heavy in my arms. Denise would’ve looked stunning in it—she always did. Everything fit her effortlessly. But as I slipped it on, the fabric clung to my body too tightly. Denise had always been slimmer, neater. I wasn’t big, but compared to her, I felt… wrong. The dress hugged every curve, making it hard to breathe.
Mum circled me quickly, zipping the back and smoothing out the folds. Her hands moved fast, trembling, desperate. When she finally stepped back, her eyes glistened.
“You look just like her,” she whispered.But I didn’t feel like her. I felt like I was drowning.
She sat me down in front of the mirror and began to work on my face. Powder, liner, lipstick—the same shades Denise always used. Her movements were gentle, careful, like she was painting a mask that had to be perfect.
I watched my reflection change little by little. My heartbeat was loud in my ears, my breaths uneven. With every stroke, my face disappeared and hers appeared in its place. Denise’s lips. Denise’s eyes. Denise’s perfect, confident smile.
When Mum finished, she touched my shoulder lightly, her voice soft but firm. “You’re doing this to keep us safe, Dahlia. That’s all that matters.”
I nodded, even though I didn’t feel convinced. Those words didn’t ease the fear in my chest—they only made it heavier. Father had never told me why Denise had to marry Luca Romano. He’d only said it was “for our safety.” Whatever that meant.
I looked at the mirror again. The girl staring back wasn’t me anymore. She was my sister—beautiful, fearless Denise.
But inside, it was still me. Terrified, trembling Dahlia.
The stranger in the mirror was about to walk into my sister’s life… and marry the man she ran away from.
My stomach turned, and I looked away. My hands were cold and slick with sweat, trembling no matter how hard I tried to keep them still.
The drive to the church felt like a blur. My body was in the car, but my mind was somewhere else—floating, drowning in fear. The dress was too tight around my ribs, and the lace kept scratching my skin, making it harder to breathe. I kept my hands on my lap, gripping the fabric, and every small bump on the road made my heart jump.
When we finally reached the church, my chest started to tighten. Slowly at first, then all at once, like my lungs just gave up. My fingers dug into the edge of my dress when the car stopped. My palms were sweaty, and I wiped them on the fabric without thinking. My heart was beating so loud it felt like it filled the car. For a second, I thought about running. Just opening the door and running down the road until this whole day disappeared. But my legs wouldn’t move. They felt heavy, like someone had tied them down.
Mum was the first to move—she always was. She opened the door quickly and stepped out, her heels clicking on the pavement. Then Father got out. He fixed his jacket, smoothed his hair, and came to open my door. “Come on,” he said, his voice soft but steady. I took his hand. It was warm, strong, but there was something strange in the way he held it. Like he wanted to comfort me, but didn’t know how.
We walked up to the entrance together. The stone steps were old and smooth, and my heels made small clicking sounds that echoed. The big wooden doors were open, and inside was dim, with candles flickering along the walls. Then I saw him.
A tall man stood near a pillar, dressed all in black. His suit was perfect, his face unreadable. His eyes moved over us, slow and sharp. When he spoke, his voice was low and calm, but something about it made my stomach twist.
“The boss wants to see you,” he said.
The way he said boss made the hairs on my neck rise.
We followed him without a word. He didn’t look back, just walked—steady, confident. Our footsteps echoed across the floor. The church seemed even larger the further we went, and the silence felt thick, like it was listening. I tried not to look at the statues on the walls, but I could still feel their cold stone eyes watching us.
Finally, the man stopped in front of a small wooden door at the very end of the corridor. My stomach twisted again, and I felt my palms grow sweaty. He didn’t even knock—just pushed the door open like he owned the place. The hinges creaked softly as it swung inward.
The room inside was small and dim, almost too quiet. Thick, dark curtains were pulled over the windows, blocking out all sunlight. The air smelled faintly of smoke and something expensive—maybe cologne or wine. There was a table in the middle of the room, made of polished wood, and two chairs placed neatly on either side. A single candle sat on the table, its tiny flame flickering and shaking every time the door moved.
And that’s when I saw him.
Andrea's POVHe groaned softly and curled his fingers inside me, hitting that spot that made everything go bright. His thumb worked my clit faster. “You’re doing so good,” he whispered. “So wet and tight around my fingers. I can feel you trying not to moan. Keep trying, baby. Come for me quiet. Let me feel it.”The orgasm hit fast and hard. My back arched off the bed, my pussy clenching around his fingers as pleasure rushed through me in hot waves. I cried out into my own hand, the sound muffled and broken, thighs shaking hard. He kept moving his hand through all of it, drawing it out, whispering the whole time.“Shh… that’s it. Come quiet for me. Good girl. So fucking good, staying quiet while I make you come all over my fingers.”Only when I started to come down did he slowly pull his fingers out. He brought them to his mouth and licked them clean while I watched, still trying to catch my breath with my hand over my mouth. Then he stood up long enough to shove his pants and underwea
Andrea's POVI pushed myself up on my elbows so I could see him better. “I missed you too,” I said. My voice came out quieter than I meant it to. “All day. Every time I looked up at the house I hoped I’d see you at one of the windows.”He leaned down, one knee on the mattress, and kissed me. It wasn’t soft. It was hard and hungry, his mouth opening over mine like he needed to taste me to breathe. His tongue slid against mine, deep and insistent. I kissed him back the same way, reaching up to fist the front of his shirt and pull him closer. One of his hands braced beside my head; the other came down to rest on my waist, fingers spreading wide over the damp bikini fabric. The kiss went on until my lips felt swollen and I was making small, needy sounds into his mouth.When he finally pulled back, his forehead stayed close to mine. “You look so hot in this swimsuit,” he said. His thumb stroked slowly along the edge of the bikini top, just above my breast. “I saw you from the mansion. From
Andrea's POVI was happy that my mum was giving her that. Happy that Dahlia was getting, even temporarily, the kind of warmth she deserved and maybe had never had.I lay back on my lounger and watched the two of them together—my mum laughing at something Dahlia said, Dahlia laughing back, her hand resting protectively over the gentle swell of her stomach—and without meaning to at all, I found my mind wandering somewhere I hadn't quite expected it to go.I imagined myself in Dahlia's place.Pregnant. Glowing. My own hand resting over my own growing belly. And Dante beside me—not hidden, not a secret, but mine, openly and completely. Looking at me the way Luca looked at Dahlia, with that quiet fierce pride and devotion. A future where we didn't have to hide. Where my mum could fuss over me the way she was fussing over Dahlia now, asking about names and nursery colors and whether I was feeling alright. Where Dante could rest his hand on my belly and feel his child kick and there would be
Andrea's POV"Love is a beautiful thing, sweetheart," she said quietly. "It's one of the most beautiful things in the whole world. There's nothing like it. But the people we give our hearts to don't always feel the same way back. And that's one of the hardest truths there is to live with." She squeezed my hands gently. "I just don't want to see your heart get broken, Andrea. That's all. That's the only thing a mother ever really worries about, no matter how old her children get. We just want to keep you from hurting.""I know," I said softly. "I know, Mum.""It's not that I don't believe he cares for you. From the little I saw, the way he looked at you in that mirror—" She gave a small knowing smile. "A man doesn't look at a woman like that over nothing. But caring and being able to say it, to give it freely—those aren't always the same thing. And you deserve all of it. The caring and the words and everything in between."She leaned over and kissed my forehead, soft and warm, the way
Andrea's POVI blushed before I could stop it. The heat rushed up my neck and flooded into my cheeks instantly, completely traitorously, giving me away before I'd said a single word."What? No, of course not," I said quickly. "He just works for Luca, that's all. He drove us from the airport, that's the only reason you saw us together."But my mum had been reading me my entire life, and she just looked at me with the patient, unhurried certainty of someone who already knew the answer and was simply waiting for me to stop pretending and admit it."Andrea," she said again. Just my name. Gentle but immovable.I deflated. There was no point. There had never been any point in trying to hide things from her—she'd always seen straight through me, even when I was small and certain I was being clever."How long?" she asked softly.I sighed and pulled my knees up to my chest, wrapping my arms around them. "It started a long time ago. The first time I came to visit Luca. Four years ago." I picked
Andrea's POVI settled onto my bed with my laptop and opened up my novel, picking up right where I'd left off. The words had been coming so much more easily lately, ever since things with Luca had stabilized and the constant crushing weight of fear had finally lifted off all of us. My characters were finally getting somewhere good now—working through the misunderstandings that had kept them apart, finding their way back to each other. There was something deeply satisfying about writing toward a happy ending, even when my own real-life situation still felt so uncertain and complicated.I wrote for about an hour, completely losing myself in the story, before my phone pinged on the nightstand beside me.I picked it up. It was Dante.You okay?I felt myself smile at the screen before I'd even started typing.I'm fine. Mum and Dahlia are downstairs becoming best friends. I think my mum has officially adopted her.His reply came quickly.Good. Dahlia could use that.I noticed he didn't elab
Dahlia’s POVHis cock stood straight up, thick and hard, the head shiny and bobbing a little as he locked eyes on me. He didn't say a word, just moved fast, closing the space between us. His chest pressed firm against my back, pinning me to the wet tile wall. I felt his erection hot and heavy again
Luca’s POVI hated that look. Hated that I was the reason for it.“Why?” I asked softly. “Why were you so afraid?”For a moment, she didn’t speak. She just looked down at her hands, twisting her fingers together like she needed something to hold on to. I stayed quiet. I didn’t rush her. I could fee
Dahlia’s POVI smiled through my tears, my chest aching in that soft, painful way that comes from loving someone too much. Yes, I wanted him to remember. I wanted him to wake up one day and look at me the way he used to, with recognition and certainty.But even if he didn’t…Even if the memories ne
Dahlia’s POVThe next morning, I woke up feeling lighter than I had in days.For the first time since everything happened, my body felt rested. Properly rested. I had slept deeply, without nightmares, without waking up in panic. When I opened my eyes and saw the soft morning light filling the room,







