LOGINDante grabbed the plate of pasta from the tray and scooped up a forkful. He held it to Luca's mouth, his other hand gripping Luca's jaw.
"Open."
Luca pressed his lips together, glaring up at him.
"I said open your mouth." Dante's fingers tightened on Luca's jaw, pressing hard enough to force his mouth open. He shoved the fork in before Luca could react.
Luca choked, his body jerking. For a moment Dante thought he might spit it out, but then Luca swallowed, his throat working painfully. Tears leaked from the corners of his eyes.
"Good," Dante said, loading another forkful. "Again."
This time Luca opened his mouth without being forced. He swallowed the second bite, then a third. His hands were shaking, his whole body trembling from weakness and hunger. Dante kept feeding him, until half the plate was gone.
"Enough," Luca finally gasped, turning his face away. "I can't—I'll be sick."
Dante set the plate down but didn't let go of Luca's arm. "You'll eat more in two hours. And you'll eat every meal I bring you from now on. Do you understand?"
Luca didn't answer. He slumped forward, his forehead nearly touching Dante's chest. His breathing was ragged.
"Do you understand?" Dante repeated, his voice harder.
"Yes," Luca whispered.
Dante released him and Luca fell back onto the pillows, his eyes closing. Within seconds he was asleep, his body finally giving in to exhaustion.
Dante sat there watching him for a long time. In sleep, some of the hardness left Luca's face. He looked younger, more like the boy Dante remembered. But the shadows under his eyes remained, and the bones jutting through his skin, and all the evidence of what five years had done to him.
Dante reached out and brushed a strand of hair from Luca's forehead. The gesture was gentle, careful. Nothing like the roughness of moments before.
"I'm sorry," he said quietly, knowing Luca couldn't hear him. "I'm so goddamn sorry."
He left the room and went downstairs to his office. There was work to do, business that couldn't wait just because his personal life was falling apart. Three of his captains were waiting for him, wanting to discuss territorial disputes and a shipment that had gone missing.
Dante forced himself to focus, to be the ruthless leader they expected. But his mind kept drifting back to the room upstairs, to Luca sleeping in that bed.
Two hours later, he brought more food. Luca was awake, sitting up in bed with his knees pulled to his chest. He looked at the tray in Dante's hands with something like resignation.
"I'll eat," he said before Dante could speak. "You don't have to force me."
Dante set the tray down and watched as Luca picked up the fork with shaking hands. He ate slowly, mechanical bites that he chewed and swallowed without tasting. But he ate. That was what mattered.
"Why literature?" Dante asked, breaking the silence.
Luca paused mid-bite, looking up at him. "What?"
"You were studying literature. Why?"
For a moment, Luca didn't answer. Then he set down his fork and stared at the food. "I liked stories. I liked the idea that words could create entire worlds, that they could make people feel things." His voice was flat, emotionless. "Stupid, right?"
"No," Dante said. "It's not stupid."
"It is when you learn that the real world doesn't work like stories do. There are no heroes. No happy endings. Just people using each other until there's nothing left."
"That's not true."
Luca laughed, sharp and bitter. "Isn't it? Look at us, Dante. Look at what we are. You're a killer who runs a criminal empire, and I'm the thing you bought at an auction. That's not a story. That's a nightmare."
Dante wanted to argue, to tell Luca he was wrong. But what could he say? Luca was right about what Dante was. He'd built his empire on violence and blood. He'd killed men with his own hands, ordered the deaths of dozens more. He was exactly what Luca said—a killer.
"Finish eating," Dante said instead.
Luca picked up his fork again and continued, eating until the plate was clean. When he was done, he lay back down and turned his face to the wall.
Dante took the tray and left.
The pattern continued for the next two days. Dante brought food three times a day. Luca ate without protest but said nothing beyond single-word answers to direct questions. He slept most of the time, his body recovering from starvation and exhaustion.
On the fifth day, Dante entered the room to find Luca standing by the window. He'd showered—his hair was damp—and changed into the clothes Dante had left for him. Simple things: soft pants and a t-shirt. They hung loose on his thin frame.
"You're up," Dante said.
"You told me I could leave the room," Luca replied without turning around. "I want to see the rest of the villa."
Dante set down the breakfast tray. "All right. I'll show you around."
They walked through the villa together, Dante showing Luca the library, the kitchen, the sitting rooms. Luca said nothing, just looked at everything with those empty eyes. When they reached the library, though, he paused.
The room was two stories tall, lined floor to ceiling with books. Dante had inherited most of them from his father and had never read any of them. They were just decoration, proof of wealth and status.
Luca walked to one of the shelves and ran his fingers along the spines. "Dante, Petrarch, Leopardi," he murmured. "You have first editions."
"They came with the house."
Luca pulled out a slim volume and opened it carefully. "This is worth a fortune. Do you even know what you have here?"
"Books," Dante said. "Just books."
"They're not just books." For the first time since Vienna, there was something like life in Luca's voice. "They're history. Art. Someone's entire soul poured onto pages." He looked up at Dante. "Can I read them?"
"You can do whatever you want with them."
Luca held the book against his chest like it was precious. "I thought I'd never get to read again. They didn't—" He stopped, his jaw tightening. "It doesn't matter."
"What didn't they let you do?" Dante asked, moving closer.
Luca turned away, setting the book back on the shelf. "Nothing. Forget it."
"Luca—"
"I said forget it." Luca's voice went hard again, the brief moment of softness gone. "Are we done with the tour?"
Dante wanted to push, to demand answers. But he held back. "There's one more place."
He led Luca to the back of the villa, through a set of French doors that opened onto the gardens. It was early morning and the sun was just burning off the dew. The gardens stretched out before them, carefully maintained by a crew that came twice a week.
Luca stepped outside and stopped. He tilted his face up to the sun, closing his eyes. For a long moment he just stood there, breathing.
"When was the last time you were outside?" Dante asked.
"I don't remember." Luca's voice was barely a whisper. "I don't remember what it felt like. The sun. Fresh air. I thought I'd die without ever feeling it again."
Dante watched him, something twisting in his chest. "You can come out here whenever you want. The gardens are yours."
Luca opened his eyes and looked at him. "Nothing here is mine, Dante. We both know that."
Before Dante could respond, his phone rang. He pulled it out and checked the screen. Marco. His younger brother. The call he'd been dreading.
"I have to take this," Dante said.
"Then take it." Luca walked further into the garden, putting distance between them.
Dante answered. "Marco."
"Is it true?" Marco's voice was sharp, angry. "Tell me it's not true."
"What are you talking about?"
"I heard you were at an auction in Vienna. I heard you bought someone. And I heard—" Marco's voice cracked. "I heard it was Luca."
Dante closed his eyes. "Yes."
"Where is he? Is he there with you right now?"
"Yes."
"I'm coming over. I need to see him. I need to know he's okay."
"Marco, wait—"
"I'm already in my car. I'll be there in twenty minutes."
The line went dead. Dante lowered the phone and looked at Luca, who was standing by a fountain, trailing his fingers through the water.
This was going to be complicated. Marco had blamed himself for Luca's disappearance, had spent five years drowning in guilt just like Dante. And now he was about to find out that Dante had found Luca and hadn't told him.
Dante walked over to Luca. "Your brother is coming. Marco. He'll be here soon."
Luca's hand froze over the water. He turned slowly, his face going pale. "Marco? He's coming here?"
"Yes."
"Does he know? Does he know what you—what you did?"
"He knows I found you. That's all."
Luca's breathing quickened. His hands were shaking again. "I can't. I can't see him. Not like this. Not after—"
"Luca—"
"He is my brother." Luca's voice broke. "He was my best friend and I disappeared and he probably thought I abandoned him and I can't, Dante, I can't face him."
Dante grabbed Luca's shoulders. "You don't have a choice. He's coming and he's not going to leave until he sees you."
Luca stared up at him, panic clear in his eyes. "What am I supposed to say to him?"
Thirty years after Vienna, Luca sat in the garden writing the final pages of what would become his last book—not about trafficking this time, but about recovery itself, about what it meant to build an entire life on the other side of catastrophe.Dante, seventy-one now, sat across from him doing crossword puzzles with the same focused intensity he'd once brought to running a criminal empire."Seven letters," Dante said. "Lasting beyond expectation.""Survival," Luca offered."Doesn't fit. S-U-R-V-I-V-A-L is eight letters.""You're hopeless at crosswords.""I'm excellent at crosswords. I just enjoy your company while doing them."Luca smiled and went back to writing. The final chapter, the one he'd been avoiding for months because finishing it meant acknowledging the story actually had an end, at least on paper.People often ask me when healing finishes, he wrote. They want a timeline, a finish line, proof that someday the work stops and you simply arrive at wholeness. I used to want t
Lorenzo Salvatore died in prison the same year Zara turned twenty-five. Dante received the notification with the same emptiness he'd felt the day they arrested him, no grief, just the closing of a door that had been shut for a long time already."Do you want to attend anything?" Luca asked. "Burial, anything?""No. He stopped being my father the day he held a gun to your head." Dante folded the letter and set it aside. "I'll arrange a burial. Quiet, no announcement. That's all the obligation I owe him.""You're allowed to feel something. He was still your father.""I feel relief that he's no longer a variable I need to account for. Is that terrible?""No. It's honest."They handled it quietly, as Dante wanted. No ceremony, no announcement to the press that occasionally still tracked the Salvatore name from its old criminal associations. Just paperwork and a small plot in a cemetery outside Palermo.Marco's death, years earlier, had hurt in a complicated way—grief tangled up with betra
Zara graduated top of her class four years later, then took a position with the EU Commission's anti-trafficking division in Brussels. She called twice a week, always with strong opinions about whatever policy was failing somewhere."They're moving too slow on the Balkans corridor," she said one Sunday. "I told my supervisor we need mandatory cross-border task forces, not 'recommended cooperation frameworks.'""How did that go?""He said I remind him of someone he used to know. Very intense, very stubborn." Zara paused. "I think he meant it as a compliment.""It probably was.""Tomás got a job offer in Brussels too. Banking regulation." Another pause, more careful this time. "We're thinking about getting an apartment together.""That's wonderful, Zara.""You're not going to ask if we're being responsible or if I'm too young?""You're twenty-three. You've survived worse than cohabitation."She laughed, the easy laugh she'd grown into over the years. "Dad would ask if Tomás's intentions
Zara started university in September studying political science. She attacked it the way she attacked everything—with focused intensity and zero tolerance for anything she considered pointless.Two weeks in, she called Luca from campus."My professor is an idiot," she said."That's a strong opening.""He spent the entire lecture explaining why systemic change in trafficking policy is unrealistic. I argued with him for twenty minutes.""How did that go?""He told me I was naive. I told him his tenure was making him complacent." A pause. "Then I was asked to stay after class.""Zara.""He actually apologized. Said I made good points but could work on my delivery.""He's not wrong about the delivery.""You sound like Dr. Patel.""Dr. Patel is smart. What did you do after?""Went to the library and wrote a twelve-page counter-argument to his lecture notes.""Did anyone ask you to do that?""No. But it needed doing."Luca hung up and immediately called Dante. "Our daughter got into an argu
Zara had been with them for six months when she asked about the adoption paperwork.Luca was in the garden reading when she found him. She sat across from him and said, without preamble, "Are we doing this officially or not?""Do you want to do it officially?""I asked first.""Yes," Luca said. "We want to. But only if you do."Zara looked at her hands. "I've been adopted before. When I was nine. It didn't work out.""I know. Dr. Patel told us, with your permission.""They gave me back. Literally returned me like a broken appliance." Zara's jaw tightened. "Said I was too difficult.""You're not too difficult. You're exactly who you are and that's enough.""You say that now.""I'll say it in ten years too. And twenty." Luca set down his book. "We're not going to return you, Zara. That's not something we're capable of. You're already family.""You can't promise that.""Watch me."She was quiet for a moment. Then she said, "What would it change? Legally, I mean. I'm almost eighteen. I'll
Marco died four months later. Elena told Luca over the phone, simple and direct. Luca said thank you and hung up.He sat with it for a day. Waiting to feel something significant. Grief or relief or closure. But mostly he just felt the quiet satisfaction of a chapter finally ending.He didn't go to the funeral. He went to dinner with Dante instead, at the same restaurant where they'd had their first date twenty years ago."Is this weird?" Dante asked. "Celebrating while Marco's being buried?""We're not celebrating. We're just living. There's a difference." Luca ordered wine. "He died. I'm sad about it in the way I'd be sad about anyone dying. But I'm not going to pretend it's more than that.""Fair enough."They ate dinner and talked about other things. The Tokyo house Rebecca had just opened. Dante's plan to finally sell the last of his illegal business interests. The painting class Luca had enrolled in that he was somehow getting worse at despite two years of practice."How do you g
Elena ran background checks on everyone in their inner circle. Every employee, every associate, every person who'd had access to their operations in the past two years. She found nothing suspicious."Either Anya was lying, or whoever it is is very good at covering their tracks," Elena said, frustra
Luca drove his palm into the man's wrist, knocking the gun aside like Elena had shown him. The gun discharged, bullet ricocheting off brick. Before the man could recover, Luca kicked him in the knee. Something crunched. The man went down screaming.Luca grabbed the fallen gun. His hands were shakin
Dr. Patel showed up at the villa an hour after Luca's call. She didn't look happy."This is a terrible idea," she said, standing in Dante's study with her arms crossed. "You're enabling his need for control by putting him in actual danger.""I'm respecting his autonomy," Dante said."You're letting
The coordinates Viktor sent led to an abandoned warehouse by the docks. Cliché, but effective, lots of space, multiple exits, and far enough from civilization that gunfire wouldn't draw immediate attention.Dante and Luca arrived at midnight. Elena's team was already in position, hidden in the shad







