LOGIN
The sky above Santorini melted into a deep orange hue, spilling across the sea like paint on canvas. Our table sat right at the edge of the terrace, facing the ocean. The summer breeze brushed gently against my skin, carrying the salty scent of the sea mixed with a faint hint of rosemary from the restaurant kitchen. Soft jazz music played in the background, barely audible.
Matteo hadn’t touched his wine.
“Someone died this morning,” he said, staring into his empty glass. “Two men from Palermo. Shot in the street, broad daylight. Old-school. Brutal.”
The steak knife in my hand paused over the still-bloody meat. I looked at him, waiting. He was always like that… opening conversations like dropping a grenade on the table.
“They were probably trying to make a statement,” he went on. “Or send a message. We know who did it. But not enough to strike back without starting a full-blown war.”
I leaned back into the linen-covered rattan chair and took a deep breath. The candlelight on the table flickered in his dark, weary eyes.
I reached out, touching the tense back of his hand on the table. His fingers were stiff. Cold, even in the summer. I rubbed them gently.
“Matteo…” I whispered calmly. “Let our people handle it. We didn’t come all the way here to talk about death over ravioli.”
He looked at me. For a long time. As if trying to read something behind my blank expression. “I know,” he murmured eventually, then turned his gaze to the sea. “It’s just hard to stay quiet when everything feels like tiny cracks before the wall breaks.”
I gave a small nod and returned to my meal. The meat was no longer warm, but it still lingered on the tongue. Matteo was a man built for the battlefield, but fragile in uncertainty.
And lately, our world was full of uncertainty.
“Tell me about your day,” he said after a pause that stretched too long. “Something light. Like… what did you guys do this afternoon?”
I gave a faint smile, sipping my wine before answering. “Mom thinks credit cards don’t have a limit. She bought five dresses in three hours. And we’ve only been here a day.”
Matteo gave a soft laugh, his face softened. “Of course. Classic Katerina Serrano.”
“And Bretta…” I looked out toward the beach, now fading into darkness. “She got upset because her sandals made her feet swell. Then she cried because no table could fit her footrest.”
“She cried?” he raised an eyebrow.
“Dramatically. In front of the jewelry store clerk. Then suddenly asked for ice cream and said she wants to name her baby after a flower.”
“A flower?”
“I don’t get it either. But she swore her daughter’s name will be Azucena.”
“Like… lily?”
“Yeah. But in Spanish, so she says it sounds more dramatic.”
Matteo smiled. Almost warm. But the smile never lasted long. His expression hardened again when his phone buzzed on the table.
I caught a glimpse of the name: Santino Morelli. Italian blood.
And trouble.
He silenced it. His eyes were on me again, but no longer soft. “If they start touching family, you’ll become a target, love.”
I shrugged slightly. “Nothing new. I was born a target.”
“I won’t let that happen.”
After dinner was over and two glasses of wine left half-full, Matteo took his third call in an hour.
“Give me five minutes,” he said quickly, voice tense, eyes locked on the phone like it could explode any second. “Wait in the beach, or... take a walk if you want.”
I nodded. No protest.
Because Matteo’s five minutes always meant twenty.
The restaurant sat on top of a white limestone building, overlooking the sea that was now turning black. Below, the narrow streets twisted like veins, squeezed between thick-walled houses and blue rooftops glistening under the soft lights.
I chose to descend slowly, my steps echoing quietly on the slightly slick stone steps. The salty air nipped lightly at my neck as I turned into a narrow alleyway. Narrower than I’d expected. The houses around me were pressed close together, separated by stone fences and flower pots placed randomly in corners.
Small windows were open, casting warm light from inside. Some carried the scent of roasted tomatoes, butter, and old music.
I wasn’t sure when I’d stopped paying attention to where I was going. My steps were too relaxed. My mind too... empty.
By the time I realized the path no longer felt familiar, it was too late. I turned into a small bend, trying to get back to the main road, but instead collided with someone’s body.
Tall. Solid. And warm.
“Watch it,” I muttered instinctively, one hand touching his chest before I could fall.
A soft masculine scent slipped into my senses. Like firewood, light tobacco, and rain on a late afternoon.
A deep voice followed, calm and low. “Are you… lost?”
I turned to look at him.
And for a moment, I forgot to breathe.
The man stood beneath the shadow of a stone lantern, part of his face hidden, but enough visible to catch the sharp jawline, straight nose, and blue eyes as piercing as the night itself. His black hair was messily swept back, one side tousled. His shirt sleeves were rolled up to the elbows, the dark fabric contrasting against his olive skin.
More handsome than Matteo. Too handsome not to be dangerous.
But something in me tightened—the way he looked at me, too still. Too knowing. Like he recognized me. Or… had seen me before.
Maybe just my imagination. But the feeling came fast, cold, like a shattered mirror from the past.
I shook my head, briefly. “No,” My eyes lingered a second too long on his face before I dropped them. “Sorry.”
Just that one word, then I turned and walked away, my steps a little quicker than usual.
He didn’t follow. But I could still feel his gaze.The alley began to widen. The restaurant sign reappeared in the distance, and the villa where we were staying was just one block away. The sound of shoes hitting stone greeted me first.
“Señora Serrano—” Jared, my personal aide, stood leaning against the white stone fence, looking tired and half-annoyed.
“I was only fifteen minutes,” I said lightly as I walked toward him.
“Twenty. Matteo almost had us sweep the whole town.”
“But he didn’t, did he?”
“Not yet.”
I gave a faint smile. Jared rolled his eyes but still opened the gate for me. As I stepped inside, I glanced back once. The narrow alley I’d come from was still quiet. Empty.
...
Matteo was on the balcony when I entered the villa. His phone was wedged between his shoulder and ear while his fingers tapped nervously on an iPad. His voice was low but sharp, as always. Commanding without needing to shout.
Through the glass, I could see his jaw clenched. Hard as bone, firm as his resolve, which was slowly turning into obsession.
Jared set my bag on the couch and said a quick goodbye. I just nodded, brushed aside my dress, and walked into the bedroom. The dim light welcomed me, and the air inside felt too still for a villa that was supposed to be a retreat.
I unzipped my dress on my own. But even from the mirror’s reflection, I could feel eyes on me.
“Why didn’t you tell Jared where you were going?” His voice came from the doorway. Calm.
“I didn’t go anywhere,” I answered, placing the dress over the back of a chair. “Just went for a walk.”
Matteo leaned against the doorframe, still in his black shirt. The top two buttons undone, and his eyes on me like I was hiding something under my skin.
“You got lost,” he said. A statement, not a question.
I looked at him through the mirror, brushing my hair to one side. “You told me to take a walk.”
He didn’t answer. Just walked in. Then stopped behind me and stared at our reflection in silence. Our faces side by side in the mirror. Mine with tired eyes and a reddening neck, his with a gaze that never truly settled.
Matteo’s hand rose, touching my shoulder. “I just want to make sure you’re safe.”
“I know.”
“People will start thinking you’re alone if you keep wandering off like that.”
“I’m not alone. I’m your wife.”
“Then act like it.”
That last line landed like a small blade. Not because of his tone, but because of how bare it was. I looked at him through the mirror’s reflection.
“What do you mean?”
Matteo stared straight into the mirror, not at me. “I mean don’t make me look like the kind of man who can’t protect his woman.”
I gave a short laugh, humorless. “His woman?”
He didn’t flinch. Just dropped his hand and turned me to face him.
“The world’s looking for an excuse to stab us in the back, Krystal. And you...” his eyes locked onto mine, making my chest feel tight, “....you’re the best excuse they’ll ever get.”
“Then maybe the problem isn’t me,” I whispered. “Maybe it’s the fact that you’ve made too many enemies.”
Matteo laughed, but there was no weight in it. Then he kissed my forehead, “You’re always too smart for your own good.”
...
The next morning, two new bodyguards appeared in the villa courtyard. I wasn’t asked. I wasn’t given an explanation. They just showed up. One always ten steps behind me, the other quietly checking every room before I entered.
Bretta complained as we were heading to a boutique.
“Do they think we’re getting kidnapped at a linen shop?” she said, nodding toward one of the guards who was now helping pick tablecloth colors.
I only gave a faint smile, hiding my frustration behind oversized sunglasses and lipstick far too bright for the morning.
But Matteo didn’t stop there. My phone started losing signal in random places. Some of my social media accounts logged out by themselves.
And when I asked, Matteo only gave one answer: “It’s for your safety. Our world is shifting.”
Bretta stood in the middle of the fitting room, wearing an ivory silk dress with a low neckline and a belly that was starting to show. She stared at her reflection in the mirror with a dramatic expression, one hand on her hip, chin slightly raised.
“Don’t tell me I look like an overpriced marshmallow,” she said without blinking.
“If overpriced marshmallows wore Jimmy Choos and diamond necklaces, maybe,” I replied, running my fingers along a rack of evening gowns in soft palettes.
Bretta sighed loudly. “My feet are swollen, my back hurts, and this baby—” she pointed at her stomach, “—won’t stop kicking like it’s auditioning for a ballet.”
“I told you not to come to Santorini. But you said—and I quote—‘I want to glow pregnant under the Aegean sky.’”
“Well, I didn’t know glowing also meant sweating through everything and having a mood swing every two hours.”
I placed a teal gown back on the rack. “And Mauro told you to rest. Over and over.”
Bretta rolled her eyes. “My husband’s too dramatic. He thinks I’m gonna break just from walking five steps from the bed to the kitchen.”
“Because you do break. Every two minutes. Crying, yelling, sulking over iced tea that apparently didn’t have enough lemon—”
“Oh my God, Krys. I’m pregnant, not possessed. A little compassion, maybe?”
I laughed and finally pulled a burgundy satin dress with a subtle thigh slit and off-the-shoulder cut. Classic. Elegant. Not too flashy, but still lethal.
Bretta walked over, eyeing the dress like she was seriously considering swapping it for the one she was wearing. “If I wasn’t the size of a sailboat, I’d make you change and give me that dress.”
“Unfortunately, you are the size of a sailboat. And this dress isn’t for you.”
She gave my shoulder a light pat, then flopped dramatically onto the boutique’s cushioned sofa. A boutique staff member rushed over, offering lemon water and a back pillow.
“So, tonight’s party...” she said, leaning back. “Is Matteo going to stop talking about murder and sabotage long enough to make a toast?”
I held the dress up to my body and looked at the mirror. “If he doesn’t, at least I’ll look amazing while he does it.”
Bretta chuckled softly, but her eyes darted to our security standing still at the edge of the boutique. “Jared doesn’t like this place. Too many back doors, he said.”
“He doesn’t like a lot of things,” I muttered, checking my phone that still had no signal.
My eyes scanned the room. The dresses hung like a calm, colorful fog. But it all felt like a backdrop.
The scene before something happens.
And for some reason, since last night... everything had felt like the moment before something happens.
...
Zach didn’t answer fast enough.I looked at Diego. “Papa know?”Diego fired toward the bar. “We only found out when they breached the perimeter.”“The perimeter?” I let out a short laugh. “I went out for a drink. I wasn’t attending a NATO summit.”“Señorita…”“Don’t Señorita me right now, Diego.”Zach turned his head slightly. “Focus.”I stared at his back. “Don’t give me orders like I’m your wife.”“If you were my wife, I would’ve tied you to a chair fifteen minutes ago.”I smiled thinly. “Very healthy fantasy.”He fired to the side without taking his eyes off me. The man trying to move in from the left jerked back, his weapon dropping, his body hitting the floor.Zach kept looking at me.Kept.Looking at me.“This is not the time to fight me,” he said.“I’m not fighting you.”“Krystal.”“I’m considering my options.”“Your option is staying alive.”I didn’t answer.“For once, use that brain of yours to survive instead of stabbing at me.” He moved half an inch closer, close enough tha
The glass blew inward, rough and brutal.A mess.Shards hit the floor, the tables, the shoulders of people ducking for cover. They bounced off my shoes and caught in my hair like confetti from hell.Zach shoved me down with one hand at the back of my neck.My chest hit his waist. My knees slammed into the floor, sticky with tequila and something I very much hoped wasn’t blood.Cheap alcohol, cigarette smoke, sweat, sweet perfume, and gunpowder all tangled in my nose. Five minutes ago, this club had been ugly in a fun way. Now it looked like someone had taken a bad decision, handed it an automatic weapon, and told it to run.“Zach…”“Shut up.”Naturally, a shootout was when his control issues decided to make a full comeback.I resisted the urge to bite his calf.Another shot hit the bar behind us. Bottles shattered. Brown and clear liquor sprayed everywhere like expensive rain with no class. People screamed.A woman crawled under a table with one shoe missing. Nicolás, the guy in the d
He kissed me back.And it should have satisfied me.It should have.But Zach Romano had a way of turning defeat into something that still felt like a win, especially when I was the idiot standing there breathless because of him.His hand cradled the back of my head, his fingers sliding into my hair, already half-loose from the claw clip, pulling me close enough that my breath snagged in my throat. His mouth pushed deeper against mine, and my knees, traitorous little idiots, gave up immediately.Damn it.I kissed him back. I wasn’t a saint, and he wasn’t some moral test I could pass with one quick prayer.Both my hands rose to his neck and locked him, my fingers brushing the warm skin just beneath his hairline. He tensed beneath my fingers, just enough to give himself away. I liked knowing I could do that to him. I liked it too much. So I pulled him closer.A low sound rumbled out of his throat.Music slammed in from every direction. Someone near the bar shrieked with laughter. Shoes c
Shit.Shit shit shit.I turned slowly, very slowly, because some things were easier to face if you didn’t look at them directly. War and taxes... or an ex-kidnapper too handsome for national security.And here he was....Zachary Romano.All sharp eyes, black hair, and expensive danger. The kind of beautiful that made smart women forget they were supposed to know better.He stood too close behind me, wearing a black T-shirt and dark jeans, looking unfairly good for a man who had no business being in this club. His short black hair was messy, his bangs falling slightly over his forehead. His eyes were sharp and calm. Too Zach.How long had it been since I last saw that face?I didn’t know.I forgot.But ...lie.I remembered.The last time I saw him, I was still in his bed, breathless, furious, and far too aware of every place he’d touched me. Then he walked away like he hadn’t just ruined me for sport.Longing rose in my chest.Slight. Warm.Ew....I immediately threw it far away, to wh
At a table near the wall, a woman was dancing on top of a plastic chair. Two of her friends cheered. In another corner, a couple was arguing while still holding their drinks, an admirable level of emotional efficiency. Someone dropped a glass. The shards were immediately kicked under a table by a server who didn’t even look back.I set my empty glass on the bar.Nicolás held out his hand. “Dance?”I looked at his hand.Clean. No ring. No bloodstains. No expensive watch that could buy a small apartment. No murderous aura.Refreshing.I took it.The dance floor was hot and too crowded. Bodies moved close, but no one really touched me until I allowed it. Nicolás danced well enough not to be embarrassing. His hand drifted near my waist once, then stopped when I looked at him.I moved with the music, letting the bass take over my mind little by little. My T-shirt slipped on my shoulder. My hair started coming loose from the clip. A thin sheen of sweat gathered at the nape of my neck. I clo
In the foyer, two of Papa’s men were already standing there like they had come out of the walls.Not the overly obvious kind. They wore dark jackets, ordinary faces, extraordinary bodies. One of them, Diego, a man in his forties with a small scar near his chin, looked at my sandals with an expression that was both deeply professional and deeply pained.“Señorita.”“Don’t.”He shut his mouth.I took a car key from the marble bowl by the door. Not the most expensive car in the garage, and not the fastest either. A low black SUV normal enough not to make everyone on the road immediately think cartel princess, though the plates probably still screamed I have family problems.The Medellín night air touched my skin as soon as I stepped outside.Warm. A little damp. Smelling of earth, exhaust, night-blooming flowers, and a city that never really slept.I got into the car, started the engine, then looked in the rearview mirror.One black car came to life a few meters behind me.At the far end
I heard the rumble of a heavy engine pulling into the villa’s courtyard just as the sky outside the kitchen window turned a deep violet.I was still perched on a tall barstool, absentmindedly spinning a teaspoon in my now-cold coffee. My heart refused to race... but my body, as always, betrayed me.
After lunch, I sat on one of the tall barstools near the kitchen island. My chin rested in my palm as I stared at Aldo, who stood stiffly in the corner like a dead-eyed statue carved from boredom and body armor.I let out a dramatic sigh, loud enough to pierce whatever brain he had behind that blan
I watched her back as she arranged vegetables inside the oversized fridge. I grabbed a large pot and set it on the induction stove. My hands moved easily, tearing open the packaging on the fresh beef. The raw, iron-heavy smell hit my nose, awakening a low, lazy hunger deep in my stomach.“Hey,” I c
In every corner, brass sconces cast a soft yellow glow, drawing long shadows across the limestone walls. The sound of waves crashing grew louder as I neared my room at the end of the hallway, ocean wind slamming against rock like a thousand secrets dying to be told.I opened the bedroom door. Warm.







