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Chapter 7

Author: TEG
last update publish date: 2026-01-06 04:20:30

​The medical wing of the estate didn’t smell like a hospital. There was no scent of industrial bleach, no hint of the stale, recycled air that had defined the small-town clinic in Maple. It smelled like nothing—a terrifying, expensive vacuum.

​Leo was already settled. The monitors surrounding his bed were silent, high-tech ribbons of light that merely pulsed with a soft, blue glow. He looked small against the five-hundred-thread-count sheets. His breathing was steady, assisted by a machine that cost more than Bella’s first car, but his face remained pale. The specialist, a woman with a face as neutral as a stone wall, had already performed the intake. She hadn’t asked about insurance or a birth certificate. She had simply looked at Dante, received a single nod, and disappeared into a private lab with Leo’s blood samples.

​Bella watched through the observation glass, her fingers tracing a smudge on the pane. She couldn’t breathe in there. Every hum of the equipment felt like a line of code in a contract she hadn't signed. Every steady heartbeat on the monitor was a debt she knew she could never pay back. She turned away when her own reflection in the glass started to look like a stranger.

​She found Toby and Maya in the solarium. It was a cathedral of glass and limestone, the afternoon sun pouring in with a warmth that felt unearned. The room was overflowing with a mountain of toys that looked like they had been looted from an upscale boutique. Toby was engaged in a war between a plastic dragon and a fleet of wooden trucks, his face smudged with chocolate from a snack he’d clearly been given without Bella’s permission.

​"Mom! Look! The dragon has fire breath!" Toby roared, holding up the creature.

​Maya wasn't playing. She sat on the heated marble floor, sorting Lego bricks. She had three distinct piles: red, blue, and yellow. Her tiny brow was furrowed in a look of weary concentration.

​"The man said these are for us to keep," Maya said quietly, her eyes on a tiny plastic hinge.

​"Which man, Maya?" Bella asked.

​"The one with the watch," Maya replied. "He didn't smile. But he gave Toby the dragon."

​Bella felt a cold prickle under her skin. Dante. He was already marking his territory with plastic and primary colors, buying affection before he’d even earned their names.

​"Stay here with the nanny, okay? I need to talk to the man with the watch."

​"Is Leo gonna be okay?" Toby asked, the dragon pausing mid-flight.

​Bella knelt and brushed a stray hair from his forehead. "He’s getting the best medicine, Toby. Just play."

​She left the solarium for the library. The transition was jarring—from the bright world of her children to the silent corridors of the Blackwood home. The air felt thick, weighted down by generations of secrets. Dante sat at the head of a mahogany table that could seat twenty. He wasn't working. He was staring at a glass of water, watching the way the sun hit the crystal. He had discarded his jacket, his white shirt unbuttoned at the collar.

​He looked up as she entered. He didn't offer a shark smile. He just looked hollow.

​"The kids are settled," Bella said, staying near the door. "Toby thinks he’s in a theme park. Maya is suspicious."

​"She’s like you," Dante said, his voice a low rasp. "She looks for the catch before the gift."

​"Because there’s always a catch, Dante." She walked to the window, watching a hawk circle the perimeter. "What’s the status? No PR version."

​Dante pushed a leather-bound folder toward her. "Silas is moving faster than I anticipated. He’s looking for leverage to kill the audit. Marcus intercepted a call ten minutes ago. A stringer for a tabloid was asking questions at the clinic in Maple. They have Leo’s name, Bella. They have a photo of your house."

​The floor seemed to tilt. Bella gripped the back of a chair. "How?"

​"Money. Someone in that office realized a file on a child with no father listed was worth a year’s salary." Dante stood up. He didn't move toward her, but his presence filled the room. "The estate is a lighthouse. It’s the first place Silas will look. We can’t stay here."

​"I'm not moving them again. Leo just got into a bed."

​"He’ll be moved by private ambulance. Discreetly." Dante took a step closer. "I’m moving you to the penthouse. In the city."

​Bella let out a short, harsh laugh. "The city? You want to put us in a glass box in Manhattan? Why don't we just take out a billboard in Times Square?"

​"The penthouse has a private elevator bank," Dante said, his voice flat. "It connects to the foundation’s medical annex. No lobbies, no cameras. It’s shielded. Here, the staff reports to my uncle out of habit. In the city, the security is mine. Only mine."

​"It's a cage, Dante. Just a higher one."

​"It’s a residence," he corrected. "You’ll have your own floor. Your own codes. I won't have a key. If you want to see me, you come to my level. Otherwise, we stay in the hallway."

​Bella turned back to the window. He had her lease. He had her flights. Now he had her children’s medical records. "Why? Why give me a floor you can't access? A Blackwood doesn't give up control."

​Dante was silent for a long time. When she turned, his expression was raw.

​"Because if I force you, you’ll spend every second looking for the exit," he said. "I need you focused on the audit. I need you to trust the kids are safe so you can help me burn his empire down. I need my partner back."

​"We aren't partners. And we aren't a family."

​"The DNA says otherwise."

​"The DNA is just data," she snapped, stepping toward him. "It doesn't make you a father. You weren't there for the fevers or the stitches. You don't get the reward without the work, Dante."

​Dante’s jaw tightened. He looked like he wanted to reach out, but he stayed behind the mahogany barrier.

​"Three weeks," Bella said.

​"What?"

​"Only until Leo’s first round of treatment is finished. Three weeks. Not a day more. After that, you provide transport to a location of my choosing. No tracking. You let us disappear."

​Dante leaned forward. "Fine. Three weeks. But you stay inside the perimeter."

​"And the rules stand," she added. "No playing dad. To them, you are a colleague. My boss. If you break that, I’ll vanish. I don't care how many satellites you have."

​Dante reached into his pocket and pulled out a keycard. It was matte black with a silver 'B' embossed in the corner. He slid it across the wood like a surrender.

​"Agreed. The cars are downstairs. The movers have already finished at the house in Maple. Everything is being transferred as we speak."

​Bella froze. "You went into my house?"

​"I had to secure the site. Silas’s people were already circling." Dante’s voice softened. "They packed everything, Bella. The clothes, the toys... even the blue crayons Toby likes. The ones in the tin box under his bed. I didn't want them to wake up in a place that didn't feel like home."

​The violation felt like a physical blow, but the mention of the crayons made her throat ache. He was being a Blackwood—thorough and invasive. But he was also being something else.

​"This doesn't change anything," she said, gripping the card. "I’m doing this for Leo."

​"I know." Dante turned toward the door. He stopped at the threshold but didn't look back. "The motorcade leaves in ten minutes. Wear your coat. The city is colder than the estate."

​He disappeared, leaving her alone with the black card. She thought about the life she had built on Maple Street, now packed into crates. She headed for the solarium to gather the pack.

The drive became a blur of SUVs and whispered commands. Leo was whisked away in an ambulance; Maya and Toby were buckled into a reinforced sedan. Bella sat between them, the keycard in her pocket. As the gates swung open, a dark realization settled over her. She had spent years running from the lion, only to walk into his den.

​She pulled out her phone to check the audit link. The first file loaded—offshore accounts in the Caymans. She scrolled until a name appeared in the metadata. It wasn't Silas’s. It was a name she recognized from her own past. A name that shouldn't be there.

​Her breath caught. Before she could tap the file, a shadow fell over the car. They were entering the tunnel, the sun vanishing into flickering orange. Beside her, Toby’s dragon fell to the floor with a thud.

​In the front seat, the radio crackled. "Alpha Lead, we have a tail. Silver sedan. They’re aggressive."

​Bella’s heart leaped. She looked at the rear window, seeing the black grille of Dante’s car behind them. "Dante," she whispered.

​The car lurched, accelerating as sirens began to wail, echoing off the tunnel walls. Through the glass, she saw Dante’s SUV swerve, cutting off the silver sedan as sparks flew from the wall. The three weeks hadn't even started, and the cage was already under fire. She wasn't just in the den; she was in the crossfire.

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