LOGINDon De Santis couldn’t handle the fury of the North. Nobody can. He spent a year trying to steal my shipments and take over my streets, and all he got for it was a pile of body bags.
He finally realized that you don’t play games with the Vane family. We have owned this city for decades. We are old money built on silence and iron. He is new money, built on noise and chaos. So, he did what all cowards do when they are losing. He crawled to me and begged for peace.
He offered me a treaty in the most unlikely way: a marriage. He wanted to tie our bloodlines together so I wouldn’t finish what I started. I’m not entirely sure why I agreed to this charade, but I am a man of my word. If a wedding stops the bloodbath for a while, I will take the deal. But I don’t believe in peace. Peace is just a quiet moment between two wars. It is the time a man takes to reload his gun.
I stood at the altar of St. Anne Cathedral, my back a straight line of iron. I didn’t feel like a groom. I felt like a general waiting for a surrender. The church was freezing cold, the way I prefer it. The smell of incense and old stone filled the air, but all I could think about was the last time I stood in a place like this.
Fifteen years ago, I was a different man. I was thirty years old, and I thought I knew how the world worked. I married Claire because it was expected of me. She was a woman of high standard, a perfect queen for the North. She was soft, elegant, and never asked questions about the blood on my shirts. We were the perfect pair until a car bomb meant for me turned her Mercedes into a ball of fire on Lake Shore Drive.
I remember the heat of that day. I remember the smell of burning rubber and the way the glass looked like diamonds on the pavement. I didn’t cry at her funeral. I didn’t scream. I just became cold. I spent the next ninety days hunting down every single person involved in that hit. I didn’t just kill them; I erased them. Claire’s death taught me the only lesson that matters: softness is a liability.
Love is a weakness that people use to destroy you. Since that day, I haven’t let anyone close enough to hurt me. I lived in a fortress of my own making, alone and satisfied.
And now, here I was again. A widower at forty-five, standing in a church waiting for a boy who wasn’t even born when I started running this city.
I looked out at the pews, analyzing the church like a tactical map. The divide was clear. On the left sat the North. My people. They were dressed in charcoal and black, sitting perfectly still. They didn’t whisper. They didn’t move. They were statues of discipline. On the right sat the South. The De Santis clan. They were a nightmare of bad taste. They wore bright gold chains, loud silk shirts, and too much cologne. They were restless, shifting in their seats and whispering like children. They were trash wrapped in expensive labels.
Don De Santis sat in the front row, looking proud of himself. He thinks this marriage is a victory. He thinks he has bought his safety by giving me his son. He is a fool. He hasn’t bought peace; he has just given me a hostage. Once the boy is under my roof, the Don will be on a leash. I will own his most precious asset, and I will use that asset to dismantle the South from the inside out.
The organ music started to play. It was a deep, heavy sound that felt more like a warning than a celebration. The massive doors at the back of the church opened, and the air shifted.
I checked my watch. 02:28 PM. He was late. That was the first strike. I don’t tolerate lateness. It shows a lack of respect and a lack of control.
Then, I saw him.
I saw him, the bratty spoiled prince of the south, taking the aisle towards me. He looked drunk or something, and for a minute, he looked like he wanted to run. Not only was the southside chaotic. They are cowards, too. This is gonna be quite an adventure.
He was wearing a beige suit, which was a ridiculous choice. He was small, barely over five feet tall, and he looked like he was drowning in the ceremony. He was wearing dark Ray-Bans inside a dim church, which was the height of arrogance. He stumbled slightly as he walked, his movements hazy and unfocused. I could tell immediately that he was medicated. I’ve seen enough addicts and nervous wrecks to know the look. His father probably had to drug him just to get into the car. It was pathetic.
As he reached the altar, the space between us felt electric. I am six-foot-five and built like a wall; he was a tiny, trembling bird in comparison. He stopped a few feet away, swaying on his feet. He looked like he might pass out right there on the marble floor. I didn’t reach out to steady him. I don’t help people who can’t stand on their own.
He slowly reached up and took off the sunglasses.
I expected to see glazed, empty eyes. I expected to see a boy who had completely given up. But I was wrong. When he looked up at me, his eyes were red and tired, but they were burning with a fierce, violent hatred. He didn’t just dislike me; he wanted me dead. He looked at me with more fire than any of the soldiers I had faced in the last year.
Interesting, I thought. Maybe there was something under the surface after all.
“You’re late,” I said. My voice was low, meant only for him.
He blinked, his breath smelling of wine and chemicals. He didn’t flinch. Instead, he leaned in just an inch. “And you’re old,” he whispered back. His voice was messy and slurred, but the insult was sharp.
I felt a tinge of a smile pull at the corner of my mouth. Almost. Most people are too afraid to breathe in my presence, and this drugged-up boy was insulting me at his own wedding. This was going to be more entertaining than I thought.
The priest began to speak, his voice shaking. He knew this wasn’t a marriage of love. He knew he was presiding over a business transaction between two monsters. He hurried through the words, his eyes darting between the North and the South pews as if he expected a riot to break out at any second.
I kept my eyes on Luca. He was vibrating. I looked at his hands; they were soft and manicured. He had never worked a day in his life. He was a doll, a pretty thing used to settle a debt. I wondered how long he would last in the North before the cold broke him.
“If anyone has an objection why these two should not be married,” the priest said, his voice rising in pitch, “speak now or forever hold your peace…”
The silence that followed was heavy. It was the kind of silence that happens right before a bomb goes off. I could hear the wind howling outside the cathedral, battering against the stained-glass windows.
Then, it happened.
A cough.
It was sharp and sudden, coming from the South side of the church. In my world, a cough is never just a cough. It is the sound a man makes to tell his friends to get ready. My brain immediately went into combat mode. I didn’t look at the crowd. I didn’t look at the Don. I analyzed the sound and the timing.
In one fluid motion, I reached inside my tuxedo jacket. My hand found the cold, familiar grip of my 1911. I drew the weapon with a speed that made the priest gasp. I didn’t point it at the ceiling. I leveled the barrel directly at the row where the cough had come from.
Screams broke out. The North side stood up in unison, their hands growing to their own holsters. The South side scrambled, knocking over pews in their panic. The priest dove behind the altar like he was seeking cover in a trench.
But I wasn’t looking at them. I was looking at Luca.
He hadn’t moved. He hadn’t screamed. He didn’t even look surprised. He stood there, swaying slightly, staring down the barrel of my gun with a look of total exhaustion. He didn’t look like he was afraid of dying. He looked like he was disappointed that I hadn’t pulled the trigger yet.
“Finally,” he mumbled, his voice so quiet I almost missed it. “Do it.”
I stared at him over the sights of my pistol. My finger was steady on the trigger. I realized in that moment that this boy wasn’t just a bratty prince. He was suicidal. He was a tragedy wrapped in white silk, and he wanted me to be his executioner.
For the first time in over a decade, I felt a jolt of genuine curiosity. I wasn’t bored anymore.
“Nobody moves,” I shouted, my voice booming through the church, silencing the chaos. “Or I shoot the groom first.”
I watched the light in Luca’s eyes. He didn’t blink. He just waited. And for the first time, I wondered what kind of hell he had been living in to make a man like me look like an escape.
The bed was still incredibly warm, but the space beside me was already empty. I opened my eyes, the heavy curtains of Elizabeth’s suite completely blocking out the early morning Chicago sun. The scent of her- an intoxicating mix of expensive perfume and the raw, lingering heat of the devastation we had caused in the dark was stamped into my skin and the comfy sheets. I stretched lazily on the bed and sat up slowly, the sudden chill of the Estate biting at my bare shoulders. Elizabeth was gone. Of course she was. The cold, conniving boss woman of this twisted dynasty didn’t do mornings after. She had her sprawling empire to run, and her icy, untouchable facade to meticulously rebuild before the rest of the massive house woke up. But as my gaze drifted to the discarded emerald green gown lying on the floor like a fallen flag, a slow, dangerous smile curled at the corner of my lips. She had shattered. I had felt the legendary Elizabeth Vane completely break under my touch, and that mom
I stood at the head of the mahogany table, my hands resting flat against the polished wood. My pulse was a steady, deafening drumbeat in my ears. I didn’t care about Marcus and Lorenzo’s shipping routes. I didn’t care about the East Side port authority. For the first time in years, the empire I had built felt entirely irrelevant. All because of the girl in the forest green gown. That girl. She had sat at my table, surrounded by the most dangerous men in the North, and she hadn’t flinched. She had worn my signature color, my armor, and had weaponized it, letting the gown drape over her curves like a challenge.Every time she looked at me over the rim of her champagne glass, it wasn’t with the submission of a ward. It was with the starving patience of a wolf waiting for the hunters to leave the woods. “ You’re playing a dangerous game, Elizabeth.” Silas’s voice cut through the silence. He was still sitting in his chair, his grey eyes fixed on the empty doorway where Tatiana had dis
I got to the hallways heading to the dining room; the usual quiet silence of the estate was replaced by the chatter of wealthy men, the occasional deep chuckle of people who owned politicians, and the clicking of expensive crystal glasses. It was a sound I had only ever heard from the outside of high-rise windows back in the South, from the people who bled us dry. Following the voices, I rounded the heavy marble archway and stepped into the dining room. The sheer scale of the setup looked like a buffet on absolute steroids, entirely disproportionate for the small number of people actually seated around the table. Silver dishes gleamed under the massive crystal chandelier, filled with delicacies that looked more like modern art pieces than food. Silas Vane was resting at the head of the table. He looked entirely detached from reality, lounging back in his chair with an expression that screamed he was thoroughly uninterested in whatever conversation was happening around him. His shirt
For a few minutes, I just sat there in the dim blue light coming off the server, my breath rattling in my throat, sounding entirely too loud in the reinforced silence of the room. My skin still felt raw where her fingers had traced a slow, agonizing line down my arm. “He won’t find it,” her voice still echoed in my mind. Very cold and precise. “Because by the time he’s strong enough to walk down those stairs, Silas would have convinced him otherwise. And you, Tatiana… You’re going to help him believe it.”I touched my lower lip. It was swollen from her kiss. A kiss that now felt less like passion and more like a binding contract. She had looked at me with those ancient, pale eyes of hers and dropped the ultimate leverage: “I’ll show him your file. I’ll show him that his sister wasn’t a survivor. She was a witness who never said a word.” How dare she! Those words tore at the scars I tried so hard to hide. She knew. She knew that when our father was breaking Luca back in the South, I
I stood in the heavy silence, my heart trying to beat its way out of my ribs. My lips were still burning from Elizabeth’s mouth; a calculated fire that had turned into something brutal. The discipline was a lie. I had seen the crack, felt the way her hands had trembled against my waist before she’d smoothed my dress and walked away to play the Queen of the North. But as the adrenaline of the kiss began to drop, it was replaced by a cold, sharp clarity. Elizabeth was stepping out. Silas was anchored to Luca’s bedside like a predator guarding his broken prize. The house was supposed to be a fortress, but to a girl who had spent years learning how to be the space between shadows. It was just a puzzle. In the South Side, I had survived by being the ghost that no one bothered to hunt. Here, among the portraits of dead Vanes, I was more than that. I was an anomaly. I moved through the East wing, my footsteps making no sound. I avoided the main corridors, sticking to the service passages
The East Wing smelled of the faint, lingering citrus scent of the polish the cleaner used to mask the age of the wood and unused potential. It was a wing designed for guests who were meant to be seen and not heard. I had walked these floors for over thirty years, the architect of a dynasty that thrived on the art of being untouchable. But as I stood outside Tatiana De Santis’s suite, my hand hovering over the heavy oak door, the discipline felt like a corset that had been pulled one notch too tight. I had delayed the Beauforts’ arrival. Silas was still anchored to the master suite, drowning in his obsession with the boy they had broken, which left me to manage the other complication. I told myself it was a tactical necessity. We needed Tatiana to look the part of a ward, a polished jewel of the North, before we paraded her in front of the Board. But as I pushed the door open, I knew I was lying to myself. Tatiana was standing by the window. She had stripped off the scuffed boots a
“Stop breathing so loudly, boy,” Aunt Gable snapped, her voice ringing out sharp and cold. “You sound like a dying horse.”I flinched, my fingers digging into the polished mahogany of the banister. The rail felt like ice against my palms. I didn’t turn to look at her; I couldn’t. If I moved my head
Detox wasn’t a ‘journey.’ It was a war. The next three days were a blur of grey walls and white-hot agony. I spent most of it curled into a ball on Silas’s black silk sheets, shivering so hard I thought my teeth would shatter. I pulled the blue robe tighter around my shivering body. Every minute w
I sat there, shaking, the silence rushing back in to fill the space she’d left. I felt the absence of Xanax like a physical hole in my brain. My heart was doing that weird, irregular skip. Again. My legs felt like jelly as I stood and made my way to the closet. It was a walk-in. Rows of charcoal s
Usually, the thick and heavy glass insulation drowned out the world, leaving me in the peaceful vacuum of my own thoughts. But today, the silence was jagged. It was occupied by the frantic, shallow breathing of the boy sitting three feet away from me. I didn’t need to look at Luca De Santis to kno



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