LOGINLucien Valenti’s POV
There’s something about a woman who looks at you like she’s already planned your murder.
It makes you want to know where she hid the knife.
“She hates you,” Nico said as soon as the door shut behind me.
I didn’t look at him. Just loosened my tie and walked toward the bar in my study.
“Everyone hates me,” I said.
“Yeah, but she means it. Like. Deep in her bones.”
“Good. Makes things simpler.”
Nico slumped into the leather chair across from the fireplace. His suit jacket was open, tie undone, like he’d been drinking half the night. Probably had.
“Are you really going to let her just walk around here like a queen?” he asked. “Like she’s not a Moretti?”
“She’s my wife now.”
“Yeah, and I married a bottle of scotch once. Doesn’t mean I trusted it not to bite me in the morning.”
I poured myself two fingers of whiskey and turned to face him. “Did you dig into her background like I asked?”
He blinked. “What, you thought I’d forget?”
“Sometimes I hope.”
Nico scowled, then reached into his coat and tossed a thin file onto the table. “There. The golden princess. Clean record. Educated. Speaks three languages. Trained in diplomacy, strategy, and piano.”
“Piano?” I lifted an eyebrow.
“Yeah. Really innocent, huh?” He leaned back. “She also refused to take any of the Moretti operations after her brother died. You think she’s soft. She’s not.”
“I don’t think she’s soft,” I said.
“Then what do you think?”
I looked out the window. The house was still. Dark. But I could feel her presence inside it. A spark of heat beneath the ice. “I think she’s dangerous.”
“And you married her anyway.”
“That was the point.”
Nico stood. “You know I don’t like this. None of this. She’s not here for peace. She’s here for revenge.”
I finished my drink in one swallow. “Let her try.”
The halls were quiet when I made my way toward the east wing. No guards followed. I didn’t need them. Not in my own house.
But something was off.
The minute I turned the corner, I felt it. Air. Movement. A shift.
Her door was cracked open.
And no guard in sight.
I walked straight in.
There she was, sitting at the edge of the bed. Her robe half-open, her feet bare, hair loose around her shoulders. And in her hands was an envelope.
She didn’t look up.
“What is that?” I asked.
“Do you always walk into rooms uninvited?”
“When I own the house, yes.”
She held up the envelope like it weighed something. “This was in the drawer.”
I stepped closer. My eyes scanned the front. One word written in a jagged red script.
Enzo.
I froze.
“Where did you get that?”
“I just told you.”
“That wasn’t there before.”
Her eyes snapped to mine. “You checked my lingerie drawers?”
“I check everything.”
“Of course you did,” she mumbled.
I took the envelope, but she pulled back.
“No.”
“Alessia.”
“No,” she said again, standing. “This is my brother’s name. This was in my room. This is mine.”
“You have no idea what’s inside.”
“And you do?”
“I know a threat when I see one.”
Her eyes narrowed. “Or maybe you don’t want me to read what he had to say.”
I gritted my jaw. “He’s dead.”
“Yes. He is. And you’re the only person who ever profited from that.”
I stepped closer. “Careful.”
She didn’t back down. “Why? Will you kill me too?”
Silence fell between us. Thick. Unmoving.
Then I said, “Open it.”
She hesitated. Just a flicker of it.
Then she tore the seal.
Inside was a single sheet of paper. Her eyes scanned the words. As she read, her expression changed. Confusion. Shock. Then something colder.
She handed it to me without a word.
I read the message.
There is more blood on your father’s hands than mine. He betrayed his own. Follow the money. You’ll see the truth.
No signature. No date.
My blood went still.
“You recognize the handwriting?” she asked.
I nodded once. “Yes.”
She stared at me. “Who?”
“Someone who should be dead.”
Her voice lowered. “So this is real.”
“Yes.”
She retreated, like the ground beneath her had shifted.
“You said you didn’t kill him,” she said quietly. “When we spoke earlier.”
“I didn’t.”
“But you know who did.”
I looked at her. Really looked at her.
She wasn’t crying, she didn't look like she was about to. She wasn’t unraveling. She was calculating. Like a queen pushed to the edge of her board.
“Why would someone plant this here now?” she asked.
“To cause division.”
“Between us?”
“Between families.”
She laughed, hollow and bitter. “There’s no ‘us,’ Lucien.”
I stepped forward. “Not yet.”
Her lips parted, but I didn’t give her time to speak.
I bent down, my voice low. “You want the truth? Then stop playing house and start watching the people closest to you. The ones you trust.”
“Don’t you dare twist this.”
“I’m not twisting anything. You’re just not seeing straight.”
She folded the note, like nothing happened and placed it back in the envelope.
Then she looked at me “If I find out you’re lying to me…”
“You’ll what?”
“I’ll bury you.”
I smiled. “Promise?”
I was met with silence
She moved to the window and stared out into the night. Her spine was straight. Her shoulders squared.
She wasn’t breaking.
She was waking up.
“You’re not going to sleep tonight, are you?” I asked.
“No.”
“Good.”
I turned to leave. Paused in the doorway. “The guard outside your room. He didn’t abandon post. He was pulled.”
Her head turned. “By who?”
“That’s what I’m going to find out.”
And when I stepped out, the hallway was darker than before. Heavier. Like something had slithered through it just moments before.
I reached for my phone and called the only person I trusted inside these walls.
“Matteo,” I said when the line picked up.
“Yes, sir.”
“Someone moved the guard outside my wife’s door. Without my order.”
A pause.
“I’ll check the roster.”
“You won’t find it there.”
Another pause. Tighter now.
“Understood.”
I ended the call.
Halfway down the corridor, I stopped at a painting on the wall. A classic oil piece. Gaudy. But behind it, a hidden panel.
I pressed it.
A small screen lit up.
Security footage.
I scrolled back to an hour earlier.
And there it was.
A figure. Hooded. Moving through the east hall. Reaching the guard. Leaning in.
The guard walked away.
The figure stepped into Alessia’s room.
Twenty seconds.
Then back out.
I paused the screen. Rewound. Froze the frame on the face that lifted just for a moment beneath the hood.
My blood went cold.
It was someone I had buried five years ago.
Someone I had watched die.
Someone who should not exist.
He was alive.
And he was inside my house.
Alessia's POV The elevator doors slid open into our secondary penthouse suite in the heart of the city, and the quiet luxury of the room felt like a different world compared to the chaos we had left behind at the Palazzo Riveria just an hour ago. Matteo walked straight to his terminal to finish the final security wipes on our digital footprint, and Lucien started pacing the floor with his tuxedo jacket discarded on the sofa, his eyes still sharp as he monitored the perimeter of the building for any sign of a retaliatory squad from the Rossi firm."I just checked the latest wire feed and the final balance of the transfer is sitting exactly where we wanted it, so Count Alberto is officially broke and his reputation among the board members is currently being shredded by the morning news cycle," Matteo said, and he looked up from his monitor with a tired smile that showed the absolute exhaustion he had been hiding behind his caffeine addiction for the last two days."Alberto is a snake w
Matteo's POV The van tires were kicking up a spray of rain and oil as we tore away from the palace gates, and I kept my eyes glued to the three monitors on the small folding table because the real work of destroying the Rossi empire was happening in the digital space while we drove through the dark streets of the capital. The offshore account balances were still flickering on my screen as the automated scripts continued to move the final tranches of cash into our hidden Moretti holding funds, and I could hear the background chatter from the palace security frequency getting increasingly desperate as the guests inside the ballroom started checking their own investment apps and finding their personal portfolios completely wiped clean."The panic is starting to spread through the ballroom because the investors are seeing their withdrawal requests denied by the main server, and the palace staff is currently trying to lock the terrace doors to keep the billionaires from storming the Count
Lucien's POV The marble steps behind the palace were slick with the evening rain and I kept my hand firmly on Alessia’s elbow as we hurried down into the darkness of the sculpture garden, the sound of the lobby sirens still wailing behind us while the distant flicker of Matteo’s headlights showed he was waiting at the lower access gate. We were moving fast through the rows of statues and heavy hedges when the soft crunch of gravel behind us warned me that we weren't as hidden as we had hoped, and before I could even pivot to check our rear flank two men in charcoal suits stepped out from behind a large stone fountain with their hands already reaching for the fixed-blade knives strapped to their ribs."Alessia, keep running toward the van and don't stop for anything even if you hear the metal hitting stone, because these aren't lobby guards and they are definitely from the Intercept Global strike team that Alberto hired," I whispered, my voice barely audible over the rush of the wind
Alessia's POV The digital chime of the fire alarm cut through the air of the lounge, and the wealthy men around the baccarat table immediately began to reach for their phones while Count Alberto’s eyes darted toward the hallway where the sound of shouting guards was growing louder by the second. I stood up from my chair and tucked the winning chips into my purse, but before I could turn toward the exit, Alberto’s hand shot out to grab my wrist, his grip surprisingly strong and his face twisted with a sudden, sharp suspicion that made the gold cufflinks on his velvet sleeves catch the low light of the room."You play a very calculated game for someone who supposedly manages real estate in the north, Countess, and I find it strange that you were so eager to win these ledger keys just as the lobby security was breached by Rossi’s men," Alberto said, his voice dropping into a low hiss while the other billionaire players rushed toward the terrace doors to escape the smoke."I came here t
Matteo's POV The interior of the surveillance van smelled like hot coffee and stale circuit boards, and I was hunched over the main terminal with my fingers flying across the keys while the audio feed from Alessia’s hidden microphone crackled with the sounds of shuffling cards and the low, tense murmur of the high-stakes game. I had the palace’s secondary server node looped into my own local drive, and the green progress bars were dancing across my monitors because the encryption keys Count Alberto was using for his private ledger were surprisingly complex, but they were no match for the cracking software I had been building since the factory fire."Keep him talking for another two minutes because the handshake protocol between his baccarat terminal and his secure offshore cloud is currently syncing, and if he folds now he might disconnect before the full key path is dumped into our system," I whispered into the secure channel, and I could hear the faint sound of Alessia’s laugh echo
Lucien's POV I stood perfectly still against the dark mahogany frame of the VIP lounge door, and my hands were tucked neatly into the pockets of my tuxedo while I watched Alessia take her seat at the center of the heavy felt table where the air was thick with the scent of expensive cigars and the sharp smell of aged whiskey. Count Alberto was sitting directly across from her with his eyes fixed on her hands, and the three other billionaires around the table were shuffling their stacks of high-value chips with a rhythmic, nervous clicking that echoed against the vaulted ceiling of the private chamber."The buy-in for this hand is one hundred thousand euros if you really want to verify the strength of your Zurich account, Countess, so don't be shy about pushing your stack into the center if you think your maritime routes are as profitable as you claim," Count Alberto said, and his voice was smooth and cultured but his gaze was predatory as he waited to see if she would flinch under the







