LOGINODESSA POV
I was sleeping deeper than I had in months. The kind of sleep where your body feels heavy and your mind is finally quiet. I was naked under the blanket, and the sheet felt cool against my skin. For a few minutes, I let myself forget everything. I forgot about the men outside my door. I forgot about the price on my head. I forgot about running. Then the gunshots started. The sound tore through the room and through my sleep. It was close. Too close. Three shots, one after another. _Crack. Crack. Crack._ The window shook with each one. My eyes opened and I was already moving. My heart was beating so hard it hurt my chest. I didn’t think. I just reached under my pillow. My hand closed around the grip of my gun. Cold metal. Heavy. Safe. I’ve slept with it there every night for five years. More shots came from outside. Then shouting. Then the sound of glass breaking somewhere downstairs. I kicked the blanket off and grabbed the pants I’d left on the floor. My hands were shaking, but I got them on. I pulled a t-shirt over my head. I didn’t bother with a bra. There wasn’t time. I didn’t bother with shoes either. If I had to run, I’d run barefoot. “TEAM TWO, MOVE LEFT! I SAID LEFT! CORNER HIM, DAMN IT!” That was Aaron. The man trying his best to keep me alive. His voice was loud and rough, cutting through the gunfire. “TEAM ONE, COVER FIRE! DON’T LET THEM UP THE STAIRS!” My bedroom door was locked. I knew that lock wouldn’t stop anyone who really wanted in. But it would buy me two seconds. Sometimes two seconds was all you needed. I pulled the slide on my gun. The sound it made was sharp and final. It clicked into place. A bullet was in the chamber now. Ready. I pressed my back against the wall next to the door. I held the gun up with both hands, pointed right at the door handle. My arms were straight. My breathing was loud in my ears. My plan was simple. The first man who came through that door was going to get a bullet in his chest. If I was fast enough, the second man would get one too. I would keep shooting until I was out of bullets or out of men. Then everything went quiet. The shooting stopped. Aaron stopped shouting. I couldn’t hear boots on the stairs anymore. I couldn’t hear anything at all. The silence was worse than the gunshots. Silence meant it was over. And if Aaron’s men weren’t talking, it meant they were dead. My stomach felt sick. Aaron and his team were good men. Ex-military, every one of them. They knew how to fight. If they were down, then whoever came for me was better. Much better. Elena. My daughter’s face came into my head, and my chest hurt. She was five years old. She was two states away with my sister. Safe. She calls my sister “Mama” now. She didn’t know my real name. I had to live. I had to get up off this floor and live, because she needed me. Even if she didn’t know it. That was when I heard it. A sound inside my room. Behind me. It was soft. Just the sound of a foot stepping on the old wood floor. The floorboard gave a little creak. Someone was already in here with me. I started to turn. I started to swing my gun around. My finger was already moving to the trigger. I wasn’t fast enough. Something hard and metal slammed into the back of my head. I saw a bright white flash, like lightning inside my skull. The pain was instant and huge. My legs gave out. The gun fell out of my hand. I heard it hit the floor, but the sound was far away. Then everything went black. ALESSINO POV For five years, I told everyone she was dead. I told my men when they asked why I didn’t take a wife. I told my priest when he said I should find peace. I told my own reflection in the mirror on nights when the whiskey wasn’t strong enough to shut my brain off. Dead. Buried. Gone. That was the story. I made sure it was the only story. We had a funeral. Closed casket. The church was full of people who were scared of me and people who owed me money. They all cried because they thought they had to. I didn’t cry. Dons don’t cry. I stood in the front, wearing a black suit, and I watched them lower an empty box into the ground. There was no body to bury. The car crash was bad. The fire was worse. They said there was nothing left to identify. No dental records. No DNA. I paid them enough money to make sure nobody asked questions. After that, I stopped a lot of things. I stopped going to that church. I stopped drinking wine because she liked wine. I stopped letting women stay the night in my bed. Because before the funeral, before the fire, before she left me, there was her. She was the only one. The only woman I ever let see me without my armor on. With her, I wasn’t Don Alessio De Luca. I was just Alessio. She would say my name in the dark, soft, like it was a secret between us. She was the only one who ever made love to me. Not sex. Not fucking. Love. Slow and quiet. I would hold her hair in my fist so I could see her face. She would dig her nails into my back and tell me not to stop. After, she would lay her head on my chest. She said my heartbeat was the only thing that kept her nightmares away. She said I was safe. Then one morning I woke up and she was gone. No note. No goodbye. Two weeks later, I got the call about the crash. So I stopped loving. It was easier that way. Now I was sitting in my office. The big leather chair behind my desk. The lamp on the corner was the only light on. It made the room feel small and the shadows feel long. My glass was empty. I’d been waiting for hours. Pedro was supposed to call me after the docks. Alexandro was supposed to check in after he swept the east side. Vittorio was supposed to bring me an update at midnight. It was two in the morning now. My phone was silent. The house was silent. A small part of me, a stupid part I thought I killed five years ago, kept thinking about what Pedro said. They're hunting a woman. Dark hair. Said she was dead, but she’s not. That part of me wanted it to be her. I wanted it so bad my chest hurt. The rest of me knew better. Dead women don’t come back. Ghosts don’t walk into your office. You bury them, and you move on. That’s the rule. The door to my office opened. I didn’t look up right away. I figured it was Vittorio, finally. Or Pedro, with bad news about the two million we lost. I was ready to be angry. I was ready to break something. I heard boots. Heavy. Then the sound of something being dragged across my wood floor. That made me look up. It wasn’t Vittorio. It wasn’t Pedro. It was two of my soldiers. Men I trusted to kill and not ask why. They had a woman between them. One held her left arm. The other held her right. Her feet were bare and dirty. They were dragging her, and her toes were scraping against the floorboards. Her head was hanging down. Her dark hair was all over the place. Long, wet, and tangled. It covered her face completely. I couldn’t see who she was. Her white t-shirt was ripped at the collar and it had blood on it. Dark red stains. Her pants were black. No shoes. She wasn’t fighting them. She wasn’t making noise. She looked like she was either unconscious or she had already given up. My soldiers got to the middle of my rug. The expensive one from Turkey. The one that cost more than most cars. They let go of her arms and she dropped. She hit her knees hard. The sound was loud in the quiet room. She pitched forward a little, and put her hands out to stop herself from falling on her face. She stayed like that. On her knees, head down, hair hiding her. Breathing. I could see her back moving up and down. My soldiers didn’t say anything. They didn’t need to. They just turned around and walked out. One of them pulled the door shut behind him. The soft click of the door echoed through the silent room. Now it was just me and her. And the clock on the wall. Tick. Tick. Tick. I didn’t stand up. I didn’t say anything. I stayed in my chair and I watched her. I wanted her to feel it. The floor. The quiet. The fact that she was in my house, in my room, and I was the one who decided what happened next. I let her kneel there for a long time. Long enough that her arms started to shake from holding herself up. Long enough that the blood from her t-shirt started to drip onto my rug. Then I finally spoke. My voice was low. Calm. The kind of calm that comes before a storm. “Look at me.” She didn’t move at first. Her whole body went still, like she was afraid to breathe. I waited one more second. Then I said it again. Slower. “I said. Look. At me.” She shook. Just once. A full body shake she couldn’t control. Then, slowly, she lifted her head. She raised one hand, and her fingers were bloody. She pushed her hair back from her face. It stuck to her cheek because of the blood. And then I saw her. All the air left my lungs at once. My heart stopped beating for a second. My hands, which were resting on the desk, went ice cold. No. No, that wasn’t possible. It was her face. Her eyes. Dark, big, the same ones that haunted me for five years. She had a small scar through her left eyebrow. She got that when she was sixteen, falling on a table filled with wine glasses. I was there. I was the one who cleaned the blood. She had a cut on her lip now. Her left eye was starting to swell and turn purple. She looked tired. She looked scared. She looked twenty-five again, and forty at the same time. But it was her. It was the woman I buried five years ago. It was the only woman I made love to, while I fucked the rest. The woman I told my name to. She was kneeling on my floor, breathing, bleeding, alive. She’s also a lying piece of shit and a betrayer!•ODESSA POV•I wake up because my eyes sting. Not from sunlight. From crying in the dark until my throat felt raw and my pillow felt like a swamp. I didn’t make noise. I never do. But the silence in this room is worse than screaming. Too much marble. Too much air that doesn’t belong to me. I’m exhausted. Not sleepy-tired. Soul-tired. The kind where your bones feel like stone and your brain keeps replaying the same three seconds, his hands. her red dress. his eyes on me while he didn’t stop her. I slept in his room last night. On purpose. So he wouldn’t have to drag her in here to finish fucking her. What makes me think he didn’t finish her in his office instead? I smiled at that thought. Sad, ugly, the kind that doesn’t reach your eyes.I sit up. The sheets are cold. Everything is cold here, including him. His room looks like a hotel suite no one checks into. Clean lines, grey and black, windows that show the city but let in no warmth. It’s beautiful and dead. Like him w
CHAPTER 11•ODESSA POV•He leaves it wide open. Just like the night I left him. Twenty-five years ago. Gianna Rossi died in a car crash, what about my dad? So why did the people who raised me call themselves Mom and Dad? I was six. She was cutting apples. I was small for my age, knees scraped, hair in a messy braid she didn’t do. “Momma,” I asked, sweet. Soft. The way I thought daughters were supposed to ask. “Did I look like you when I was born? Did Daddy have my eyes?” The knife hit the wood. Thud. “You ask stupid questions for a stupid girl,” she said. “Eat.” I didn’t eat. I stared at her hands. They weren’t soft. They didn’t look like mine. I wondered if my real mother had hands that held me. If my father had eyes like mine. If they ever got to look at me at all. I learned not to ask. I don’t go to my room. I go after him. My feet are bare on the marble, cold, quiet. The silk on my skin is torn. Not blue. Just... torn. I need names. Dates. Who told them to lie to
•ODESSA POV• I didn’t sleep that night. Not because of the lock clicking behind Alessino last night. Because of his hand on my throat. Because I didn’t pull away. Because for one split second, when his thumb brushed my pulse, I wanted him to press harder. God, I’m sick. A knock drags me out of bed. The maid with breakfast. She sets the tray down without looking at me. Her eyes skip over the window like it’ll bite her. When she’s gone, I go to it. The glass is old, wavy. But it’s the wood frame that catches me. Down low, near the sill, where the paint’s chipped. Carved in, small and frantic, like someone used a pin: Gianna — Romano Gianna. The name his mother keeps crying at dinner. Beautiful eyes. Tell Alessino to be good to her. A ugly thought crawls in before I can stop it. What if Gianna was his? What if she’s not just some dead woman his mother’s loved? What if she was engaged to him? What if she was supposed to be the one in this house, wearing
•ALESSINO POV•Maria's fingers slipped, and her spoon dropped. The sound cuts through the garden like a gunshot. “Ma,” I say, keeping my voice even. “You’re tired. Let’s get you inside.” She blinks at me, confused again. “Who are you? Where’s my son?” The table goes dead quiet. Leo looks at his plate. Alexandro doesn’t move. The two captains suddenly find the white roses very interesting. Only Odessa looks at me. Really looks at me. Like she’s seeing something she wasn’t supposed to see. I hate it. “Leo,” I say. “Take my mother upstairs. Tell the nurse to up her dose tonight.” Leo moves fast. Gentle with her. “Come on, Mama. Let’s go sit by the fire.” Maria goes with him, but she keeps looking back over her shoulder. “The girl,” she mumbles. “She has Giana’s beautiful eyes. Tell Alessino to be good to her.” I went numb. Beautiful eyes. That’s what Ma always said about Gianna. She’s refused to stop talking about her old friend even after her sickness.I watch Leo le
•ODESSA POV•I wish the ground would open up and swallow me. That’s the first thought I have when I wake up. The second thought is eight o’clock. His voice from yesterday, saying it. Dinner is at eight. The red dress is on your bed. Wear it. I haven’t moved from the floor. My back hurts. My head hurts worse. I can’t stop hearing him. If you’re not at my table when the clock strikes eight, I’ll come up here. And you don’t want that. I believe him. I’ve been in this room for less than a day and I already feel crazy. Like my skin doesn’t fit right. Like every sound is his footsteps. Like if I breathe too loud, he’ll hear it. That’s what he does. He gets inside your head and locks the door from the outside. There’s a knock at 6:30. I don’t answer. They come in anyway. Two maids. Young. Quiet. They don’t look at me on the floor. They just walk to the bathroom and start the water. Like this is normal. Like dressing a prisoner is part of their job. “Miss Romano,” one says. “Mr.
•ALESSINO POV•I didn't go back to her room that night. I can’t. If I see her again, I’ll either break her or break myself. There’s no in-between. So I spent the night in my office. Door locked. A bottle of Macallan open on the desk. Not drinking. Just holding it. Watching the amber catch the light from the city. Five hours. I sit there for five hours and don’t move. The sun comes up. I haven’t slept. I make her coffee. Two sugars. No milk. The way she used to take it when we were kids and she’d sneak into my kitchen at three in the morning because she couldn’t sleep. She’d say the sweetness kept the nightmares away. I wondered if it still worked. The kitchen is empty at 5am. Or it should be. The grinder is loud. I don’t care. Let the whole damn house wake up. Let them see. “Boss?” I don’t turn around. I know the voice. Alexandro. He’s been with me since I was sixteen. He was there when I took my first life. He was there when I took my last breath thinking she was go
•ODESSA POV• I wake up to the sound of a key turning, and for a second I think it’s Massimo, but the room is wrong. The ceiling is too high. The sheets smell like fresh wood and oily metal instead of cologne. Then I remember. Alessino. The door opens and two women walk in with a basin of wate
•ALESSINO POV•I don’t go far after I leave the room because my legs won’t carry me any farther than the hallway, and I press my back to the wall outside her door and listen to the silence I just left behind, and all I can hear is my own breathing coming too fast like I’ve been running for five yea
ODESSA POVI kept my head down, trying to steady my breathing. The room was spinning, but I couldn't let him see my fear. Alessino's voice was like a crack of thunder, making my skin prickle. I knew he was watching me, his eyes burning into my skin."Hello, Odessa," he said, his voice low and menac
ALESSIO POV“Ahh fuck! Yes……oh my god, Allesino! Yes daddy.” Sofia moaned, as she pushed her ass further against me, inviting me to thrust in deeper, while grabbing the silk sheets. I pulled my dick out, my jaw locked so tight, that my teeth hurt. Who the fuck gave her the right to call out my nam







