LOGINMy ankle had healed enough by the third day. Still tender when I put weight on it, but functional.
Volkov cleared me to move through the mansion again.
That afternoon, Father summoned him to the study. Business. Something about security protocols for an upcoming meeting.
"Stay in the sitting room," Volkov told me before he left. "Don't move until I return."
I nodded.
He disappeared down the hallway, and I was alone.
I settled onto the sofa in the sitting room, the same one where he'd tended my ankle. The afternoon light filtered through the tall windows, casting long shadows across the marble floor.
The silence was thick. Oppressive.
I picked up a book from the side table. Something in Italian that I'd read three times already. I opened it, trying to focus on the words, but they blurred together.
Three weeks until the wedding.
The thought made my chest tighten.
I heard footsteps.
Not Volkov's measured, controlled stride.
These were different. Casual. Confident.
I looked up.
Dante stood in the doorway.
My entire body went cold.
He smiled. That slow, predatory smile that made my skin crawl.
"All alone, principessa?"
I didn't answer. Couldn't.
He stepped into the room, hands in his pockets, moving with deliberate ease.
"Where's your shadow?" He glanced around. "Ah. With the Don, I assume."
I gripped the book tighter.
Dante crossed the room, not rushing, taking his time. He stopped beside the sofa, too close, looming over me.
"You know, I've been watching you." His voice was soft. Conversational. "The way you walk. The way you never speak. So obedient."
My hands trembled.
"Moretti is going to love you." He crouched down beside the sofa, bringing his face level with mine. "He has specific tastes. Likes his women quiet. Compliant."
I couldn't breathe.
His hand reached out, fingers brushing a strand of hair away from my face.
I flinched.
"Don't be scared, principessa." His smile widened. "I'm just preparing you. Moretti won't be gentle. He enjoys the fear. Feeds on it."
Bile rose in my throat.
"He'll take his time with you. Every night. And you'll have to smile through it, won't you? Because that's what good daughters do."
My vision blurred. The room tilted.
Dante leaned closer, his breath hot against my ear.
"And when you cry, when you beg him to stop, he'll only get rougher. He'll break you, piece by piece, until there's nothing left."
A sob caught in my throat.
His hand slid to my shoulder, gripping it.
"But maybe I could give you a preview. Show you what to expect so you're not so surprised on your wedding night."
Panic exploded through me. I tried to pull away, but his grip tightened.
"Dante."
The voice cut through the room like a blade.
Dante's hand froze.
I looked up.
Volkov stood in the doorway.
He didn't move. Didn't rush forward. Just stood there, utterly still.
But the air in the room changed.
The temperature dropped.
Dante straightened slowly, releasing my shoulder. "Just having a conversation."
Volkov's eyes locked on him. Cold. Empty.
"Step away from her."
It wasn't a command shouted in anger. It was quiet. Controlled. But there was something underneath it that made my blood run cold.
Authority. Absolute. Unquestionable.
Dante hesitated, then took a step back.
"I said she was alone. Thought someone should keep her company."
Volkov moved into the room. Each step deliberate. Measured.
He stopped between Dante and me.
"Your presence violates protocol." His voice was low, steady. "You're unauthorized to be within three feet of her without supervision."
Dante's jaw tightened. "I don't answer to you."
"You do now." Volkov's gaze didn't waver. "The Don assigned me to protect her. That includes protecting her from internal threats."
The words hung in the air.
Internal threats.
Dante's face flushed with rage. "You're calling me a threat?"
"I'm stating fact." Volkov took one step closer to Dante. "Your behavior is disruptive. Your intentions are clear. If you touch her again, I will remove you."
"You can't—"
"I can." Volkov's voice dropped lower, colder. "The Don gave me full authority over her security. That authority supersedes your position. Test me, and you'll find out exactly how far that authority extends."
Dante stared at him, fists clenched.
For a long moment, neither man moved.
Then Dante smiled, but it didn't reach his eyes. "Moretti will hear about this. He'll want to know his bride's bodyguard is overstepping."
"Tell him." Volkov didn't blink. "Tell him I'm doing my job."
Dante's smile vanished.
He turned and walked out, his footsteps echoing down the hallway.
The moment he was gone, Volkov turned to me.
I was shaking. Trembling so hard I couldn't hold the book anymore. It slipped from my hands and fell to the floor.
Volkov's eyes scanned me, assessing.
"Did he touch you anywhere else?"
I shook my head.
"Stand up."
I tried. My legs wouldn't support me.
Volkov reached down and gripped my wrist, pulling me to my feet.
The grip was hard. Too hard.
I gasped.
He held my wrist firmly, his fingers pressing into the delicate bones.
"You don't freeze when someone approaches you." His voice was cold, clinical. "You move. You call for me. You don't sit there and let it happen."
The pressure on my wrist increased.
Tears burned behind my eyes.
"Do you understand?"
I nodded frantically.
He held my gaze for another second, then released me.
I pulled my hand to my chest, rubbing the ache.
"Return to your room," he said. "Don't leave it unless I'm with you."
I didn't wait. I hurried out of the sitting room, my wrist throbbing, Dante's words echoing in my head.
That night, I lay in bed, staring at the ceiling.
I couldn't stop shaking.
Dante's voice played over and over in my mind.
He'll break you, piece by piece.
A sob tore from my throat.
I pressed my face into the pillow, trying to muffle the sound.
But the tears came anyway. Hot. Relentless.
I cried until my chest ached, until I couldn't breathe.
Three weeks.
Three weeks until I was married to a monster.
Three weeks until everything Dante said would come true.
I curled into a ball, clutching the blanket, sobbing into the darkness.
Eventually, exhaustion pulled me under.
I woke suddenly.
The room was dark. Silent.
But something was wrong.
My eyes opened, staring at the ceiling. I didn't move. Didn't know why I'd woken.
Then I felt it.
The air was different. Heavier.
Like the room was holding its breath.
My heart started to pound.
I lay completely still, listening.
And then I heard it.
Breathing.
Slow. Steady. Controlled.
Not mine.
Someone else.
Terror flooded through me, cold and sharp.
Someone was in my room.
I couldn't move. My body was frozen, paralyzed by fear.
The breathing continued. Calm. Patient.
Watching.
My eyes moved, slowly, terrified of what I would see.
I turned my head toward the window.
A figure sat in the chair.
My breath stopped.
Tall. Broad shoulders. Sitting relaxed, one leg crossed over the other.
Masked.
The black mask. Featureless except for the eye holes.
The same one from the library.
He wasn't moving. Just sitting there in the darkness, hands resting on the armrests.
Watching me.
My entire body locked up. I couldn't breathe. Couldn't scream. Couldn't move.
My eyes went wide, frozen on him.
How long had he been sitting there?
How long had he been watching me sleep?
The silence stretched, suffocating.
He tilted his head slightly, studying me.
Then he leaned forward, elbows resting on his knees.
"Hello, princess."
LUNA POVMy fork hit the porcelain plate with a loud clatter.The sharp sound echoed across the long mahogany table, but it didn't even slow him down. The heavy thud of his boots just kept moving against the hardwood floor.He was leaving. After hiding from me for three entire months, he had sat at my table, eaten his food in absolute silence, and was now just walking away again.I sat there for a few seconds, staring at his empty chair. My chest rose and fell. The suffocating weight of the last four months—the weeks of cold isolation before the fire, the agonizing night he left for Italy, the sheer terror in that drawing-room—boiled up into my throat all at once.Something inside me finally snapped.I pushed my chair back. The wood scraped harshly against the floor."Killian."My voice came out sharp, cutting through the quiet dining room.His boots stopped. He froze in the archway, but he didn't turn around. His broad back just faced me, completely unmoving.I took a shaky step towa
LUNA POVThe house was quiet as I walked down the curved staircase.For the first two months after the hospital, I had eaten every meal in my bedroom. But lately, the walls had started to feel too close. I had been pushing myself to go down to the formal dining room for dinner, trying to build a normal routine. I usually ate alone, accompanied only by the soft ticking of the grandfather clock in the hallway.I turned the corner and stepped through the archway.My foot froze an inch above the hardwood floor.Sitting at the far end of the long mahogany table, staring down at a glass of water, was Killian.My heart instantly slammed against my ribs. A sudden spike of panic shot through my veins, urging me to turn around and run back upstairs. It had been exactly three months since I last saw his face.I gripped the doorframe.He didn't look up. He had to know I was standing there—his instincts were too sharp to miss someone walking into the room—but he kept his gaze glued to the table.H
The heavy, sickening crack of a neck snapping echoed over the roar of the underground crowd.Killian didn't step back. He stood over the massive Russian fighter, his chest heaving, sweat and blood dripping from his dark hair. The man at his feet twitched once, and then his body went completely slack against the chain-link floor.It was a death match. The only kind of fight Killian had sought out for the past three months. No referees, no bells, no submissions. Only one man walked out of the cage alive.The crowd screamed, a chaotic mix of money exchanging hands and raw, bloodthirsty adrenaline, but Killian didn't hear any of it. He looked down at his taped knuckles. They were split open, the white fabric soaked in dark crimson. The sharp, biting physical pain burned through his nerves. It was the only thing that managed to temporarily quiet the deafening noise in his head.Killian ducked through the metal doors of the cage and walked down the damp concrete corridor toward the locker r
3 MONTHS LATERLUNA POVThe morning sunlight spilled across the hardwood floor, warm and blindingly bright.I stood by the massive floor-to-ceiling window in my bedroom, resting my forehead against the smooth glass. Outside, the sprawling garden was covered in vibrant yellow and white roses. The stone pathways wrapped around a small fountain, the light catching the water as it flowed.It was a peaceful place. It was nothing like the dark, isolated Bratva fortress we used to live in. When I was discharged from the hospital three months ago, they didn’t take me back to that imposing estate with its high concrete walls. They brought me here. A house with open skies, massive windows, and quiet, sunlit corridors.I lifted my right hand, letting the sunlight hit my skin.The heavy plaster casts had cut off my wrists a few weeks ago. I slowly traced the tip of my finger over the thick, raised scar running across my forearm.My breath hitched. A sudden, sharp phantom pain shot through my nerv
The room was dimly lit. Luna was lying in the center of the hospital bed, hooked up to IV lines and a heart monitor. Her face was pale, heavily bruised, and covered in small bandages. Both of her hands and wrists were heavily wrapped in thick white casts.Killian’s chest tightened. He took a slow, gentle step forward.Luna’s heavy eyelids fluttered open. Her dull green eyes shifted, locking onto his tall, dark frame standing at the foot of her bed.Killian opened his mouth to speak. To tell her she was safe. To beg for her forgiveness.But the moment her eyes met his, her pupils dilated in pure, absolute terror.The heart monitor beside her bed spiked violently, the steady beeping turning into a rapid, frantic screech. Luna pushed herself backward against the pillows, ignoring the broken ribs and the fractured wrists.A raw, blood-curdling scream tore out of her throat.Killian froze. The air completely left his lungs."No!" Luna shrieked, thrashing wildly against the sheets, her terr
Killian stood frozen in the middle of the bright, sterile hallway. The adrenaline that had carried him out of the estate suddenly vanished, leaving behind a crushing, suffocating emptiness.He slowly looked down at his hands.They were coated in dark, drying crimson. Her blood.He stumbled backward, his spine hitting the cold concrete wall. He slowly slid down until he was sitting on the floor.What have I done?The horrific revelations from the drawing-room crashed over him again, heavier and more violent this time. He stared at his blood-stained hands, his chest violently heaving.She was already shattered long before she arrived in Russia. A traumatized child who had watched her mother die. A silent ghost whose voice was stolen by her own father's hands. And instead of offering her safety, Killian had dragged a pure, defenseless soul into a freezing dungeon.Starvation. Isolation in the dark. Treating her worse than a slave.He had tainted a saint.He thought he was a king executin
Just for a second. Just to look back one more time.The fire had burned out completely, leaving nothing but cold ash. The couch where I'd slept. The table where we'd eaten in silence. The window where I'd watched storms and counted days and tried to remember who I was supposed to be.It was just a c
The snow was deeper here, coming up to my shins, soaking through my thin pajama pants immediately. I should have gone back inside. I knew that. But my feet kept moving forward anyway, carrying me toward the center of the clearing where the space opened up even more.I stopped and tilted my head back
Luna's POVThe road had disappeared an hour ago.Now we were on something that wasn't really a road at all. Just a dirt track cutting through dense forest. Branches scraped against the SUV. The headlights carved a tunnel through absolute darkness.I sat in the back seat. Staring at nothing.My body
BOOM.The shockwave hit us. A wall of pressure and sound. The SUV rocked violently.Ahead of us, the east wing of the estate erupted in flames. Fire bloomed into the night sky. Debris rained down. Stone. Glass. Burning wood."DOWN!" Volkov roared.He threw the SUV into reverse. Backed up fast. Spun







