MasukPOV: Kang Sera
The cemetery was empty at this hour, which was exactly why Sera came.
She knelt in front of the black marble headstone, brushing a few stray leaves off the engraved name. Ten years of marriage had taught her precisely how much space to leave between herself and his memory. Not too close. Never too far.
"You would have hated the flowers I brought today," she said quietly, setting down a small bundle of white chrysanthemums. "Too plain. You always said plain things were for people with nothing to prove."
The wind answered her instead of him. It always did.
She didn't cry anymore. She had cried enough in the first two years, back when she still believed grief was something that ended if she was patient with it. Now she simply came, once a month, and said whatever needed saying, and left before the ache in her chest could turn into anything louder.
He had never loved her. She had known that on their wedding day, watching him shake hands with men twice his age while she stood beside him in white silk, a gift wrapped and delivered to stop a war neither of them had started. She had learned, over ten quiet years, that love was not a requirement for duty. Only patience was.
"I kept every promise," she told the stone, smoothing her thumb over the carved edge of his name out of habit rather than affection. "I never disgraced you. Even now."
She rose, brushed the dirt from her knees, and did not look back as she walked to the car. She never looked back. It was easier that way.
The De Luca estate was already humming with tension by the time Sera stepped through the front doors. She felt it before she understood it, a change in the air like the moment before a storm breaks, servants moving faster than usual, voices dropping the instant she passed.
"Miss Sera." Her grandfather's assistant met her in the hallway, his expression carefully arranged into nothing. "Your grandfather is waiting in the west study. With guests."
"What guests?"
"He asked that I not say."
Sera's stomach tightened, but her face gave nothing away. Ten years of political marriage had taught her that much, if nothing else. She smoothed the front of her coat and walked toward the study with her spine straight and her expression calm, because that was what was expected of her, and she had never once failed to give people what was expected.
The doors opened onto a room full of men she recognized instantly. The heads of every major mafia family in the region, seated around the long mahogany table like a council convened for war. Her grandfather, Kang Min Jae, sat at the head of it, his hands folded, his face unreadable.
Nobody stood when she entered. Nobody offered her a chair.
"Grandfather." Her voice stayed even. "What is this?"
"Sit, Sera."
She didn't sit. "I asked what this is."
One of the men, a heavyset patriarch from the northern families, exchanged a glance with another before speaking. "The alliance is fracturing. Your husband's death left a wound that has not healed. Territories are already shifting hands."
"I am aware," Sera said.
"I read the reports."
"Then you understand what must happen next." Her grandfather's voice was quiet, careful in a way that made the back of her neck prickle. "A new alliance must be formed. Immediately. One strong enough that no family dares test it."
Sera felt the floor tilt slightly beneath her, though she didn't move.
"Whose alliance."
Nobody answered right away. The silence stretched long enough that she understood the answer before anyone said it aloud, the way she had understood it the first time, ten years ago, standing in a different room with different men wearing the same careful faces.
"Arsen Dragunov," her grandfather finally said.
The name meant nothing to Sera and everything at once. She had heard it whispered in rooms like this one before, always with a certain reverence, the kind reserved for men who were feared rather than liked. The Dragon. King of the Eastern Syndicate. A man rumored to have no weaknesses at all.
"You are giving me to him."
"We are securing peace."
"You are giving me to him," she said again, quieter this time, because the anger had nowhere left to go. It never did. "Again."
Nobody in the room denied it. Nobody apologized either. The northern patriarch cleared his throat and began speaking about timelines, about press statements, about the optics of a swift and dignified ceremony, and Sera stood very still and let the words wash over her the way rain washes over stone, without ever soaking in.
She had done this before. She knew the shape of it now. There would be no negotiation, no version of this conversation where her answer mattered. There never had been.
When the meeting ended and the other men filed out, murmuring to each other about logistics as though she were furniture rather than the bride they had just assigned, Sera stayed rooted by the table. Her grandfather remained seated, his eyes fixed on something invisible in front of him.
She studied him for a long moment. He looked older than he had that morning. Tired in a way she had never seen on him before, not even after her first husband's funeral.
"If this marriage is for peace," she said slowly,
"why do you look afraid?"
Her grandfather's hands stilled on the table.
He didn't answer.
"Grandfather."
"Go rest, Sera."
His voice had gone soft, almost gentle, which frightened her more than anything he could have shouted. "It has been a long day."
She wanted to press him. Every instinct told her something in that room had been left unsaid, something heavier than politics, heavier than territory lines and broken alliances. But she had spent ten years learning when a door was closed for good, and this one had just shut in her face as firmly as any she had ever known.
She turned and left the study, but she paused just past the doorway, out of habit more than intention, glancing back through the gap where the door hadn't quite latched.
Her grandfather waited until he believed himself alone. Then he rose, crossed to the far wall, and pressed his palm against a section of paneling that slid back to reveal a small hidden safe.
Sera didn't move. She barely breathed.
Inside the safe was a single old photograph, worn soft at the edges from years of handling. Her grandfather lifted it out with both hands, the way a man holds something he is afraid of dropping and afraid of keeping at the same time.
Even from the doorway, Sera could see it. A teenage boy standing in front of a burning kingdom, flames swallowing the sky behind him.
Her grandfather's shoulders sank. His voice, when it came, was barely more than breath.
"Forgive me, Arsen."
POV: Kang SeraSleep never came, not after the gunfire, not after the lily she had found waiting outside her door that morning, its meaning still unexplained and sitting heavy in her chest. Sera gave up trying somewhere around four in the morning and wandered the halls of the estate instead, her bare feet silent against the cold marble.She hadn't meant to end up near the kitchens. She told herself that later, when she tried to make sense of what she'd seen.Light spilled faintly from beneath the swinging door, warm and unexpected at this hour. Sera pushed it open slowly, half expecting a member of the staff, and stopped in the doorway instead.Arsen stood at the stove, sleeves pushed up to his elbows, stirring a pot of something that smelled like ginger and chicken broth.Not a glass of scotch in sight.Not a single file spread across the counter. Just him, alone, quietly tending a simmering pot at four in the morning like it was the most o
POV: Arsen DragunovArsen didn't think. He moved.One second he was staring at a laser point steady against Sera's chest, and the next he had already pulled her into him, twisting his body between her and the source of that red light a half breath before the first shot shattered the crystal ceiling above the ballroom.Glass rained down in a glittering storm. Screams tore through the gold and silver crowd as guests scrambled for cover, chairs overturning, champagne glasses shattering against marble."Stay down." Arsen's voice came out low and absolute, his arm locked around Sera's back as he pulled her beneath the shelter of an overturned banquet table."Arse...""Down."She obeyed, pressing herself against him, her whole body trembling in a way she was clearly fighting to control. He could feel her heartbeat hammering through the thin fabric of her gown, could feel his own pulse roaring in his ears, sharper and louder than it had been in years.A second shot cracked against the far wa
POV: Kang SeraThe engagement gala was larger than any event Sera had attended in the last ten years, which was saying something, considering how many funerals and alliances she had already survived.Every mafia family with any standing in Asia had sent representatives. Chandeliers threw gold light across a sea of tailored suits and jeweled gowns, and somewhere beneath the music and the champagne, Sera could feel dozens of eyes calculating exactly how long this alliance would hold before it cracked.Arsen stood beside her near the entrance, close enough that etiquette demanded it, far enough that nothing about his posture suggested comfort. He wore black again, the same controlled stillness from the last gala, though tonight there was something sharper beneath it, something Sera couldn't quite name."You look composed," he said, not quite a compliment, not quite anything else."I've had practice."Something flickered behind his eyes, there and gone before she could read it. "So have I
POV: Arsen DragunovArsen stared at the photograph on his screen until the image stopped looking like Dora at all and started looking like a puzzle piece he didn't yet understand.He didn't ask himself why she had been there. That question could wait. What mattered more, what made the muscles along his jaw tighten until they ached, was the angle.He zoomed in, studying the perspective of the shot, the slight downward tilt, the distance."Nikolai." His voice came out low, controlled in the way that made people in his organization move faster than shouting ever could.Nikolai appeared in the doorway within seconds. "Sir.""This photograph." Arsen turned the screen toward him. "Where was it taken from."Nikolai leaned in, studying the image with the practiced eye of a man who had spent a decade reading crime scenes for a living. His expression shifted slowly from professional focus to something closer to alarm."That's the rooftop above Aldrich Street." He straightened. "That's inside ou
POV: Kang Sera"Who are you," Sera asked again, her wrist still tingling where the woman had grabbed it."Dora." The name came out flat, offered without warmth or explanation, as though it cost her something just to say it out loud.Sera studied her carefully. Dora didn't move like a threat. She didn't reach for a weapon, didn't crowd Sera's space the way men in this world so often did when they wanted something from her. She simply stood there, hands loose at her sides, eyes carrying a weight Sera couldn't yet name."You grabbed me in a hallway and told me not to marry him," Sera said. "I think you owe me more than a first name."Dora's mouth curved, but it wasn't a smile. Not really. "If you knew marrying him would destroy your life," she said quietly, "would you still walk down that aisle?"The question landed somewhere low in Sera's chest, somewhere she wasn't prepared for. She thought of the ivory silk pinned against her shoulder that morning, the designers arguing over a color w
POV: Kang SeraThe wedding preparations began before Sera had even finished processing that there would be one.By the second morning, her bedroom had been overtaken by fabric swatches and three designers speaking over each other in rapid Italian, French, and Korean, none of them waiting for her opinion before deciding it for her."Ivory suits her skin tone better than white," one of them said, holding a bolt of silk against Sera's shoulder without asking permission."The Council wants white. White photographs as purity.""She's a widow, not a virgin bride. White will look like a costume."Sera stood between them like a mannequin, arms slightly raised, saying nothing. She had learned a long time ago that her opinion was rarely the deciding factor in rooms like this one. She let the fabric fall against her skin and stared past the mirror at nothing in particular."Miss Sera." One of the bodyguards knocked twice before entering. "Security wants to walk the gala route with you this after







