On the eve of his 26th birthday, Luca Virelli, heir to a multi billion dollar empire is set to announce his engagement to a woman he barely knows. It’s a merger of dynasties, a flawless public image, and a life scripted to perfection. There's only one problem: Luca is gay, and no one knows, least of all his ruthless, image obsessed father. Drowning in guilt, silence, and a future he never chose, Luca does the unthinkable: he gets drunk, kisses a stranger in a crowded club, and spends one unforgettable night in a hotel room with him. No names. No faces. No future. Just escape. But fate has other plans. The next day, as Luca meets his fiancée at their engagement party, that same stranger appears, standing calmly at her side. He’s her brother. Asher Hartwell. And he’s supposed to be straight. As worlds collide, desire smolders in the shadows. But love this dangerous can’t stay secret for long. When lies unravel and the cost of freedom means losing everything, family, power, legacy, Luca and Asher must decide: is the wrong kind of love worth everything it will destroy?
View MoreThe suit fit too well.
Tailored down to the last thread, the Italian silk molded to Luca Virelli's frame like armor, as if his life weren’t already stitched with the expectations of men who mistook control for love.
He stared at himself in the mirror of the private dressing room, watching his own reflection like it belonged to someone else.
A crisp white shirt, sleeves perfectly pressed. A navy blazer, double breasted, sharp enough to draw blood.
His father had sent it over this morning. With a handwritten note tucked into the collar.
“A future Virelli should always dress like he belongs to power.”
Luca didn’t smile. He just folded the note in half, then again, then again, until the paper couldn’t bear any more pressure and split down the middle.
He dropped it into the wastebasket like it burned his hands.
Tomorrow was his twenty sixth birthday.
It should’ve meant something, a celebration, a choice, a breath of air. But it wasn’t any of those things.
It was an execution date dressed as a wedding rehearsal.
His engagement would be announced at the Hartwell estate tomorrow night. A strategic merger masked as a romantic union.
Serena Hartwell, poised, intelligent, and impossibly composed, was the daughter of one of the few men Paolo Virelli respected. Or feared. Or perhaps both. Luca couldn’t remember the difference anymore.
He’d met Serena once. Polite dinner. No chemistry. No warmth. She’d smiled like she was checking off a box. He’d smiled back because that’s what he was taught to do. Then they'd shaken hands like two CEOs closing a deal.
Because that’s what they were.
And none of it mattered.
Because she wasn’t the problem.
He was.
Luca sat on the edge of the sleek leather ottoman and let his head fall into his hands.
The silence in the dressing room was thick, too thick. It pressed down on his ribs like a weight, like the air itself didn’t want him to breathe freely.
If he closed his eyes long enough, he could still hear his father’s voice from this morning.
"Son, this is how empires are kept intact. Love has nothing to do with legacy."
Legacy. Image. Dynasty.
Never once: freedom. Never once: desire.
He hadn't told anyone the truth. Not his father. Not Serena. Not his oldest friends, though most of them were more business associates than confidants. No one knew. Because telling meant risking everything. And Luca had learned early: silence was safer than honesty.
Especially when you were gay and your last name was Virelli.
And maybe, once, he thought he’d fight it.
Once, he’d imagined telling Paolo the truth, a dramatic confrontation, a speech about being true to yourself.
But Paolo had a gift. He could look at you and strip the spine right out of your body with a single sentence.
Luca stood again, ran a hand through his dark hair, and took a long breath. He picked up his phone from the marble counter. Messages from assistants, reminders from the press team, a notification from the event planner for tomorrow.
Everything humming along like a machine built to bury him.
He tapped into his contacts and hesitated.
Then he swiped away.
Tonight, he didn’t want assistants or handlers or yes men.
Tonight, he wanted to disappear.
................
The club throbbed with bass and neon.
It was one of the few downtown spots where people didn’t ask for names, and the lighting made secrets easier to keep.
Luca leaned over the bar and ordered a whiskey, neat.
The bartender glanced at his tailored clothes and raised an eyebrow.
“Rough day?”
Luca tossed back the first glass and set it down like a statement. “Make it two.”
He didn’t come to clubs. Not anymore. But tonight… he didn’t want to be himself. He didn’t want to be anyone. And anonymity had a pulse here, wild, seductive, alive.
By the time the third drink was in his hand, he had unbuttoned his shirt halfway down, the jacket thrown over the stool. His hair was slightly mussed, his restraint dissolving with every beat of the music.
He climbed onto the low platform at the center of the bar, arms raised like a man about to surrender or burn. “Drinks on me!” he shouted into the crowd.
A cheer erupted. Someone threw confetti. Someone else tried to climb up with him.
And then, through the heat and sweat and flashing lights, Luca’s gaze caught on a figure near the back.
A man.
Tall, dark hair, leaned back against the wall like he didn’t belong to the chaos. Black t shirt, toned arms, a drink in his hand that hadn’t moved in ten minutes.
But it was his eyes.
Cool. Direct. Slightly amused. Like he saw straight through the glitter and didn’t flinch.
Luca stepped down, heart pounding for a reason that had nothing to do with alcohol. He didn’t think. He just moved. Through the crowd. Past dancers. Past laughter.
Until he was standing right in front of the man.
“Hi,” Luca said, voice low, words slurring just slightly.
The man didn’t answer. Just looked at him.
Luca leaned in, and kissed him.
Not soft. Not questioning.
Like a man clinging to his only moment of truth.
And the stranger?
He kissed him back.
They didn’t speak again until the hotel room door clicked shut behind them. Clothes were half off before they reached the bed.
Hands roamed. Teeth grazed skin. The stranger was strong, sure, his grip rough in a way that made Luca gasp, not from pain, but from the terrifying freedom of feeling something.
In the dark, between tangled sheets, there were no legacies, no billion dollar names.
No engagement announcements.
Just a man who made him forget and Luca thought foolishly, beautifully, that he would never see him again. That this night would vanish like smoke in the morning.
He had no idea that fate had a crueler plan.
Reid closed his eyes, leaning his head back against the wall, preparing to make the call he’d been thinking about all night, the one that would transfer his next assignment out of the country. Disappear for a while. Somewhere cold. Remote. Quiet. He didn’t care where.He pulled out his phone and opened the contacts menu.But just before he could scroll, a message lit up his screen.Unknown Number.Subject: Luca Virelli.You want him gone? There’s a way. And this time, he won’t come back.Reid’s entire body went still.He stared at the message, his mind blank.It was a prank. Had to be.He almost tossed the phone.But his hand… didn’t move.His throat tightened. A dry laugh pushed through his chest, bitter and hollow.“Jesus,” he whispered to himself. “What the fuck is wrong with me?”But his thumb hovered over the screen.Because somewhere inside him, a voice he didn’t recognize, low, twisted, and desperate, whispered back:If he’s gone, maybe he’ll finally see you.Reid clenched his
The music shifted, smooth, pulsing, seductive, coaxing people out of the shadows and into the soft kaleidoscope of light on the dance floor.The crowd pulsed with laughter and warmth, a sea of freedom and abandon where no one had to apologize for who they were or who they loved.Luca glanced toward the DJ booth, then to Asher, his brows lifted.“You wanna dance?” he asked, not as a dare, but as an invitation.Asher leaned back against the booth seat, eyes narrowed slightly. “Is that a trick question?”Luca shrugged. “Might be the last time we get to dance without photographers hiding behind ice sculptures.”Asher gave a soft snort. “Fair point.”Without waiting for more prompting, Luca stood and reached out his hand, right there, no hesitation, in full view of the room.Asher stared at it for a second.Then smiled.He took it.They stepped onto the floor, shoulder to shoulder with men swaying, laughing, spinning with their partners.The air was thick with sweat and perfume, neon light
The world outside blurred into amber and violet shadows as the car wound down the city’s edge. Buildings loomed like quiet giants under streetlights, and the distant hum of traffic filled the silences between their breaths.Luca leaned his elbow on the door, fingers grazing his lips as he stared out of the window, eyes unfocused, but heart racing.He was free.Not in the way people throw the word around, not in papers, or speeches, or company announcements. No.Really free.And the terrifying, exhilarating weight of it hit him all at once.“I’ve been thinking,” Luca said quietly, breaking the silence as they took a turn near the river.Asher glanced at him. “That’s dangerous.”Luca cracked a small smile. “Maybe.”He turned, his voice a little steadier now. “I don’t want to just… survive this. I want to live it. Fully.”Asher nodded slowly, one hand draped over the steering wheel, the other resting between them, palm up. Luca laced their fingers together without hesitation.“I want us
For a long time, Paolo didn’t speak.Luca remained standing across from him, arms folded tightly, chest still rising and falling from the final words he had thrown like punches. His skin was warm with tension, his throat tight, and yet, strangely, he wasn’t afraid.He had expected fire, fury, perhaps even another betrayal.But Paolo just stood there.A man unmoored.Eventually, he exhaled. Low and bitter.“I didn’t raise you to be weak,” Paolo said, voice rough.Luca didn’t flinch. “And I didn’t become weak. You just never saw what strength looked like in someone who didn’t resemble you.”After a beat, Paolo turned his back to him and walked to the tall cabinet by the bookshelf. He pulled out a folder, thick, dark, with a wax seal already broken.He dropped it onto the desk.Luca recognized it immediately. The security files. The ones Asher had said his team couldn’t fully trace yet.Caldera.“Dominic Caldera,” Paolo said, pouring the name like poison into the air. “He’s the one who h
Paolo turned away, jaw clenched. “You don’t understand what you’ve done.”“What I’ve done?” Luca echoed. “I fell in love with someone who made me feel like I could breathe for the first time in my life. That’s my crime?”“It’s not about him, Luca,” Paolo snapped, spinning to face him. “It’s about what it means.”“No,” Luca said, stepping closer. “It’s about what it means to you. That your son is gay. That I didn’t become the man you imagined in your perfect little heir blueprint. You don’t hate Asher, you hate me for choosing him.”Paolo didn’t answer.But his silence was louder than a confession.Luca’s throat tightened. “You’d rather I was dead than deviate from your vision of a ‘legacy.’”“No,” Paolo barked. “Don’t you dare say that.”“Then what, Papa?” Luca hissed. “What would you call sending armed men after your only son? To humiliate me? To drag me back here like a criminal just because I won’t lie anymore?”Paolo’s hand shook around his glass, the ice clinking.“I wanted to re
The silence in the car was different this time.The kind of silence that sat on the chest like a brick and made breathing feel like a task.Asher kept both hands on the wheel, knuckles flexing against the leather. The roads to the Virelli estate curled through marble gates and private lanes lined with ancient cypress trees.The sky above was a hazy navy, the last of the day slipping into shadows. Golden lights from the estate shimmered in the distance like the gates of Olympus.But there was nothing divine about what waited inside.Luca hadn’t spoken in minutes. He just sat there, suit jacket discarded, sleeves rolled up, his jaw tight. His eyes were fixed ahead, but Asher knew he wasn’t seeing the trees.He was seeing Paolo.“What are you going to say to him?” Asher asked gently, breaking the quiet.“I don’t know,” Luca admitted, his voice lower than usual. “I’ve played the conversation a hundred times in my head. And still... nothing feels enough.”Asher flicked a glance at him. “Th
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