Valeria
“You’re making a scene again, Valeria,” my father hissed, not looking away from the television. “You’re always thinking the whole world is conspiring against you.”
I stood in shock in the living room with my fists clenched at my sides. “I’m not being dramatic. I have proof. Lorenzo stole from the company. He has siphoned tens of thousands of dollars out of the company's account.”
“So?” he said flatly. “He’s your brother. He probably needed it.”
I glanced over to my mother, who was sitting on the couch with one leg crossed over the other, idly stirring the contents of wine in a glass.
“Mother,” I said without pleading. “Please, say something. You can't possibly agree with this.”
But mother gave me a long, slow sigh. “Valeria, you’re making it sound like it’s the end of the world. Perhaps if you hadn’t made everything about that small wine business, you wouldn’t be this up tight right now.”
I blinked. “Little wine business? I started that company from nothing. I worked for it. I supported this family with the earnings.”
“ You chosed to,” Lorenzo leaned against the frame of the door behind me, sipping his drink. “No one told you to act like a martyr.”
“You drained the company,” I snapped, turning to look at him. “Half a million gone. I have the bank reports, Lorenzo.”
“And I said I was gonna pay it back,” he said with a shrug. “You’re acting like though I killed someone.”
“You may as well have,” I murmured. “You stabbed me.”
At last Father stood, looking irritated. “You’re embarrassing yourself now. You’d think this is the first business to go down? People declare bankruptcy all the time.”
“But I’m not bankrupt yet!” I shouted. “You’ve all robbed me and I’m the one that has to pay for it! How is that fair?”
Mom took another sip of wine, her gaze still locked on her glass. “You’re just too emotional. This isn't healthy. Maybe take a few days off.”
I stared at her. At all of them. The people I had loved, pleased and made sacrifices for, all my life. And yet there they were, watching me unravel as though it meant nothing.
I didnt say another word, instead, I picked up my bag, and I left. No one followed behind me, no one tried to stop me.
The cold was bitingly sharp outside, but it didn’t sting as much as all that silence my family had left behind. I had to crumple my paper notes to keep my hands from shaking as I slipped into the car and my breath misted the windshield.
I didn’t remember the drive. But I recalled the silence, and then the heavy thud of my apartment door closing behind me.
Inside, the warmth meant nothing to me as my bones were already cold.
I went directly to the liquor cabinet to pour myself a glass of wine — dark red, the kind I used to raise in celebration of business deals and awards. Tonight, it tasted like ash in my mouth.
I sat on the edge of the couch holding the glass like it was the only thing could keep me whole. My mind raced with faces, numbers, memories and my mistakes.
“I should have listened,” I murmured. “I never should have done it to begin with. I should’ve separated everything.” But I hadn’t. I’d believed they were family. I trusted that they wouldn’t destroy me, but yet again look at where I was now. I filled another glass, and then another. The room felt fuzzy, but the pain remained sharp.
My phone vibrated with activity — missed calls, emails, news alerts. I ignored them all. And that's when I heard it. A loud crash from outside that made me flinch.
I got up slowly, as my heart started to race. My mind flew to the most terrible possibility — was I about to get robbed? Was someone breaking in? I slipped up to the window and looked through the drapery.
Blue and red lights danced on the asphalt. It was the police, but why? Another loud bang rang out. But this time, it was as if my front gate had been knocked down. I recoiled with instinct, panting. I didn’t move neither did I didn’t speak. I listened and waited. The noise was followed by the sound of a knock, crisp and hard.
I froze, staring at the door. My body wouldn’t move. And at that moment I couldn’t decide if I was more frightened of what waited on the other side of the door or of what I’d already lost. The knock came again, and I swallowed.
Then, a voice broke the silence. ‘‘Miss Valeria DeLuca? This is the police.” I felt my heart drop. I walked cautiously, my legs trembling as I moved closer towards the door. I hesitated for a second before I unlocked the door.
Two men, both uniformed, stood in the doorway. Their expressions were unreadable. The taller one spoke first. “Are you Miss Valeria DeLuca?”
“Yes,” I managed.
“I’m Officer Chen. This is Officer Ramirez. You’re being served a notice of appearance from the Federal Court.” And with that, he passed me a closed document.
“This states the seizure of all U.S. based assets of the below named individual. Your properties have been repossessed under legal writ of nonpayment due to the bad debt in the person of Sergio DeLuca.”
I looked at the folder reading the words, barely comprehending what the man was saying.
“No signature is needed at this stage. This is a formal notification. You are expected to appear in court, not later than the next seven days of business.”
I trembled as I grasped the paper. “I—I don’t understand.”
Officer Chen nodded once. "You'll find the court date and more information inside.”
My eyes skimmed over the official lines:
The under-listed assets under Ms. Valeria DeLuca are summoned on collateral forfeiture due to monies owed by Mr. Sergio DeLuca.
Assets specifically, but exclusively include: Vino Luna Winery, DeLuca Estate, Brand Holdings Bank Account(s), any other owned property under Ms. Valeria DeLuca’s name.
I sank to the floor.
Everything was gone.
Not just my money but my home, my company, my brand. All of it was gone. My father had used everything I owned as a stake in his gambling. And he hadn’t even told me.
My vision blurred.
Why had I not seen it coming?
I fought for that business. I had put my all into that business. Late nights. Empty bank accounts. Rejections. Sleepless winters. And I had survived them all. But not for this. Not to be served this betrayal from people I basically fed, clothed, and protected.
“How can it be…” I uttered.
Valeria’From the second I turned and found him standing there, my breath had caught in my throat. Dante. His hairy arms were crossed across his chest, his pose commanding. And the eyes, those sharp grey eyes peered into me with an icy stare. No emotion, no warmth. Just sharp calculation. I jerked myself up straight, and struggled to compose my body. But inside? My heart slammed against my ribs. Our eyes locked. Neither of us moved. He didn’t speak. Not at first. “What did you mean by that?” His voice finally broke the silence .I blinked once, my expression vacant. “Mean by what?” His jaw twitched. “Don’t mess with me, Valeria,” he said, taking a slow step forward. “That little thing you said back there by the pool — who are you, even, trying to take everything back from?” My stomach twisted. He’d heard. Of course he had. I’d been so deep in my own world that I hadn’t even sensed him come up to me.“I was just thinking to myself,” I answered pleasantly. “You startled me.” Dante’s lip
ValeriaNico stood shifting by the door, scratching his neck. He looked into my eyes for a moment, then looked away. He didn’t want to say it. But he had to. “Dante says for me to tell you,” he mumbled, “you shouldn’t be working right now.”I cocked my head to the side, willing him to continue. “He said … and I’m quoting here,” he said, with a half shrug, “‘Tell her I don’t want a cripple for a subordinate. ” My brows lifted slightly.“Oh,” I said flatly. “How charming.”Nico winced. “He’s… Dante. You know how he is.”“Cold, arrogant, does the thinking with muscle not mind?”“I did not say that,” he replied, and it was to his credit that he did not smile. I did though. A little.“I’ll sleep,” I said, gesturing at the door. “You’ve delivered the royal decree. Consider your mission complete.” He paused, then studied me one final time, looking for a deeper crack in me. Not finding it, he nodded and silently departed. The door clicked shut. And the instant it happened, I allowed the thoug
DanteI felt it, the second I entered the infirmary. That bitter, winding twist of something I wouldn’t name—falling low in my chest. She was lying in the cot, limp and quiet, one of her arms extended for the doctor to swab clean the injury on it. Blood had stained the fabric beneath her, dried black on her skin. She didn’t flinch, not once. Nico stood by the door. He went rigid the moment he saw me and snapped to attention.“She’s stable,” he said. “Just a surface cut. Nothing life threatening.” I nodded slightly, but my eyes were already glued to hers. Valeria. The woman that had been pulled into this world a mere few weeks ago — and who was supposed to be a tool. Now she was another thing altogether.“She initially declined backup,” Nico said. “Told us to go take care of the fight while she delayed Rami’s men. We got a good twenty seconds on them with that jump. Maybe more.” I said nothing. I flicked my eyes to the bandage, the edges of it already soaked through.“She improvised,”
Valeria I sat near, too near to the man next to me, my thigh brushing his beneath the small café table as the city blurred around us. His name was Nico. One of Dante’s men. Young, good looking and reckless in the way that meant he was as useful as he was dangerous. He did a good job of acting as though he was my lover, one arm resting lazily across the back of the chair, the other, adopting a lazy familiarity, draped just the side of the edge of the table—just a tug away from the weapon hidden under his jacket.Our target waited across the street.I could just sit there and look pretty and smile, like a spoiled, pretty girlfriend whose sole role was to sit sipping wine and chuckle at jokes made by my male counterpart. Meanwhile, I directed the earpiece snugly lodged in my ear toward the discussion happening only meters away. Every word was being recorded.“You good?” Nico whispered, grinning toward me, that dead smile going all awkward and everything.“Peachy,” I said, my lips hardly
Valeria A thousand questions filled my head as I left the meeting room. The air outside the chamber felt too cold, too sharp, as though it wanted to snap me out of the thought that swallowed me. But I didn’t know if I wanted to climb out. Not yet. Not when everything seemed to have just… changed.I attempted to control my breathing as I walked down the long, echoing hall. My own footsteps echoed softly on the polished flooring, while my thoughts echoed far more loudly—still with Dante's thunderous challenge across the table."How dare you!" Even now, the recollection returned in pieces. I recalled the fist slamming the table. How all the men in the room had gone still. His voice had cut the tension, and even the guards outside had visibly jumped. He hadn’t said my name. He hadn’t looked at me.But there was something about them that told me the explosion had nothing to do with power or status. It was about me. And that scared me. More than the shouting. More than the auction. He’d de
Valeria I walked out of Dante Moretti’s office with a smirk curling on my lips, a victorious and triumphant smirk. I did not have anything like a plan, when I approached his study. I only wanted to deliver the report, and take note of his response to my presence. But what I didn’t see coming … was him.That tightly coiled, cold king of sin had flinched. Dante Moretti had actually flinched. And it hadn’t been that hard — just silk, wet hair and my steady voice bathed in practiced indifference. I didn’t even try for real and he cracked.Pathetic.Once in my room, I had barely shut the door when I ran towards it, breathing heavily, my fingers shaking as I turned the lock with my back against the wood. He'd opened that door mere moments after I'd snuck away and I'd genuinely thought I was about to be dragged in, thrust into the light. But I hadn't been caught. I had to sit on the bed to catch my breath. And when I did, my chest hammered violently. He was affected. He'd balled up his fis