LOGINLeora’s fingers trembled as she poured herself a glass of water. It had been two days since the anonymous phone call, and still, she hadn’t told Allerick.
She didn’t know why.
No....she did. She didn’t want to appear weak. Vulnerable. Needing him.
Because needing anyone had always come at a cost.
She stood by the window in the drawing room, staring out at the cold expanse of the garden. The hedges were perfectly trimmed, the fountains frozen mid-spill. Everything in the Allerick estate was precise, calculated—just like its master.
She could feel his presence before he entered the room.
“I don’t like people hovering by my windows,” Allerick said behind her.
She turned. “And I don’t like people lurking like ghosts.”
He raised a brow. “Are we trading insults now?”
“Would you prefer silence?”
“No,” he said. “That’s more dangerous.”
She took a sip of water and studied him. Today, he wore a tailored charcoal vest over a black shirt, sleeves rolled up just enough to show the lean strength in his forearms. His wheelchair, sleek and custom-built, moved with practiced precision.
She’d seen the way people looked at him, like he was half a man.
But there was nothing “half” about Don Allerick.
“I got a phone call,” she said finally.
That got his attention.
“Where?”
“In the library. A landline.”
“From who?”
“I don’t know. A man. He asked if you knew where I was.”
He wheeled closer, his eyes darkening. “Why didn’t you tell me immediately?”
“Because I wasn’t sure if it meant anything. And I didn’t want to give you another reason to watch me like a hawk.”
“You think I need a reason?”
“Don’t twist this.”
His jaw clenched. “Do you remember exactly what he said?”
Leora repeated the brief exchange.
Allerick listened, then turned toward the hallway.
“Jalen!” he barked.
Seconds later, Jalen appeared. He always seemed to linger nearby like a stormcloud waiting to strike.
“Trace every incoming landline call to the library from the last week,” Allerick ordered. “Scrub the security footage. Pull voice logs. I want to know who she spoke to and how they got access.”
Jalen gave Leora a tight nod before disappearing down the hall.
Allerick turned back to her.
“You don’t just get random phone calls here,” he said. “This was intentional.”
“I figured,” she muttered.
“You’re a target now. Not because of who you were, but because of who you married.”
Leora felt a bitter laugh rise in her throat. “So romantic.”
“This isn’t a love story,” he said. “It’s survival.”
That night, she couldn’t shake the feeling of being watched.Even as Maren brushed out her hair in silence and turned off the lights, the shadows in the corners of her room seemed to shift and breathe.
She curled under the sheets, staring at the ceiling.
This wasn’t supposed to feel like prison.
But it did.
Her door creaked open. She jolted upright, but it was just Maren.
“You have a visitor,” the girl said softly.
“At this hour?”
“He said it was urgent. He’s in the foyer. Boss approved it.”
Leora threw on a robe and followed Maren down the hall, her heartbeat thudding like thunder.
When she saw the man waiting near the stairs, her blood turned to ice.
“Zavier?”
He turned.
Her brother.
Older by five years, taller, sharper in the face, but still her brother. The same one who used to sneak her sweets after curfew. The one who’d warned her not to trust their father.
And the one who vanished the day Allerick’s men retaliated against House Valencia.
Leora stepped back. “You’re alive?”
“Barely,” he muttered. “I’ve been in hiding. And I shouldn’t be here. But I had to see you.”
She stared at him, unsure whether to cry or scream.
“You married him,” Zavier said, voice low. “You gave yourself to our enemy.”
“You don’t understand......”
“I do understand. I understand what he did to our family. What he did to you.”
Her throat tightened. “I did what I had to. Adam was worse. Father was worse.”
“Father is a bastard, but he’s still blood.”
“No,” she said fiercely. “He’s poison. And you know it.”
Zavier stepped closer. “They’ll never accept you, Leora. You’re not one of them. They’ll use you until you’re empty, then discard you.”
“I’m not a fool.”
“No, you’re a sacrifice.”
She flinched.
“I came to warn you,” he said. “They’re planning something. Something big. Our father’s not done with you. He sees you as a traitor. And you know what he does to traitors.”
She swallowed hard.
“Get out while you can.”
A cold voice interrupted them.
“She can’t.”
Zavier turned sharply.
Don Allerick sat at the top of the stairs, flanked by guards. His eyes locked onto Zavier like crosshairs.
“This is my house,” he said. “You don’t barge in and spit your threats here.”
Zavier stepped in front of Leora, shielding her.
“You don’t own her.”
“She came willingly,” Allerick replied coolly. “Unlike your father’s deals.”
Leora stepped between them. “Stop it, both of you.”
Zavier grabbed her shoulders. “You don’t owe him anything.”
“I owe myself peace,” she said.
Allerick’s voice cut through like ice. “Your time’s up. Get out before I change my mind.”
Zavier stared at his sister. “You’re choosing him?”
“I’m choosing me.”
For a moment, Zavier looked like he might lunge—but then he turned and stalked out into the night.
Leora was left shaking.
Back in her room, Leora sat at the edge of her bed, arms wrapped around herself. Allerick entered without knocking.“Your brother is reckless,” he said.
“He’s hurting.”
“We all are.”
She looked up. “You didn’t have to confront him like that.”
“I protect what’s mine.”
“I’m not a piece on your chessboard.”
He rolled closer. “Then stop acting like one.”
Their eyes locked. Something unspoken passed between them—grief, anger, maybe something softer neither dared name.
“You think I enjoy this?” he asked. “This life? These games?”
“I think you’ve learned to thrive in them.”
He studied her. “You’ve got fire, Leora. Use it wisely.”
She looked away. “What happens now?”
“You stay here. You’re safe with me.”
“Safe doesn’t mean happy.”
“No,” he said. “But it’s a start.”
The message carved into steel had not been scrubbed away.Allerick ordered the warehouse sealed, untouched, as if the scars in the metal were an altar. Men stood guard at every door, but no one dared linger inside. The words seemed to bleed still.“Brothers share everything. Even blood.”The soldiers whispered of curses, of vendettas older than the Council itself. But when Allerick wheeled into the ruin, the whispers fell silent.He studied the grooves in the steel with a predator’s patience. His jaw flexed once, twice.Marco lingered behind him. “This wasn’t Council work.”“No,” Allerick agreed. His voice was so low it scraped like gravel. “This was family work.”The silence that followed was worse than gunfire.---Back at the estate, Leora felt the air heavy with unease. The men trained harder, barked sharper, their laughter dead. Even the walls seemed to listen.She moved like a ghost among them, binding wounds, fetching water, forcing smiles. But her thoughts gnawed her raw.Brot
The night refused to end.Smoke still clawed at the horizon, a red wound where Palermo burned, but the Moretti estate felt colder than ash. Every wall seemed to whisper, every shadow seemed to hold a face.Leora awoke from dreams of fire and found the Vessel kneeling by the window, hair tangled, eyes wide open. She hadn’t moved for hours.“What are you doing?” Leora whispered, wrapping a shawl around her shoulders.The Vessel’s head turned slowly. “Listening.”“To what?”The girl pressed her palm to the glass, breath fogging it faintly. “The dead. They’re still screaming. Some of them used to be yours.”Leora’s blood chilled. She hurried forward and grasped the girl’s shoulders, shaking gently. “No more of that. Do you hear me? No more.”The Vessel blinked, and the spell broke. She sagged against Leora, lips trembling. “I didn’t mean it. It just… comes.”Leora stroked her hair, heart aching. What have they made you into?But she couldn’t ask aloud. She couldn’t admit the fear curling
The east wing still smoldered.Men dragged corpses from marble floors, their boots leaving red trails where fire hoses had failed to wash away the blood. The Moretti estate, once a fortress of glass and iron, smelled like a grave.Leora stood in the courtyard, her hands shaking as she scrubbed soot from the Vessel’s face. The girl sat on the stone steps, silent, eyes fixed on the ruined windows. Her hair clung in damp strands, her lips parted as if she might whisper—but no sound came.Leora cupped her cheeks, forcing her gaze down. “You did well,” she said softly. “You saved me.”The girl blinked. Slowly, uncertainly, she asked, “Am I allowed?”Leora’s throat tightened. She kissed her forehead. “Yes. You’re allowed.”But the words felt fragile, paper-thin against the night.---Inside, Allerick’s men worked in grim silence.Marco stood near his Don, shirt torn and arm bandaged, face pale from blood loss. “Thirty dead, Don. Twenty more wounded. Half the staff gone. The house won’t hold
The house groaned like a dying beast.Smoke pressed down on the gilded ceilings, fire licked across priceless tapestries, and the east wing’s grand chandelier dangled by a single chain, swinging wildly above the battlefield.Council soldiers shouted commands through their black masks, storming through the breach. Moretti guards fired back with desperate precision, the marble floors slick with blood.And then—like shadows carved from the night—they arrived.The third force.Silent. Efficient. Moving as one. Their formation was military, but too precise, too rehearsed. Their black uniforms carried no insignia.Their leader strode in front, mask peeled back just long enough to reveal a face Leora knew, a ghost dragged from the grave. But before recognition could sink its claws fully into her, the figure gave a mocking bow.“Don Moretti,” the stranger purred, voice carrying above the carnage. “It seems your war has grown… crowded.”And then—chaos doubled.---The new arrivals tore into bo
The drums came closer.At first, faint like thunder carried across the city. Then sharper, more deliberate—a rhythm that didn’t belong to weather, but to war.The Moretti estate bristled awake. Guards poured through the halls, radios crackling, the metallic slide of weapons echoing in every corner.Leora stood by the ballroom window, heart pounding in time with that dreadful rhythm. The girl was beside her, notebook clutched against her chest, her lips moving silently as though reciting prayers. Or rules.Allerick entered last, pushed forward by Marco. His presence shifted the air, commanding without a word. The sight of him—scarred, unbowed even in his chair—struck Leora with a surge of fierce, aching pride.“They’re here.” His voice was steel. “No more waiting.”---The attack began not with bullets, but with whispers.Lights flickered. Radios died with a hiss of static. A pressure settled over the house, heavy, suffocating, like invisible hands pressing on their throats.The girl s
Night in the Moretti estate was never truly silent.Even when the guards hushed their steps, even when the chandeliers dimmed, the house itself seemed to breathe—a restless giant waiting for dawn.Leora lay awake, listening to that breath. The ceiling above felt oppressive, pressing her down with thoughts that wouldn’t quiet.The girl slept fitfully on the cot beside her, notebook clutched tight to her chest like a holy relic. In the glow of the dying lamp, her face looked younger—soft, almost innocent. But even in sleep, her fingers twitched as though fire lingered just beneath her skin.Leora reached out, brushing a stray lock of hair from her brow. The girl stirred, whispering in her dreams. One word repeated, over and over: rules.Leora’s chest ached. “You’re more than rules,” she whispered. “More than what they made you.”But the girl didn’t wake.---By morning, the house pulsed with restless energy. The guards moved briskly, checking weapons, stacking crates, their voices low b







