LOGINThe morning sun poured through the tall windows of the Romano estate, glinting off polished marble floors, gilded walls, and crystal chandeliers. The mansion had been transformed for the wedding—flowers of deep red and white lined the aisle, candles flickered on golden stands, and velvet chairs awaited guests who would watch the union of two people who were supposed to be perfect for one another.
But perfection was a lie. Mia Romano stood in the bridal suite, staring at herself in the mirror. Her gown was a masterpiece of satin and lace, hugging her frame, cascading in waves of ivory silk. But she didn’t feel beautiful. She felt trapped. Her fingers clenched at the fabric around her waist. I’m supposed to smile, nod, and pledge myself to a man I don’t love. To a man I hate. Her reflection didn’t comfort her. It only reminded her that she was, in the eyes of her father, a commodity—a piece on the Romano chessboard, moving according to someone else’s strategy. A soft knock at the door pulled her from her thoughts. “Mia? It’s time,” said her maid, a sympathetic glance in her eyes. Mia inhaled sharply and followed the woman down the grand staircase. Each step felt heavier than the last, as if the floor itself were pressing down on her chest. The guests were already seated in the grand hall—mafia elites, politicians, and distant family members, all waiting to witness what they assumed would be a flawless, elegant ceremony. And all of them assumed she was happy. Her father, Don Romano, waited at the altar. His expression was the picture of satisfaction, a subtle nod indicating everything was proceeding exactly as planned. Beside him, Mark DeLuca stood like a statue: tall, broad-shouldered, dark suit immaculate, face unreadable. His eyes, normally so piercing, were unreadable today. Not cold. Not warm. Simply… contained. Mia’s stomach churned. She took her place at the end of the aisle and forced herself to walk. Each step was a battle between pride and dread. The murmurs of the guests faded as she reached the altar. Her father’s gaze was proud, commanding—but to Mia, it was a cage. She met Mark’s eyes for a brief instant. His gaze didn’t flicker. No smile. No warmth. Just… presence. The kind of presence that made you want to look away, but somehow, you couldn’t. “Do you, Mia Romano, take this man to be your lawfully wedded husband?” Don Romano’s voice echoed through the hall. Mia’s lips pressed into a thin line. Her mind screamed. No. Never. Not him. Not this. But the words she had to say were simple. “I… do not—” A sharp glance from her father froze her tongue. She inhaled and corrected herself, the syllables tasting like ash in her mouth. “I… do.” Mark’s jaw tightened imperceptibly. He didn’t smile. He simply inclined his head once, a gesture of acknowledgment, not affection. “Do you, Mark DeLuca, take this woman to be your lawfully wedded wife?” “I do,” he said evenly, his voice deep and calm. Not a trace of hesitation, not a hint of joy. Just… certainty. The priest—or Don Romano’s appointed officiant—paused, glancing at Mia expectantly. “And now, you may kiss the bride.” Mia froze. The words hung in the air like a guillotine. She looked at Mark, his strong jaw, the dark intensity of his eyes, the way he stood so perfectly composed. The entire world seemed to shrink to just the two of them. But she couldn’t. She wouldn’t. She shook her head subtly, her lips pressed together. Her fingers dug into the lace of her gown. Mark’s eyes flickered. A faint line of surprise—or was it disappointment?—crossed his features, but he didn’t move forward. He waited. Patiently. Respectfully. Her father’s glare sliced through the tension. “Mia,” he warned under his breath. Do it. Mia swallowed, but she remained steadfast. Her hatred, her pride, and the sting of betrayal fueled her. She would not give him that moment of victory. She would not. The officiant coughed nervously. “Perhaps… a simple bow or handshake—” Mia’s gaze darted to the guests. Eyes fixed on her. Expectations. Whispers. Judgment. Her chest tightened. She wanted to scream. To run. To tear down the flowers, knock over the candles, and shatter every gilded thing in this hall. But she didn’t. She simply stood, chin high, refusing to bend. Mark finally stepped forward, closing the distance between them. His movements were deliberate, measured, and, for the first time, Mia noticed the faintest flicker in his eyes—a spark she couldn’t quite define. He extended his hand. Not for a kiss. Not for warmth. Just… acknowledgment. Mia stared at it for a heartbeat, then turned her hand away, letting it hang at her side. A sharp gasp rose from somewhere in the audience. Her father’s hand clenched into a fist. Mark’s gaze remained fixed on her, unwavering. There was no anger. No reproach. Only… something else. Something deeper, buried under layers of control and stoicism. The ceremony ended in a blur. Applause echoed around the hall, but to Mia, it was hollow. She walked down the aisle with her head high, refusing to look at Mark, refusing to acknowledge the murmurs of the guests, refusing to let herself feel anything other than rage. Back in the mansion, the reception buzzed with forced smiles and polite conversation. Mia sat stiffly at her place, untouched champagne glass in hand, eyes scanning the room. Her father, proud and satisfied, watched her like a hawk. And Mark? He remained beside her, stoic, perfectly composed. He didn’t speak to her unless necessary, but there was a subtle air of… watchfulness. Every now and then, she caught him observing her—calm, unflinching, measuring her reactions. Mia’s teeth ground together. I hate him, she told herself, again and again. I hate him. I hate him. But in the deepest, most infuriating part of her mind, something twisted. Something she refused to name. The day ended with the obligatory toasts, the obligatory dances, and the obligatory smiles. And when the guests finally departed, leaving the mansion in eerie silence, Mia escaped to her separate room, closing the door with a resounding click. Mark, of course, had a room directly opposite hers. Her father’s words echoed in her mind: You will respect this arrangement—or you will live with consequences you cannot even imagine. Mia collapsed onto the bed, the satin sheets cool against her skin. Her chest heaved. Anger, disbelief, and humiliation swirled within her. She hated this man. She hated the life her father had carved for her. She hated the chains she now wore. And yet… she couldn’t stop thinking about the faint flicker of something in Mark’s eyes that day. The calm intensity. The subtle watchfulness. The way he had stayed perfectly composed while the entire world watched her humiliation. She pushed the thought away forcefully. I hate him. Yet, as the night stretched on and the mansion fell silent, she realized that hatred—sharp, bitter, and consuming as it was—was only the beginning of something far more dangerous.Smoke still clung to the corridors when the second wave hit.Mia hadn’t realized she’d let go of Mark until the crush of bodies pulled them apart. Guards surged past her, shouting orders, dragging the wounded, sealing doors. Someone slammed into her shoulder, hard enough to spin her sideways.“Mia—!” Mark’s voice cut through the noise.Then a door crashed shut between them.The sound echoed like a verdict.“Mia!” he shouted again, closer now, angrier.She pounded once on the door, panic rising, but another explosion rocked the wing and the ceiling groaned ominously. Dust rained down. The corridor lights flickered, then died, plunging the hallway into half-darkness lit only by emergency strips along the floor.“Mia, stay where you are!” Mark’s voice came through the door, strained.Footsteps thundered away on his side.She was alone.Her breath came too fast. She forced herself to move, backing slowly toward the wall, senses screaming. The mansion no longer felt like stone and marble—i
The second gunshot shattered her thought just then. She heard the sound already echoing through her bones a sharp crack, then another, followed by the scream of an alarm tearing through the mansion. Red lights flickered to life along the walls, bathing the corridor outside her room in a violent glow. For one disoriented second, she thought it was another nightmare. Then the shouting started. “Breach! East wing—move!” Boots thundered past her door. Somewhere below, glass exploded. Mia’s heart slammed against her ribs as she bolted upright, dragging the sheet around herself. She barely had time to swing her feet to the floor before her door burst open. Mark. He was already dressed, gun in hand, jaw tight, eyes razor-sharp. Blood smeared his sleeve not his, she realized with a jolt, too bright, too fresh. “Get up,” he said, voice clipped. “Now.” “What’s happening?” Her voice shook despite her effort. “They’re here.” He didn’t have time for explaining. Then another explosion r
By morning Mia felt Mark distancing himself — like he intentionally avoided the breakfast table until she had already eaten, in how he answered her questions with efficiency instead of warmth, in the careful neutrality that wrapped itself around him like armor.She hated it more than anger.Anger meant honesty. This.... this was restraint sharpened into distance.By afternoon, she couldn’t take it anymore.She found him in the west corridor, speaking quietly with Luca. Mark noticed her instantly, something flickering across his face before it vanished. He dismissed Luca with a nod.“What is it?” he asked.That tone. Calm. Controlled. Closed.Mia folded her arms. “Why are you pretending nothing changed last night?”His jaw tightened. “Because nothing did.”“That’s a lie.”He took a slow breath. “Careful.”“Careful of what?” she shot back. “Hurting your pride? Or admitting you actually feel something?”That did it.His composure cracked not loudly, not violently but enough that she saw
Because Mia had always believed clarity came with distance.That if she stepped back far enough, emotions would untangle themselves, settle into something manageable. But as she moved through the mansion that evening, everything felt closer instead—sharper, heavier, impossible to ignore.Mark was everywhere.Not physically. He wasn’t hovering, wasn’t following her from room to room. If anything, he was careful not to. But she noticed him in the details now. In the way guards deferred to him with quiet respect. In how conversations stilled when he entered a space. In how he listened more than he spoke, and when he did speak, people obeyed.Loyalty clung to him like a second skin.She saw him in the war room later, leaning over a table scattered with maps and reports. Luca stood across from him, speaking in low tones. Mark nodded occasionally, eyes focused, expression unreadable. He looked… burdened. Not powerful for the sake of it, but responsible.When one of the younger men grew agit
The mansion felt different when they returned.Not quieter—never quiet—but sharper. Like every corridor remembered secrets. Like the walls had ears again.Mia stepped inside beside Mark, shoulders brushing for a fraction of a second before he deliberately shifted away. The distance was subtle, practiced. Public.It hurt more than it should have.Don Romano was already waiting, issuing orders, questioning guards, moving pieces on an invisible chessboard. Isabella stood near the staircase, perfectly composed in a pale dress that looked soft enough to lie about who she really was.Her eyes met Mia’s.And lingered.Mia looked away first.The rest of the day passed in fragments—voices, footsteps, closed doors. Mark vanished into meetings. Guards doubled. The mansion locked itself back into routine, into control.By evening, Mia was restless.She was crossing the east wing when a voice stopped her.“Mia.”She turned.Isabella stood a few steps behind her, hands folded loosely in front of he
The silence after his confession didn’t fade.It thickened.Mia stood near the window, arms crossed tightly over her chest, as if holding herself together took effort now. Mark remained where he was, a few steps away, his presence filling the room without him moving an inch closer.Neither of them spoke.The rain had stopped. The night pressed in.“You shouldn’t have said that,” Mia finally whispered.Mark didn’t pretend to misunderstand. “I know.”Her jaw tightened. “Then why did you?”“Because I was tired of lying,” he replied quietly. “And because pretending I don’t feel anything when you look at me like that is becoming impossible.”She turned, eyes flashing. “Like what?”He hesitated—just long enough for honesty to win. “Like you’re standing on the edge of something you don’t want to admit you’re already falling into.”Her breath caught. “You don’t get to decide what I feel.”“I’m not deciding,” he said. “I’m noticing.”She laughed sharply, more defensive than amused. “You notice







