Mag-log inThe Romano mansion was quiet now, the echoes of the wedding day long gone. The opulent halls, lined with polished marble and crystal chandeliers, seemed almost oppressive in the stillness of the night. Mia’s heels clicked softly against the floors as she made her way to her suite, every step a declaration of independence.
Her father had made his expectations clear: she was married, and Mark was her husband. But Mia had made her decision too. She would not share a room with him—not tonight, not ever if she could help it. When Mark entered the suite shortly after, his presence was calm, deliberate. His dark eyes scanned the room, taking in every detail, but they lingered on her. “You’re sleeping here,” Mia said sharply, cutting through the silence. Mark’s brow arched ever so slightly. “I thought that was the plan?” His voice was low, even, but there was an edge that made her stomach twist. “This is my room,” she said firmly, planting her hands on her hips. “I’ve made my choice. Separate rooms. End of discussion.” Mark studied her, and for a fleeting moment, Mia thought she saw something—surprise? amusement?—flicker across his face. But just as quickly, it was gone, replaced with his usual stoic expression. “Fine,” he said. His voice betrayed nothing, but his eyes lingered on hers longer than necessary. “Separate rooms it is.” Mia’s heart, against her will, thudded a little faster. She shoved the feeling away. I hate him. I hate him. --- The first night was awkwardly silent. Mia sat on her bed, staring at the walls of her suite, replaying the events of the day over and over in her mind. The wedding, the forced vows, Mark’s inscrutable expression—it all swirled together, leaving a bitter taste in her mouth. Across the hall, she imagined Mark in his room. Calm. Controlled. Unshaken by the chaos she felt inside. That thought made her fists clench. How dare he be so… composed? Dinner the next evening was equally tense. The Romano family had insisted on a formal meal, an introduction of Mia and Mark as husband and wife to the inner circle of the mafia. Mia sat rigid, her posture perfect, her expression polite but distant. Mark, sitting beside her, radiated a quiet authority. He didn’t reach for her hand, didn’t brush against her knee, didn’t do anything to make the world believe they were anything more than strangers forced together. It was maddening. “So… how does it feel?” her cousin Luca whispered, leaning close enough that only Mia could hear. “Being married to Mark DeLuca?” “I…” Mia swallowed. “It’s… fine.” The word sounded like a lie, even to her own ears. Luca smirked knowingly. “Hmm. You sound like you’re hiding something.” Mia glared at him, wishing she could disappear into the marble floor. She didn’t want to admit it—not even to herself—but there was a subtle tension whenever Mark was near, a pull she couldn’t explain. Mark’s dark eyes flicked toward her briefly, then back to his plate, unflinching. She felt her stomach tighten at the sight. No. He is my enemy, she reminded herself firmly. The rest of the dinner passed in rigid silence. Conversations around the table were polite but tinged with curiosity. Everyone could see the unspoken war between Mia and Mark. It was palpable. Afterward, as the guests left and the mansion fell silent, Mia retreated to her suite. The door clicked shut, and she let herself collapse onto the bed, exhaustion hitting her in waves. She had been married. But nothing had changed. She didn’t love him. She didn’t even like him. And yet… the faintest pang of something unfamiliar tickled her chest when she remembered the way his eyes had lingered on her during dinner, the way his hand had rested on the table, steady and unwavering. She hated herself for noticing. --- Mark, on the other side of the hallway, was equally restless. He had spent the entire dinner watching her—her stiff posture, her refusal to meet his gaze, the subtle tremor in her hand as she lifted her glass. He had loved her for years. Watching her struggle to maintain composure while hiding her true feelings was both infuriating and intoxicating. She hated him, yes. And he hated that she hated him. But he also loved her, more than he had ever loved anyone, and that love burned silently, dangerously, in his chest. He paced his room once before sitting on the edge of his bed, thinking of her. Mia. Furious, fiery, untouchable. She was like a storm contained in porcelain, and every fiber of his being wanted to reach out, to touch, to calm her—but he wouldn’t. Not tonight. She had drawn her line, and he would respect it. For now. --- The following morning brought a new kind of tension. The Romano mansion was bustling with servants and security preparing for another week of business, but Mia and Mark moved through the halls like parallel lines—close enough to sense each other, far enough to avoid interaction. Breakfast was silent. Mia ate mechanically, Mark beside her, his presence heavy and imposing. He didn’t speak, didn’t look at her, didn’t invite conversation. And yet, she felt it—every measured movement, every flick of his gaze, even when he thought she wasn’t looking. She hated it. She hated him. But when he rose to leave, brushing past her with the faintest whisper of his sleeve against her arm, she felt a jolt she refused to acknowledge. Mia’s hand itched to swipe it away. Instead, she gritted her teeth and focused on the table, ignoring the slow burn in her chest. I am not his. I will never be his. And yet, even as she repeated the mantra to herself, the tension between them grew heavier with each passing hour. Their separate rooms, once a relief, now felt like walls she couldn’t escape. Every glance, every accidental brush of hands, every controlled movement of his body reminded her: the storm was only beginning. The hate she clung to so fiercely was already entangled with something else—something she couldn’t name. Something dangerous. Something that threatened to unravel her carefully constructed defenses. And she hated that too.It arrived at midday.Not through Mark.Not through Luca.Not through any of the usual channels that screamed danger before a word was even spoken.It came quietly.Too quietly.Mia found it on the small table near the balcony doors.A plain black envelope.No seal.No name.Just her.For a moment, she didn’t touch it.She stared, as if the envelope might move first.Don’t pick up anything you didn’t see delivered, Mark’s voice echoed faintly in her mind.But this hadn’t been delivered.It had been placed.Someone had been inside the space they thought was secure.That alone made her chest tighten.She picked it up.Light.Almost insulting in its simplicity.She turned it over.Nothing.No warning mark.No signature.Just a single handwritten line on the front:For Mia. Not the Don.Her fingers froze.That detail mattered.Too much.She opened it.Inside was a single card.No threat.No insult.No blood.Just words.You are not safe where you are standing.But you are also not owned t
The mansion felt heavier after the message.Not louder.Not more active.Just… heavier.As if the walls themselves sensed something had shifted outside.Mark had been gone since morning.Luca too.Mia stayed inside, just as she was told. But “staying inside” in this house still meant moving through rooms filled with guarded silence and unanswered phones.By midday, she found herself near the west corridor.Close enough to the study.Close enough to hear voices.She hadn’t meant to stop.But she did.Don Romano’s voice came first—low, steady, unmistakable.“You’re reacting too fast.”Mark answered immediately.“I’m reacting appropriately.”A pause.Then the Don again.“That depends on what you think this is.”Mia froze.She shouldn’t have been listening.But her feet didn’t move.Mark’s voice came again—colder this time.“I think it’s an intrusion.”“I think it’s a test,” Don Romano corrected.Silence.Then footsteps—slow, deliberate.The kind of pacing that meant calculation, not agit
It happened before sunrise.The call came without warning, slicing through the mansion’s early silence like a knife.Mark was already awake. Of course he was.Mia wasn’t. Not yet.She only noticed the shift when she stepped into the hallway and saw the movement—fast, controlled, urgent. Men didn’t run in this house unless something was very wrong.She followed the sound down the corridor.Luca stood near the entrance, low voice on the phone. Two guards waited behind him, faces tight, eyes sharp.When he saw her, he ended the call immediately.That alone told her everything she needed to know.“What happened?” she asked.Luca hesitated, just a fraction too long.Then—“One of ours is dead.”The words landed without fluff, without warning.Mia went still.“Where?”“East perimeter,” he said. “Near the outer patrol route.”She frowned slightly.“That’s inside your secured zone.”“Yes.”That single word made the air colder.Mark appeared behind them moments later, jacket already on, no tie
The meeting room was already full when Mark arrived. No introductions. No small talk. Just tension. Men stood around the long table, papers spread out, phones lit with fragmented reports, voices overlapping in controlled urgency. Mia stayed near the back. Close enough to hear everything. Far enough not to be pulled into it. Mark took his place at the head of the table without asking for it. No one questioned it. That was the part that still unsettled her sometimes—how easily people obeyed him when things got serious. Luca stepped forward first. “We’ve confirmed it,” he said. “This isn’t Santoro.” A murmur moved through the room. Mia frowned slightly. Mark didn’t react. “Explain.” Luca tapped the map on the table. Three locations were marked in red. “Dock fire. False shipment alerts. And the south-side meeting trap.” Mark’s eyes moved across them. Slow. Precise. “These aren’t random,” Luca continued. “They’re coordinated. But not aggressive. They’re… testing respo
For three days, nothing happened.No threats.No urgent calls in the middle of the night.No men rushing through the halls with weapons in their hands.No blood.No betrayal waiting at the breakfast table.The mansion settled into something that almost felt normal.Almost.Mia had learned quickly that in this house, peace always came with suspicion.Still, she enjoyed it.She ate breakfast without watching the door.She walked the gardens without two guards trailing too close behind her.She slept through the night.And Mark—Mark watched all of it like a man expecting the floor to collapse.“You do realize,” Mia said on the fourth morning, “most people would be grateful for silence.”Mark didn’t look up from the paper in his hand.“Most people don’t know what silence usually means.”She sat across from him, reaching for coffee.“It means no one is trying to kill us.”“That’s also a sign that someone is planning something.”Mia sighed.“You’re exhausting before noon.”“You’re optimist
Morning arrived slower than usual.The mansion was quiet, but not peaceful. There was movement in the halls, footsteps crossing polished floors, doors opening and closing, low voices giving instructions.Something was changing.Mia noticed it the moment she stepped downstairs.Two suitcases stood near the entrance.A driver waited outside.One of the house staff carried a garment bag past the hall.She stopped halfway down the staircase.“Who’s leaving?”Luca looked up from where he stood near the door.“Isabella.”Mia blinked once.“Today?”He nodded.“Orders were arranged last night.”“By who?”Luca’s mouth twitched slightly.“By herself.”That surprised her more than anything.Mia glanced toward the sitting room, where voices murmured softly. She recognized one immediately.Isabella.Still calm. Still elegant. Still impossible to read.Mia continued down the stairs.She didn’t know what she expected to feel.Relief, maybe.Satisfaction.Instead, what she felt was something quieter.
Mia didn’t go back to the infirmary that night.Not because she didn’t want to—but because she wanted to too much.She stayed in her room, pacing the length of it like a trapped thing, every step echoing with Mark’s voice in her head. Mia. The way he’d said her name—soft, bare, stripped of command
The Romano dining hall was built to intimidate—long marble floors, chandeliers like frozen storms hanging overhead, and a massive table carved from centuries-old oak. Fifty chairs lined each side, each one ready for another powerful ally, another dangerous enemy dressed as a guest.Tonight, the tab
The moment their bedroom hallway door clicked shut behind them, the mask Mark had worn all evening shattered.He didn’t wait.Didn’t give her space.Didn’t hide behind his usual stone-cold restraint.“Mia.”Her name was a low growl—raw, frayed, dangerous.She froze.Mark rarely raised his voice.He
The next day all Mafia's families where invited to a gala, and gala was everything Mia hated.Gold. Crystal. Music so smooth it felt like a lie.The Santori Ballroom glowed beneath cascading chandeliers, polished marble reflecting power and wealth in equal measure. Mafia families filled the space w







