LOGIN
The Romano family gala was supposed to be perfect.
Perfect lighting. Perfect guests. Perfect celebration. And tonight was important. Elena Romano stood near the center of the grand ballroom, greeting investors and business partners beside her fiancé, Matteo Bianchi. The Romano Corporation had just secured a major expansion deal, and tonight’s event was meant to celebrate that victory. Everything was going exactly as planned. Until the doors opened. A strange hush rolled through the ballroom. It started near the entrance, like a wave of whispers spreading through the crowd. Elena frowned slightly. “What’s going on?” she murmured. Matteo glanced toward the doors. Then his brows lifted in surprise. “Well… that’s interesting.” Elena followed his gaze. And her heart dropped. Walking into the ballroom like he had every right to be there was the last person she expected to see tonight. Damon Vale. Her stomach tightened immediately. Tall. Broad-shouldered. Dressed in a perfectly cut black suit that made him look like he belonged on the cover of a magazine rather than in a corporate gala. Five years ago he had been attractive. Now? Now he was dangerous. His hair was darker than she remembered, slightly longer, and the calm confidence in the way he walked made people instinctively step aside for him. Conversations slowed. Executives turned. And within seconds, several women near the entrance were already staring. Elena muttered under her breath. “You have got to be kidding me.” Matteo looked amused. “That’s Damon Vale, right?” “Yes.” “The Vale family Damon?” She exhaled slowly. “Yes.” The Vale family. Their biggest rivals. For over thirty years the Romano and Vale companies had competed for contracts, investors, and influence in the business world. The rivalry was legendary. And Damon Vale was the heir to it all. Which meant one thing. Trouble. As if sensing her gaze, Damon looked up. Their eyes met across the room. Recognition flickered instantly. Then something else. Amusement. Elena straightened her posture. “Oh no,” she murmured. Too late. Damon had already started walking toward her. The room seemed to part for him. Investors tried to greet him on the way. A woman lightly touched his arm while speaking to him. Someone laughed nervously at something he said. Damon responded politely but briefly, his voice calm and low. He didn’t linger. He didn’t chase attention. And somehow that made people want it more. Within seconds he was standing in front of Elena. Up close, he was worse. Much worse. His dark eyes studied her calmly, like he was inspecting a very interesting problem. “Well,” Damon said quietly. “Elena Romano.” His voice hadn’t changed. Still smooth. Still annoyingly confident. Elena crossed her arms. “Damon Vale.” Silence stretched between them. Then Damon smirked slightly. “I see the Romano family is still throwing expensive parties.” She raised an eyebrow. “And I see the Vale family is still showing up where they aren't welcome.” Matteo coughed softly, trying not to laugh. Damon finally looked at him. “And you are?” Matteo offered his hand. “Matteo Bianchi.” Damon shook it once. Firm. Controlled. “Elena’s fiancé,” Matteo added. For a brief second, Damon’s gaze returned to Elena. Something unreadable flashed across his expression. Then it was gone. “Congratulations,” Damon said calmly. Elena didn’t miss the faint sarcasm in his voice. “Thank you,” she replied sweetly. “I’m glad someone from the Vale family can still say something polite.” Damon tilted his head. “You always did have a sharp mouth.” “And you always had an ego problem.” He chuckled quietly. Some nearby guests had begun pretending not to listen. But they absolutely were. The tension between the two heirs of rival companies was far too entertaining. Damon glanced around the ballroom. “Nice event.” “Don't get comfortable,” Elena replied. “You're still the enemy.” “That hasn't changed.” One of the investors approached Damon nervously. “Mr. Vale, I didn't know you'd be attending tonight.” Damon nodded slightly. “I wasn't planning to.” The man looked eager. “Well, if you have time later, we would love to discuss potential collaboration.” Damon gave a noncommittal nod. “We’ll see.” That was enough. The investor walked away looking thrilled. Elena stared. “You didn't even say yes.” “I didn't say no either.” She rolled her eyes. Typical Damon. Several women passed behind them slowly, whispering to each other. “He’s gorgeous.” “Is that Damon Vale?” “I heard he's brutal in negotiations.” Elena heard every word. And it annoyed her more than it should. Damon noticed. “You look irritated.” “I am irritated.” “Why?” “Because you walked into my family's party like you belong here.” He leaned slightly closer. “Our families compete in business, Elena.” His voice lowered. “That doesn't mean I can't attend a party.” She stepped closer too. “You enjoy provoking me.” “I enjoy winning.” Her eyes narrowed. “You haven't won anything yet.” Damon smiled faintly. “We'll see.” Matteo cleared his throat. “I have a feeling you two have history.” Elena and Damon answered at the same time. “Yes.” “No.” They both paused. Then Damon chuckled quietly. Matteo laughed. “This is going to be interesting.” Across the room, more executives were already heading toward Damon. Investors. Business partners. People who clearly wanted his attention. Within moments, a small crowd had begun forming around him. Elena folded her arms. “Look at them.” Matteo watched the scene too. “People respect power.” “Elena scoffed.” “They're acting like celebrities.” Damon glanced back at her once more before the crowd swallowed him. That small irritating smirk still on his face. Matteo leaned closer to Elena. “So… lifelong enemies?” She nodded. “Something like that.” Matteo smiled slightly. “Well.” He looked across the ballroom at Damon surrounded by admirers. “This party just became a lot more interesting.” Elena didn’t reply. Her eyes were still on Damon Vale.Elena arrived at the office earlier than usual.Again.It wasn’t intentional.Or maybe it was.The truth was, she didn’t want to be at home.Not when her thoughts were this loud.Not when everything kept circling back to the same thing.Damon.And the decision she hadn’t fully accepted—but had already started preparing for.The building was quiet.Too quiet.The kind of silence that made every sound sharper—the soft echo of her heels, the faint hum of electricity, the distant murmur of early staff starting their day.She dropped her bag on the desk and stood still for a moment.Breathing.Thinking.Trying to organize everything in her head.Contract marriage.The words still didn’t feel real.They felt… distant.Like something that belonged to someone else’s life.Not hers.Not Elena Russo—the woman who planned everything, controlled everything, avoided unnecessary risks.And yet—Here she was.Considering one of the biggest risks of her life.She poured herself coffee.Didn’t sit.Di
Elena didn’t go straight home after work.She couldn’t.The thought of sitting alone with her thoughts—of replaying every word Damon had said—felt exhausting.So instead, she texted Sofia.Are you free?The reply came almost immediately.Always. Come over.Sofia’s apartment was everything Elena’s wasn’t.Warm.Lived-in.Messy in a way that somehow still felt comfortable.Shoes by the door. A half-empty glass of wine on the table. Music playing softly in the background.“Finally,” Sofia said, opening the door wider. “You look like you’ve been fighting with the entire world.”Elena walked in, dropping her bag on the couch.“Feels like it.”Sofia raised a brow. “Work?”Elena hesitated.“…Something like that.”A few minutes later, they were both seated—wine in hand.Elena didn’t speak immediately.Sofia didn’t rush her.She never did.But the silence didn’t last long.“Okay,” Sofia said, leaning forward slightly. “What happened?”Elena stared at her glass.Then exhaled.“The board wants m
Elena didn’t sleep well.She turned in bed more times than she could count, the sheets tangled around her legs, her thoughts refusing to settle.Every time she closed her eyes—The same thing came back.The meeting.The board.And Damon standing there like it was just another decision.Like it didn’t change everything.Morning came too quickly.She woke up already tired.Not physically.Mentally.Her head felt heavy with thoughts she didn’t want to face.Still—She got up.Because that’s what she did.She handled things.The shower helped a little.The coffee helped more.By the time she stood in front of her mirror, dressed and ready, her expression was back to normal.Calm.Controlled.Untouched.Exactly how everyone expected her to be.The office was quieter when she arrived.Early.Good.She needed that.No questions.No pressure.Just work.She dropped her bag and sat down, opening her laptop immediately.Emails.Reports.Numbers.Things that made sense.Things that didn’t demand
The next morning felt… off.Elena noticed it the moment she opened her eyes.There was no clear reason.No missed calls. No urgent emails. No obvious problem.And yet—Something sat quietly in her chest.Unsettling.Like a warning she couldn’t explain.She pushed it aside.Routine first.Control always.By the time she got to the office, the building was already buzzing. Assistants moved quickly, conversations were low and urgent, and there was a strange tension in the air that hadn’t been there before.Elena slowed slightly.Noticed it.Processed it.Then continued walking.As she stepped onto the executive floor, her assistant approached immediately.“Good morning, ma’am,” she said quickly. “There’s an urgent board meeting scheduled in thirty minutes.”Elena frowned.“Scheduled by who?”A pause.“…Mr. DeLuca.”Of course.Elena nodded once.“I’ll be there.”The conference room was already half full when she walked in.Board members.Senior executives.Legal representatives.This wasn
The investor dinner was louder than Elena expected.Not in noise—but in presence.Powerful people filled the room. Conversations overlapped, deals were hinted at behind polite smiles, and every glance carried intention.Elena stepped inside, her heels clicking softly against the polished floor. Her black dress hugged her frame perfectly—simple, elegant, controlled.Just like her.She didn’t come here to impress.She came here to win.“Ms. Russo,” a familiar investor greeted as she approached.“Good evening,” she replied with a small, professional smile.They spoke briefly about projections, market expansion, expected returns.Normal.Safe.Controlled.Until she felt it.That same awareness again.Her body reacting before her mind caught up.She didn’t turn immediately.She didn’t need to.Damon was there.When she finally looked, he was across the room, standing near the bar.And just like always—People surrounded him.Two investors were speaking to him, but it was obvious who contro
The morning started slowly, with sunlight spilling across her kitchen counter as Elena poured herself a cup of black coffee. The aroma filled the quiet apartment, but it did nothing to settle the restless tension in her chest.She didn’t like this feeling.She liked control.Routine.Clarity.And lately, Damon DeLuca had been disrupting all three.By the time she arrived at the office, the building was already alive with movement. Staff hurried through the halls, phones rang, keyboards clicked—everything felt normal.Except her.As she stepped out of the elevator, she saw him immediately.Leaning casually near the glass wall of the executive floor, arms crossed, watching the space like he owned it.Damon.He didn’t move when she approached.Didn’t greet her.But his eyes shifted toward her just slightly.That was enough.Elena kept walking like she hadn’t noticed, her heels steady against the polished floor.“Ms. Russo,” one of the staff greeted.She nodded. “Good morning.”Behind her







