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~ Aria ~ I woke to an empty bed and the sound of the shower running.For a moment, I let myself savor the pleasant ache in my muscles, the memory of Luca's hands on my body, his mouth trailing fire across my skin. Then reality crashed back in, cold and unforgiving.
What had I done?
I sat up, pulling the sheet around myself, and spotted my clothes folded neatly on the chair. My sweater, my jeans… everything I'd torn off in desperation last night. The careful organization felt like a rebuke.
The shower cut off. My stomach tightened.
Luca emerged moments later, fully dressed in a fresh suit, his dark hair damp and slicked back. He looked every inch the consigliere again: composed, controlled, untouchable.
He didn't quite meet my eyes. "The jet is ready. We leave in forty minutes."
That was it? That was all he had to say?
"Luca…"
"Get dressed." His voice was flat, professional. "We're on a schedule."
Something cold settled in my chest. "Are we really going to pretend last night didn't happen?"
He finally looked at me, and his expression was carved from ice. "Last night was a mistake. It was unprofessional, and it can't happen again."
The words hit like a slap. "Unprofessional."
"Yes."
"I see." I stood, clutching the sheet, pride keeping my spine straight even as humiliation burned through me. "So you got what you wanted, and now…"
"That's not what this is." A muscle jumped in his jaw. "I work for your father. You're his daughter. What happened last night violated every rule I…"
"Rules you seemed perfectly happy to break when you had your hands on me." My voice was sharp enough to cut. "When you were inside me."
His eyes flashed, something dark and hungry moving behind the ice before he locked it down. "Get dressed, Aria. We're leaving."
He walked out, closing the door with careful precision.
I stood frozen for a moment, shock and anger warring in my chest. Then I threw a pillow at the door, childish but satisfying.
Bastard. Absolute bastard.
I dressed quickly, refusing to let him see how much his dismissal had cut me. When I emerged from the bedroom, he was waiting by the door, phone in hand, looking like last night had never happened.
Like I'd imagined the way he'd groaned my name. The desperate edge to his kisses. The possessive grip of his hands on my hips.
The car ride to the airport was silent.
I stared out the window, arms crossed, while Luca answered emails with mechanical efficiency. I hated that I was still aware of him… the way he smelled, the occasional flex of his fingers on his phone, the tension in his shoulders that suggested maybe he wasn't quite as composed as he pretended.
The Gulfstream was waiting, sleek and pristine. Inside, it was all cream leather and polished wood, obscenely luxurious. My father's world in miniature.
I took a seat as far from Luca as possible and buckled in. He sat across the aisle, finally pocketing his phone as we prepared for takeoff.
The silence stretched. Outside the window, Boston fell away beneath us.
"Your father is expecting us for dinner tonight," Luca said eventually. "There will be other family members present. Underbosses, caporegimes. You'll need to…"
"I know how to behave." I didn't look at him. "This isn't my first rodeo."
"It's been four years. Things have changed."
"Has he gotten less murderous? Less involved in drug trafficking and extortion?"
"He's still your father."
"Biologically." I turned to face him finally. "Tell me something, Luca. When you fucked me last night, were you thinking about him? About how unprofessional it was?"
His jaw clenched. "Aria…"
"No, I'm genuinely curious. At what point did the guilt kick in? Before or after you made me come?"
"Stop."
"Why? Does it bother you? Having to face what you did?"
"What *we* did." His eyes blazed. "You're not blameless in this."
"I never claimed to be. I wanted you. I was honest about it." I leaned forward. "The difference is, I'm not ashamed of it."
"You should be."
The words hung between us, vicious and final.
I sat back, something in my chest cracking. "Well. At least I know where I stand."
Luca looked away, that muscle ticking in his jaw again. "It can't happen again."
"Message received. Loud and clear."
I pulled out my laptop and buried myself in work for the rest of the flight, ignoring the way my hands shook slightly on the keyboard.
Ignoring the occasional weight of his gaze on me. Ignoring the traitorous part of me that wanted to cross the aisle and make him take back every cold, professional word.
…
The Santoro estate sprawled across the hills of Provence like something out of a dream… or a nightmare, depending on your perspective.
Stone walls, manicured gardens, vineyards stretching toward the horizon. Beautiful and brutal, like everything my father touched.
A car was waiting on the tarmac. Luca handed me into the back seat with impersonal courtesy, then slid in beside me. The driver pulled away without a word.
"How bad is he?" I asked quietly.
"Pancreatic cancer. Stage four. He has months, maybe less."
I processed that, waiting for grief to hit. It didn't. Just a distant sort of sadness for what had never been.
"And he wants me to take over the legitimate businesses."
"Yes. The hotels in Paris, Nice, and Monaco. The vineyards here in Provence. The shipping company in Marseille." Luca's tone was strictly professional again. "You'll have full operational control. He's kept them clean… genuinely clean. No money laundering, no ties to the family business."
"I don't believe that."
"Believe what you want. It's the truth." He looked at me finally. "He wants you to have something untainted. Something you can build on without the weight of his sins."
"How generous."
"He's trying, Aria."
"Four years too late."
The estate's gates opened as we approached. Armed guards—discreet but unmistakable—nodded to Luca as we passed. The car wound up the long drive, pulling to a stop in front of the main house.
My stomach tightened. I hadn't been here since I was twenty-two, since the last disastrous visit that had ended with me screaming at my father about his "business" and taking the first flight back to Boston.
Luca opened my door. "Ready?"
"No."
"Good. Fear keeps you sharp."
He placed his hand on my lower back again, guiding me up the stone steps. I wanted to shake him off, but something about the familiar gesture steadied me.
The entrance hall was exactly as I remembered: soaring ceilings, Renaissance paintings, furniture that belonged in a museum. My heels clicked on marble as we walked toward my father's study.
Luca knocked once, then opened the door.
Vittorio Santoro sat behind his massive desk, and my breath caught. Four years had aged him decades. He'd always been imposing—broad-shouldered, granite-faced, commanding. Now he looked diminished, his skin sallow, his frame gaunt beneath an expensive suit.
But his eyes were still sharp as he rose to greet me.
"Aria. *Figlia mia*."
"Father." I didn't move forward for an embrace. Neither did he.
"Thank you for coming."
"I didn't have much choice." I glanced at Luca. "Your consigliere was very persuasive."
My father's mouth twitched. "Luca is good at his job. Sit, please."
I took the chair across from his desk. Luca moved to stand behind my father… his usual position, I remembered. Always watching, always assessing threats.
"I won't waste time with pleasantries," my father said. "You know I'm dying. You know I want you to take over the legitimate operations. What you don't know is why."
"Guilt?"
"Pragmatism." He poured himself water with a slightly trembling hand. "My nephews are idiots. My brother cares only about the criminal side of the business. You're the only one with the intelligence and education to build something lasting."
"How touching."
"I don't expect forgiveness. I don't expect love." His eyes held mine. "But I'm offering you an empire, Aria. Clean money, real businesses. Power without blood on your hands."
"There's always blood," I said quietly. "Even on the clean side. Because it all flows from the same source, doesn't it? You built those hotels with drug money. Those vineyards with extortion proceeds."
"Yes." He didn't flinch. "And now I'm giving you the chance to make them something better. To prove that Santoro can mean more than violence and fear."
I wanted to refuse, walk out and never look back.
But the look on his face… the exhaustion and weariness of a man facing his own mortality and desperate to leave something behind that wasn't just destruction.
"I'll consider it," I said finally. "But I'm not promising anything."
"That's all I ask." He looked at Luca. "You'll serve as her personal bodyguard while she's here. I'm announcing her as my potential successor tonight at dinner. There will be... resistance."
"Understood," Luca said.
My head snapped up. "Bodyguard?"
"You're a target now," my father said bluntly. "My enemies will see you as leverage. My allies will see you as a threat to their own ambitions. Luca won't leave your side."
Perfect. Just perfect.
I met Luca's eyes across the room. His expression was carefully blank, but I saw the tension in his shoulders. He didn't want this any more than I did.
"Fine," I bit out. "If I'm staying, I want my old rooms."
"Already prepared." My father stood slowly, clearly in pain. "Dinner is at eight. Dress appropriately. You're representing the family now."
Dismissed, apparently.
0112~Luca~The drive back felt like punishment.Aria sat in the back seat, quiet the entire time. Not the kind of silence you ignore. The kind you feel. Heavy. Intentional.She didn’t look at me once. Her eyes stayed fixed on the window like there was something out there worth more than anything inside the car.There was one moment.Our eyes met in the mirror.Just briefly.She looked away immediately. Like holding it for even a second longer would have cost her something.“Thank you, Mr. Moretti.”Mr. Moretti.I felt it again.She had been calling me Luca since the first week. The shift had happened so naturally back then I hadn’t even noticed when it stuck.Now it was gone.Replaced with that. Formal. Distant. Final.A door closing in four syllables.I pulled into the estate and she was out of the car before I had fully stopped. Same as the morning. Clean. Efficient. Like she had already decided how this was going to go and was following through without hesitation.I watched her wa
0111~Aria~The house felt different.Not loud. Not chaotic. Just… tense. Like something had shifted and everyone could feel it, even if no one was saying it out loud.I got out of the car before Luca could come around to open my door.Josie didn’t hesitate. She gave me a quick “see you later” and went straight upstairs. She had read the room perfectly and removed herself from it without making it a thing.I stood in the entrance for a moment, clutch still in my hand, just breathing. Then I went to find my father.He was in his room.Sitting by the window with his coffee.He looked like he hadn’t slept much. Like he had been up for hours, waiting. Worrying.That part hit me more than anything else.I shouldn’t have let him feel like that.He looked up when I walked in.I didn’t give him the chance to speak first. I crossed the room and sat opposite him.“I’m sorry,” I said. “For worrying you. For not telling you where I was going. For making you hear it from Pierre.”I held his gaze.
0110~Aria~The ceiling was unfamiliar.That was the first thing I noticed.I lay there on my back, still and slightly disoriented, my head pounding in a slow, steady rhythm. For a few seconds, I did not know where I was or how I got there. Everything felt distant, like I was waking up from something heavy.I stayed still.Let it come back on its own.The ceiling. Clean. Neutral. The kind of space that felt expensive without trying too hard. The sheets were soft, the pillow smelled like fresh linen, not mine. Light filtered through curtains that were not mine either.Then the rest followed.The club.The drinks. Too many.Josie.The music. The lights. The way everything blurred at the edges.And then the words.The things I said.I closed my eyes for a second, then opened them again slowly.Pierre’s apartment.Of course.A quiet kind of embarrassment settled in my chest.I had said all of that to Pierre.I lay there without moving, replaying fragments. Not everything, just enough to f
0109~Luca~Marco had the estate camera footage up in four minutes.That was all it took from my call to him standing beside me in the security room, the monitor glowing in the dark, both of us watching in silence as Aria Santoro climbed out of her window at two thirty in the morning.There was something in the way she moved. Not hesitation. Not fear.Determination.I watched her pause and look around, careful, alert, taking everything in like she was making sure no one would stop her.Then I saw it.The side gate.She knew.She had known about it, known exactly where to go, exactly how to leave without being seen. She crossed the grounds quickly, reached the street, and got into a car that was already waiting for her.The footage cut there. The estate boundary.Marco looked at me.I kept my eyes on the screen, on the empty stretch of road where she had disappeared.“She planned it,” he said.No judgment in his voice. Just a statement.“Yes,” I said.There was no point denying it.She
0108~Pierre~Landon had been asking me to go out for three days.Not in a pushy way. That wasn’t him. Just steady. He mentioned it once, then again, then casually brought it up whenever the moment allowed until it stopped feeling like a suggestion and more like something inevitable."One evening," he said. "That’s all. No commitment. Just show up.""I’m fine," I told him."You’ve said that four times this week," he replied, "and none of them sounded convincing."He wasn’t wrong. And I didn’t have the energy to argue with accuracy.So I got dressed, put on a jacket, and went.---The club was exactly the kind of place Landon liked. Good music, just loud enough, the right crowd, the kind of energy that made a Friday night feel like it had earned itself.He already had people there. Familiar faces. Not close friends, but enough to sit with, talk to, exist around without effort. That kind of company where no one expects anything from you.I was there.At least physically.I had a drink,
0107~Joan~The look on her face had been worth everything.I had replayed it at least forty times since the night of the party, and it still didn’t get old. Yes, call me mad if you want, I don’t care. That exact moment, the word landing, the slight crack in her composure. Just enough. Just where I wanted it.Right in the chest.Aria Santoro, shaken.Worth every minute of planning. Worth the drive. Worth the luggage. Worth standing out in the cold waiting for the convoy to come through the gates, timing everything down to the second with Isabella beside me and everything exactly where it needed to be.She stood there in that beautiful gown and took it. I watched the ground shift under her feet.I won’t lie. It was satisfying. The most satisfying thing I’ve felt in a long time.Serves her right.Thinking she could walk into a life and take whatever she wanted. Step into Luca’s orbit with her Harvard degree, her CEO title, her father’s name, and assume everything in that space was open
0043~Aria~Pierre.I let the name sit for a second. Just a second."Interesting name," I said.He raised an eyebrow slightly. Still with that unhurried quality, like the supermarket aisle and everything in it was operating on his schedule rather than anyone else's."And yours?" he asked. "Or shoul
0021~ Aria ~The words hung between us, heavy and intoxicating, making every nerve ending in my body light up with anticipation. I could already feel myself getting wet, my body responding to the dark promise in his voice with embarrassing immediacy.Yes. God, yes.But then his expression shifted.
0013~ Aria ~I woke up sore.Not the pleasant, lingering ache of a good workout, but the deep, bone-deep soreness that came from being bent into impossible positions and fucked with relentless intensity. My thighs protested when I shifted in bed. My hips felt bruised. And there was a tenderness be
0007 ~ Luca ~In my adjoining room, I paced like a caged animal.This was insane. All of it. I was supposed to be controlled, professional, above base urges.Instead, I was completely obsessed with my boss's daughter. Couldn't think straight when she was near. And tomorrow night, I'd have to watch







