Se connecterGia’s POV
My eyes blinked open, slow and heavy, stinging from the bright light as it settled in. A cough slipped past my lips, rough and dry, like my throat had been scraped with sand. My hand flew to my neck as a dull ache throbbed beneath the skin, my fingers brushing the sore spot. And then it hit me. The auction. The man who reeked of death. His hand over my mouth. Me, passing out. My eyes snapped open wide now. And I saw him. He sat across from me, one leg bent casually like this was a conversation, not a nightmare. Just like before, his grey eyes locked on mine, piercing into every layer of my skin. His expression showed no guilt, not even a hint that anything he did haunted him. My chest tightened. "You..." my voice cracked as I pushed myself upright, panic gripping my insides... "you tried to kill me." He didn’t move. He didn’t even blink. "Why did you bring me here?" I shouted, my voice rising. My hand shot forward, finger pointed like it could burn a hole through his chest. "Is this how you plan to wipe out the Giovanni name?" My eyes darted around the room. The living room was massive, high ceilings, gold décor... But none of it mattered. None of it felt real. I scanned the space again, desperate for any window. But the windows were buried behind heavy, creamy curtains, casting the entire room in a dim, oppressive gloom. It felt like we were alone. Just him and me. And God, I feared for my life, that he’d kill me the same way he killed my father. The light above burned too bright now, and there were no neon auction lights for him to hide behind. I could finally see him clearly. He wasn’t wearing the jacket from before. Just a dark, fitted shirt clinging to his chest and arms, and black pants stretched over powerful thighs. His hair was slicked back, a little messy. He looked too calm, like the chaos he’d caused didn’t matter. He was tall. Clean-shaven. Cold. Older, but in that maddening, dangerous way. The kind that made your heart skip, both in fear and in admiration. He leaned forward slightly, resting his elbows on his knees. Then came the words, low and smug. "Pretty doll, if I wanted to kill you, you’d already be dead." That voice was deep and threatening. Oh my God. This man was a psycho. How could he talk about killing someone like it was entertainment, something he did when he was bored? There was no escape for me, so I had to try another strategy. Maybe I could appeal to his conscience, though I doubted he had one. I sat up straighter. "What more do you want from me?" My voice trembled, but I didn’t stop. "You killed my father. Isn’t that enough?" The corner of his mouth lifted. That same smug expression he wore at the auction. He wasn’t even trying to deny it. "You’re not going to lie?" I whispered. "You’re not even going to pretend you didn’t do it? I saw you. I saw the blood. I watched him fall. I watched you shoot him." His face didn’t change. Not even a trace of regret. Just that look, like he was proud of it. "Because he deserved it," he replied flatly. "Your father was the real monster. Death would’ve been too easy." "Don’t you dare talk about him like that." I lashed out, a raw instinct rising to defend the man I’d called father my whole life. Even if some part of me was still scared... Because I knew this man could kill me just as easily. He raised an eyebrow. "You really don’t know, do you?" Silence. His grin deepened. "The kind of man he really was. The enemies he made. The blood he spilled. And you want to sit there and defend him like some little girl who doesn’t know what kind of world she was raised in?" My dad was far from perfect, but he loved me, in his own way. I remembered the nights he came home late and still read me bedtime stories. How he’d kiss my forehead and call me his princess. How he promised to always protect me. But I also remembered the locked doors. The yelling behind them. The bodyguards going in and out of rooms that were off-limits to me. The months he never came home. The fear in Aunt Camilla’s eyes when she thought I wasn’t looking. She said he had enemies. Maybe he’d just made one mistake. Maybe he wasn’t the devil this man claimed. "He wasn’t a monster," I whispered, though the words felt small now, like I was struggling to believe them myself. He rose from his seat, his footsteps echoing as he came closer. I backed into the couch, pressing my body as far as it could go, but it didn’t matter. He already stood before me. "People like your father always have two faces," he sneered. "You only saw the version he wanted you to see." His hand reached out, fingers brushing my cheek, slow and too warm for a killer. A shiver tore through me, and I hated it. So I turned my face away, ashamed that my body even responded to him. But he didn’t let go. He gripped my jaw, firm, tilting my face back to him. His thumb dragged slowly from my cheek to the corner of my lips, parting them just slightly. "This viper’s mouth of yours," he murmured, "I already told you, I’ll tame it... and put it to good use. Soon." Fury surged through me and I slapped his hand away. His eyes darkened. Then his hand wrapped around my neck. Not tight, but firm. Enough to still my breath and remind me exactly who held the power. He yanked me forward until our faces nearly touched, his breath hot against my lips, burning through the small space between us. It didn’t just warm my skin. It awakened every nerve ending in my body. "No one disrespects me," he gritted through clenched teeth. "Not the men who beg for mercy right before I put a bullet in their brains. Not the ones I bury alive. And definitely not you, pretty thing." Fear shot through me, hearing the gruesome acts he had committed, but I couldn’t let it show. "I don’t care," I shot back, voice shaking. "You killed my father. You took the only person I had left. How do you think that makes me feel?" My throat tightened, and tears welled in my eyes despite how I fought to hold them back. "Why?" I choked. "Why my dad? Why me?" He stared at me. Then he laughed wickedly. "For revenge." I blinked. "What?" "Your father took something from me," his voice was low and strained, as though a painful memory had just flashed in his head. "Something I can never get back." "And this is how you repay him?" I asked, heart pounding. "By ruining the life of an innocent girl who knows nothing about any of this?" "Oh no." He loosened his grip just slightly. "This isn’t about ruining you." His gaze locked onto mine, intense, piercing. "This is about owning you." It felt like the floor slipped out from under me. I didn’t want to beg, but the thought of what the man who killed my father was capable of doing to me terrified every inch of my body. "Please... let me go." He tilted his head, eyes gleaming with dark satisfaction right before he released me. I stumbled back, hands flying to my throat, massaging the tender spot where his fingers had pressed. "Pretty doll," his voice was taunting, "I’m not letting you go. Not now. Not ever." Then he smiled in a twisted way. "I’ll take my revenge by punishing every inch of that body for one reason only... my pleasure."Anna's POVMira smiled politely, shaking her hand. "Thank you. It's nice to meet you."Before Vera could say more, Cesare cut in, clapping Dante on the shoulder."So. You brought your bodyguard and his girlfriend to your honeymoon?" He looked at Dante, eyebrows raised, grinning like he'd just made the joke of the century. "What kind of honeymoon is this, nephew?"Dante didn't miss a beat. "I need Bruno for security. And Mira is here to keep Gianna company while I attend to certain business."Cesare nodded slowly, his grin widening. "A true Deluca. Mafia business never rests, does it?"Vera's expression shifted immediately. She turned to Dante, disapproval clear in her voice. "Don, you're not going to leave your new bride alone to handle business, are you? You must spend time with her. Business can wait."Cesare waved her off. "Vera, you wouldn't understand. This is how it works. Besides, Don is a better man than I am. He'll make time."Dante pulled me closer against his side, his hand
Gianna's POVWe stepped into the house and I understood immediately why Dante had warned me. Everything was gold. The fixtures, the damn doorframes, even the frames on the wall all had a gold undertone. This was what happened when someone watched too many movies about kings and decided to make it their entire personality.Guards stood at every corner holding rifles like they were guarding a president.Cesare spread his arms wide. "Welcome to my kingdom."Dante muttered something under his breath that sounded like a curse.Cesare turned to me then, his entire face lighting up like I was the most fascinating thing he had seen all week. "And you, bella, what do you think? Impressive, no?"He swept his hand around like he was presenting a prize on a game show. "This is just the entrance. Wait until you see the rest."I opened my mouth to respond, but he was already turning back to Dante."Of course, for you, nephew, none of this is new. But it's been years since you've visited. I've made
Gianna's POVMy heart wouldn't stop pounding. The sound of it filled my ears, drowning out everything else until all I could hear was that frantic rhythm beating against my ribs like it was trying to break free.I'd done what Dante told me. I'd pressed myself to the floor of that car with my cheek against the cold leather and listened to doors opening, shoes hitting pavement, the sound of men repositioning themselves around us like a chessboard.I sucked in a deep breath, trying to calm my nerves.But then the thought of Dante getting shot flashed in my mind. While I was just sitting here, hiding like a coward while he bled out on some random street in Monaco?I couldn't just sit there.I raised my head slowly, just enough to peek through the window. My hands were shaking.Dante was standing in the middle of the road, gun at his side, facing six men who looked like they'd walked out of some crime thriller.Dark suits, broad shoulders, hands resting near their waistbands where I knew w
Dante's POVElio's eyes shifted to the rearview mirror. "I see them."Paolo already had his hand moving toward his side. In the second car behind us, I knew Bruno would have clocked them by now."Any idea who they are?""No." Elio's hand moved to his waistband. "This route was supposed to be clear."The SUVs were not hanging back anymore. They were closing in fast, weaving through cars."They've been on us for a while. Lose them. Step on it.""Right away, Don."Elio hit the gas and the Mercedes surged forward. We shot past a convertible, then a tourist bus. Elio cut left, then right, but the two SUVs matched every move. They took every turn we did, never falling back. They were not trying to hide it anymore.My mind ran through the list of enemies who could have tracked us here. Monaco was supposed to be quiet. Anyone coming after me here would have to be desperate or too stupid to care about the consequences.I reached across the seat, my hand finding Gianna's arm. She turned from th
Dante's POV The private jet began its descent into Nice with the kind of smooth approach money could buy. From there, we would drive to the villa just outside Monaco. I stared out the window at the tarmac below, the Mediterranean gleaming in the distance. The villa belonged to my uncle, and I had not been there in years. The last time I had set foot in that place, Esmeralda had been alive. We had spent two weeks there, just the three of us. Arielle had been nine, running through the gardens while Esme chased her, both of them laughing. The memory felt like it belonged to someone else now, like I was watching it happen to a different man. This was the first vacation I had taken since she died. The first time I had allowed myself to step away from the empire, from the constant weight of responsibility that came with running a criminal organization. And I was spending it with a wife who barely looked at me. The flight had been torture. Gianna sat across from me, looking as beau
Dante POV I found my daughter in the upstairs living room. She was sprawled across the sectional sofa, her face buried in a thick hardcover, legs kicked up over the armrest. Her hair fell in a curtain around her face. "Hey, principessa." She looked up, tucking a strand behind her ear. "Hi, Dad." I walked over and tapped her shin. "Scoot over." She rolled her eyes but pulled her legs down, making room. I sat beside her, and she immediately stretched her legs back out, her feet landing in my lap. "What are you reading?" She held up the book without looking away from the page. "A mystery novel. A detective in Victorian London." I caught sight of the cover. A woman in a low-cut dress leaned against a man in a top hat, their faces inches apart in the fog. The Scarlet Letter Murders. I grabbed the book from her hands. "Hey!" She sat up, reaching for it. I flipped through a few pages. My eyes landed on a passage. His mouth found the hollow of her throat as his fingers worked the l







