LOGINHe swore he loved me. He swore I was his forever. But when the spotlight came, my fiancé chose my sister instead. While they celebrated their engagement under my father’s proud gaze, I drowned in humiliation… until I made the worst—and most intoxicating—mistake of my life. I kissed him. Marcus Lucchesi. Twice my age. My ex’s father. My father’s most trusted ally. A ruthless mafia king who should have destroyed me for daring to touch him. Instead, he pulled me closer. Instead, he claimed what no man had ever touched before. Now I wake up in his bed—sore, ruined, and branded by the one man I should never want. And he’s not letting me go. ❝You begged for me, princess. Now you’re mine. Even if the whole world burns.❞ Betrayed by the son. Desired by the father. I was supposed to be invisible… but in Marcus’s bed, I’ve never been seen more clearly.
View MoreJULIA
“Lower your eyes, Julia. Don’t embarrass me.”
My father’s words sliced into me. He has always been this cold and sharp with me.
I dropped my gaze instantly, my fingers tightening around the stem of my champagne flute until my hand shook. The bubbles fizzed and mocked me, but I dared not look up again.
Don Augustus DeCavalcante had spoken. When the mafia king of the continent commanded, you obeyed—even if you were his only blood.
Especially if you were his only blood…
The ballroom erupted in applause. Terra spun across the dance floor on Nero Lucchesi’s arm, silk blue skirts swirling as she smiled her angelic smile.
My father’s lips curved with pride. “Beautiful,” he said, loud enough for those around him to hear. “Graceful. She carries the DeCavalcante name as though it were made for her.”
My throat burned. My lips parted, but all I managed was a whisper, thin and trembling: “T-that… that was supposed to be me.”
Don Augustus turned his head slightly, his dark eyes sweeping me like I was an insect. “It was supposed to be whoever best serves this family. Clearly, Julia, that is not you.”
I shrank into myself as heat crawled up my neck. My hand trembled harder and the champagne threatened to spill.
On the floor, Nero bent down, kissed Terra’s hand, lifted his gaze to the room, and the applause roared like thunder.
For a fleeting second, his eyes found mine.
My chest tightened until I could barely breathe.
He had once held my hands like that. Whispered in the dark that I was enough for him. That he loved me. That he didn’t care if my father barely acknowledged me, even if I was the daughter of a discarded ex-wife.
‘Only you, Julia. Always you. I promise I’ll always be here. I’ll protect you. I’ll make you mine.’
Those words replayed in my head like it’s mocking me.
Because looking at him tonight all smiling beside Terra and basking in my father’s approval that I finally understood.
It had never been me he wanted.
It had always been this. The spotlight and the favor of Don Augustus.
My stomach twisted as the truth sank in. I wasn’t his love. I was only a stepping stone, a temporary comfort until he could grasp something greater.
“Keep smiling,” Don Augustus muttered beside me, his lips tight. “Do not shame me by crying and making a scene on your sister’s engagement.”
My lips trembled as I forced them to curve upward into something that hurt worse than tears. My heart broke, but then again, silence was all I was ever allowed.
Terra’s laughter rang out as Nero spun her again. My father clapped, his expression growing even more delighted.
Livia, his true love and third wife, who was also Terra’s biological mother from a different man, smiled beneath the glittering lights. My father finally pulled his attention away from me and stood beside her, completely focused on her.
My hands shook violently now. Before I shattered the glass, I set it down and turned toward the bar. I needed something stronger. Something that could drown me before my pain gave me away.
“Whiskey,” I rasped to the bartender.
“Make it two,” a familiar, low but amused voice drawled beside me.
I stiffened and slowly turned my head only to freeze again.
Marcus Lucchesi.
Nero’s adoptive father. My father’s trusted friend.
He was a lot older, broader, infinitely more dangerous than his son. His dark eyes swept over me slowly, not kindly, not cruelly—just like a man who saw through everything and cared for nothing.
“You look miserable,” Marcus said, picking up his glass. He didn’t even bother to hide the smirk tugging his mouth. “Let me guess… jealous?”
Heat rushed to my face. “I’m not,” I whispered, too quickly, the words trembling out of me.
“Oh, don’t lie,” he chuckled, leaning an elbow against the bar. “I saw the way you looked when my son kissed your little stepsister. You nearly shattered that glass.”
“I wasn’t—” my throat closed. I couldn’t even finish the protest.
Marcus tilted his head, studying me like I was some interesting puzzle piece left in the wrong box. “You know, I didn’t even want to come tonight. These parties are dull. Pretending everyone here isn’t plotting murder the second the music stops… boring.”
He took a long sip of whiskey, then flicked his gaze back to me. “But watching you sulk in the shadows? That’s the most entertainment I’ve had all week.”
My grip on the bar tightened until my knuckles whitened. I wanted to shrink into the floor, to vanish. But his words clawed under my skin, twisting with the alcohol already burning my stomach.
“I’m not sulking,” I muttered, my lips trembling as the room swam a little.
“No?” his smirk deepened. “Then what’s this look on your face, princess? Heartbreak? Self-pity? Or are you just furious that my son prefers someone else?”
My chest constricted. The alcohol blurred the edges of my vision, but Marcus’s voice cut sharp through it all.
He was mocking me and teasing me. To him, I was just another form of amusement in this gilded cage.
Why was he like this? He was nearly my father’s age. Only a few years younger! Yet every time he saw me, he acted like some teenage bully.
And maybe it was the whiskey. Maybe it was the ache in my chest. Maybe it was the crushing need to prove, to myself if not to him, that I wasn’t broken.
Before I could think, before I could stop myself, I turned to him, rose on shaking feet… and pressed my mouth to his.
The kiss was clumsy and fueled by desperation and liquor.
I didn’t care. For one second, I only cared about the shock in Marcus’s stillness, the taste of whiskey on his lips, and the burning proof that I wasn’t weak.
When I pulled back, I trembled at the sight of his eyes staring directly at me.
Somehow, those eyes were unreadable and dangerous.
TERRAThe worst part wasn’t the fear.It was the waiting.Waiting made everything louder. Every thought sharpened until it cut, every doubt clawing at the edges of my mind like it wanted to tear its way out. I hated it. I hated the stillness, the way time stretched when I needed it to move.I paced across my room, heels clicking against the marble, the sound echoing back at me like a countdown. My phone sat on the vanity, screen dark, but I kept glancing at it anyway, as if looking might force it to light up.It would happen soon.It had to.Because if it didn’t, if this plan failed the way the others had begun to, then everything my mother warned me about would become real. I would fade. I would become background. A name people used to whisper about with pity instead of respect.And I refused to let that happen.A soft knock came at the door before it opened. Livia stepped inside, her expression tight, eyes scanning the room like she expected to find chaos spilled across the floor.“
JULIA The message reached me in the middle of a conversation that had nothing to do with danger.Phoebe was halfway through a dramatic retelling of something trivial, her hands moving like she was conducting an orchestra only she could hear. I was laughing, actually laughing, the kind that loosened my shoulders and made the room feel warm instead of watchful.Then my phone buzzed.I almost ignored it. Almost.But something in the timing, in the way the vibration felt too sharp against the table, made me glance down. A message notification. Unknown number, but not entirely unfamiliar.I opened it.I don’t know exactly what Terra’s planning, but it’s public and soon. Be ready.For a second, the words didn’t register. They just sat there, black text on a bright screen, disconnected from reality.Then the meaning settled.My laughter faded before I realized it had stopped.Phoebe noticed immediately. She always did.“What is it?” she asked, voice softer now.I turned the phone toward her
NEROI knew something was wrong before anyone said it out loud.Not because of rumors. Not because of whispers. Those were always there, shifting like background noise you learn to ignore. It was the silence between them that gave it away. Conversations cutting off when I entered a room. Messages that used to come easily now arrive delayed, filtered, cautious.Terra was moving again.And this time, she wasn’t hiding it well.I stood on the balcony outside my apartment, the city humming below, neon bleeding into the night like a wound that refused to close. My phone felt heavier than usual in my hand, screen lit with half-read messages from contacts I trusted less with every passing day.Most of them said the same thing in different words.She’s reaching outside the circle.She’s desperate.This could get ugly.I should have felt loyalty. Instinct. The old pull that had kept me orbiting Terra for years, convinced proximity to her meant proximity to power.Instead, all I felt was exhaus
MARCUSBy the time the last guest left, I already knew.Not the details. Not the exact shape of what Terra was planning next. But the shift was there, unmistakable, like a change in air pressure before a storm breaks. You learn to recognize it when your life depends on patterns.And Terra had just stepped out of pattern.I stood alone in the private lounge off the ballroom, jacket draped over the back of a chair, the low hum of cleanup echoing faintly through the walls. My phone lay on the table in front of me, screen lit with a steady stream of updates from three different channels.None of them panicked.That was the first confirmation.If she had tried something immediate, something reckless, I would be seeing alarms, not quiet data. Instead, what I saw were small movements. Contacts reaching out. Minor financial shifts. A few digital footprints that didn’t belong to anyone in my circle.Preparation.I leaned back slowly, folding my hands. Terra was not retreating. She was repositi












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