Mag-log inRosa’s POV
“You slapped Raffaele?” Kylie’s voice cracked, eyes so wide I could see the whites all around. She was perched on the edge of my couch like she might bolt any second, hands twisting in her lap. “Rosa… you actually slapped him?” I dropped onto the armchair across from her, elbows on my knees, face buried in my palms for a second before I looked up. “Kylie, I might die tonight, but I swear I won’t go down without a fight.” She stared at me like I’d grown a second head. News of the gunfire at the gym had spread like wildfire. It read that there were shots fired, no suspect caught, everyone evacuated…the usual chaos. Of course the cops were calling it a random drive-by. Of course Raffaele walked away clean. And of course I’d told Kylie the truth the second she burst through my door twenty minutes ago, wild-eyed and clutching her phone like a lifeline. Now the weight of it was crashing down on me all at once. I was fucked. Completely, irreversibly fucked. “Is he that scary?” I asked, voice quieter than I meant it to be. “Like… does he even have a soul?” Kylie shrugged, but the movement was too quick, too nervous. I raised a brow. “You know something, don’t you?” She shook her head fast. Too fast. Shee probably asked Luca about him and there was no way in hell that Luca who worshipped her very presence wouldn't have told her. “Kylie, a three-year-old can lie better than you can.” Her shoulders slumped. She looked at her hands, then at me, then back at her hands. “I promised Luca I wouldn’t say anything.” “I need to know, Kylie. What if he’s really some kind of psychopath?” She swallowed hard, eyes glistening. “He is, Rosa.” My stomach dropped. “He lost someone,” she whispered. “Someone he loved more than anything. And after that… he turned into this… deranged monster. Luca says he’s not the same person he used to be. Not even close.” I opened my mouth to ask who, what happened, when, anything but my phone rang. The screen lit up with an unknown number. I stared at it like it might bite me. Kylie leaned forward. I answered. “Hi, Rosa.” That voice. Low and smooth with a deadly calmness. My whole body went cold. “How the hell did you get my number?” “Doesn’t matter. You might want to stay on the line for a second.” Before I could snap back, a small, bright voice piped up in the background. “Rosa? Is this scary-looking uncle really your boyfriend?” My heart fell through the floor. Stevie. My little brother. Rage exploded in my chest so fast it burned. “Raffaele, you dare not fucking touch my family.” “You didn’t answer my question when I asked about them,” he said, tone almost conversational, “so I came to see for myself.” My hand was shaking so hard the phone rattled against my ear. “You called me sick? You better hurry, sweetheart. There’s no telling what a sick person can do.” I was already moving, snatching my keys, shoving my feet into sneakers. Kylie jumped up behind me. “Rosa, wait! I’ll call Luca, he’ll talk to him—” “No time.” I yanked the door open. “I’m not waiting for one Navarro brother when they are both almost equally deranged.” I took the stairs two at a time, hailed the first taxi I saw, and slid into the back seat, slamming the door so hard the driver flinched. “Elmwood Drive. Fast. Please.” The whole ride I prayed to God, to whoever was listening, to the universe, to anyone who might give a damn that he wouldn’t hurt them. That this was just another twisted game. That I hadn’t just handed him the keys to my entire world by walking away in that gym. When the taxi screeched to a stop outside our small, weathered house, I threw money at the driver and ran up the cracked walkway. Through the front window I saw them. Raffaele Navarro. Sitting at my mom’s tiny kitchen table. Eating dinner. With my mother and my eight-year-old brother. Stevie was laughing at something he’d said, fork halfway to his mouth. Mom was smiling, the soft one she saved for people she trusted. I burst through the door so hard it banged against the wall. “Stay away from my family.” Three heads turned. Raffaele’s smile was slow, lazy, like he’d been expecting me. Mom blinked. “Rosa? Honey, what’s wrong? Why are you acting like this toward your boyfriend?” “He’s not my boyfriend!” I yelled, voice cracking. I stepped in front of them both, arms out like I could shield them with my body. “Mom, I told you not to let strangers in the house!” Raffaele stood up, slow and deliberate, all six-foot-three of him unfolding like a shadow coming to life. He looked at my mom, polite, almost gentle. “You should listen to your daughter, ma’am. There are a lot of scary people in the world.” Mom smiled, confused but warm. “But you wouldn’t hurt us, right? You’re Rosa’s boyfriend.” Raffaele returned the smile small, dangerous, beautiful. “That depends on what your daughter does from now on.” He turned those dark eyes on me. “Thanks for the slap, Rosa. It really made me step up my game.” My pulse roared in my ears. “Now,” he continued, stepping closer, voice dropping so only I could hear, “can we start over? Or should I visit the story of how your father passed?” My heart stopped. He knew. He fucking knew. The room tilted. Mom was saying something, Stevie tugging at my sleeve asking why I looked so mad, but all I could hear was the blood rushing through my head. He knew about Dad. It meant he knew everything about my family and the secret I was fighting so hard time bury for good. And he was sitting here, eating Mom’s spaghetti, charming my little brother, holding the one secret that could shatter what was left of my family. I stepped right into his space, close enough that I could smell the faint trace of gunpowder still clinging to him, close enough that I could see the faint red mark my hand had left on his cheek earlier. “You touch them,” I whispered, voice shaking with fury and fear and something darker, “and I will end you. I don’t care who you are. I don’t care what you are, I will bury you.” His eyes flickered, something almost like respect, or hunger, or both. Then he leaned down, mouth brushing my ear. “Careful, sweetheart. Threats like that? They sound an awful lot like foreplay to me.”Kylie's POVThe end of first term party was in a venue off campus, a rented space with low lights and loud music and too many people from the forensics and law faculties packed into one room. I came with Rosa and my other friends and I told myself I was not looking for him. I told myself I was here to celebrate the end of exams and to drink cheap wine and to dance with my friends and to not think about Luca for one night.I spent the first twenty minutes looking for him.I scanned the room while I talked to Priya. I looked over Rosa's shoulder while she told me about her criminal procedure paper. I glanced at the door every time someone new walked in. I was not looking for him. I was just aware of the room. I was just paying attention to who was here. I was just—There he was.He was across the room talking to someone I did not recognize, a man from the law faculty, someone tall with dark hair who was gesturing while he talked. Luca was listening. His back was partially to me and he w
Kylie's POVWe were studying in the library on a Thursday night. The same corner table. The same lamp. The same two coffees, because he always brought me one now and I had stopped pretending I did not expect it. The project was almost finished and exams were approaching and we had fallen into a rhythm that felt less like working together and more like something I did not have a name for.He was reading from his textbook. I was reviewing my toxicology notes. The library was quiet and the city was dark outside the windows and everything was normal.Then he spoke without looking up from his book."How's your mother?"I looked up. My pen stopped moving. I stared at him across the table."What?" I said.He turned a page. Still did not look up."Your mother. You mentioned she had a hospital appointment this week. I was wondering how it went."I stared at him. My heart was doing something I did not invite it to do."I didn't mention that to you," I said.He looked up then. He held my gaze ac
Luca's POVI started meeting her outside her forensics lectures.Not every time. That would have been too much. Too obvious. Too easy for her to dismiss as routine. Every third time, approximately. Irregular enough that she could not predict it. Irregular enough that she would think about it before every lecture, wondering if I would be there, wondering what it meant when I was and what it meant when I was not.When I was there, I fell into step beside her and we walked and talked. When I was not there, she noticed the absence.That was the point.Today I was there. I stood against the wall outside the lecture hall with my hands in my pockets and my eyes on the door. Students filed out in groups, talking and laughing and checking their phones. I waited. I was good at waiting.She came out. She was looking down at her phone, scrolling through something, not paying attention to where she was going. Then she looked up and saw me against the wall.Her face did something.It was small. Hal
Kylie's POVI met Rosa at the coffee cart the next morning. The sky was gray and the air was cold and I had not slept well because I had been thinking about Luca's face when he said I'm not trying to be subtle anymore. I needed to talk to someone who would not tell me I was overthinking. I needed to talk to Rosa.She was already there when I arrived. She had her coffee and her arms were crossed and she was looking at me with that expression she wore when she knew something had happened and she was waiting for me to tell her."He booked a study room for me," I said.Rosa did not react. She just stood there with her coffee and her crossed arms and her patient face."Yesterday. I was looking for a place to study and the library was full and the front desk said there was one room available under a Navarro booking. I went up and he was there. He had coffee waiting for me. My order. One sugar, oat milk."Rosa took a sip of her coffee. "He booked it in advance.""Yes.""Knowing you'd need it
Kylie's POVEnd of term exams were approaching and the library was full.Every table was taken and every corner had someone hunched over notes and every quiet space was filled with the sound of typing and highlighting and stressed breathing. I had been walking through the building for twenty minutes, checking every floor, every hallway, every hidden nook I had discovered in my first year. Nothing. No space. No room. No corner quiet enough to think.I went to the front desk.The woman behind the counter looked up at me with the tired expression of someone who had been asked the same question a hundred times that day."Any study rooms available?" I asked.She clicked something on her computer. She scrolled. She frowned."There's one," she said. "But it's booked under a Navarro booking.""What does that mean?""It means a student with that surname has a standing reservation for the same room every Tuesday and Thursday afternoon. They get priority. You can go up and knock, but if they're
Luca's POVAfter dinner the group moved outside.The restaurant was warm and crowded and the night air was cold and sharp and everyone spread out on the sidewalk, pairing off into smaller conversations, the group redistributing naturally around the steps and the streetlights. I stood near the edge of the group, watching, not participating, the way I always did.Kylie ended up beside me.It was not an accident. I had positioned myself where I knew she would exit, where the flow of people would push her toward me. But she did not know that. To her, it was natural. The group shifted and suddenly she was next to me, close enough that I could smell her shampoo, something soft and clean and faintly sweet."Luca," she said.She said my name. Just my name. Just Luca. But something about the way she said it had shifted. It was not the careful politeness of the first few weeks, when she was still trying to figure out who I was and what I wanted. It was easy. Comfortable. Like she was used to sa
Rosa’s POVI woke up slowly, light leaked through heavy curtains in thin gold stripes across the bed. My mouth tasted like metal and regret.My head throbbed in time with my heartbeat. I tried to sit up and the room tilted so hard I had to grab the sheets to stay upright.That’s when I noticed Kyli
Raffaele’s POV The penthouse felt different up here, away from the girls downstairs. Luca’s space was all sleek lines and dark wood, a mirror of our family’s world, but with Kylie’s touches scattered around: a soft throw blanket on the couch, fresh flowers on the bar cart. It made the place fee
Rosa’s POVThe second I realized he’d seen me flip the photo my face caught fire all over again. I stood there frozen in his office doorway, robe slipping off one shoulder, heart slamming so loud I was sure he could hear it. I’d been caught red-handed snooping through his things, touching something
Raffaele’s POVThe doctor stepped back from the bed, peeling off his gloves with that calm practiced snap that always made me want to punch something. “Her drink was spiked,” he said, voice level like he was reading a weather report. “Rohypnol most likely, judging by the symptoms and the timeline.







