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Rosa's POV
My heart was slamming against my ribs so hard I could feel it in my teeth. Two men stood over me, cursing in some sharp foreign language, words snapping like whips, faces twisted in anger. They were pissed at each other, at me, at the whole damn situation and I was just sitting there on the cold concrete, wrists tied tight behind my back, trying not to let them see how scared I was. My name was Rosa Stewart, and I was about to tell you exactly why these idiots were cursing themselves stupid in a tongue I couldn’t even recognize, but before I could even get the first sentence out in my head, the door crashed open with a bang that echoed off the walls. Bright light flooded in, blinding after hours of shadows, and a tall figure stepped through, moving like he owned the darkness itself. I squeezed my eyes half-shut, praying it was Luca, please let it be Luca, let him have come to fix this mess he’d dragged me into. It wasn’t Luca. He looked like him? There was no time to figure out who it was, because the two guards exploded into motion, shouting, rushing the newcomer with knives flashing. One of them tripped in his hurry, and his blade clattered to the floor right near my feet. I didn’t think. I twisted hard, ignoring the rope tearing skin, fingers stretching until they closed around the handle. The stranger was already fighting, fast and brutal, slamming one guard into the wall with a sickening thud. He glanced over, saw me standing there ready to go, and his dark eyes widened just a fraction. “The lady shouldn’t fight?” he said, voice low and edged with amusement even as he drove a fist into the other man’s stomach. I bared my teeth. “This lady has a bronze medal in national sparring, so maybe shut up and worry about your own face.” I lunged before he could answer. The second guard swung at me, wild and sloppy. I slipped to the side, years of drills kicking in, and snapped a palm strike straight up into his nose. Blood sprayed. He howled. I dropped low, hooked his ankle, yanked, then brought my knee crashing into his groin as he fell. He curled up whimpering. I finished with a sharp elbow to the temple. Out cold. “Woah,” the stranger breathed, finishing his guy with a clean hook that snapped the head back. “You do know how to fight.” “You better stop talking and watch your damn back,” I snapped, already spinning toward the doorway where more boots were pounding closer. He laughed—actually laughed—while ducking a flying chair. “Are you really my brother’s fiancée? I heard you once flew home early because you got a splinter in your foot. And here you are kicking ass like it’s Tuesday.” I blocked a punch, countered with a quick jab to the throat. The man choked and staggered. “I do more than fight,” I told him, breathing hard. “I might actually smack you in the ass if you don’t shut your mouth and help me finish this.” He grinned, wide and reckless, grabbing another attacker by the shirt and hurling him into a stack of crates. “Feisty. I like it. So tell me, Kylie—” I almost tripped over my own feet. Kylie. Of course he thought I was Kylie. Luca’s real fiancée. The one I’d been pretending to be since the moment they’d grabbed me. I swallowed the panic and rolled with it. “Yeah, Kylie,” I said, sweeping a guy’s legs and stomping his wrist so the gun he was reaching for skittered away. “Kylie Rivers. Pleasure to meet you in this five-star hellhole.” He was still talking, even while he fought, voice calm like we were chatting over coffee. “Luca never said you could handle yourself like this. He made you sound… delicate. Porcelain doll. All soft edges.” I ducked a fist, came up with an uppercut that rattled teeth. “Clearly Luca’s a shitty judge of character. And you talk too much.” We were moving together now, almost back-to-back, the room a chaos of grunts and falling bodies. Three more men burst through the door. The stranger snatched a metal pipe off the floor and swung it in a wide arc, forcing them to scatter. “Left!” he called. I pivoted, met the charge head-on. Big guy, slow. I feinted high, dropped low, leg sweep, then drove my heel into his temple as he hit the ground. Done. “Nice,” he said, approving. “Less compliments, more punching.” He took out the last two in quick succession—one with the pipe, one with a brutal knee to the face. Then silence dropped, sudden and thick, only our heavy breathing and the occasional low moan breaking it. I turned to face him fully for the first time. Dark hair fell into darker eyes, sharp jaw, blood streaking his knuckles and a tear in his shirt showing tanned skin. Same bone structure as Luca, but rougher, more dangerous, like a blade that had seen too many fights. He opened his mouth… probably to say something else annoying—when a flicker of movement caught my eye. One of the men I thought was down rolled fast, gun coming up. Everything slowed. I saw the barrel swing toward me. I couldn’t move quick enough. But he could. He threw himself in front, shoving me back hard. The gunshot cracked, deafening. His body jerked, he stumbled into me, and we crashed to the floor together, him half on top, heavy and warm, blood blooming fast across his shirt. “No—no no no…” The words tore out of me. I scrambled free and kicked the man down, hands shaking as I pressed them to his chest. “Hey, stay with me! Talk to me—are you okay? Where did it hit?” He coughed, winced, eyes finding mine. “No,” he rasped. “Not okay.” I leaned closer, panic choking me. “Tell me where, I can—” He moved suddenly, strong, hand sliding to the back of my neck, pulling me down until our faces were inches apart. Then he smirked, slow and wicked. “I had the sense to wear a bulletproof vest, sweetheart. Unlike you, who fights reckless.” Relief slammed into me so hard I almost sobbed. Then fury chased right behind. “You absolute asshole,” I hissed, shoving his chest—careful of the blood, but not gentle. “You scared me half to death!” He laughed, rough and low, still holding me close. “Had to check if you cared. I’m Raffaelle Navarro. Luca’s older brother. And you are? I know your name but maybe we need a proper introduction.” I should have told him. Rosa Stewart. But he was so close, breath warm on my face, eyes locked on mine with that dangerous glint, and the lie slipped out smooth as silk. “Kylie,” I whispered. “Kylie Rivers.” His smile deepened, like he was tasting a secret. “Kylie Rivers,” he repeated, thumb brushing the side of my neck. “My brother’s delicate fiancée who just fought like a street demon. Well, Kylie… it’s nice to finally meet you.” My pulse was roaring in my ears. Bodies all around us, blood on the floor, sirens probably coming soon, and all I could think was that I had just lied to the wrong man. I was Rosa Stewart. And I was in way over my head.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.






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