Then he was gone.
And all Noora could do was sit there, trembling.
Stunned. Bruised. Breaking.
She felt the ghost of his grip still burning into her scalp, his threats echoing like a ticking bomb in her chest.
What the hell was she supposed to do?
Let him touch her? Let him mark her? Let him ruin her?
Or disappear? Leave everything behind. Her mother. Her identity. Her last thread of dignity.
She couldn’t do either.
Just the thought of vanishing…of erasing her name… of never seeing her mother again, was like being shoved off a cliff blindfolded.
Tears slid silently down her cheeks.
But she had to pull herself together before her mom came back. Sophie had suffered enough. Noora wouldn’t let her see the wreckage of what Luciano had turned her into. Not again.
The door clicked open.
Noora flinched.
But it wasn’t him. It was Sophie, carrying a plate of fruits. Her steps slowed the moment she saw the broken vase on the floor. Her eyes scanned the mess, then lifted to her daughter.
For a moment, she didn’t say a word, just stared with a silent ache. But instead of asking, she knelt and started picking up the shattered pieces.
“No, Mom—don’t,” Noora croaked, trying to get up. “I’ll clean that—”
Sophie shook her head gently. “It’s okay, honey. I got this. You rest.”
She swept up the fragments as if they weren’t glass but something far more delicate—like they were pieces of Noora herself.
Then she came to sit beside her on the bed, brushing a strand of hair off Noora’s forehead with trembling fingers.
“Noora…” her voice was soft, hesitant, but heavy with knowing. “Did something happen with Luciano?”
Noora’s lips quivered. She tried to smile. She tried to lie.
“No, Mom,” she whispered. “I… I just got upset. He scolded me for being careless, and I—I threw the vase.”
Sophie didn’t argue. She just nodded slowly, eyes cast down, but her silence screamed louder than any accusation.
“I’m sorry,” Sophie whispered, her voice breaking as tears filled her eyes. “I’m so sorry for dragging you into this life. I should’ve fought harder. I should’ve given you more than this. A home that didn’t hurt you. I failed you, didn’t I—”
Noora’s chest caved in. “Mom…” her voice cracked, tears spilling freely. “Please don’t say that. Please don’t—”
She lunged forward and wrapped her arms tightly around her mother, burying her face in her shoulder like a child again.
“You’re the best mother in the world,” she sobbed, clutching her tighter, shaking her head. “Don’t say those things. Don’t ever say that. You didn’t fail me. You never did. If you say that, it feels like you’re going away—and I… I can’t lose you, too…”
Sophie froze in her arms, as if Noora’s words had knocked the breath out of her.
Then she held her back; strong, sure, motherly.
“I’m not going anywhere, silly girl,” she murmured sadly, “I’ll never leave. Never.”
And for a while, the world just stopped.
And in that fragile moment, Noora realized that;
She couldn’t leave. She couldn’t give up.
She would never let Luciano—or anyone—erase the life built on her mother’s sacrifice.
9 P.M…
Even if it destroyed her.
……
Luciano sat sprawled on the edge of his bed, his white shirt hugging his broad frame, sleeves rolled, the top buttons undone to reveal just a hint of chest.
One hand braced behind him, the other languidly held a glass of blood-red wine, swirling as he watched the moonlight bleed through his window.
His gaze shifted between the clock and the stars. 8:59.
Tick…
Tick..
Tick.
The glass trembled slightly in his grip. She would come. Of course, she would.
The clock struck 9:00 sharp.
Knock~
He didn’t turn. His voice was low, sharp. “Come in.”
He heard the click of heels—measured, deliberate, deadly. Still, he kept his eyes locked ahead; not acknowledging her presence as if she didn’t matter.
“So, what did you decide?”
Silence. Only the sound of her heels stopping right in front of him.
That silence pierced him deeper than any answer; this time—demanding to acknowledge her presence. His patience snapped. His head lifted to meet her eyes.
And there she was.
Noora stood like a firestorm in flesh, her chin raised, her eyes blazing defiance hotter than hell.
There was something feral about her this time; beautiful, dangerous, untouchable. It sucker-punched the breath from his lungs.
“Yes,” she said, her voice like a sword sheathed in velvet. “I’ve decided.”
She took a slow step forward.
Then another.
And another—
Until—
She was so close he could smell the faint perfume on her skin.
Something wild and soft.
Something that shouldn’t have belonged to a girl like her.
“I’ve decided I won’t let you take anything else from me,” she whispered, venom coiling behind every word. “Not my dignity. Not my mother. Not my existence. I won’t let you erase what I’ve bled to build, Luciano. I won’t run anymore.”
Her voice trembled—but not from fear. From power. From hatred. From resentment.
For him!
Luciano’s jaw clenched, every muscle tight. He should’ve hated this. He should’ve laughed in her face and told her to get the hell out.
But instead…
His blood roared with something dangerous that he tried long to suppress.
His control snapped like glass under pressure.
Noora reached for her shirt—and with one swift jerk, ripped it open, buttons flying like shrapnel as fabric fluttered to the floor.
Her bare skin shimmered in the moonlight, but it wasn’t her body that undid him. It was her eyes…those damned, defiant eyes staring straight into his soul as she said, steady and lethal:
“Do whatever you want, Luciano Richardson.”
A beat of silence.
Then another.
He didn’t look at her body. He couldn’t.
Because he knew—if he let his gaze drop an inch, he’d lose every ounce of the restraint he still clung to.
“Are you sure this is what you want?” he growled, voice ragged, deeper than it should’ve been.
“Yes,” she whispered challengingly.
“This is your last chance, Noora Veneitte,” he whispered dangerously. “Leave now. Because once I move—once I touch you—there’s no going back.”
He prayed—prayed—she would bolt. Turn her back and run like hell—away from his life—as far as she could so he could erase her everything.
He was so sure she’d do that but—he never imagined her to still stand in front of him, like a prey offering itself to the devil.
She took one final step forward and hissed, “I’m not running anymore.”
And that was it.
Whatever self-control he had left—crumbled.
With a guttural sound that wasn’t quite human, Luciano surged forward. His arm looped around her waist and yanked her into his lap, her body crashing into his with violent heat.
She gasped as her legs straddled him, her bare chest pressed against the fabric of his shirt, the friction electrifying.
Her fingers curled in his collar.
His breath hitched at her throat…
Who’s really winning this battle of wills? Buckle up for the next chapter — it’s going to burn. 🔥🔥
Knock.Knock.The knocks came again—sharper this time… louder, as if it meant to tear apart the silence.Luciano’s breath hitched, his jaw tensing as his eyes remained locked with Noora’s. Neither of them moved. The silence was no longer intimate but it had turned razor sharp, like something balanced on the edge of a blade.Then came the voice.“Luciano?” It was Charles. “Open up.”Noora’s body jolted in his arms.Luciano immediately pulled back, fingers tightening once around her waist before he let go. His eyes, still storm-dark with desire, scanned her flushed, tangled form; hair mussed, lips swollen, the scent of their sin lingering in the air.“Hide,” he said, the word low and dangerous. “Now.”Noora didn’t ask where. She didn’t have time. She turned silently, slipping behind the heavy velvet curtain by the tall window… her breath shallow, chest rising and falling in silent panic.Just in time.Bang. Bang.Another knock. Sharper.Luciano turned and opened the door slightly… just
“Are you sure that’s what you want?” Luciano’s voice was a growl; low, dark, raw enough to scrape bone. “I’ll give you one last chance to walk away, Noora Veneitte. Because once I move—once I touch you—there’s no going back.”He was trying to scare her off.Begging her to bolt, to run like she always had, to leave him free to forget her.But she didn’t move. She didn’t even blink.She stood before him like a storm dressed in skin, her chest rising and falling with fierceness, her eyes a wildfire refusing to burn out.“I’m not running away from you anymore.”Luciano’s heart twisted violently in his chest.She didn’t know what she was inviting.What kind of darkness lived inside him.What kind of hunger had festered, starved, mutated into something savage.He should’ve turned away.He should’ve thrown her out.But instead—He grabbed her.His arms wrapped around her waist in a violent, hungry pull, dragging her down onto his lap like she belonged there—like she was made to burn in his fi
Then he was gone.And all Noora could do was sit there, trembling. Stunned. Bruised. Breaking.She felt the ghost of his grip still burning into her scalp, his threats echoing like a ticking bomb in her chest.What the hell was she supposed to do?Let him touch her? Let him mark her? Let him ruin her?Or disappear? Leave everything behind. Her mother. Her identity. Her last thread of dignity.She couldn’t do either.Just the thought of vanishing…of erasing her name… of never seeing her mother again, was like being shoved off a cliff blindfolded.Tears slid silently down her cheeks.But she had to pull herself together before her mom came back. Sophie had suffered enough. Noora wouldn’t let her see the wreckage of what Luciano had turned her into. Not again.The door clicked open.Noora flinched.But it wasn’t him. It was Sophie, carrying a plate of fruits. Her steps slowed the moment she saw the broken vase on the floor. Her eyes scanned the mess, then lifted to her d
“I asked you something,” Noora said, voice taut. “What do you mean?”Luciano didn’t answer. His eyes stayed locked on hers, challenging, unblinking.And then—Deliberately, he began unbuttoning his shirt.Noora’s brows furrowed. “Wh—what the hell do you think you're doing?” she barked, voice rising with panic. “Stop!”But he didn’t.“Eyes up, sweetheart,” he said coolly. “I thought you weren’t afraid to face your actions and the consequences.”One by one, the buttons slipped free until his chest was bare…smooth, sculpted, and much too close.Her breath caught as her gaze flicked down, before she forced herself to look away in disgust.“What are you trying to prove?!” she snapped.Luciano leaned in slowly, placing his palms on either side of her head, caging her in. She sank into the pillow instinctively, heart hammering.“Do you recognize this?” he asked with a dangerous glint in his eyes.“I... I don’t—” she mumbled, refusing to meet his gaze.His hand gripped her jaw, turning her he
The moonlight glazed the Richardson estate in silver, shadows licking the edges of the poolside like silent secrets.Luciano sat at the edge, long legs sprawled, a glass of whiskey burning in his hand.The ice clinked softly, the only sound daring to disturb the suffocating silence that clung to him like smoke.His presence was a warning. Every inch of him screamed danger.Eyes half-lidded, hair tousled, the silk of his midnight robe shifting with the wind. He looked carved from a darker myth. The quiet wasn’t peace. It was danger, which was leashed tight beneath the surface of his stillness.He heard the footsteps before he saw her. Light. Arrogant. Predictable.He didn’t move.Didn’t turn.Didn’t even blink.To him, her presence didn’t even qualify as a nuisance…just a mosquito buzzing close to the flame.“Oh my,” came the saccharine voice, sliding beside him like oil. “It’s Mr. Luciano himself.”Luciano’s jaw ticked. Still, his gaze stayed fixed ahead, on the moon’s reflection rippl
The car was silent, save for her whimpers.Noora writhed in his lap, sweat trailing down her skin, limbs trembling as fire pulsed under her skin like molten lava. The drug still surged through her veins, devouring her sanity with every beat of her heart.“Ahhh… so hot… it burns…”Her fingers clawed at the shredded remains of her dress, peeling fabric off her feverish skin as though it stung her.Luciano clenched his jaw, eyes forward, unmoved.“Stop squirming,” he muttered coldly, voice like ice cutting through her flames.She whimpered and curled closer to him instead, burying her flushed face into the crook of his neck.“S-So hot… Please… please make it stop…”“Please make it stop…”He didn’t budge.But she felt the slight jerk in his throat when her lips grazed his collarbone.“Noora Veneitte!” His voice was low. Dangerous. “Bear it. Or you’ll regret what happens next.”But she didn’t listen.Couldn’t.Her body was no longer hers. Her fingers found his chest; hard, warm, alive. She