Share

Chapter 2

Author: Matthew M
The flimsy, papery hospital gown was the last remnant of the delicate girl I’d pretended to be. I shed it, along with the lingering scent of antiseptic and the vile, sweet perfume of betrayal that clung to my silk cocktail dress. Seven days. The timer was set. Elena Moretti, the fragile civilian attachment, was dead, and Elena Luciano, the cold, calculating counterweight to two dynasties, was about to be born.

I dismissed the Moretti doctor—a man who represented a complicity I could no longer tolerate—and made my way not toward the penthouse security of my old life, but toward the estate’s private armory. This cavernous space, a sanctuary of calibrated lethal force, was where Marco and Santino had taught me the family trade: how to survive. It was here, surrounded by racks of gleaming steel and heavy ammunition, that I had first learned what true power felt like—the weight of a cold Beretta in my hand, a skill my intellectual, civilian parents could never have imagined.

Salvatore, the ancient armorer, whose loyalty was measured in decades of service, nodded with a bleak understanding when I appeared.

"Salvatore, I need the lockbox on the third shelf, second row. The one with the double combination." My voice was flat, containing the cold edge of absolute authority.

His eyes, dark and knowing, widened in the harsh fluorescent lighting. He knew what lay in that reinforced box: the final inheritance from my true parents, meticulously secured by Isabella—genuine passports, a devastating cache of unmarked currency, and the secure, pre-arranged contact with the Luciano Syndicate.

"The young Dons… they check the inventory, Miss Elena. They monitor the locks." His fear was heavy in the air.

I moved closer, my rage barely concealed beneath a veneer of icy command. "They forfeited their right to check my life, Salvatore. Now, they forfeit their right to check my assets. If Marco or Santino ask, I was never here. They are not to know what I took."

He searched my eyes for a sign of the girl he had watched grow up, but found only the woman who had learned how to survive them. He gave a single, crisp nod of reluctant allegiance. "Be quick. I can only hold them for a matter of minutes."

I retrieved the box. Beneath the stack of forged documents and currency lay a single, velvet-lined case. I opened it. It held the Mourning Star: a breathtaking, priceless black diamond engagement ring. It had belonged to my mother, a stone so notorious, a symbol of such pure, dark intent, that my brothers believed it was safely locked away in a Swiss vault, a symbol of their control.

The moment I slipped the ring onto my finger, it felt heavy, dark, and perfectly cold. It was more than jewelry; it was a promise. A declaration that I was claiming a destiny beyond their control.

Ascending in the silent elevator to the penthouse, I rehearsed the final scene. No tears. No accusations. Just the ice-cold precision of a calculated move. They understood strength; tonight, I would give them a masterclass.

The doors slid open. The silence of the penthouse lounge was immediate, vast, and unnerving. Too silent, too theatrical.

Then, the sound: a quiet, perfectly controlled, yet deeply wrenching sob drifting from the living room.

I found Gianna exactly where I expected her, curled dramatically on the bespoke white leather sofa, weeping not into a simple napkin, but into the protective chest of Santino. His arms were wrapped around her, his face buried near her hair in a posture of profound comfort. Marco stood nearby, scotch in hand, looking exhausted, paternal, and utterly dismissive of my absence. They were a tableau of domestic serenity that screamed of my immediate, complete replacement.

Gianna slowly lifted her head, her eyes red-rimmed and dramatically innocent, then caught sight of the heavy black diamond ring on my hand. Her tears stopped instantly, replaced by a sudden, predatory widening of her gaze.

Marco’s glass halted halfway to his lips. "What in God's name is that?" His voice was a flat, proprietary demand, his surprise real, cutting through the saccharine scene.

"This?" I lifted my hand, turning my wrist slightly, allowing the unique, lethal black diamond to catch the overhead light. "An engagement ring."

Santino slowly unwrapped his arm from Gianna, standing to his full, imposing height. His movement was fluid, dangerous, and purely predatory, his focus fixed solely on the stone. "Don't play games, Elena. That is the Mourning Star. That stone is locked in Geneva. Where did you get it? Who did you steal it from?"

"It belonged to my mother," I said simply, allowing the silence to stretch, thick with mounting dread. "And now, it belongs to the future Mrs. Vincent Luciano."

Gianna’s gasp was a masterpiece of melodrama. She instantly clutched at Santino’s arm, her fear manufactured and perfect. "V-Vincent Luciano? Il Macellaio di Brooklyn? The Butcher of Brooklyn? The head of the Syndicate!"

Marco slammed his scotch down on a nearby glass table with a sharp, decisive clink. His face became a mask of profound disbelief and mounting, terrifying rage.

"You accepted his proposal?" Marco took a heavy, deliberate step, closing the distance between us. His voice dropped to a dangerous rumble of pure, masculine fury. "After everything? After we protected you? After we gave you a home and a life in this family, you run to our oldest enemy?"

"You didn't give me a home, Marco," I countered, my voice low and steady, my heart a piece of cold marble in my chest. "You gave me a very expensive, very high-security cage. A cage where the men I trusted most proved they were willing to let me poison myself to protect a stranger who has been in your orbit for a few short months. That is not family; that is a liability I’m shedding."

Santino’s jaw clenched, his eyes dark with the shame of exposure. "She was terrified! She's delicate, Elena! We were protecting her from you—your reputation for dramatics, your volatile emotional outbursts."

"Dramatics?" I laughed, a harsh, brittle sound that felt alien even to my own ears. "You want dramatics, Santino? Here it is."

I reached into the small, ornate bag I carried—the same bag Gianna had been using to display my stolen jewelry—and pulled out a tiny, antique silver key. I tossed it onto the coffee table. It landed near the sapphire pendant still conspicuously draped around Gianna's neck.

"That key opens the private safe deposit box with the documents proving your father's involvement in the Mayor's last campaign fraud," I announced, watching their faces pale as the raw realization of the leverage hit them. "You need those documents to solidify the Moretti legacy, to buy the loyalty of half the city council."

Marco snatched up the key, his confusion warring with his innate greed for power. "What is this? Why are you giving this up?"

"Because it’s a wedding present," I replied, smoothing the silk of my dress, adjusting my armor. "Vincent doesn't want territory. He doesn't want your secrets. He wants a wife. And I want the security of a man who knows the difference between strength and fragility, and who chooses to marry the former."

I walked toward the elevator, my heels clicking a final, decisive rhythm on the pristine marble. I paused with my hand on the cold brass handle, savoring the moment of absolute, unassailable control.

"You have six days left," I told them, meeting their stunned, horrified gazes. "Six days to prove you were worth keeping."

"Wait, Elena!" Santino called out, his voice now sharp with a sudden, desperate fear, a sound I hadn't heard since they were boys.

I turned back, poised to leave.

"If you walk out that door, you’re not coming back," Marco warned, recovering his composure, his voice dropping to a low, dangerous growl. "And the second you become Mrs. Luciano, you become the enemy. We will treat you as such. There will be no leniency, no quarter."

I smiled, a genuine, terrifying smile that held no warmth whatsoever.

"Good," I reminded them, my voice dropping to a seductive, lethal whisper, the tone of a woman who finally understood the rules of the game. "Because enemies always know each other’s weak spots."

The elevator doors began to close, the finality of the separation deafening. But Marco lunged forward, his powerful hand slamming into the gap, jamming the doors open before the lock could engage. His breath was ragged, his face thrust close to mine, his eyes burning with a dark, desperate realization.

"You think you’re safe with Luciano? You think he knows you?" Marco gripped my arm, hard, his fear outweighing his fury. "Luciano doesn't know you have the kill-switch for his entire electronic infrastructure—a code that can shut down all his communication, his finances, his entire operation. And I'm the only one who knows where you hid the backup activation key."
Continue to read this book for free
Scan code to download App

Latest chapter

  • Proposal of Blood and Betrayal   Chapter 10

    The basement room felt charged with kinetic energy, a silent explosion waiting for a fuse. Vincent Luciano stood before me, offering a choice that was designed to be no choice at all: immediate, bloody destruction or undeniable, absolute domination.Marco and Santino stood behind me, their stances rigid, their faces etched with a desperate, painful hope. Their fate, and the fate of the Moretti dynasty, hung solely on the words I was about to speak.I looked down at the plain platinum band in Vincent's hand, then at the empty space on my finger where the Mourning Star had rested. I had spent the last week planning my revenge and my escape. But my entire identity, my entire life, was inextricably tied to the two men who now stood ready to accept their ruin. They were my first love, my first heartbreak, and now, my final, impossible choice."Vincent," I began, my voice clear, strong, and unwavering. "You are right. I am stronger than they are. And I am profoundly tired of being an asset.

  • Proposal of Blood and Betrayal   Chapter 9

    Vincent Luciano’s presence in the orchestra storage room completely shifted the dynamics of the confrontation. He had bypassed the front of house entirely, cutting straight to the chase. His eyes, usually cool jade, were blazing with cold, possessive fury as he surveyed the scene—the overturned chairs, the two Moretti heirs with drawn weapons, and me, trapped between them."My security team tracked the movements of a known Moretti asset—your mother—leaving the perimeter in a hurry," Vincent explained, gesturing toward the shattered door with his Beretta. "When I didn't see you in the Opera box, I knew you were gone. And Santino? You were supposed to be watching my fiancée, not plotting with her."Santino, having instinctively lowered his gun at the sight of the Luciano boss, slowly raised his hands in a gesture of non-aggression. "It's not what you think, Luciano. We were having a necessary family discussion. About Don Moretti's treachery. And Gianna's role as a spy. Elena has actually

  • Proposal of Blood and Betrayal   Chapter 8

    Marco and Santino froze, the adrenaline-fueled momentum of their confrontation collapsing under the sheer weight of this new, shocking truth. The idea that their delicate, weeping, supposedly fragile fiancée, Gianna, was a calculating double agent planted by their own father was a reality too enormous to instantly process. Their guns, previously trained on each other, lowered slowly."A spy? Gianna?" Marco whispered, his disbelief palpable. "No. It's impossible. She’s too nervous. Too fragile. She can barely hold a teacup without spilling it.""That's her expertly crafted cover," I argued, my voice urgent. "She’s always fainting, always crying, always needing a hand. It’s the perfect way to distract you both and keep you focused on protecting her vulnerability, rather than scrutinizing her actions. Remember the night they proposed to her? The engagement was at the very same dinner where you forced me to drink the grappa."I looked pointedly at Santino. "Gianna slipped the drink. She go

  • Proposal of Blood and Betrayal   Chapter 7

    The tension in the opera corridor was a live wire ready to snap. Two brothers, both heavily armed and ready to kill, stood locked in a stalemate, fighting over the woman they had simultaneously betrayed and relied upon, only to discover a deeper treachery originating from their own mother."She goes nowhere with you, Santino," Marco snarled, pulling his gun free and pointing it dangerously toward the ceiling. "She belongs to me. She is a Moretti asset.""She belongs to the Syndicate now, remember?" Santino retorted, leveling his own weapon, keeping it low but visible. "And right now, the Syndicate thinks I'm her only contact. I take her, I get the information. You chase her, you start a war you can't win. Be smart."I took advantage of their dangerous standoff. "Neither of you are taking me anywhere without my consent." I pressed the Luciano Chain into Isabella's trembling hand, urging her toward the dark, recessed service entrance. "Go, Madrina. Now. I'll handle them. I know the truth

  • Proposal of Blood and Betrayal   Chapter 6

    My decision was driven by the core principle of survival I had learned from the Morettis: always trust the calculating mind over the emotional one. Marco was prone to explosive, aggressive action; Santino favored subtle manipulation. If Santino was lying, his plan would be devastatingly effective. If he was telling the truth, he was my only safe passage to Isabella.I pulled my hand from his, subtly shaking my head. I crumpled Marco's note and left it in the palm rest of the seat.Vincent, noticing the slight, intimate commotion from the stage, leaned in, his voice polite but firm. "Is everything alright, Elena? You look agitated.""Perfectly," I said, forcing a bright, cold smile. "Santino was just congratulating us on our engagement. A little overwrought, perhaps."Santino gave an elegant, mocking bow to Vincent, a gesture of defeat that felt utterly disingenuous. "Congratulations, Vincent. She's all yours now." He turned to leave, but as he passed my chair, he subtly kicked somethin

  • Proposal of Blood and Betrayal   Chapter 5

    The air inside the Metropolitan Opera House was thick, a suffocating mixture of old money, expensive perfume, and an even older, more lethal web of grudges. I walked the red carpet on Vincent Luciano’s arm, dressed in a simple, lethal column gown of bias-cut black silk that plunged into a dramatic, backless V. The Luciano Chain, a blinding torrent of white diamonds, was the only contrast to the stark black fabric and the dark menace of the Mourning Star on my finger.The flashbulbs of the paparazzi were blinding, the whispers of the società lethal. Every click of the camera was a declaration of war.Vincent was every inch the protective fiancé, his posture radiating absolute power. "Remember your role, Elena," he murmured into my ear as we moved toward the main entrance. "Be a vision of silent, unattainable devotion. We are presenting a united front.""I hear you perfectly," I replied, my voice sweet as poison, a promise of calculated obedience.I scanned the opulent, multi-tiered hall

More Chapters
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on GoodNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
SCAN CODE TO READ ON APP
DMCA.com Protection Status