Masuk
Annabelle’s POV
“Please, Mr. D’Angélo, I just need more time!”
Father's voice was hoarse, raw with desperation.
On hearing his desperate tone, I paused.
I stood outside my study, my grip on the doorknob, tightening. My heart was slowly beginning to race too.
I had never seen my father so vulnerable like that before.
I kept wondering to myself, trying to figure out the scene I was witnessing at the moment.
“I have seen father feel pain, that was when mum died…
I have experienced him being scared and uncertain, but that is always just for a few moments, in times of difficult decisions or situations…
But I haven't seen him act this desperate before!” I thought to myself.
Before Mama’s death (as we fondly called her), making the toughest decisions at home was so easy and simple for my father.
Mama acquired so much power because she hailed from one of the wealthiest families in their local clan. This gave Father an edge in most situations when protection was needed.
But then, she decided to keep a flower and paint shop because of me. She knew how much I had grown to love flowers and painting.
"I have seen this face before," I quickly remembered, on seeing our visitor.
Two other men stood almost motionless at his back as if keeping guard.
I couldn't fathom what was happening. Even though I have always known since my childhood that Father had some strange faces visiting us from time to time, because of his gambling and dirty involvement with gang leaders.
But that particular atmosphere was different from all others of the past.
I rushed to my study table to confirm the face of the man sitting, from the regular magazine always placed by the bookshelf.
Searching around for a few minutes...
"Finally got it!” I whispered nearly out loud but quickly caught myself.
This magazine, for years, has been seen tolling around the house.
“Antonioni D’Angélo? The Shadow King? The man who makes empires tremble?”
So many questions were pumping into my head. Including…
“Father is pleading with him!? Why?”
The huge man sitting on the threshold, his presence was suffocating.
His voice was smooth but deceptively calm. And for some strange and unknown reason, it sent a cold shiver down my spine.
Antonioni D’Angélo!
Everything about this man screamed danger—his broad shoulders, his tailored shady-black suit, the way his dark eyes assessed the whole room with chilling detachment.
He is one who effortlessly exudes power, the kind that doesn’t need to be announced.
Antonioni leaned back in his chair, exuding effortless power and masculinity. His fingers tapped against the armrest in slow, deliberate beats. His silence is worse than words.
After an agonizing pause, a deep, icy-warm, and cold voice cut through the air. “Time is a luxury you no longer possess…”
I strained my ears further to hear what he was saying.
It seemed like Father was muttering something, but he flicked his hand, cutting him off.
“You gambled with what wasn’t yours. You lost! Now, it’s time to pay your debt, Edward!” I had heard him say.
I couldn't bear the sound of where their discussion was heading. Out of my hidden corner, I voiced out.
“What debt?” My voice barely sounded like mine.
My pulse pounded as dread coils around my ribs, like a snake.
Antonioni’s gaze flickered over me, resting a little on my hips, then back to my father.
“Is this her? Not very bad looking.”
Father nodded like a child pleading guilty to a clumsy crime.
My stomach twisted.
“What’s going on?”
“She doesn’t know?” He sounded almost amused.
Father lowered his head. “I was going to tell her.”
“Tell me what?” My stomach continued to twist fearfully and painfully, my face slowly turning pink.
Father wasn’t meeting my eyes, instead, he looked down at his palms, which he placed between his laps. “Belle, sweetheart, I…” He swallowed hard. “I had no choice...”
I turned to him, shaking my head. “...no choice about what exactly?”
His throat bobbed. “I…I owe Mr. D'Angélo more than I can ever repay.”
While I tried to process my father's statement, Antonioni drew closer, with slow, deliberate steps, like a panther circling its prey, his scent, an expensive cologne, and something darker filled the space between us.
My heart was racing as he circled me. I was utterly confused. My gaze followed him carefully as he moved around me to check me out.
And then, his voice cut through the air like a blade...
“Your father owes me a huge debt he cannot repay...” His voice was smooth, but there wasn't any warmth in it. “...so he is offering you instead.”
I stumbled back. “No, No! That’s not…he wouldn’t…!” I was so shocked that I couldn't find the right words to express my shock.
I finally turned to my father, pleading. “Father, please tell me this isn’t true!”
He collapsed onto the chair, his hands covering his face.
Tears gathered inside my eyes and were ready to drop.
Antonioni’s gaze dropped to the mess. His lips curled—not in anger, but something worse. Amusement.
“Hmm... interesting... You are even more fragile than I imagined." I had heard him mock.
Spontaneously, I balled my fists in anger, spitting the words, “I am not fragile!”
Antonioni's smirk deepened. “Well, we will see about that.” He shifted his buttocks on his chair (in a way that suggested it was about time), checking time on his wristwatch.
In an instant, his deep voice startled me again as he said the words…“You belong to me now, Annabelle. Guards! Take her, let's go!”
Panic surged through my veins. “I’m not something to be owned, Mr D’Angélo! I'm not going anywhere with you!”
Father remained face-down, with his hands covering his face completely, looking defeated.
Antonioni's lips curled into another smirk, this time around, a more wicked one, kind of:
“You don't have a choice.”
At this time, I was dumbfounded, in no particular order of emotions or feelings.
The tears that had been running down my cheeks had already drenched the upper piece of my dress—the one close to my collarbone.
Antonioni's fierceness cut across my anxiety. “We'll be on our way now, Edward. Word will continually be sent to you as to how the marriage is going. Good bye man.”
He took his leave after saying those last words. Walking majestically toward the exit.
Shockingly enough, father still couldn't utter a word. It's only that this time, he was able to lift his face from his hands, only gazing at Antonioni like a lost sheep.
His eye bags were heavily sagging down on his upper cheekbones.
“Father, please say something.” I cried further, looking at him and expecting him to save me.
Instead of getting the protection I expected, I saw him still looking transfixed at the exit where Antonioni had taken out, again defeated.
He stayed in the posture for a few minutes.
The next feeling that came was a feeling I had never felt in my entire life.
I was shattered and disappointed.
Before I could say another word, the two men in suits who had been with us stepped forward and made to put their hands on me.
I jerked back, my heart hammering in my chest.
I still couldn't believe Father could do such a thing to me.
“Father, please say something! Don't allow them to take me away, please,” I cried uncontrollably.
Just immediately after I spoke, two gunshots were heard from outside.
One of the guards, in a split second, pointed his rifle at my father, and Father's hands immediately swung up into the air in surrender.
I didn't see that coming, but he pointed the gun at me, too, and commanded me to move closer to my father.
In an instant, I flipped my hands to my mouth and obeyed. I was shivering in fear, almost about to urinate
on myself.
There was a great rage of fear and tension in the atmosphere.
I prayed that my father and I didn't end that day dead. What could be happening outside?
Sometimes a character’s pain grips you by the throat and refuses to let go until you’ve followed her into the dark and felt every bruise her heart collects along the way. This book is one of those journeys—a must-read laced with high emotional depth, psychological tension, and sharp character intelligence. This is not just a romance. It is dark romance—a war of hearts, where tenderness fights for breath in a kingdom built on blood, and desire becomes the battlefield no one walks away from without scars. Welcome to the journey. Hold your heart tight. You’re about to hurt… and heal… with her.
(Dual POV — Antonioni & Annabelle)Antonioni’s POVPeace.For the first time in my life, I understood what that word truly meant—not as an idea, not as something distant or imagined, but as something real… something I could sit in, breathe in, live in.It wasn’t power. It wasn’t controlled. It wasn’t the empire I had built with blood, strategy, and relentless force.It was her. Annabelle.Everything I had once thought made me strong had only made me hard. But she… she had made me human again.The wedding in Dubai had been nothing short of grand, but for me, it wasn’t the scale, the wealth, or the influence that mattered.It was the moment she walked toward me.Choosing me again. That alone was everything. Fulfilling.
Antonioni’s POVGraduation days are supposed to feel loud. Full. Celebratory. With family.But when I saw her… It felt quiet. Deeply, overwhelmingly still.She stood there alone. No mother. No father. No husband. No siblings. No one visibly claimed that moment with her after everything she had endured to get there.And yet… She stood. Whole. Composed.Unshaken. Like everything she had been building toward had finally settled into place, and for once, life wasn’t dragging her backward or forcing her forward. It was simply… letting her stand.My chest tightened. Because I knew… She had learned how to stand without me.And that realization humbled me more than anything else ever had.I stayed where I was, watching her from a distance. Not approaching. Not interrupting. Just… observing.
Antonioni’s POVThe Park wasn't weak or unstable. Not anymore. It was just… quiet. The kind of quiet that comes after war. After blood. After loss. After victory.Everything was in place. Operations ran smoothly. Reports came in on time. Every sector of the Park breathed with order and precision. There were no sudden alarms, no betrayals lurking in corners, no fire waiting to be put out.For the first time in years… Nothing was falling apart. And yet… Something in me was.I sat at the head of the long table in the Dome, eyes scanning through documents I had already read twice. Numbers. Names. Routes. Security rotations. All intact.Perfect. Controlled. Mine. But my mind wasn’t there. It hadn’t been for a while.“Boss?” Matteo’s voice cut through the silence.I di
Annabelle’s POVGraduation days are supposed to feel loud. Full. Celebratory. With family. But mine felt… quiet, deeply, overwhelmingly still. I was all alone—no mother, no father, no husband, no siblings to cheer me on for two years of schooling.Like everything I had been building toward had finally settled into place, and for once, life wasn’t rushing me forward or dragging me backward. It was simply… letting me stand.I adjusted my gown slightly, fingers smoothing over the fabric as I stood among other graduates, laughter and chatter rising around me like a distant wave I wasn’t quite inside of.I smiled when necessary. Responded when spoken to. But my mind… My mind was elsewhere. Not in Spain. Not in the past. But in a space I hadn’t yet defined. A space that felt like waiting. Even though I told myself I wasn’t.My phone vibrated in my hand.I almost ignored it. Almost. But something…something quiet and familiar, made me look. Another transfer.My brows pulled together slightly.
Annabelle’s POVMichigan felt… still. The kind of stillness that doesn’t suffocate you, but gives you space to finally hear yourself think.I hadn’t realized how loud my life had been recently until I stepped into the quiet. No gunfire. No tension sitting at the base of my spine.No constant need to look over my shoulder or measure every word before I spoke it.Just… me. And for the first time in a long time, that felt unfamiliar.My new house wasn’t extravagant. Not like Spain. Not like the Dome. Not like anything tied to Antonioni’s world. But it was mine.White walls, wide windows, soft light spilling into every corner. The kind of place that didn’t carry history or blood or secrets in its foundation. A place that allowed new things to grow.I remember standing in the empty living room the day I got the keys. Bare floors.Echoing silence. And yet, my chest felt full.“I did this,” I whispered to myself. Not for survival. Not for anyone else. But for me.The gallery came next. That
Antonioni’s POVThe moment they stepped inside my study, something changed. I didn’t see it at first, but I felt it. The air. It changed. It became sharp and wrong.My fingers stilled over the paper in front of me. And then… I looked up. “Who…?”The word didn’t even finish forming.Because the man standing in front of me…No. That wasn’t possible.My chest tightened instantly, as something had reached inside and gripped my lungs. My mind tried to catch up, to make sense of what my eyes were seeing, but it refused.It was…my father—the one Patty Mama told me he died when I was just two years old. He stepped forward. Slowly. Deliberately. As if he knew one wrong step would shatter whatever fragile reality was holding this moment together.“Antonioni…” he said.My name. From his mouth. This was undeniably him. The face in the pictures.“I… It’s me. Your father. I’ve come back. I’ve come to make it right.”My pen slipped from my fingers. I didn’t feel it fall. My body locked. Completely.
Lorenzo's POV I didn’t come to expose Antonioni, even though it would have felt satisfactory to do that. If I had exposed him, the room would not still be standing.I came to remind him that I exist. That was the difference.The courtroom smelled like polish, crispy papers, and cowardice. The kind
Lorenzo's POV Marta talked when she was nervous.Not recklessly. Not emotionally.But in fragments. She offered the details as if they were harmless, like crumbs scattered without awareness of who was watching the ground.She didn’t know that about herself.I did.She had just returned from the pr
Diego’s POVMama Espe’s voice reached the courtyard before Annabelle did.I heard it from where I stood, checking the perimeter, adjusting my gloves, preparing my mind for what the day would demand.Concern h
Antonioni’s POVThe sound of success isn’t applause. It isn't a brief relief, not a celebration.It's the silence that should settle after a room full of people realizes they have failed to bury you, and must now live with the consequences of your survival.That silence followed me back into my cel







