Emilia had just stepped into the hallway when she saw her.
Tall. Stunning. A predator in heels.
She wore a long coat, barely fastened. Beneath it, flashes of red silk clung to her skin like fire. Lingerie. Her heels struck the marble like gunshots, confident and unapologetic.
Lucien’s bedroom door opened. The woman walked in without knocking. Like she’d done it before. Like she was expected. Like she belonged.
Emilia froze at the top of the stairs, her chest tightening, the floor shifting beneath her. The air thickened in her lungs, too heavy to breathe.She turned and fled to the kitchen, heart pounding. Rosa was there, chopping herbs like she was stabbing something.
Emilia’s voice barely rose above a whisper. “Who is she?”
Rosa looked up slowly, eyes gleaming with something cruel. Then she laughed. Cold. Mean.
“Oh, her?” Rosa sneered. “That’s Isla. Lucien’s favorite. She comes when he needs to forget everything else.”
Emilia’s stomach twisted. But she didn’t speak.
Rosa tilted her head. “What’s the matter? You thought you mattered? You were bought, Emilia. Don’t mistake his pity for affection.”
She shoved a silver tray into Emilia’s hands. “Take this up to him. Maybe he’ll want a smoke break between rounds.”
Whiskey. A cigar. Some kind of roasted meat.The tray shook in Emilia’s grasp.She wanted to disappear.But she climbed the stairs anyway.
Each step heavier than the last. She could hear them now, muffled sounds from behind the door. Louder. Rhythmic.
A moan. A gasp. The creak of a bed. Then Isla’s voice, low, dirty, dragging Lucien’s name like a drug across her tongue. Emilia stopped outside the door, frozen.
She should turn back. She didn’t. She knocked.
The moaning stopped. A long silence. Then the door creaked open, just enough for her to see inside. Isla was on his lap, wearing nothing but red lace and a wicked smirk. Lucien was shirtless, his chest rising and falling. His eyes landed on Emilia. And something in them shut off.
He looked like sin. And he looked… furious. Not shocked. Not guilty. Just cold. Like she was a nuisance. Like she was filth on his polished floors.
“Leave it,” he said. His voice was flat. Angry. Distant.
Emilia placed the tray down, hands trembling. Then she turned and walked away.
Lucien said nothing. Neither did Isla.
She didn’t cry. Not until she was in her room. Lights off. Blankets pulled over her like armor that didn’t work. She told herself it didn’t matter. That she didn’t care.
Why did it hurt so much? Why did she care? Why did it matter who warmed his bed? But it did. God, it did. And for the first time, she let herself feel it, every anger, every humiliation, every word he’d never said. The want. The ache. The foolish hope that maybe, just maybe, he saw her as something more.
But he didn’t. He never did.
She curled into herself, small and shaking.
Then, The door creaked. Two men entered. Unfamiliar. Tall. Armed.
Her body jolted upright. Panic flooded her veins.
“Lucien didn’t...” she started, but a hand smothered her scream.
One of them lunged. His hand clamped over her mouth. The other grabbed her wrists. She fought. Kicked. Thrashed. Screamed. But her cries were muffled.
Still, she screamed again, louder. A desperate sound that cracked the night open.
Down the hallway, behind closed doors, above the moans of pleasure, her scream echoed.
Back in Lucien’s room, Isla moved faster on top of him, grinding harder, dragging her nails down his chest.
“Don’t stop,” she whispered.
But Lucien had gone still. He wasn’t listening.That scream, he heard it again.
It wasn’t the wind. It was her. Something inside him snapped.
He shifted beneath Isla, but she pinned him down harder, the red silk between them slick with heat.
“It’s the wind, Lucien,” she hissed into his ear.
“Get off me. Now. That was Emilia.”
He reached to shove her off, then felt it. Cold steel against his ribs.
“Don’t be stupid,” Isla murmured.
His eyes snapped to hers. He couldn’t believe it. He’d known her for years.
“How much were you paid?” he growled. “To betray me.”
Isla smiled. Dark. Deadly.
“Oh Lucien, a lot. Someone finally saw my worth better than you ever did.”
“Your worth?” he laughed bitterly. “You were nothing in that filthy club before I picked you up. You belong to me, Isla. And you should know better than to cross me. Get off me while I can still forgive this betrayal.”
“You never forgive anything, Lucien.” She leaned in, dragging the barrel of the gun along his chest. “That’s why I didn’t come alone.”
Then she saw it, the panic in his eyes. Emilia’s voice was getting fainter. Fainter.
“She’s not just a slave, is she?”
Lucien didn’t answer. He didn’t have to.
Isla’s smile widened. “Wow. The almighty Lucien. I saw it the moment she knocked. Your body changed. You weren’t even here anymore.”
Her finger curled tighter around the trigger. Lucien’s pulse thundered in his veins.
“I could shoot you right now,” she whispered. “But I won’t. Not if you cooperate. I still owe you my life.”
She leaned in again, lips brushing his cheek. Then she pulled out her phone.
“Jerry,” she said coolly, “She’s valuable. She means something to him.”
She hung up.
Lucien stared at her, breathing hard. Rigid.Fear and rage roared in his chest.
Because now,He couldn’t hear Emilia’s voice at all.
You’ve made it to the most pivotal chapter so far, and if your heart is racing, you’re not alone. Lucien may play cold, but tonight? His carefully constructed world begins to fracture. And Emilia, the girl he thought he could keep in the shadows, is becoming his greatest weakness. Isla’s betrayal wasn’t random. It was planned. Coordinated. And Lucien never saw it coming. But here’s the thing about monsters in suits… When you take what they secretly love, They stop pretending to be human. See you in Chapter Eleven. And trust me… Lucien’s about to remind everyone exactly who he is.
The house slept, but Emilia did not.Lucien’s arm was draped heavy across her waist, his breath steady in sleep, yet she lay with her eyes wide open, counting the seconds. Her pulse was a drumbeat in her chest, each thud reminding her of the napkin folded beneath her pillow.Tonight. Kitchen.Rosa’s handwriting, sharp and deliberate, had carried no explanation, only that single instruction.She stared at the ceiling until the clock on the wall chimed past midnight. Slowly, carefully, she lifted Lucien’s arm and slid out of bed, her bare feet ghosting across the marble floor. The mansion was quiet, but not silent, the walls had their own pulse here. Guards shifted outside. Somewhere in the distance, a door shut.Emilia wrapped her shawl tighter around her shoulders and moved through the halls. Her steps echoed faintly, swallowed by the cavernous darkness of the house. Every shadow seemed to lean closer, listening.When she reached the kitchen, the air was warmer. The scent of rosemary,
The sky was paling when Emilia slipped back through the garden gate. Dew clung to the grass, the cool dampness seeping through her slippers as she hurried across the lawn. Rosa’s hand was firm at her elbow, guiding her through the shadows with a precision that betrayed years of knowing this house better than her own soul.“Quiet now,” Rosa whispered, her breath fogging in the dawn chill. “Los guardias will make their rounds soon.” Emilia nodded, her chest tight. Every second out here felt stolen, every breath a betrayal. She had not slept. Her mind replayed Dario’s face, his smooth voice, the way he had spoken of Lucien, of the Vulture, of choices she wasn’t ready to make. Her pulse thrummed with the weight of it all.Rosa pulled her into the side corridor that led toward the servants’ wing. There were fewer patrols here; the guards focused on the gates and main entrances. They moved swiftly, slipping past a yawning maid, ducking into the laundry passage, and finally stopping outside
The room was dim, lit only by the soft glow of sconces against the stone walls. Emilia’s pulse quickened as the heavy doors shut behind her, sealing her in. She had been dragged through unfamiliar corridors, past faceless men whose eyes glinted like predators in the half light, until finally, she was deposited here.To meet Dario vescari. He wore power like a second skin; even if his looks give weak. it radiated from the slope of his shoulders, from the silence that wrapped the room as though it dared not defy him.He was not old, not the shadowed monster she had imagined lurking behind the name Vulture. His face was sharp, his eyes dark, thoughtful, like someone who measured every detail and missed nothing. His mouth curved in a half smile, as though he had been expecting her impatience.“Are you the Vulture?” she demanded, her voice low but steady, the words spilling out before her courage could falter. She had come this far; there was no point in circling the question.The man’s s
The drive was a blur of shadows and jolts. Emilia had tried to count the turns, tried to mark the rhythm of the city against the car’s speed, but with her head forced down and a black hood covering her vision, she could only cling to fragments: the rough smell of leather, the hum of tires, the occasional barked orders in clipped Italian.Every second stretched into dread.Her wrists were bound lightly, not tight enough to cut circulation but firm enough to remind her of her helplessness. That unsettled her more than rough treatment would have. Whoever had taken her wanted her unharmed. Wanted her whole.Wanted her alive.The thought carved deeper into her chest with each passing minute.At last, the car slowed. Gravel crunched beneath the tires, and then the engine cut off. Hands grabbed her roughly, pulling her out. The night air hit her like a slap, cool, scented faintly with salt, as though the sea wasn’t far away.“Walk,” a man’s voice ordered.She stumbled forward, guided by stro
The night air at Pier 17 was colder than Emilia expected, the salt heavy wind biting through her coat as if it knew she had no business being here. The waves slapped against the wooden posts, steady and merciless, their rhythm reminding her of a heartbeat, hers, rapid and unsteady.She moved carefully, her shoes quiet against the damp planks. The place smelled of rust and seawater, fish and oil. Cargo crates lined the pier like silent sentinels, shadows stretching long and jagged under the weak glow of the scattered lamps. It felt abandoned, too quiet, too still, like a stage set and waiting.Her fingers clenched tightly around the straps of her bag, where Rosa’s money was tucked inside. Now, standing here in the dark, she wondered if she had been a fool.Every step felt like a trespass. Every shadow looked alive.She kept glancing behind her, the echo of her own footsteps making her jump. The guards at the mansion had been difficult enough to slip past. Rosa’s diversion, the money sl
The night air clung to Emilia’s skin like a second shadow. The iron gates of Lucien’s mansion closed behind her with a sound that felt final, like the last line of a vow she hadn’t meant to make. Rosa’s keys were cold in her pocket, and the bundle of bills pressed against her ribs, heavier than gold.For a moment she stood frozen, her heart pounding in her throat. She had never stepped outside these walls without Lucien by her side, without guards trailing at her back. Freedom was not sweet, it was terrifying.The street stretched wide and empty beneath the pale light of the moon. Trees shivered with a midnight breeze, and somewhere in the distance, a dog barked. Emilia pulled her coat tighter around her shoulders, lowered her head, and began to walk.Every crunch of gravel beneath her shoes sounded like an alarm bell. Every flicker of movement in the shadows made her stomach knot. She kept expecting Lucien’s voice to cut through the silence, to hear the sharp clap of his shoes on the