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 conservatory was cold now.Not just from the storm outside, though that didn’t help, the glass roof trembled under the weight of the wind, and each crack of thunder rattled through her ribs. But the real cold was inside her. Settling deep in the pit of her chest. A frost that no fire could melt.Lucien had walked out and never looked back.Emilia didn’t blame him. She’d screamed at him. Called him a bastard. Told him she loved him in the same breath she accused him of becoming a monster.God, she had meant it.Every syllable. Every second. Every ache behind the words.But love wasn’t a shield here. It didn’t protect you. It didn’t soften the world, it sharpened it. And now, alone in the echo of her confession, Emilia felt something splinter.She pressed her palm against her chest, right over her heart, like she could contain it. Like she could force her body to stop remembering the way he looked at her. The way his voice had broken when he said she hadn’t lost him. The way his arms
The house was too quiet now. The kind of silence that came after a fight that hadn’t really ended.Lucien didn’t look back when he walked out of the conservatory.He couldn’t.If he did, he wasn’t sure if he’d go back in to finish the argument, or fall to his knees in front of her.Her words rang louder than the echoes of Julio’s accusations:“Because I love you, you bastard!”She had said it like a curse. Like an anchor.She had said it like a confession and a threat all in one. Raw. Unfiltered. It hadn’t been soft. It hadn’t been sweet. It had been a scream in a burning room.Lucien’s jaw flexed as he moved through the dim corridor, boots silent against polished marble. The storm outside was growing louder, wind clawing at the shutters, thunder rolling low like the growl of a warning.His steps led him toward the armory wing, where Julio had set up a new control hub, tucked into the old wine cellar. Reinforced concrete. One way in, one way out. No windows.Perfect for paranoia.Lucie
The estate was no longer quiet.It growled now, low and mean. Boots thundered across marble. New men filled the halls like wolves scenting blood. Every corner of the house bristled with eyes, weapons, suspicion.Lucien stood by the library window, jaw clenched as he watched another black SUV pull through the gates. Armored. Tinted windows. Reinforcements. Power players. People who didn’t need to knock.The council hadn’t sent word, they didn’t need to. They never did when the stakes were this high.Behind him, the room buzzed with voices and strategy, Julio murmuring orders to their lieutenants while two techs unpacked surveillance gear like it was holy scripture.“Three more arrived this morning,” Julio said without looking up. “Two from Marseille, one from Naples. All requested by the Upper Circle.”Lucien nodded stiffly.“House is on lockdown,” Julio continued. “No one leaves. No one enters. Not without biometric clearance and escort.”Lucien turned away from the window, face hard.
The house was too quiet.Not the comforting quiet of safety, but the brittle silence of a place holding its breath. Shadows seemed longer. Footsteps felt louder. And every corner Emilia turned, she swore she could feel eyes watching, not just from cameras or guards, but from within the walls themselves. The estate wasn’t home anymore.It was bleeding.And the worst part? She wasn’t sure if it was Lucien’s blood staining it… or hers.She sat on the edge of their bed, staring at the vent above. The one Lucien had pulled the camera from. A small, jagged hole remained where the dummy cover had been pried off. It gaped like a wound, raw and violating.Every touch they’d shared in this room. Every whispered word, every moan, every time she’d reached for him in the dark,?they’d been watched. Recorded. Maybe shared.She clenched her fists and stood.She couldn’t sit and feel violated anymore. She wouldn’t.Lucien had left earlier, mumbling something about command checks and signal reports. He
The door clicked shut behind him with finality. Locked. Not to trap her, God, never to trap her, but to seal them into a moment that could no longer be avoided.Emilia stood near the center of the room like a live wire, arms crossed, eyes burning with fury and fear. The chandelier light cast over her skin like porcelain, cracked and radiant.“You’re going to tell me everything,” she said, her voice steady, even as the pulse visibly fluttered at her throat. “No more half truths. No more locked doors. You promised me no more secrets.”Lucien dragged a hand over his jaw, stubble scratching against his palm. He hadn’t slept more than an hour in days. Not really. Not since Raul looked him in the eye and said, “He knew I pledged myself to you. He knew everything that goes on in your house.”Emilia waited. She always waited… until she didn’t.“I’m not protecting you to control you,” he said quietly. “I’m trying to keep you alive.”Her expression didn’t change. “Then stop treating me like glas
The silence in the Wolfe estate had changed.It wasn’t the peaceful quiet Emilia had grown used to, the kind laced with soft jazz from the parlor or the hum of distant voices in the kitchen. No, this silence had a shape to it. Heavy. Watchful. Like something coiled in the walls, waiting.She noticed it first when she entered the hallway that morning and caught two housekeepers murmuring near the staircase. They didn’t even try to hide it, just stopped mid-sentence and looked past her like she was a ghost. Or a grenade.“Do you need something?” she asked, trying to keep her voice neutral.They both shook their heads and walked away too quickly.The day went on like that. Glances. Awkward pauses. Locked doors that used to be open. Even lulu, who had never liked her but used to at least pretend, refused to meet her eyes when she brought Emilia’s lunch to the sunroom.Only Mateo greeted her with warmth.He passed her in the hallway with a nod and a quiet, “Señora,” offering a small, reassu