ログインVanessa looked like the kind of woman magazines were built around. Elegant. Perfect. Untouchable. Even the way she stood radiated confidence Aria could never fake. Her blonde hair fell in smooth waves over one shoulder, and the fitted cream dress she wore probably cost more than Aria’s rent for a year. But it wasn’t her beauty that unsettled Aria. It was the way she looked at Lucien. Like she already belonged here. Like she belonged to him. “This is the girl?” Vanessa repeated with quiet amusement. Lucien’s expression hardened slightly. “You shouldn’t be here.”
“And miss this?” Vanessa smiled faintly. “Impossible.” Aria immediately felt out of place standing between them in borrowed clothes and damp hair. Vanessa stepped farther into the office, her heels clicking softly against the marble floor before she stopped directly in front of Aria. Up close, her perfume smelled expensive and sharp. “You’re younger than I expected.” Aria forced herself not to shrink under her gaze. “I didn’t realize I was being expected.” Something flickered in Vanessa’s eyes then. Surprise. Maybe even approval. Lucien spoke before the silence stretched further. “Vanessa.” A warning. Vanessa sighed dramatically before turning toward him. “Oh relax. I’m simply curious about the woman suddenly living in your house.” Aria’s chest tightened slightly at the implication. Living in his house. God. This entire situation still felt unreal. Vanessa crossed her arms loosely. “The city’s already talking, by the way.” Lucien looked completely unaffected. “People always talk.” “Yes, but now they’re interested.” Her gaze shifted briefly toward Aria again. “Which makes her dangerous.” The word landed heavily. Dangerous. Not because of who Aria was. Because of what she represented. Lucien walked toward the desk calmly. “Why are you really here?” Vanessa studied him for a moment before answering. “Your uncle knows something happened last night.” The temperature in the room seemed to drop instantly. Aria noticed it immediately—the subtle tension in Lucien’s shoulders, the slight tightening of his jaw. For the first time since meeting him… He looked genuinely irritated. “What exactly does he know?” Lucien asked quietly. “That you left the warehouse with a girl.” Vanessa’s eyes flicked toward Aria again. “And that several men are now missing.” Fear crawled slowly down Aria’s spine. Warehouse. Missing men. Everything about these people sounded dangerous in ways she still couldn’t fully understand. Lucien remained silent for a few seconds before speaking again. “Tell Dante to handle it.” Vanessa frowned slightly. “Lucien—” “I said handle it.” The finality in his voice ended the conversation immediately. Vanessa exhaled softly before nodding once. “Fine.” Then her attention returned to Aria completely. “You should be careful,” she said calmly. Aria frowned. “About what?” “About him.” The room fell silent. Lucien’s expression darkened instantly. “Enough.” Vanessa ignored him. “He protects things he considers his,” she continued softly. “But eventually he destroys them too.” Something uncomfortable twisted inside Aria’s chest. Lucien stepped forward then, his voice colder now. “Leave.” For a brief second, tension flashed between them. Real tension. Old tension. Vanessa looked at him for a long moment before finally smiling again. “You always get angry when someone tells the truth.” Then she turned and walked out of the office without another word. The silence she left behind felt heavy. Aria slowly looked back toward Lucien. “What was that?” Lucien walked toward the window without answering immediately. “An unnecessary interruption.” “She seemed to know a lot about your life.” “She does.” Aria hesitated before asking carefully, “Was she your girlfriend?” The question slipped out before she could stop it. Lucien turned slowly. His gray eyes locked onto hers. And suddenly she became very aware of how alone they were in the office. “No.” The answer came too quickly. Too flat. Which somehow told her there was more to it. Aria looked away first. Not because she cared. She absolutely did not care. But something about the thought of Lucien with another woman made her chest feel strangely tight. Ridiculous. This man was practically a stranger. A dangerous stranger. Lucien studied her quietly for a moment before speaking again. “You should sign the contract today.” There it was again. Business. Control. Distance. Aria folded her arms tightly. “You really don’t waste time, do you?” “Time gets people killed.” The bluntness of his answer silenced her briefly. She hated how serious everything became around him. Nothing felt light. Nothing felt normal. Even breathing inside this house felt heavier somehow. Lucien moved toward a small table near the window and poured himself another drink. It wasn’t even noon yet. Aria noticed that immediately. “You drink a lot.” His gaze shifted toward her briefly. “You observe too much.” “You avoid questions too much.” A strange silence settled between them again. Then unexpectedly, Lucien gave a quiet humorless laugh. The sound shocked her. Because it sounded human. Tired even. “You’re different from most people around me,” he said. Aria frowned slightly. “What’s that supposed to mean?” “They usually stop speaking once they’re afraid.” The honesty in his voice caught her off guard. Something about that sentence felt lonely. Before she could think too deeply about it, Lucien’s phone rang. His expression darkened the second he answered. “Yes.” Silence. Then: “Where?” Aria watched the subtle shift in his posture carefully. Danger. Whatever he was hearing wasn’t good. Lucien’s jaw tightened. “I’ll handle it.” The call ended. "What happened?” Aria asked before thinking. For a moment, he simply stared at her. Then— “Your apartment was broken into this morning.” The words knocked the air from her lungs. “What?” “They arrived after you left.” His voice remained calm, but colder now. “Which confirms they’re tracking you.” Fear flooded her instantly. “My mother.” “She’s safe.” “How do you know?” “I already sent security.” Aria stared at him in shock. “You sent people to my mother?” “Yes.” “You had no right—” “They searched your apartment, Aria.” His voice sharpened slightly for the first time. “If your mother had been there alone—” He stopped speaking. But he didn’t need to finish. The image formed in her head anyway. Her mother hurt. Terrified. Maybe worse. Her knees suddenly felt weak. Lucien noticed immediately. Before she could react, he stepped closer and caught her arm steadily. Warm fingers wrapped around her skin. Strong. Careful. The contact sent a strange rush through her chest. “Easy,” he said quietly. Aria looked up at him, shaken. For the first time since meeting him, fear cracked something open inside her completely. “I don’t know what to do,” she admitted softly. The vulnerability in her own voice embarrassed her instantly. But Lucien didn’t mock her. Didn’t dismiss her fear. His gaze held hers steadily as he said the one thing she didn’t expect. “Then let me handle it.” The words should have terrified her. Instead… For one dangerous moment…They made her feel safe.Aria signed the contract three hours later. Not because she trusted Lucien. Not because she wanted this madness. But because fear had finally settled deep enough inside her bones to make reality impossible to ignore. Someone had broken into her apartment. Men with guns knew her face. And her sick mother was now surrounded by danger simply because Aria had walked down the wrong alley. She had run out of choices. The sound of the pen scratching against paper felt strangely final. Lucien stood across the office silently while she signed the last page. No smile. No satisfaction. Just that same unreadable expression he always wore like armor. When she finally placed the pen down, her chest tightened unexpectedly. “What happens now?” Lucien stepped forward and collected the papers carefully. “Now,” he said calmly, “you become my wife.” The words felt unreal. Wife. Not girlfriend. Not partner. Wife. Even if it was fake, hearing it aloud made her stomach twist. Lucien closed the folder before
Vanessa looked like the kind of woman magazines were built around. Elegant. Perfect. Untouchable. Even the way she stood radiated confidence Aria could never fake. Her blonde hair fell in smooth waves over one shoulder, and the fitted cream dress she wore probably cost more than Aria’s rent for a year. But it wasn’t her beauty that unsettled Aria. It was the way she looked at Lucien. Like she already belonged here. Like she belonged to him. “This is the girl?” Vanessa repeated with quiet amusement. Lucien’s expression hardened slightly. “You shouldn’t be here.”“And miss this?” Vanessa smiled faintly. “Impossible.” Aria immediately felt out of place standing between them in borrowed clothes and damp hair. Vanessa stepped farther into the office, her heels clicking softly against the marble floor before she stopped directly in front of Aria. Up close, her perfume smelled expensive and sharp. “You’re younger than I expected.”Aria forced herself not to shrink under her gaze. “I didn’t r
Aria barely slept. The guest room alone was bigger than her entire apartment. Floor-to-ceiling windows overlooked the glowing city below while soft gold lights illuminated furniture that probably cost more than her yearly tuition. Everything was beautiful. And none of it felt safe.She sat at the edge of the enormous bed with the marriage contract still resting in her lap. The papers had become slightly wrinkled from how tightly she’d been holding them for the past hour. Marriage. To Lucien Moretti. Even thinking about it sounded unreal.Outside the storm had finally calmed, but her thoughts hadn’t. Every time she closed her eyes, she saw blood on wet pavement. A gun pointed in her direction. Lucien’s cold gaze watching her like he already knew exactly how this would end. She looked down at the contract again. Temporary legal marriage. Public appearances when necessary. Full security protection. Absolute confidentiality. It sounded less like a marriage and more like ownership. A quiet
The inside of the car smelled like leather, rain, and expensive cologne.Aria sat pressed tightly against the door, her breathing still uneven as the black SUV sped through the city streets. Her wet clothes clung uncomfortably to her skin, and her fingers wouldn’t stop shaking no matter how tightly she clasped them together. Nobody spoke.The silence inside the vehicle felt suffocating. Two armed men sat in the front while Lucien occupied the seat beside her, calm and unreadable as if bullets hadn’t just flown through the air minutes ago. Aria couldn’t understand it. How could someone remain so composed after something like that? How could he look untouched by violence? Streetlights flashed across his face through the tinted windows, briefly illuminating sharp features and cold gray eyes fixed on the city outside. He hadn’t looked at her once since they left the alley. That somehow made her even more nervous. Her mind replayed the gunshots over and over again. If she had walked a litt
Aria could barely feel her legs. The cold rain soaked through her clothes while terror sat heavily in her chest, making it difficult to breathe properly. The man gripping her arm loosened his hold slightly, but not enough for her to escape.Not that she could. There were too many of them.Too many guns. Too much danger wrapped around the man standing in front of her.Lucien Moretti.She didn’t know his name yet, but she could already feel the weight of his power. It was in the way everyone around him stayed silent unless spoken to. In the way fear seemed to follow him naturally. And worst of all— In the way he looked at the dead body without emotion. Aria swallowed hard, trying not to stare at the blood spreading across the pavement. “I swear I won’t tell anyone,” she said quickly, her voice shaking. “Please… I just want to go home.” One of the guards laughed quietly. “That’s what they all say.” Her stomach twisted. Lucien’s gaze remained fixed on her face, unreadable and cold. Even u
Rain hammered against the bus stop roof as Aria Collins hugged her sketchbook tighter against her chest, trying hopelessly to protect it from the wind.The last bus had already left. Of course it had.She let out a tired sigh and rubbed her freezing fingers together before checking her phone again. Two percent battery.Perfect. “Seriously?” she muttered under her breath.Her shift at Valentino’s Restaurant had ended nearly an hour ago, but one of the waitresses had called in sick, forcing Aria to stay late washing dishes and cleaning tables she didn’t even serve. Her entire body ached from exhaustion. She still had an unfinished art project due tomorrow morning, rent overdue by three weeks, and exactly forty-two dollars left in her bank account.Forty-two dollars.The number sat heavily in her chest.At twenty-two, this was not the life she imagined for herself. She looked across the empty street, watching rainwater slide down glowing neon signs while expensive cars sped through puddl







