LOGINMarcelina's POV
The moment the door closed behind me, I broke. Thankfully, the hallway was empty and quiet, but I barely noticed anything else as I walked down fast, wiping my cheeks with the back of my hand like that would fix it.
But it didn't. And the tears didn't stop either.
"Get it together, Marcel," I muttered under my breath, swiping angrily at my face again.
My chest felt too tight, like I had been holding my breath for weeks without realizing it. And I hated myself for it. I hated that I had just lost one chance I had allowed myself to imagine.
I wasn't like this.
I didn't fall apart in hallways or cry at all—not anymore. But here I was, stopping right in the middle of the hallway because I couldn't bring myself to walk anymore.
Pressing my palm against the cool wall, I bent my head and drew in a slow breath. Then another. I counted them like I always did years ago.
"Four in, hold, four out." And just like that, I was sixteen again.
My mother had been brilliant.
That was the word everyone used.
She didn't just fill rooms with her mind, she taught in colleges, published award-winning medical journals, and debated men twice her age. I grew up watching people lean forward when she spoke and thought that was what power looked like.
But that changed when she began forgetting words.
There were small things at first—names, appointments, misplacing objects she had just held. She laughed it off as stress and overwork, we all did. But then, we started noticing the pause. The way her eyes went blank for a second too long.
Her diagnosis came later, but this was after the fear had already settled in our bones.
The condition did not kill quickly; it dismantled her piece by piece, slowly stripping her of her memory, better judgment, and independence. She forgot how to cook, then how to drive, and eventually forgot how to be alone.
The woman who once needed no one became someone who needed help dressing, eating, and remembering her own husband and child. I became her caretaker before I even finished high school.
I reminded her who people were and learned how to smile even when my small heart was breaking. I loved her more than anything, but loving her did not make it easier to watch her disappear.
She hated it.
And that was the worst part. Because she knew she was fading.
"Don't let me become a burden, Marcel," She would look at me and say.
Sometimes, it was Julia or Hannah... Any other name that wasn't mine. And that broke my heart every time, just as that sentence never left me.
My fear was never dying.
It was becoming someone who needed care. Loving someone, depending on them, and then losing myself while they watched, helpless, the way I had watched her.
The condition was neurodegenerative, genetic, and autosomal dominant. If you carried it, you had a fifty percent chance of passing it on to your offspring. There was no cure and no reversal either. Only delay and wait until you take your final breath.
I had built my life around control and became a neurologist because of it. But control has limits. And lately, the world around me has started to look... familiar.
The earliest markers of the disorder were slowly appearing in my mentors, senior colleagues, and then dangerously close to my own age group.
I saw it in the way most of them paused too long in the middle of a sentence, searching for a word they used to wield effortlessly. I saw it in the way they walked into a room, forgetting why they'd step in in the first place. The quiet retirements no one questioned, the sudden "sabbaticals".
They were fading at the edges and I recognized it. Not just because I had lived it, but because fear was very good at recognizing itself.
I wasn't imagining it, I was running out of time.
That was why Dom Vitali mattered.
Not because he was so hot and attractive. And certainly not because his eyes made my skin feel too warm.
I needed him because he was clean. There were no markers for neurological decline, no genetic red flags waiting to ambush a child I loved, and no inherited decay that could combine with mine to amplify the damage.
With careful selection, the probability dropped low enough to hope. Low enough that it would give my child time to grow, to remember me whole, and not need me when I could no longer be enough.
My child wouldn't carry the same terror I had lived with since I was a teenager. If I faded, it would be later. When they were older.
I wasn't dramatic enough to pretend I woke up one morning desperate for a baby. I was still whole—for now. And I wanted a child before that changed.
I wanted to experience motherhood while my mind was still mine. While I could choose, while I could remember every first word, and every little laugh.
Before my fertility window closed up on me.
Pushing off the wall, I took a deep breath and lifted my chin. I was not going to let this opportunity go to waste. I was not going to pass on this condition.
It was better to have my child knowing I gambled with life and tried to control every variable I could just to keep him or her safe, rather than risking nothing.
"Let's get this over with, Marcel,"
Without second thoughts, I turned around and walked back down the hallway.
My heels clicked sharply against the floor while my heart pounded so loud till it felt like it was chasing me. But I didn't slow down or think. Because if I stopped, fear would catch up with me and I would talk myself out of it.
Now was not a good time for any of those, so I pushed the door open without knocking and walked into his office.
Dom Vitali was still there.
Still standing where I had left him with one hand in his trouser pocket and the other, holding his glass of gin. It was like he hadn't moved at all. Like he had waited for me.
Our eyes clashed and something dark and unreadable passed through his gaze. Surprise, maybe, or something far worse. But he didn't speak. He only watched me with those sharp, predatory eyes as he lifted the glass and finished what little gin was left inside it.
I did not give him time to think. I could already feel my nerves slipping, fear and doubt clawing their way back up my spine.
So I moved.
I let my bag slide off my shoulder and drop to the floor at the same moment he placed the empty glass on the table. That was it. There were no more exits. This was the moment where you either walked away and lived with regret, or you jumped and accepted whatever waited below.
Go hard or go home, they said.
Ignoring the way my heart slammed so hard against my chest, I took a step towards him, then another. His dark and burning eyes followed me, tracking every inch like a predator that had already decided the outcome.
When I reached him, I didn't hesitate. I jumped into his arms and crashed my mouth into his. For half a second, I thought he might push me away. But then his hands came up, gripping my waist before kissing me back just as hard.
The world tilted.
Not because I was dizzy. But because everything I had been holding tight inside me suddenly slipped loose. Fear. Want. Desperation. Need.
Unwanted heat rushed through me fast, curling low in my stomach as his grip tightened, fingers digging into my back and the back of my neck.
The kiss deepened, turned rougher, and I felt it everywhere. In my chest, in my thighs, in the sharp hitch of my breath when his mouth moved against mine like he already knew how badly this would undo me.
I forgot how to think or why I was doing this in the first place. All I knew was the way his body felt solid and perfect against mine. The way I was pressed so close there was no space left for doubt or second thoughts.
This was supposed to be simple. Quick and clean with no emotions attached, but it wasn't. Not when my pulse was everywhere, loud in my ears, between my legs, and under my skin.
Before I could pull away or say something smart or ruin it, his lips slowed just enough to make it worse, dragging against mine deliberately, like he was taking his time memorizing me.
I hated how easily my body betrayed me and how much I wanted him to keep holding me like this. How his dark and unreadable eyes burned into me like he was already three steps ahead of wherever this was going.
Neither of us spoke.
But then, his lips curved into something that wasn't quite a smile.
"Took you long enough," He murmured.
Domenico~The fear didn't disappear completely, but anger pushed through it fast enough. And suddenly, I saw the same woman from the dining room the previous morning."Well, excuse me for not sitting at home staring out the window waiting for you to appear for once," she snapped.My expression darkened slightly."You do whatever the fuck you want—" "And that led you to a strip club?" I asked, cutting her off."Yes!" She looked shocked by her own response immediately after. But it was too late."So this was revenge," I asked, running my fingertips through the fabric of the dress.She sucked in a breath."No." "Your Mama never taught you all liars go to hell?" Her jaw tightened and she jerked away from me as though the words slapped her."It wasn't revenge," she repeated stubbornly. "I just wanted one fucking night where I didn't feel like some pathetic woman trapped in a giant house waiting around for her husband to acknowledge her existence."The words should've done nothing.Inst
Domenico~Though even the thought of Silvestri seeing her in that dress made me want to put a bullet through his thick skull the second I landed.Him and every other bastard with functioning eyes around her.Now I stared at her silently.Her skin looked pale against the dark fabric.Soft.Too fucking soft for the kind of world she had stupidly wandered into tonight. At least the baby was alright and not caught up in his mother's recklessness. Because for someone who wanted this child more than anything, she sure had a talent for risking both their lives.Tiny thing.Stubborn fucking woman.She had no idea how close she came to dying tonight.Silvestri had said she was physically fine.The panic attack, stress, overstimulation, and sudden shock from the shooting likely overwhelmed her body. Especially in her condition. And by the time they got her home, her blood pressure had dropped badly.He had given her fluids, medication to calm her nervous system, and something mild to help her
Domenico~I wasn't supposed to be in Italy.Let alone in his wife's bedroom. Yet here I was, standing silently beside Marcelina's bed at four in the fucking morning, staring at the woman who had somehow managed to stay rent-free in my head no matter how far apart we were. She was asleep.Or at least, I thought she was.The doctor had called it exhaustion mixed with a severe panic attack.I called it fucking recklessness.By now, I was supposed to be somewhere over the fucking Black Sea, handling the disaster waiting for me in Russia.Instead, I had spent the last few hours on a jet back to Italy covered in blood and smoke because my wife thought disappearing into a strip club without security was a brilliant fucking idea.The irony almost made me laugh.Especially after the shit she said before leaving the dining room that morning._I hope whatever keeps you away turns to shit and leaves you choking on it_My eyes darkened.Because that was exactly how the fucking day went.The ship
Marcelina~Their eyes moved slowly over my body and disgust crawled under my skin instantly. I pulled the fur coat tighter around myself, but somehow that didn't help."Bene, guarda questo," one of them murmured. [Well, look at this]I stared at him for a second, irritation rising fast, wishing I understood Italian well enough to respond properly—or better yet, knee him straight in the fucking groin."Non sembra uno di noi," the other added. [Doesn't look like one of us]"Potrei averla prima io," the first one said with a smirk. "Riscaldare quella fica stretta per te," [I could have her first, warm up that tight cunt for you,]Their eyes stayed glued to my legs.And my stomach twisted harder.What the hell were they saying? Definitely nothing good, judging from the smirks pulling at their mouths and the way they looked at me like I was some kind of prize.One of them took a step closer."You lost, bella?" That I understood."I could show you your way around my cøck," he added with a
Marcelina~The VIP section had its own kind of chaos. Women laughed loudly from nearby couches while dancers moved around poles under dim red lights. Some men sat back drinking, others had women on their laps while the rest paid for erotic dance or extra services like a blowjob.One of the male dancers approached me almost immediately. Tall, shirtless, and covered in tattoos. I could even see the ridiculous eight packs Valeria had been screaming about earlier and the very questionable dick size straining against his boxer briefs.Honestly, it looked medically concerning.How exactly was that supposed to fit anywhere inside the human body without causing permanent damage?"Ciao, bella sexy..." The dancer said and I nearly choked on my drink when he smiled at me. "Why so nervous?" [Hello, sexy lady...]"No," I blurted out before he could even say another word.Valeria burst into loud laughter."Celina, Relax. He's not proposing marriage." The man chuckled softly and crouched slightly b
Marcelina~By the time we left the hospital, Valeria had already decided what all three of us were wearing. Apparently, according to her, strip clubs had a dress code."Hot," she had said simply. "The dress code is smoking hot." Valeria wore a tiny red dress that barely covered anything, paired with black heels sharp enough to kill someone. Nina went for black silk, low-cut at the front with an open back.And me?I was currently questioning every life decision that had brought me here.The black dress they picked for me was short. Extremely short. And tight enough to feel painted onto my skin.It was strapless with a corset-style lace design at the back, hugging every curve in a way that made me feel half naked. The only reason I agreed to leave the mall in it was because I wore a black fur coat over it.A very thick fur coat.One I was currently gripping tightly to myself as we stepped out of the car.Music vibrated through the ground immediately.The entrance alone screamed money a
Marcelina's POVThe two men escorted me to the car just after nine in the morning.Corey has never left my side since that day. And as the only friend and family I had left, she slid into the backseat beside me and squeezed my hand, watching me with concern that she wasn't even trying to hide."Yo
Marcelina's POV Anger shot through me so quickly I almost laughed. "I'm sorry," I said slowly. "Did you just say I'm not permitted?" "Yes." I blinked, then I pointed at my own chest."This is my house." Silence."I have a job," I continued, my voice rising. "A life. You don't get to stand outs
Marcelina's POVI woke up with a stiff neck and a dull ache running down my back. And for a moment, I didn't remember where I was. But then the ceiling of my living room slowly came into focus, and I realized I was lying on the couch.Everything hurts.My body felt heavy, like I had run a marathon
Domenico's POV"Wait. What?" Her voice cut through the room, sharp with disbelief.I didn't answer immediately. Instead, I watched her.The shock on her face. The way her fingers tightened around the strap of her bag. The faint tremor in her shoulders that she was trying very hard to hide.She trul







