LOGINValentina POV
I stopped scrubbing, my breath coming in short, shallow gasps. I looked up, squinting against the bright Sicilian sun. "Where?" He raised a hand, pointing vaguely at the wet stone directly beneath my left knee. "There. Right in the corner by the riser. It's dark." I shifted my weight with a wince and moved the brush over the area, scrubbing hard until the lather turned white. "Here?" "Now you've splashed soap onto the wood trim," he said, his voice flat, completely devoid of empathy. "You're making more work for yourself." I set the brush down into the bucket with a wet slap. The exhaustion won out over my caution. "Franco, I've been out here since the sun came up. The steps are clean. There's no dirt left on—" "Are you arguing with me?" The words were quiet, but the temperature on the porch instantly dropped. Franco took a slow step down, leaning over me, his shadow completely blocking out the sun. The casual arrogance in his eyes turned into something heavy and dangerous. A cold spike of fear went through my chest. "No," I said, forcing my voice to level out, though my hands were shaking in the soapy water. "I'm not arguing." "Good." He didn't move back. He just stood there, towering over me on the narrow stairs, enjoying the weight of his own authority. "Because I can send you back to wherever you came from before the sun goes down. You understand me? You're only under this roof because Giulia asked. But Giulia isn't the one paying for the bread you eat. It’s just me and Marta, and to be completely frank, we don't need you here." I picked up the wooden brush again, my knuckles turning white around the handle. "I understand." "Then finish the steps. Properly this time. And don't let me hear a single complaint out of your mouth again." He turned and walked back inside, the heavy front door clicking shut behind him. The silence of the street rushed back in. I sat back on my heels, the wet stone cold against my skin, and pressed a trembling, soapy hand against my stomach. Inside, a tiny movement flared. It was small—just a faint, delicate flutter against my palm. Not yet, I thought, closing my eyes tight as the tears threatened to spill. Not yet. Just survive. The months crawled by like a slow poison. My belly grew, heavy and low, making every chore a physical battle. But as my stomach rounded, Franco's patience only shrank, and Marta's daily lists grew longer and more punishing. I stopped looking at the small calendar in the kitchen. I stopped keeping track of how many weeks had bled together since the night I arrived with a flat stomach and a single bag. There was no time for history. There was only the work. The kitchen floors. The tile in the bathroom. The front windows. Franco's ironed shirts. Franco's heavy dinners. The endless stone porch steps, even when the winter rain turned the air ice-cold. I learned to adapt out of necessity. I learned to move slower on the stairs so my shifting weight wouldn't trip me. I learned to swallow my meals in hot, fast bites so I could get back to the wash basin before Marta checked the clock. I learned to sleep anywhere—propped against the wall, sitting in the hard wooden chair, curled on the lumpy cot—because my body was doing two grueling jobs at once, and neither one cared that I was completely exhausted. The baby kicked harder now, no longer a flutter but a sharp, demanding presence. Sometimes at night, when the house was dead silent and the dark felt heavy enough to choke me, I would lie on my side with both hands anchored to my stomach. I could feel the distinct shape of a tiny hand, the sharp jab of a small foot. A whole separate person, growing inside a war zone, completely unaware of where we were or the people waiting on the other side of the door. "I'm sorry," I whispered into the dark of the tiny room, my voice cracking. "I'm so sorry you're here. I'm sorry I couldn't give you anything better than this." A heavy kick answered me, right against my ribs. I swallowed hard, drawing the thin blanket up to my chin. Okay, I thought, letting out a ragged breath. Okay. We're still breathing. We're not dead yet. The pain started at exactly noon. At first, I didn't think much of it. I assumed it was just the usual, deep ache that came from spending nine hours a day on my feet, dragging heavy buckets of water and bending over low sinks. By this point in the pregnancy, everything in my body hurt. My lower back throbbed constantly, and my ankles were swollen to twice their size. I kept wiping down the grease on the kitchen stove, forcing myself to push through the discomfort. But by three o'clock, the ache turned into a sharp, twisting knot. A wave of pressure hit me so hard that my legs buckled. I went down on my hands and knees onto the cold linoleum floor, gasping for air. The kitchen began to spin. I squeezed my eyes shut and tried to breathe through the contraction, my fingernails digging into the wood of the nearest cabinet. Marta was standing at the counter just a few feet away, her back to me as she chopped heavy winter vegetables for dinner. The rhythmic, dull thud-thud-thud of her knife against the wooden board didn't even pause. "What's wrong with you now?" she asked. She didn't bother to turn around or look up from her work. "I think..." I paused, catching my breath as the tight band around my stomach slowly began to loosen. "I think the baby is coming." The knife finally stopped. The kitchen went completely quiet. Marta turned around slowly, wiping her hands on her stained white apron. She stood over me, looking down at my position on the floor, at the cold sweat dripping from my hairline, and at the white-knuckled grip I had on the thick wooden leg of the dining table. "Now?" she said. Her voice was completely flat, as if I had just announced a minor inconvenience, like a cracked plate or a missing dish towel. "Yes, Marta," I rasped, forcing myself to look up at her. "Now." She didn't move for a long, agonizing moment. She just stared at me, calculating the disruption to her evening schedule. Finally, she set the heavy kitchen knife down on the counter and walked out of the room without saying another word. I stayed on the floor, my forehead pressed against the cool wood of the table leg. From down the hallway, I could hear the muffled sound of her voice talking to Franco. They were speaking in low, hurried whispers. The house had thin walls, but the rushing sound of blood in my ears was too loud, and I couldn't make out the specific words they were throwing back and forth. A moment later, Franco's heavy frame filled the kitchen doorway. He didn't come inside. He just stood there with his arms crossed over his chest, looking at me like I was a broken appliance he hadn't decided whether to fix or throw out.Valentina POV"The clinic is two kilometers away," he said, his voice loud and harsh in the small kitchen. "Can you walk?"I looked up at him, disbelieving. Another wave of pain was already beginning to tighten across my abdomen, sharper than the last. "I'm in labor, Franco.""That's not an answer," he replied coldly. "Can you get yourself down the road, or can't you?"I didn't have the breath to argue. I closed my eyes, gritting my teeth, and focused entirely on surviving the pressure building in my core. When the peak of the contraction finally passed, I used the edge of the kitchen counter to pull myself up to my feet. My knees were shaking so badly I could barely keep my balance. I leaned heavily against the counter, panting."I'll walk," I said, looking him dead in the eye.Franco gave a short, single nod, completely unfazed. "Marta will go with you."Marta came back into the room holding her thick woolen coat. She didn't offer me her arm to lean on. She didn't ask if the pain wa
Valentina POV I stopped scrubbing, my breath coming in short, shallow gasps. I looked up, squinting against the bright Sicilian sun. "Where?" He raised a hand, pointing vaguely at the wet stone directly beneath my left knee. "There. Right in the corner by the riser. It's dark." I shifted my weight with a wince and moved the brush over the area, scrubbing hard until the lather turned white. "Here?" "Now you've splashed soap onto the wood trim," he said, his voice flat, completely devoid of empathy. "You're making more work for yourself." I set the brush down into the bucket with a wet slap. The exhaustion won out over my caution. "Franco, I've been out here since the sun came up. The steps are clean. There's no dirt left on—" "Are you arguing with me?" The words were quiet, but the temperature on the porch instantly dropped. Franco took a slow step down, leaning over me, his shadow completely blocking out the sun. The casual arrogance in his eyes turned into something heavy and d
Valentina POVThe man opened the door before my hand could even reach the wood.He stood flat-footed in the frame, blocking the light from the hallway. He didn’t say hello. Instead, his eyes dropped to my boots, tracked slowly up my faded jeans, and lingered on my flat stomach before finally settling on my face. He looked at me the way a man looks at a horse he is thinking about buying at auction—calculating the cost against the teeth, checking to see if the beast is worth the price of its feed.I was twenty-two years old, six weeks pregnant, and completely flat-bellied. Everything I owned in the world was stuffed into a single canvas bag cutting into my shoulder. Under his stare, I forced my spine straight. I refused to look down."You're the girl Giulia sent," he said."Yes," I said. "I'm Valentina."He didn't offer his own name. He just stepped back into the dim warmth of the entryway, leaving the door open. "You'll work for your stay here. That's the deal, no free rides.""What kin
Marco POV "You did the right thing," Carmela said, setting the cup on my desk. "That girl was trouble the moment she walked in."I didn't answer. I couldn't. My mind was stuck in a loop, replaying the last few hours.I hadn't slept a wink last night. I had spent hours pacing the dark hallways of this house, searching for her. When she hadn't come up to our room after the dinner, I thought she was just clearing her head in the garden. Then the clock struck 2:00 AM. Then 3:00 AM. I checked the library, the terrace, the guest rooms, growing more anxious with every passing hour, wondering where she could possibly be hiding.I never in a million years would have looked in the staff quarters. I never would have believed she was down there.Then, just before dawn, Luca had burst into my study, pale and out of breath. “Marco, I found her. You need to come right now.”The memory of rushing down that corridor tore through me. Luca had kicked the door open, and the sight inside burned itself in
Valentina POVThe rain was coming down hard. I walked right into it without covering my head.I had my coat and my bag, but that was all. I turned left away from the big house. That was the only direction that mattered, getting away. The man at the gate didn't look at me, and I didn't look at him. He cleared his throat as I passed. I slowed, almost stopped. Then he said, quietly, "Good luck." Just two words. I nodded without turning around. I didn't trust my face. We both acted like nothing was happening.I walked for a long time. The streets were empty because it was very early. I kept my head down and my hands in my pockets. I gripped my jaw tight. I promised myself I would not cry in the street. I didn't want to be that kind of person.I kept that promise for about twenty minutes.Then, it just happened. I stopped walking in front of a bakery that was still closed. My body started shaking so hard that I had to lean against the window to keep from falling. The tears came out fast. I
Valentina POVI woke up cold.That was the first thing. The cold, and then the ceiling—wrong color, wrong height—and then the smell of a room that wasn't mine. My body understood before my mind did. I was already sitting up, pulling the bedsheet tight to my chest, and counting everything that was wrong.My dress was on the floor. My shoes were right beside it. I was in my slip and nothing else, and there was a man asleep beside me. He was turned away, breathing slowly and evenly, as if none of this was unusual.I knew his face. It was Enzo, the family driver. I had spoken to him maybe four times, always by accident, always briefly.I got out of the bed without making a sound. I put my clothes back on with my back turned to him, keeping my hands steady. I told myself to think. I told myself to breathe. There had to be an explanation. There had to be one because I remembered dinner, I remembered the drink going wrong, and I remembered absolutely nothing after that. That was the answer—s
Valentina POV "You're going to laugh at my uncle tonight," Marco said.I didn't look up from the mirror. "I never laugh at your uncle.""You always laugh at him," Marco said, adjusting his sleeves in the reflection behind me. "He tells the same story about the horse every single time, and you laug







