登入Two nights later, Isabella stood in front of Sofia’s mirror, just staring. The figure in the glass nearly resembled a person she didn’t recognize, it was merely a female figure wearing a navy blue gown, uncomplicated yet graceful, nothing flashy. She had deliberately selected the dress, something meant to blend in; professional and muted not to catch the eye.
Tonight wasn't about putting on a show, it was about getting the job done and then exiting silently. All the same, nervousness churned in her belly and had not released its grip since sunrise. “Girl, you look like you’re on your way to your own funeral.” Sofia stood in the doorway as she observed her with her arms folded. “Is it that obvious?” Isabella asked, making an effort to smile. “You appear pale.” “I’m fine.” Sofia refused to buy it. “Bella.” “I said I’m fine,” Isabella repeated, a bit softer. But honestly, she didn’t know what emotions she had. Could it be fear? Maybe. Or perhaps something older, that lingering ache she believed she had long since buried. The most recent time she came into Lorenzo De Luca’s world, she stood as his bride. Naïve. Full of hope but still utterly terrified. Now, that young woman was no longer there. “Stick to the plan,” Sofia said. “You work on the painting, collect your f*e and lave.” “That's the only thing I’m doing.” “And if you see him?” Isabella hesitated for a moment, then grabbed her coat. “I won’t.” ****** The magnificent Palazzo Verani was drenched in warm golden light set against a dark Milan sky. Luxury cars pulled up with men and women in elegant outfits trooping gracefully into the venue with giggles bouncing around and camera shutters clicking. The De Luca Foundation Gala brought together Italy’s top personalities; public figures, tycoons and socialites, in fact if they were significant, they were in attendance. Isabella kept a low profile as she moved stealthily by the main entrance alongside the event workers. There were no cameras or no flashy items shooting in her direction which was just perfect. Inside, the palace looked like something out of a dream. Crystal chandeliers were glistening beneath painted ceilings, polished marble floors radiated and columns rose high. Their murmurs buzzed across the ballroom, yet Isabella hardly noticed any of it, all her thoughts were just fixed on the modest exhibition space beside the main hall; the place where her real work was waiting. The curator saw her immediately she walked in. “Hii, you must be Elena Rossi. We’re so grateful you took the offer” she clipped, stopping in front of Isabella. Isabella nodded. “It’s an honor.” On a display easel, the painting waited under a spotlight. She moved closer as she could see just how fragile and beautiful it was, the gentle brushstrokes and colors that were centuries old, even beneath the protective cover. For a second, the tightness in her chest eased up. This was her world. Artwork never misled, has never caused you pain and never tried to kill you in your sleep. “Take your time,” the curator said, stepping out of the room. Isabella was alone. She bunched up her sleeves and laid out her tools; Cleaning brush, rag, cleaning solvent. The work commenced minutes slipping by almost an hour. Music and laughter drifted in from the main ballroom making Isabella actually feel herself almost relaxed. Then something shifted slightly, she heard footsteps inching closer behind her and the quiet murmur coming from the staff nearby. The air seemed to freeze. Isabella’s hand stopped mid-motion as the icy realization crept down her spine. She knew this feeling; that sensation of someone watching her. Slowly, she turned around. A towering figure occupied the entrance, his broad shoulders clad in a black suit exuding dominance. His dark-coloured hair, slicked back crowned his handsome face with a strong jawline. He still had those razor-sharp blue eyes that made Matteo’s face flicker across her mind. Isabella could barely breathe as neither of them moved Lorenzo De Luca. He hadn’t changed much, if anything, he looked older, sharper, quieter and even more dangerous and those eyes?? They definitely remembered everything. The staff faded out of the room, melting away from the moment because nobody wanted to witness this. Lorenzo stepped closer, never taking his eyes off her. He stopped just a few feet away but just close enough for Isabella to feel the gravity between them. He didn’t speak right away. He just studied her, as if making sure she was real. Alive. “Hello, Isabella.” came his voice, low and gentle but terrifying. Her heart slammed in her chest. She made herself stand straight. “Good evening,” she answered softly. Something flashed in his expression, maybe amusement, disbelief or anger. He edged closer. “You’re supposed to be dead.” he replied, the words hung in the air, sharp and cold. Isabella swallowed. “So I’ve heard.” Lorenzo’s gaze hardened. He had endured five years of questions and losses and now the woman who vanished was just standing here, acting like it was nothing. “Did you really think I wouldn’t recognize my own wife?” His voice went even lower. Wife. That word stung. Isabella steadied her voice. “I’m not your wife anymore.” Lorenzo tilted his head, eyes darkening. “Legally,” he said, “you are.” Her pulse thudded louder. She needed space. “I’m working,” she said, turning back toward the painting. “If you’ll excuse me” But his hand closed around her wrist before she could move, he was not rough, but solid and just enough to stop her cold, as a spark of tension jolted through them both. Isabella looked up slowly. “You disappeared for five years.” Lorenzo’s voice was soft but utterly certain as his grip tightened just a little. “And now you think you can walk away again?” Isabella’s heart hammered. She never planned for this reunion, never expected the weight of his stare or the cold certainty in his voice. “Let go,” she whispered. Lorenzo watched her for another moment, then released her wrist but his next words hit harder. “Enjoy the rest of the evening,” he said quietly. Then, after a pause, “Because when this gala ends…” He locked eyes with her. “You’re coming home with me.” he turned,returning the same way he had come. For the first time in five years, something became horribly clear to Isabella escaping Lorenzo De Luca once had been a miracle. But getting away again? That might be impossible.Andre couldn't stop thinking about the family portrait, even after he had left it behind at Lucia’s, the image followed him long after he returned to the villa that evening. Even up until the next week, the mere thought of it continued to bother him and the more he thought about it, the clearer it became.Lucia talked, worried and asked about everyone yet she never talked about herself, even the stories she shared were always carefully chosen. She only talked about the safe memories, funny moments and made small observations. But whenever the conversation threatened to move into uncomfortable territory, she deflected and redirected it so naturally that most people would never notice.But Andre was beginning to notice and once he did, he saw it everywhere.The following Thursday, he arrived at her apartment carrying a bag of groceries and far more questions than usual.Lucia answered the door wearing an apron covered in flour."What are you making?" He asked, the sight of the apron beg
For the rest of the week, there were no answers to Lorenzo's questions, not because Andre did not have any answers to it but because he didn't know how best to respond to it.Those questions had caught him off guard in a way only a few things ever did.For years, he had watched Lucia carry the weight of their separation like a punishment she had willingly imposed on herself. He listened to her ask about Lorenzo countless times and she grimaced whenever his name popped up in their conversations. Yet, somehow, neither mother nor son had ever managed to cross the distance between them or reach out to each other.But now, for the first time, Lorenzo had taken a small, cautious step toward that distance while Andre had spent the next few days thinking about it way more than he should have. By Thursday morning, he found himself driving toward his mother's apartment with a lot of questions still lingering at the back of his mind.As he drove past the same roads and turns, the journey had b
The family portrait remained on the mantel till the next morning, nobody had moved it or suggested putting it away. It simply stayed there, leaning slightly against the polished wood as though it belonged right where it was. Lorenzo found himself looking at it several times throughout that day. At first, he told himself it was because of Matteo's interpretation of their reality. Marco looked perpetually angry. Isabella's hair was bright purple for reasons nobody could explain and Andre had appeared taller than any human being had the right to be. But Lorenzo knew that wasn't the real reason. His attention kept returning to the figure standing near the edge of the drawing. Lucia. Matteo had included her without hesitation or asking any uncertain questions. The boy had simply drawn her where he believed she belonged. With them. The simplicity of it was unsettling. Children had an irritating habit of running directly through problems adults spent years building around themselv
The discovery of the graduation clipping still stayed with the house way after the conversation had ended. The following morning, nobody really said much about it and yet its presence was still felt, it lingered in the pauses between conversations over breakfast and even followed Lorenzo through the villa like a shadow he couldn't shake off his back. For years, he had believed that whoever was absent felt indifferent but after the series of discoveries these past months, the recent sketchbook had finally challenged the belief and pointed toward a truth he was finding difficult to ignore. Lucia had watched but not closely enough to return or at least leave a knock on the door but just close enough to know all she needed too and the realization unsettled him because a part of him wanted to reject it but the other part could no longer deny what was right in front of him. The woman he had spent years resenting had apparently spent those same years quietly following aspects of his lif
The photograph remained on the dining room table as several people including the household staff couldn't help but steal side glances at it. Marco tried to identify the building in the background. Andre studied Lucia's handwriting while Isabella spent nearly an hour turning the photograph over in her hands, repeatedly reading the message written on the back. In the end, nobody could determine exactly what place Lucia had been referring to and the mystery lingered into the night.And by the following morning, the photograph had reignited everyone's curiosity. All through the past weeks, the family had been trying to piece together fragments of Lucia's life but it felt like every conversation seemed to reveal something new and every memory exposed another part of a story that none of them fully understood.Now that the photograph popped up, it felt like another missing piece and that meant that if one forgotten item had survived all these years, then there was a chance that others ha
Matteo's question still lingered in the room long after the conversation ended, nobody rushed to rescue Andre from it or answer for him because they also wanted to understand what it actually felt like. Eventually Matteo had been sent to bed and he didn't leave without hugging Andre and reminding him that he still hadn't received an answer. Andre had laughed at that but Lorenzo had noticed that for the rest of the evening, his brother had grown quieter, not uncomfortable or upset, he was simply thoughtful as though the question had awakened memories he usually would allow himself to remember. The following morning, Lorenzo found him sitting alone on the terrace overlooking the vineyard when Matteo had left for school, with a mug of coffee resting on the pavement beside him. The liquid had long since gone cold because Andre appeared more interested in the view than the drink. Lorenzo stood there for a while before he took an empty chair to sit down beside him. Neither man had spok
Nobody knew who had delivered the package that arrived just after sunrise. Even the security footage showed nothing unusual. No vehicle approached the main gate or courier signed in and most of all, no guard had reported seeing anyone enter the property. Yet somehow that small brown box sat neatly
The map became the most talked-about subject in the villa although not openly for the next coming days, it lingered in the background of every conversation all the same. Even Lorenzo still found himself thinking about it at the strangest moments, while reviewing reports in his office and walking t
For the rest of the morning, the photograph stayed resting in Lorenzo's pocket all day. Isabella was so dumbstruck she could barely say a word, she just put it in his hand, turned around and walked away. He should have left it in the study or probably put it back into Dante's box where it had been
The villa had finally grown quiet although not completely quiet. That never happened anymore, especially not with Matteo living under the same roof. Somewhere down the hallway, Lorenzo could still hear the faint sound of a cartoon playing from a tablet that had supposedly been confiscated an hour a







