MasukThe room smelled faintly of expensive perfume and polished leather, a mix that should have felt luxurious but only made my stomach twist tighter. My heels clicked painfully against the marble floor, each step echoing in the vast, high-ceilinged room. I tried to keep my head down, to disappear into myself, but it was impossible. The lights were bright, sharp, and every eye was on us.
The other women were already lined up, all dressed in gowns that sparkled under the dramatic lighting. Some looked resigned, others terrified, but all of us shared one thing: we were on display, judged for value, for power, for desire. I tried to breathe, tried to steady my shaking hands. But my pulse thundered in my ears, loud and unsteady. Every whispered word, every glance from the men in the shadows, was a reminder that I had no control. This wasn’t my world. I didn’t belong in it. The crowd was intimidating. Dark suits, polished shoes, sharp eyes — each man exuded wealth and danger. Some of them exchanged subtle nods, others simply stared at us in silence, their gazes moving slowly over our bodies like they were already deciding what we were worth. I felt my skin crawl every time one of them looked in my direction for too long. A woman beside me whispered, barely audible: "Stay calm… it only makes it worse if you panic." I wanted to tell her I was too terrified to even think of staying calm. That my body felt like it was betraying me with every shiver and tremble. But I stayed silent, forcing my feet to keep moving as the guards positioned us in the center. A low hum of murmurs rose in the room, then quieted as a man in a crisp suit stepped forward. His voice was smooth, commanding, and it filled the entire hall. "Gentlemen… welcome. Tonight, you will have the opportunity to acquire the finest companions. Choose wisely." I swallowed hard. My throat was dry. The words cut through me like a knife. Companions. The way he said it made it sound almost normal, almost acceptable. But I knew what it really meant. Property. Item. I was none of these things, but tonight, that's exactly how I was being treated. The man gestured, and the lights focused on each of us in turn, moving like a spotlight over fragile trophies. I felt my stomach drop when I realized the attention wasn't random. Each glance, each whispered assessment, was weighing our worth in cold currency—money and power. I tried to shrink into myself, but it was impossible. Every movement I made was noted, every flicker of expression examined. The humiliation was suffocating. My heart raced, my palms were sweaty, and my legs felt like they might give out. I caught the eyes of some of the other women — a flicker of shared terror, a silent acknowledgment of our helplessness. There was no comfort in it, only the cruel understanding that we were all trapped. The auctioneer's voice rang out again, precise and chilling: "Next item…" My breath caught. My chest tightened. My mind spun. Every nerve in my body screamed that something terrible was about to happen. I took a step forward, guided by the men beside me, and the room seemed to hold its breath. The women before me had already been assessed, judged, and assigned value. I didn't want to look, didn't want to see, but it was impossible to avoid the scrutiny. Every man's gaze felt like a weight pressing down on me, measuring, evaluating, deciding. I wanted to run. I wanted to disappear. I wanted my father, my small bedroom with the cracked ceiling, my job at the café where Mrs. Alvarez would sneak me extra pastries at the end of long shifts. I wanted anything familiar. But there was nothing left. Only this room, these men, and the unbearable humiliation of being seen not as a person, but as an object on display. my home, anything familiar. But there was nothing left. Then the auctioneer's voice cut through my panic, crisp and clear: "Next item… Elena Rossi." My blood ran cold. My heart lurched painfully in my chest. The room seemed to tilt, the lights burn brighter, and every eye was suddenly on me. I felt as if I might collapse under the weight of the attention. Every whisper, every assessment, every calculating gaze pressed down on me like a physical force. I wanted to scream, to protest, to vanish — but the men beside me held firm. I was paralyzed, my body refusing to cooperate. I had become the center of a nightmare I didn't understand, and my mind struggled to comprehend that my life had been reduced to this single moment of fear and exposure. The air grew thick with tension. Some men murmured to each other. Others jotted quick notes or adjusted their glasses of expensive liquor. The atmosphere felt both intoxicating and suffocating all at once. I stood as still as I could, my chest rising and falling, my throat burning, the rapid beat of my heart loud in my own ears. I wanted to close my eyes, but I couldn't. I wanted to hide behind someone, anyone, but there was no one. Just me, standing in the spotlight, exposed and terrified. My chest heaved, my throat burned, and I could hear the rapid beat of my heart echoing in my ears. This was only the beginning. Whatever happened in the next few minutes would change the rest of my life in ways I couldn’t even imagine yet.Elena POV “You’re Isabella.” She didn’t jump or look shocked like I thought she would. She just stood there for a second, quiet, watching me like she had been waiting for those words to come out of my mouth. Then she smiled. It wasn’t a nice smile. It wasn’t friendly. It was the kind of smile that knew too much, like she had already played this moment out in her head a hundred times. “So he kept a ghost in the house,” she said softly. “I thought he would’ve buried me deeper than that.” Her voice was calm, almost gentle, like the mess I came from didn’t touch her here. It made my stomach twist in a weird way, like something was wrong with the air between us. I swallowed hard. My throat felt tight. “You had him shot.” She tilted her head a little. The way she looked at me made everything feel off. We had the same eyes, the same shape of the face. It was like staring at a version of myself that had already gone wrong somewhere along the way. “And yet, he’s still breathing. He alw
Everything fell apart all at once, like the whole world decided to come crashing down on us right then. The place turned into this blur of flashing lights and loud, awful noise — gunshots popping off, people yelling over each other, boots stomping hard on the floors. It no longer felt like Dante’s usual tight control. This was a messy, ugly chaos. Dante yanked me into the next hallway, his hand locked around my wrist so tight I could feel his pulse hammering. He wasn’t letting go, not even for a breath, like losing me would end everything for him. His steps were fast and jerky now. He already knew the building had slipped from our hands. “They’re splitting up,” he muttered. “Cutting us off, blocking every exit.” I didn’t bother asking how he knew all that. I could feel it in my bones too — the sounds closing in on us in a smart, planned way, like a noose pulling tight. “They’re not here just to trash the place,” I said, breathing hard. “It feels like they’re after something speci
We didn’t stop moving. Dante held my wrist real tight, like he was scared I’d slip away if he let go even a bit. He pulled me through hallway after hallway, his steps all jerky and fast, the kind that had my lungs burning pretty quick. The alarms kept blaring this steady noise that rattled right through my teeth and made my head pound. Gunshots cracked out every few seconds somewhere behind us, way too close for comfort. None of it felt like Dante at all. He was usually the guy who had everything figured out, always thinking two steps ahead so nothing caught him off guard. Seeing him running like this, just reacting, made my stomach do a sick flip. “Where are we even going?” I asked him, trying to suck in air between the words. “Out,” he said, real short like he didn’t want to waste any breath. “That doesn’t feel like out to me.” “It is. Just keep moving.” But I could tell it wasn't. This felt like we were heading down into some forgotten part of the building that nobod
Elena POV “You went out.” I didn’t turn right away. I already knew that low and steady tone. The kind that meant he was holding everything tight under the surface. Still, I looked up. He was walking toward me, steps measured and direct, like he’d already decided how this conversation was going to end before it even started. “I needed air,” I said. “Don’t.” His voice cut through mine without getting louder. “Don’t lie to me right now.” I let out a slow breath and leaned back against the edge of the table, folding my arms across my chest. “I’m not lying.” He stopped right in front of me. Too close. Close enough that I could feel the tension coming off him in waves, like something underneath all that control was starting to fray at the edges. “Where did you go?” he asked. “Outside.” “Where.” I met his eyes properly this time. “Since when do I have to give you a full report on every single step I take?” “Since your steps started putting you in places you shouldn’t be.” That on
Elena POV “You’re sure this is the place?” The driver’s voice pulled me out of my thoughts. I looked up from my phone, meeting his eyes in the rearview mirror for a second before looking back down at the screen. The blurry photo I’d taken in that hidden room was still open, coordinates glowing underneath it. I’d checked them so many times during the drive that the numbers felt burned into my brain. “Yeah,” I said. “This is it. Stop here.” The car slowed and came to a stop, tires crunching over cracked concrete. I didn’t wait, I pushed the door open and stepped out into the cool air. It hit me right away — thinner, quieter, heavier. Like this whole stretch of land had been deliberately emptied out. “This doesn’t look like anything,” the driver muttered, leaning out his window as I closed the door. I glanced back at him. “It’s fine. Just wait for me, I won’t be long.” He nodded, but the hesitation was clear on his face. I didn’t blame him. The place looked wrong. Rows of o
Dante POV “Run it again.” The guard didn’t argue, but I saw the way his shoulders tensed for a second before his fingers went back to the keyboard. He pulled up the same feeds we’d already picked apart twice. I stayed right where I was, leaning over the desk with my arms crossed tight, staring at that big screen like I could make it show me something different if I looked hard enough. It didn’t. It was the same clean routes. Same perfect timestamps. Same smooth-as-glass execution that didn’t feel right at all. “It’s identical,” the guard said after a bit, keeping his voice low and careful. “No deviations. No interruptions.” I let out a slow breath and leaned forward, gripping the edge of the desk until my knuckles went white. “That’s exactly what’s wrong with it.” Nobody jumped in to say anything. They were all just waiting, watching me, trying to figure out what I was seeing that they couldn’t. The room felt heavy, like the air itself was holding its breath. I straightened up







