LOGINI woke up to the sound of a heavy door slamming somewhere in the hallway, the vibration rattling the teeth in my skull. Most people in this house probably jumped at loud noises, expecting an assassination attempt. Me? I just groaned and pulled the pillow over my head.
'Duh. Sleep is my favorite hobby—who do they think they are interrupting it?' I grumbled to myself, irritation simmering beneath my half-lidded eyes. "If that's a hitman, tell him to come back after coffee," I muttered into the fabric. Then the smell hit me—expensive sandalwood and the faint, lingering scent of gunpowder. Right. The Vitale hideout. My new $50,000-a-day gilded cage. I scrambled to the bathroom, checking my reflection. The chest binder was tight, but it held. I ruffled my short hair, practicing my "Allizander" scowl. "You’re a man, Alli. A very rich, very annoyed man," I whispered. I didn't feel like a victim. I felt like a woman who had finally found a way to make a mafia boss pay for her mother’s recovery. A muffled curse, followed by the sound of glass shattering, echoed from the room next door. I pushed the connecting door open without knocking. "You know, for a guy who's supposed to be an untouchable mafia boss, you’re making enough noise to alert every neighbor in the province," I said, leaning against the doorframe. Gio was standing in front of a floor-to-ceiling marble vanity. He was shirtless, his broad shoulders blocking half the light in the room. His black trousers sat dangerously low on his hips, and his right arm was held stiffly at his side. His left hand was covered in shaving cream, and a broken aftershave bottle lay in the sink. He glared at me through the mirror, his dark eyes snapping with irritation. "Get out, Samson. I didn't summon you." "You didn't have to. I followed the sound of the temper tantrum," I shot back, walking toward him despite the death stare he was giving me. "What are you doing? Trying to shave with your left hand? You’re going to slit your throat, and then I’ll have to explain to your mother why her favorite son is a puddle on the floor." "My mother is not the one you should be worried about," he growled, turning to face me. The height difference was sudden and rude. I had to tilt my head back just to look him in the eye. "And I don't take orders from my employees." "I'm not an employee, I'm a medical necessity," I countered, reaching for the straight razor he was white-knuckling. "Now, give it here before you lose an ear. You're holding it like a steak knife." "No." "Gio." "Samson, I’m warning you—" "Oh, stop with the 'warning' bit. You’re injured, you’re grumpy, and you have a patch of shaving cream on your earlobe that makes you look ridiculous. Sit down." His jaw dropped slightly. For a second, I thought he might actually strangle me. Instead, he let out a sharp, frustrated breath and sat on the edge of the marble counter. "If you cut me," he whispered, his voice dropping into a threatening purr, "I’ll make sure your funeral is as expensive as your salary." "Big talk for a guy whose hand is shaking," I muttered. I stepped between his knees to get closer. The proximity was a disaster for my heart rate. I could feel the heat radiating from his chest—solid, scarred, and far too close. I took the razor, my fingers brushing his. He flinched, his gaze dropping to my eyes. "Tilt your head up," I commanded. "You’re very bossy for a nurse," he remarked, though he obeyed, exposing the long, vulnerable line of his throat. "And you’re very stubborn for a patient." I applied a fresh layer of cream, my fingers lingering on his jawline. His skin was warm, his pulse thrumming against my fingertips. I began the first stroke. The room went silent. I was hyper-aware of everything: the way he smelled like rain, the way his chest rose and fell in a slow, heavy rhythm, and the fact that he was staring at me. "You have... soft hands for a guy," he said suddenly. "I use moisturizer, Boss. You should try it. Maybe it’ll help with that crusty personality." He let out a dry, short bark of a laugh. "You really don't know when to shut up, do you? Most men in this city would be shaking just to stand this close to me." "Well, I'm not 'most men.' I've seen you unconscious and drooling on my pillow, remember? The intimidating boss act doesn't work on me." I moved to his chin. I had to lean in even closer, my chest nearly brushing his shoulder. I could see the thick fringe of his lashes and the way his naturally pink lips were slightly parted. To break the tension, I reached into my pocket and pulled out a small, bright blue candy wrapper. I popped it onto the counter next to him. "What is that?" he asked. "Payment for being a good boy," I teased. "I saw you eyeing these in the hospital. Take your medicine today without acting like a child, and it’s yours." Gio stared at the candy, then back at me. "You’re bribing a mafia don with a five-cent candy?" "Is it working?" He reached out with his good hand, not for the candy, but for my wrist. His grip was firm, his thumb resting right over my racing pulse. "You’re a strange man, Allizander Samson. You talk like a brat, but you stand like you're not afraid of anything." "And you're a high-maintenance patient, Giovanni Vitale," I replied, pulling my hand back. "We’re even." I finished the shave and wiped his face. He stood up, and the height difference returned like a physical weight. "Rule one," he said, his voice returning to that cold, 'Boss' authority. "You’re on call 24/7. Rule two: You don't touch the other Kards. You're my nurse. Rule three: You forget everything you saw at that hospital." "Got it. Selective amnesia is my specialty." He looked me up and down, his eyes narrowing. "You're too thin," Gio growled. He reached out, his large hand gripping my shoulder. "If an enemy grabs you, you'll snap. I'm paying for a nurse, not a liability." He leaned down, his breath hot against my ear. "Get changed. Meet me in the training hall in ten minutes. I’m going to teach you how to defend yourself... and I won't be going easy on you just because you have a pretty face." "Pretty face?" I called out as he walked toward his closet. "Does that mean you think I'm handsome, Boss?" "It means you look like you've never been punched," he called back. "I intend to fix that." "Great," I muttered, heading back to my room. "I'm getting paid fifty grand a day to be a human punching bag. Happy days."The words were still vibrating in the air when Gio reached out, his hand wrapping firmly around my wrist. Before I could even protest, he hauled me over the threshold and into the inner sanctum of his bedroom. The door clicked shut behind us, the lock engaging with a heavy, final sound that made my stomach do a nervous flip.The room was vast, draped in shadows and smelling of expensive cedar and Gio’s signature cologne. My heart was hammering against my ribs, the binder feeling tighter than ever. I scanned the room, my eyes landing on a sleek, charcoal-colored leather sofa near the window. Without a word, I scurried over to it and sat down, my back as straight as a board. "What are you doing over there?" The question came from the edge of the massive, king-sized bed. Gio had already kicked off his shoes and was sitting on the silk duvet, his tie loosened and his hair a mess. He looked at me like I’d just told him the sky was green."I'm sitting," I said, my voice higher than I int
The ink of my signature was still wet on the paper when Gio snatched the contract away, clutching it to his chest as if it were a winning lottery ticket. The terrifying, cold-blooded Don Vitale was gone, replaced by a man who looked like he’d just been told he was allowed to keep the moon.I leaned back against the edge of his massive desk, crossing my arms over my chest to hide the frantic thumping of my heart. "You know," I started, a mischievous glint in my eyes, "you’re lucky I came back at all. Jett gave me a very interesting live show while I was out."Gio’s head snapped up, his brow furrowing in confusion. "A show? What are you talking about? Did he take you somewhere?""No, Gio. He flipped his camera," I teased, stepping into his space until I could see the golden flecks in his dark irises. "I saw everything. The phone-slamming. The pacing. The way you were growling at your paperwork like it had personally insulted you. I didn't realize the big, bad boss spent his afternoons
"Let’s go... b-babe."The way the word tumbled out of Gio’s mouth was almost pathetic. It sounded like he’d swallowed a stone and was trying to choke it back up. He didn't wait for me to answer, his hand clamping onto my bicep with a grip that was less romantic partner and more arresting officer.He hauled me toward the grand staircase, his legs moving twice as fast as mine. I had to practically skip to keep up, my sneakers squeaking indignantly against the polished marble. I glanced up, ready to snap at him for the manhandling, but the words died in my throat. Gio was staring straight ahead with a fixated, glass-eyed intensity, his jaw working so hard I thought his teeth might crack.But it was his ears that told the real story—they were a deep, burning crimson, glowing like taillights against his dark hair. The most feared Don in the city was currently short-circuiting because of a four-letter word and a cheek kiss.He dragged me into his private study and slammed the heavy oak doo
The taxi ride back was a blur of rain-streaked windows and the rhythmic thumping of my own heart. I leaned my head against the cool glass, watching the city lights dissolve into long, jagged smears of neon. My mind was a battlefield.'Is this right?' I asked myself, the image of my mother’s pale face in the hospital bed flickering behind my eyelids. 'Will this protect us, or am I just building a prettier cage?' Every logical bone in my body told me to run, to take my leave and never look back. But then, the memory of Gio in the office—the way he had whispered Allizander like it was a holy relic—sent a traitorous, warm flutter through my chest. It was a terrifying sensation, a spark of life in a heart I had tried so hard to keep numb.'Fine,' I thought, as the massive wrought-iron gates of the Vitale estate groaned open. 'Let’s just go with the flow. If the world burns tomorrow, at least I’ll know I wasn't just a spectator. I’ll face the wreckage when it comes.'I paid the driver and
I didn't reply to the texts. I couldn't.After I saw his messages—the way he admitted the house felt too quiet without me—sleep became an impossible luxury. I spent the rest of the night staring at the flickering heart monitor, the green line dancing in time with my own frantic pulse. Every time I closed my eyes, I felt the phantom weight of his head on my lap. I knew right then that I’d be bothered by his words until the very end of this day. Giovanni Vitale didn't just command a room; he commanded the air in my lungs, even from miles away.As the sun began to bleed through the hospital blinds, turning the sterile white walls into a soft, bruised gold, I stood up and stretched my aching limbs. I leaned down, pressing my forehead against my mother’s knuckles, the skin papery and cool."I have to go, Mom," I whispered, my voice thick with exhaustion. "I’m going to meet Beatriz today. I need to breathe for a second before I go back to my work. I'm
The vibration of his voice against my chest was a physical pull, a gravitational force that threatened to swallow me whole. For a heartbeat, my fingers stayed tangled in his hair, yielding to the sheer, impossible softness of the moment. But then, the reality of the binder tight against my skin and the web of lies between us snapped back into focus.I pushed.It wasn't a gentle nudge. I shoved his shoulders with a frantic strength, scrambling backward until I hit the opposite end of the sofa. My breath was coming in ragged, shallow hitches."Stop," I gasped, my hands trembling as I smoothed down my oversized shirt. "Gio, stop. You’re… you’re exhausted. You’re delirious. You’re playing some kind of twisted game to see how far you can push your medic."Gio sat up slowly, his dark hair messy from my touch, his eyes hooded and tracking my every panicked move. He didn't look angry. He looked steady—terrifyingly steady."I don't play games with
Gio’s head was still heavy in my lap. I sat there, my spine pressed against the leather of the sofa, my hands still hovering in mid-air like they didn't know where they belonged. I looked down, and my heart nearly stopped. He wasn't sleeping. His eyes were wide open, dark and swirling with an inte
I had spent the remaining hours of the morning tossing and turning, the image of Gio’s knuckles turning white and the weight of his hands on my waist in the gym burned into my brain. I had just managed to stumble into the kitchen, finally pressing a cup of lukewarm coffee to my lips, when the doo
Allizander's POV.My blood turned to ice as Gio’s fingers brushed the metal of my zipper. This was it. The King of Kards was about to find out his bratty male nurse was actually a girl."Wait! Stop!" I barked, slapping his hand away with a strength fueled by pure, unadulterated panic. "What are you
The training hall was a cavernous space that smelled of floor wax and old leather. I walked in, shuffling my feet in a pair of oversized jogging pants and a hoodie that felt like a tent. Gio was already there. He wasn't wearing a shirt, just black athletic shorts and hand wraps that he was tighten







