Dawn crept over the De Luca estate like a reluctant confession. The storm had broken sometime before sunrise, leaving the gardens slick and silver. Inside, servants moved quietly, as though the house itself feared to disturb whatever had happened in the night.
Isabella woke in a bed larger than the entire room she had shared with her mother. The sheets were white, the air faintly perfumed with cedar. For a moment she thought she had dreamed the theater, the bidding, the cold eyes of the men who had watched her like merchandise. Then she saw the faint bruise at her wrist and remembered everything. A knock sounded. Before she could answer, a woman in black entered with a tray. “Breakfast, Signorina. Mr. Lorenzo said you should eat.” The servant’s tone was neither kind nor cruel—only cautious. Isabella forced a thank-you and ate little; every bite turned to dust in her mouth. Through the window she saw the wide lawns and fountains, guards pacing the walls. She was free, yet she wasn’t. --- Lorenzo stood on the balcony outside his study, a cigarette burning low between his fingers. Below him the city shimmered beyond the cliffs: a mixture of ancient spires and modern glass. It was his kingdom, inherited through fear and loyalty. Yet the girl asleep in his house had unsettled something he didn’t know he still possessed. He had spent the night thinking of her face beneath the theater lights—the refusal to beg, the silent endurance. Strength like that did not come from innocence; it came from surviving monsters. He knew because he had spent his life among them. Marco entered without knocking. “You look troubled, cugino. Buyer’s remorse?” Lorenzo exhaled smoke. “You should mind your own trades.” “I do. That’s why the family stays rich. You, on the other hand, paid a fortune for a stranger.” “I paid to stop a crime.” Marco smiled, the expression thin as paper. “Morality is an expensive hobby in our business.” Their eyes met—two storms circling the same sea. “You forget yourself,” Lorenzo said quietly. “Without me, half your men would have turned on you long ago.” “And without me,” Marco returned, “you’d still be a ghost with a gun and no empire to haunt.” For a heartbeat, silence. Then Lorenzo stubbed out the cigarette and walked past him. “Stay away from the girl.” Marco’s laughter followed him down the corridor. “You can’t protect what the world already owns, cousin.” --- Later that morning, Isabella wandered through the gallery lined with portraits of men whose eyes seemed to follow her. She stopped before a painting of two boys—one serious, one smiling. The brass plaque read: Lorenzo and Marco De Luca, heirs apparent. Footsteps echoed. She turned to find Marco himself watching her. In daylight his charm looked polished, his danger concealed beneath a gentleman’s ease. “You must be the reason my cousin forgets his meetings,” he said. “Welcome to our home.” “Thank you, sir.” “No need for ‘sir.’ Call me Marco.” He moved closer, studying her face. “You remind me of someone… perhaps of what this house lost a long time ago.” Isabella stepped back, nerves prickling. “Mr. Lorenzo said I should rest.” Marco’s smile sharpened. “Of course he did. My cousin likes to keep what he saves.” His hand brushed the edge of her sleeve. “He forgets that nothing here truly belongs to him.” Before she could retreat further, a shadow filled the doorway. Lorenzo. He didn’t raise his voice. He didn’t have to. “Out.” Marco looked amused. “I was merely greeting our guest.” Lorenzo’s eyes were glacial. “Another second and you would have needed a doctor instead of a greeting.” The cousins faced each other in silence until Marco finally shrugged. “Temper, temper. Remember who carries the De Luca name first.” He left, perfume and menace trailing behind him. Isabella stood trembling. Lorenzo turned toward her, and for the first time she saw something human beneath his steel exterior—anger, yes, but also fear for her. “I told you he wouldn’t hurt me,” she whispered. “He would have tried,” Lorenzo said. “And I would have killed him for it.” She flinched at the cold certainty in his tone. He realized it, looked away. “You shouldn’t have to hear such things.” “Then why do you live among them?” He almost smiled, weary. “Because someone has to hold the leash on the beasts. If I leave, they’ll tear this city apart.” --- That night the mansion was quiet again. Lorenzo stood by the fireplace in the small salon where Isabella waited. A single lamp lit the room; rain whispered against the windows. “I spoke with your father,” he said at last. Her body stiffened. “You— why?” “To ensure he never comes near you again. He has money now. Enough to drown himself in whatever vice he prefers. You’re free from him.” Tears welled in her eyes. “You didn’t have to— ” “I did.” His tone softened. “No one should pay for another man’s debts with her body.” For a long moment they said nothing. The distance between them felt fragile, like glass. She wanted to thank him, but words seemed too small. Instead she asked, “What will happen to me now?” “You’ll stay here until you choose otherwise. There are schools, new names, passports—whatever you need.” “And you?” “I have enemies to manage, a cousin to restrain, a city to keep from eating itself alive.” Her gaze met his. “And yet you still found time to save me.” He looked away first. “Don’t mistake conscience for kindness.” “Maybe they’re the same thing,” she said. Something in him cracked at that—a soundless fracture he didn’t understand. He reached for his glass, then stopped, as though making a decision. “Isabella,” he said quietly. “Whatever happens in this house, whatever rumors you hear—remember this. No one will touch you while I breathe. That’s my promise.” The words hung between them like an oath sealed in blood. She felt the weight of them settle over her, heavy and oddly comforting. “Why?” she asked. “Because someone should have protected you long ago. And because I’m tired of watching the world break what it cannot own.” He turned toward the fire. The light caught the scars along his knuckles, the faint tremor of a man who had fought too long. When he looked back, her tears had dried. She nodded once. “Then I’ll hold you to that promise.” A hint of a smile crossed his face—fleeting, human, almost gentle. Outside, thunder rumbled again across the sea. In that sound was the echo of wars yet to come: the feud between brothers, the vengeance that would span generations. But for this single night, the house was still. The beast slept, the girl breathed freely, and somewhere deep inside the man who had saved her, mercy flickered like a dangerous new flame.Latest Chapter
THE LAST BROTHER
The snowstorm swallowed the world whole.Wind ripped through the trees with a feral scream, carrying the scent of blood—Lorenzo’s blood—across the mountains. The forest seemed alive, breathing in ragged gasps as if it knew death was moving through its heart.Marco ran.His vision blurred, his side drenched red, breath slicing through frost like broken glass. The cold gnawed at him, ate him alive, but he didn’t stop. Rage kept him upright. Hatred kept his pulse pumping.Love—twisted, poisoned, delusional—kept him fighting.“Lorenzo…” he growled into the storm. “Still playing hero. Still stealing what’s mine.”Branches whipped his face as he stumbled deeper into the dark.Behind him, distant shouts echoed through the trees.De Luca soldiers.Hunting him.But he wasn’t running from them.He was leading them.---Inside the LodgeLorenzo’s vision faded in and out like a dying bulb.The bullet had gone deep. Too deep.He leaned heavily against Isabella as Lucio wrapped a cloth around his w
THE HUNTING LODGE MASSACRE
The mountains rose like jagged teeth against the night, their shadows swallowing the narrow road that wound toward Marco’s hideout. Snow fell in thin, relentless sheets, turning the forest into a white graveyard. Every tree looked like a watching figure. Every shift of wind sounded like a warning.But Lorenzo did not slow down.The black SUV growled beneath him as he pushed it harder, engine screaming against the climb. His hands strangled the steering wheel, knuckles bone-white. He had driven for hours, but it felt like minutes—time had collapsed into a single thought:Isabella.Alive.Waiting for me.Terrified.Alone.His chest burned with every breath, as though his heart was fighting through ice and fire at once.Lucio’s voice crackled through the comms behind him.“Boss, we’re ten minutes behind you—don’t go in alone.”Lorenzo didn’t respond.A moment later:“Lorenzo, I swear—if you go in without backup—”He turned the radio off.There was no backup for what he intended to do.No
WHEN BLOOD CALLS BLOOD
The sun had barely risen above the treeline when the De Luca mansion erupted into motion again. Footsteps echoed in the corridors, radios crackled with urgent static, and engines roared to life outside. The world was waking… but Lorenzo De Luca had not slept.He was still in the same clothes he had worn the night before, blood drying on his sleeves, shadows carved deep beneath his eyes. But his mind was awake—sharper than ever. Every nerve, every instinct, every breath was anchored to one truth:Marco wasn’t finished.Marco never stopped.And Marco wanted Isabella.Lorenzo stepped out into the hall just as Lucio approached from the staircase, a folder tucked under his arm.“You’re up?” Lucio asked.“I never went to sleep.” Lorenzo’s voice was gravel—not tired, but dangerous.Lucio swallowed. “We got intel from one of the men you… questioned.”Lorenzo gave him a cold, silent look.Lucio quickly corrected himself. “Interrogated. Professionally.”Lorenzo’s jaw twitched. “Show me.”They w
THE WOLVES UNLEASHED
The sky was still bruised with the last traces of night when Lorenzo De Luca stepped into the courtyard, the cold morning air biting at his skin. Dozens of men stood before him—armed, silent, waiting. Engines idled in the background like hungry beasts ready to tear the city apart.Lorenzo’s presence was enough to quiet even the wind.He wore the same black shirt from the night before, though someone had stitched the torn sleeve. A dark coat rested on his shoulders, the collar turned up, casting a shadow across his jaw. He looked like a king stepping into battle… or a wolf who had already decided who would die by sunrise.Lucio approached him. “The teams are in position.”Lorenzo didn’t nod. He simply scanned the faces of his men—old soldiers, loyal guards, fighters trained from the shadows of his father’s empire. Every one of them would die for him. And all of them knew he might die today.“Marco wants a war?” Lorenzo said, voice steady, chilling, final.“Yes, boss,” Lucio answered.“
THE DEVIL’S DEBT
The mansion was wrapped in an eerie quiet, the kind that didn’t soothe but suffocated. Night had fallen hours ago, yet no one inside the walls dared to sleep. Every guard was awake. Every gun was loaded. Every light stayed on. Fear moved through the air like smoke, curling into corners and shadows.Isabella felt it most.She sat beside the window of the guest room Lorenzo had moved her into—a room closer to his office, closer to his guards, closer to him. Her fingers trembled as she traced the outline of the bruises on her wrists. They stung when she pressed them, but the pain reminded her she was alive.Alive… even though Marco wanted her dead.Or worse.Her breath wavered. She hugged her knees tightly to her chest, staring at the moon outside. The forest beyond the mansion swayed with the wind, but in her mind, she heard footsteps… Marco’s footsteps. She heard the scrape of rope against wood. His chilling laugh. The whisper he left her with:“Lorenzo will bleed for this.”A shudder
Beneath the Roses
The storm had not yet passed when Lorenzo De Luca stood at the tall windows of his study, watching the dark sky twist above the city. The thunder rolled like an omen, echoing through the marble halls of the mansion. The air smelled of gunpowder and roses — the strange scent that always followed war.He turned away from the window when Isabella entered. She wore a pale blue dress, her hair damp from the rain, her eyes filled with questions she had learned not to ask.“Lorenzo,” she said softly, “you’ve been standing there for hours.”“I’m waiting for silence,” he replied, his voice low. “It’s the only thing I can trust these days.”She walked closer, her hand brushing his sleeve. “You can trust me.”He looked at her for a long moment, then nodded. “That’s why I need you to leave.”Her breath caught. “Leave? What do you mean?”“You’ll go to the countryside. Matteo will escort you. You’ll stay there until I settle things with Marco.”Isabella’s lips parted in disbelief. “You can’t send m
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