
Bound By Vengeance
Dante POV
The day before the wedding, I signed the truce with blood.
Literally.
My father said it was symbolic an old Sicilian ritual to seal loyalty. But I knew better. In this world, ink fades. Blood doesn’t. The alliance between the Moretti family and the Cruz Cartel would be written into our veins, into our generations. Whether I wanted it or not.
I stared down at the contract, the red mark smeared beside my name, and felt nothing. I’d learned to silence feelings a long time ago. They made you weak. Hesitation got men killed, and emotion emotion was just another kind of vulnerability.
“Good,” my father said, voice like gravel. “It’s done. Tomorrow, you’ll marry Selena Cruz. A new chapter for both families.”
A new chapter.
He said it as if it were peace. I heard execution.
Selena Cruz.
I’d seen her only once before across a negotiation table months ago, wearing a black dress and a look that could slit a man’s throat. Even then, I knew she’d be trouble. She wasn’t like the other daughters of cartel kings who came painted in submission. No. She had fire. And fire always burns.
I turned toward the window overlooking the Moretti estate. The city stretched out below like a pulse alive, dangerous, hungry. Every building carried blood on its walls, every deal left ghosts in its shadow. My world was built on violence. I was its heir.
And tomorrow, I’d marry my enemy to protect it.
That night, the Cruz family hosted a dinner to “celebrate the union.” The invitation had been less a courtesy and more a declaration. We own this stage tonight.
When I arrived at their estate, the first thing I noticed was the silence beneath the music. The way guards lined the hall with hands too close to their guns. The way every smile hid tension sharp enough to cut.
Then I saw her.
Selena.
She walked into the grand dining hall wearing red a deliberate, sinful red that mocked tradition and provoked sin in equal measure. The chatter died. Even the band hesitated mid-note.
She wasn’t supposed to wear red. Brides wore white. But Selena Cruz had never cared about rules.
Her hair fell loose over her shoulders, dark waves gleaming under chandelier light. Her lips painted blood curved into a smirk when she saw me at the head of the table. She looked straight at me, unflinching. Like she was daring me to react.
For the first time in years, I felt my pulse trip.
“Mr. Moretti,” her father said smoothly, his hand gripping her shoulder like she was both a possession and a prize. “My daughter, Selena. Your future wife.”
Her gaze flicked to me. Cool. Defiant. Dangerous.
I rose slowly from my chair, every motion measured. “Miss Cruz,” I said, voice even. “An honor.”
“Is it?” Her tone dripped with mockery. “Funny, it feels more like a funeral.”
Around us, laughter cracked like gunfire, uneasy and sharp. I didn’t move, didn’t blink. Only tilted my head, studying her the way one might study a wild animal beautiful, but unpredictable.
“You look stunning,” I said finally, letting a faint smile touch my mouth. “But then again, red has always been the color of sin.”
Her eyes flashed. “Then you’ll feel right at home, won’t you?”
The table went still. My father’s jaw tightened beside me, warning unspoken. But I only smiled wider, lowering my voice. “Careful, cara mia. The devil listens when you talk like that.”
Dinner was politics and poison.
Our fathers spoke of borders and shipments, of loyalty and bloodlines. I listened, offered the right words, played the obedient son. But my attention never strayed far from Selena.
She didn’t act like she belonged at the table. She leaned back, untouched wine glass glinting before her, watching the men like a predator in silk. Every move was deliberate the way she crossed her legs, the way her finger traced the rim of her glass. She was performing rebellion, and every man here knew it.
When she laughed at her father’s command, I almost admired her nerve. Almost.
By the time dessert was served, I’d seen enough.
She was testing me.
And in my world, tests always had consequences.
I stood, my chair scraping the marble floor. “Miss Cruz,” I said. “A word.”
Her dark eyes flicked up. “No, thank you.”
The words hit like a gunshot.
No one refused a Moretti not here, not like that.
The hall went silent. Even the air seemed to hold its breath.
I smiled, slow and dangerous, and stepped closer. “That wasn’t a request.”
She arched a brow. “It wasn’t an answer you’ll like.”
God, she had nerve.
“Walk with me,” I murmured, close enough for only her to hear. “Or I’ll carry you. Choose wisely.”





![Sexcapades [Erotic Stories Compilation] by DarkTwiste - Book Cover](https://cdn.textpetals.com/bookimg/public/3b005f3c652f4b41adf929d61365a45f_216x288.jpg)



