
Selena POV
The villa in Milan was too quiet.
Too perfect, too polished like a mausoleum built for secrets. The marble floors gleamed under chandeliers, the scent of expensive cologne and gun oil lingering in the air. Men in black suits moved like shadows along the corridors, their hands never far from their weapons.
And somewhere above all that silent tension was me the unwanted bride of Dante Moretti.
I stiod by the tall windows, watching the distant hills burn gold under the setting sun. From here, Milan looked peaceful, almost beautiful. You’d never guess there were wars fought in the alleys, blood spilled under the marble calm of this city.
But I knew better. Peace in this world was just a pause before the next bullet.
Behind me, the sound of footsteps broke the silence. Steady. Controlled.
Dante.
He entered without knocking, his presence filling the room like a shadow that belonged to me now whether I wanted it or not.
“You’re supposed to rest,” he said, voice low, calm but that same calm carried an edge sharp enough to cut.
“I don’t rest well in cages,” I replied, not turning around. “Even the gilded ones.”
He moved closer, the faint click of his shoes echoing against marble. “This isn’t a cage, Selena. It’s protection.”
I finally faced him. “From who? You?”
His jaw tightened. A muscle flickered near his temple. “You think I brought you here to hurt you?”
“I think you brought me here because it serves whatever deal you made with my father.”
He exhaled slowly, the sound more like restraint than patience. “You don’t understand the kind of men coming after your family. They don’t negotiate. They don’t show mercy.”
“And you do?” I asked.
His gaze darkened. “Only to those who don’t lie to me.”
Something in his tone made my stomach twist. “What’s that supposed to mean?”
He didn’t answer. Instead, he stepped closer, close enough for me to feel the warmth of his breath. “There’s something you’re not telling me, Selena. Something your father didn’t mention before the wedding.”
I met his eyes, defiant. “Maybe you’re not as informed as you think.”
For a heartbeat, silence stretched between us, hot and tight. Then, instead of responding, Dante reached past me and shut the curtains. The sudden darkness felt intimate dangerously so.
He didn’t touch me, but his nearness was a touch all the same.
“Get ready,” he said, turning away at last. “We’re visiting one of the docks tonight. I want you to see how your world works now.”
“My world?” I echoed. “You mean your empire.”
His lips curved slightly. “Call it what you want. But tonight, you’re walking into it.”
The drive to the docks took twenty minutes.
We rode in silence, the hum of the engine the only sound. Dante sat beside me, composed, his expression unreadable. I stared out the window, watching the city lights flicker like dying stars.
I told myself I didn’t care where we were going. That I didn’t care what he thought.
But I did.
Every time he shifted, every glance he stole when he thought I wasn’t looking it made my pulse jump in ways I didn’t understand.
When we reached the docks, the air changed. Salt and diesel. Waves slapping wood. The sound of low voices mixing with the clatter of crates.
Dante stepped out first. His men fanned around him like a wall of muscle and guns. He reached back to help me from the car, but I ignored his hand and climbed out on my own. His smirk was almost imperceptible.
“Stubborn,” he murmured.
“Independent,” I corrected.
We walked toward a row of warehouses at the water’s edge. The place was alive with movement trucks loading, men shouting orders, others scanning shipments.
“This is where money moves,” Dante said. “Weapons. Goods. Information. Every shipment that passes through this city goes through us.”
“Through you,” I said. “Let’s not pretend my father’s name means anything here.”
His gaze flicked to me briefly. “You’re learning fast.”
I might’ve said something back, but a sound in the distance caught my attention a faint metallic click that didn’t belong. I froze.
Then it came again.
“Dante,” I whispered.
He noticed instantly. His hand went to his gun.
The next moment exploded in chaos.
Gunfire erupted from the shadows sharp, echoing cracks splitting the night. Bullets tore through crates and glass. Men shouted. I ducked behind a steel container as Dante’s guards opened fire.
“Stay down!” he barked, moving like a ghost between cover and return shots.
My heart pounded so hard I could barely breathe. The air smelled of gunpowder and salt. A body fell near me, blood dark against the concrete.
“Dante!” I shouted, fear slicing through my throat.
He turned, eyes blazing. “Don’t move!”
A bullet whizzed past his shoulder, grazing the edge of his jacket. He fired back twice clean, efficient, lethal. Two men dropped.
Another attacker lunged from behind the crates, rifle raised. Before I could think, I grabbed a broken pipe lying on the ground and swung. It caught the man across the face. He staggered, and Dante’s bullet finished him.
For a split second, our eyes met through the smoke and chaos. His expression was something fierce pride, shock, maybe even admiration.


