
Dante POV
Sleep was impossible. I tried God knows I did but every time I closed my eyes, I saw her again, that flash of fury and fearlessness that didn’t belong in our world.
By dawn, I’d given up. I showered, changed into a black shirt and slacks, and headed to the training floor below the villa. The scent of gun oil and sweat was comforting. Predictable. My sanctuary.
I fired a full clip into the target’s chest, one shot after another, until the paper disintegrated. The rhythm of it the recoil, the sound, the destruction finally steadied my pulse.
Then I heard footsteps.
“Couldn’t sleep either?” came a smooth voice.
I didn’t have to turn. Matteo Russo, my right-hand man. Loyal. Ruthless. The kind of man who smiled while interrogating a traitor.
“Wedding nerves?” he teased.
I holstered the gun. “Try disgust.”
“Disgust, obsession, same thing,” Matteo said with a smirk. “She’s got you spinning already. I saw the look you gave her.”
I scowled. “You saw wrong.”
“No,” he said, stepping closer. “I saw a man pretending not to want something he already claimed in his head.”
He wasn’t entirely wrong.
That’s what pissed me off most.
“She’s a liability,” I said. “If she keeps running her mouth, the Cartel will see it as disrespect. And if she humiliates me at the altar, our entire alliance collapses.”
“Then you teach her respect,” Matteo said simply. “Break her in.”
I paused, his words sour in my throat. There was a time I might’ve agreed. But the image of Selena’s eyes wild and bright and untamed made the idea of breaking her feel wrong. Wasteful.
“I’ll handle it,” I said finally. “My way.”
He shrugged. “Just remember, Dante there’s a thin line between wanting to own someone and wanting to save them. Don’t cross it.”
I didn’t answer. Because I wasn’t sure I hadn’t already crossed it.
The next evening, the Cruz family arrived at the cathedral for the private rehearsal. Selena stepped out of the car like she was stepping onto a stage head high, crimson lips, black silk dress that clung like a weapon. Every man turned to look. Every woman looked ready to kill her for it.
And I?
I just stood there, pulse steady, expression blank.
Her father kissed her cheek. She didn’t flinch, but I saw the way her shoulders tensed just slightly. I stored that detail away. Fear disguised as defiance. Anger used as armor.
When our eyes met, she smiled like sin itself.
“Il Falco,” she greeted, her voice sweet poison. “Ready to rehearse your chains?”
“Always,” I said, offering my hand.
She ignored it.
The priest cleared his throat awkwardly. “Perhaps we can begin”
Selena cut him off with a cool glance. “Let’s make this quick. I have better things to do than pretend this is holy.”
Her father’s hand twitched, warning her silently, but she didn’t care. She was daring him too. Daring everyone.
I stepped closer, close enough that only she could hear me. “Keep pushing me, Selena. See where it gets you.”
She smiled without looking at me. “Maybe I want to see how far I can fall before you break.”
The words slid under my skin like a blade.
God help me, I wanted her to fall just to catch her.
That night, after the rehearsal, I found her again. Alone. On the balcony overlooking the sea. The moonlight caught her hair, turned it to dark silver. She didn’t turn when I approached.
“Why do you hate this so much?” I asked.
She laughed softly. “You mean why do I hate being sold to a man who could kill me if I breathe wrong?”
“I’ve never killed a woman.”
“That’s not the same as sparing one.”
I leaned on the railing beside her. “You think you know me, Selena. But you don’t.”
“Then enlighten me.”
I looked out at the waves, endless and black. “You’re not the only one trapped in this deal.”
“Please,” she scoffed. “You’re the heir. You get everything.”
“Everything but choice,” I said quietly.
For a moment, she said nothing. The wind caught her hair, brushing it across her face. I resisted the urge to reach out and move it aside.
Then she said, softer this time, “Then maybe we’re both prisoners.”
I turned to her, meeting her gaze.
There it wasthe crack in the armor.
A flicker of truth beneath all the fury.
“Maybe,” I murmured. “But I intend to be the one holding the key.”
Her eyes darkened. “Then I’ll steal it.”
The corner of my mouth curved. “Good. Let’s see if you can.”
As she walked away, I realized something I hadn’t expected to feel in years anticipation.
Not for the alliance. Not for the power.
For her.
Selena Cruz was fire.
And I was the fool who’d decided to play with it.
But I’d been forged in worse flames.
And tomorrow, when the vows were said and the bloodlines sealed, I’d make sure the world knew one truth:
The fire was mine to burn.


