
Dante POV
The night before a wedding is supposed to be calm.
Mine wasn’t.
The Cruz mansion lay drowned in silence, but my mind was alive with noise the ghosts of promises, betrayals, and blood that wouldn’t stay buried. I’d spent my life mastering control, and yet one look from her had cracked it like glass.
Selena Cruz.
The woman I was bound to marry not by choice, but by vengeance wearing the mask of peace.
I sat on the terrace of my guest suite, smoke curling from the cigarette between my fingers, eyes trained on the distant lights of her wing. She hadn’t turned them off. I could see her shadow through the lace curtains moving, restless, as if she too couldn’t sleep.
Figures. A fire like hers was never still.
Enzo’s voice broke the quiet.
“Boss,” he called from the doorway, his tone hesitant. “Your father’s on the line.”
I crushed the cigarette and motioned for the phone.
“Put him through.”
The call connected with a click. “Dante,” came my father’s voice, deep and commanding even through the static. “Tell me she’s behaving.”
I stared at the distant light. “If you call wearing red in front of the entire table ‘behaving,’ then yes. She’s an angel.”
He chuckled darkly. “A Cruz angel is still a devil in disguise. Don’t let her beauty fool you, boy. That woman was raised by a man who poisons loyalty and calls it power.”
I didn’t answer. My father had spent his life teaching me that control is power, and love is weakness. But tonight, neither rule felt steady.
“I’m not underestimating her,” I said finally. “But I won’t break her just to please you.”
“Break her?” He scoffed. “No, Dante. Own her. That’s what peace looks like in our world.”
He hung up before I could respond. Typical. Conversations with him were never exchanges they were orders disguised as advice.
I stood, running a hand through my hair, pacing.
Own her.
That wasn’t what I wanted. I wanted her honesty, her resistance, that sharp edge that made her look me inthe eye like she was daring me to bleed.
And the worst part? I liked it.
I didn’t remember walking out of my suite only the creak of the corridor beneath my boots, the echo of her name pulsing through my chest like a heartbeat I couldn’t silence.
The guards outside her door stiffened as I approached.
“Mr. Moretti”
“Go.” My tone left no room for argument.
They hesitated, then stepped aside.
The door was unlocked. Another act of rebellion.
Inside, the room smelled faintly of vanilla and danger. She stood near the window, wrapped in a silk robe the color of moonlight, hair cascading down her back. The lamplight traced the lines of her collarbone, the strength in her stillness.
She turned sharply, eyes narrowing. “What the hell are you doing here?”
“Making sure my future wife is still breathing.”
“Your concern is unnecessary,” she bit out. “I don’t need your protection.”
“You do,” I murmured, closing the distance between us. “You just don’t want to admit it.”
Her chin tilted upward, defiant. “You think walking into my room uninvited makes you a protector? Try again.”
My lips curved slightly. “No. But it reminds you that you’re not the one in control.”
That did it. I could almost see her temper spark. “I’m not one of your soldiers, Dante. You can’t command me.”
“I could,” I said softly, my voice dropping low enough that only she could hear. “But I’d rather you fight me. I prefer fire over fear.”
For a moment, the air between us burned. She didn’t move, didn’t breathe just stared at me with those eyes, all storm and fury and something dangerously close to curiosity.
“You’re used to people bending to your will,” she said finally. “But you won’t get that from me.”
“Good,” I whispered, stepping closer until I could feel the warmth of her body against mine. “I’m not asking for your obedience.”
Her breath caught. “Then what are you asking for?”
“Your truth.” My gaze dropped to her lips just for a second. “And maybe, one day, your loyalty. But I’ll earn that. Not steal it.”
She blinked, momentarily thrown. The defiance wavered. Then, just as quickly, she found it again. “You talk like you’re some kind of savior,” she said coldly. “You’re not. You’re just another man trying to own what isn’t his.”
I leaned in, my voice brushing her ear. “Then make sure I never can.”
For a heartbeat, we didn’t move. I could hear her breathing fast, uneven feel the tension crackling between us like a fuse about to blow.
She didn’t back away. Neither did I.
And then, just when the distance between us could’ve disappeared, I stepped back. Slowly. Purposefully.
Her glare followed me like a brand.
“Lock your door,” I said, turning toward the exit. “There are men in this house who don’t respect boundaries.”
Her voice came sharp from behind me. “Including you?”
I paused at the doorway, half-smiling. “Especially me.”
By the time I returned to my suite, dawn was already bleeding into the sky.
Enzo was waiting by the window, a cup of coffee in hand. “You didn’t sleep.”
“Couldn’t.”
He studied me carefully. “You’re thinking about her.”
I gave a short laugh. “You make it sound like a disease.”
“In our world,” he said quietly, “it is.”
Maybe he was right. Maybe I was already infected.
I went to the window, watching as the first light hit the Cruz estate men moving like shadows, guards changing shifts, the world spinning toward a wedding that wasn’t a celebration but a contract written in blood.
I should’ve been focused on that. On the strategy, the alliances, the territory that would double under our control.
But all I could think about was the woman who looked at me like she’d rather set fire to the world than let me win.
And I realized then this wasn’t just business anymore.
This was war.
And it had already begun.


