
Sofia’s POV
I hadn’t slept in five hours. My nerves were raw, my heartbeat loud in my ears.
The taxi Damian arranged was waiting outside the estate gates just as planned. When I slid into the backseat, I didn’t look back.
The farther we drove, the lighter I felt and the guiltier.
I thought of Father. The shock might kill him.
Gianna, poor Gianna, would probably faint when she found out.
And Jaxon… he’d never believe I actually did it.
Damian was the only one who knew my plan. When I first told him, he’d looked at me like I was insane. But after hours of arguments and tears, he agreed to help. We forged documents, withdrew cash, and planned every second.
And now, it was done. I was free.
Or so I thought.
The taxi dropped me off in Ohio quiet, unfamiliar, and ordinary. The kind of place no one would think to look for a Mafia princess.
I paid the driver with shaky hands and stood on the sidewalk, breathing in the unfamiliar air.
For the first time in my life, I wasn’t being watched.
Three hours later, I was settled into a small apartment Damian had found. It wasn’t fancy, but it was safe. No guards. No cameras. Just me.
As I stared at my reflection in the mirror, I almost didn’t recognize myself.
I’d straightened my red hair the hair that made me so easy to spot but then I noticed something. There were plenty of redheads here. For once, I didn’t stand out.
Three months passed quietly.
I blended in. I got a job at a small jewelry store downtown. The routine soothed me. I even started to smile again.
Until I saw him.
Matteo.
At first, I thought my mind was playing tricks on me. But when I saw him again the next day, my heart stopped. He was walking down the street, coffee in hand, wearing a dark jacket.
Without thinking, I followed him.
He lived just a few blocks away. I didn’t go near not yet. But the sight of him made everything ache again.
I waited until the weekend. The rain poured endlessly that night as I stood outside his door, soaked to the bone. My red hair clung to my face, my makeup smeared.
But I didn’t care.
I needed to see him.
When the door finally opened, Matteo froze. His eyes widened in disbelief.
“Sofia?”
“Hi,” I whispered.
He stepped back, shocked. “What the hell are you doing here? I’m calling your father right now”
“Don’t.”
He stopped when I pulled out the small gun my father’s gun and pressed it to my temple.
“If my dad sees me,” I said, voice trembling, “I’ll kill myself right in front of you.”
The silence that followed was deafening.
Matteo’s POV
For a long time, I couldn’t move.
She was standing in front of me drenched, trembling, her red hair plastered against her face like fire caught in the rain. I’d imagined this moment a hundred times in my head, but never like this. Never with a gun in her hand.
“Sofia…” My voice came out lower than I intended. “Put that down.”
Her fingers tightened around the weapon. “Don’t tell me what to do.”
Her voice was steady, but her eyes weren’t. They were glassy, filled with exhaustion and defiance and something else something that looked a lot like heartbreak.
“What are you doing here?” I asked. “You disappeared for three months, the city’s been tearing itself apart looking for you, and now you show up on my doorstep? In Ohio?”
She exhaled, shaky. “I could ask you the same thing, Matteo. Why are you here?”
That question hit deeper than I wanted it to.
“I left,” I said simply. “Didn’t see a reason to stay in New York after your father paid me off.”
“So you just… ran?” she asked, disbelief shutting through her tone. “You left everything? Just like that?”
Her words stung because they were true. I’d walked away from everything power, protection, loyalty because being near her was too dangerous.
“Yeah,” I said after a beat. “I ran. Because it was the only way I knew how to stop wanting something I could never have.”
Her lips parted slightly, like she wanted to say something but couldn’t. The rain outside thundered against the roof, filling the silence between us.
I tried again, softer this time. “You shouldn’t be here, Sofia. If someone sees you”
“They won’t,” she cut in. “I made sure of it.”
I studied her. The girl who used to throw tantrums at the dinner table, who used to sneak out of her guarded room just to irritate her father she was gone. What stood before me now was a woman who had learned to hide her fear behind control.
“Why Ohio?” she asked suddenly. “You could’ve gone anywhere. Italy, Florida, the other side of the world. But you’re here. Why?”
I didn’t answer right away.


