
Sofia’s POV
It felt strange, and yet good to be held by someone.
To feel warmth. To feel alive again.
The world around us was still, quiet except for the faint whisper of the wind brushing against the old church walls. Matteo’s arm was firm around my waist, steadying me, grounding me when I didn’t trust my own legs to hold me up.
His scent filled the small vault clean, sharp, and faintly metallic, like the smell of rain after gunfire. For a heartbeat, I just stood there, my cheek against his chest, listening to the steady rhythm of his heartbeat.
It reminded me that I wasn’t as alone as I thought.
Matteo slowly stepped back, his grip gentle but unwilling to let go completely. His voice was calm when he finally spoke, though I could hear the tension buried beneath it.
“We’ve been looking for you for a while,” he said quietly. “Your father will be glad to know you’re safe.”
His words carried duty, but there was something else hiding beneath relief.
I looked up at him, and for a moment, everything blurred. All I could see was how close his lips were when he spoke, how his dark eyes softened when they looked at me. He had no idea what that did to me.
If he noticed the way I lingered in his hold, he didn’t show it.
My thoughts drifted to my father. The man who used to laugh freely, whose presence once filled every room with life, had become a stranger.
Ever since Mom stopped walking ever since the disease had chained her to a wheelchair he had been fading piece by piece.
He was still powerful. Still feared. But his laughter had gone cold. His touch, distant. And though I knew he loved us, I often wondered if he loved his power more.
Matteo’s voice pulled me back.
“Sofia,” he said softly, searching my face.
His brows furrowed in concern, but before he could finish, the wall I’d built inside me cracked. The grief I’d been choking back for days came flooding out.
The sobs tore from my chest, violent and uncontrollable. I pressed my face against him, the scent of his shirt grounding me, and finally let myself break.
He didn’t say a word.
He didn’t try to comfort me with useless words or promises. He just held me tighter, his chin resting lightly on my hair. His silence said more than anything ever could.
And in that silence, I made a decision.
Cole Voss would never have me.
The shrill sound of Matteo’s phone shattered the fragile peace.
He hesitated, glanced down at me, then fished it out of his pocket. His thumb swiped across the screen.
“I have her,” he said into the phone, voice steady. “We’ll be there in a moment.”
He hung up, then gave me a faint smile that didn’t quite reach his eyes.
“Are you ready to go back?”
I wanted to scream no. I wanted to stay hidden here forever, away from the eyes that expected me to act composed, away from the pity.
But all I managed was a quiet, “Yes.”
We stepped out of the small room, and the sunlight hit me like a slap. It was too bright, too warm, as if mocking the emptiness in my chest.
Gianna saw me first. Her heels clicked rapidly on the gravel as she ran toward me, her eyes wide with worry.
“Sofia!” she called, pulling me into a hug so tight I could barely breathe. “Are you okay?”
I nodded against her shoulder. “I’m fine. I just… needed a moment alone.”
Gianna leaned back, studying my face. She nodded slowly. “I understand.”
Of course, she did. Gianna always understood she just never fought back.
Father stood beside the car, waiting. The last of the guests had already moved toward the mansion, eager for wine and gossip disguised as grief. His face was carved in stone, unreadable, but I caught it just a flicker of something in his eyes.
Worry.
Not for me, but for what came next.
We walked in silence. Matteo stayed a few steps behind, always near but never close enough to draw attention.
When we reached the car, I slid into the backseat beside Gianna while Father took the seat in front. The ride was quiet except for the hum of the engine and the muffled city noise outside.
The silence stretched, thick and suffocating.
Then Gianna turned to me, her expression hesitant.
“Sofia,” she said softly. “There’s something you should know.”
I met her gaze warily. “What is it?”
She hesitated, glancing toward Father. “Maybe he should tell you.”
I frowned. “Don’t keep me in the dark. I’m not a kid anymore.”
Father’s eyes flicked to me in the rearview mirror, and for a moment, the weight of his gaze was unbearable.
He sighed deeply, his voice low.
“I think it’s time to move forward,” he said. “You’ve been through enough, and I don’t want you drowning in grief.”
My pulse quickened. “Move forward how?”
He looked back at me, his expression as calm as ever.
“The marriage,” he said. “I believe it should take place this year.”
The words hit like a slap.
“The marriage?” I repeated, my voice trembling. “Now? You think marrying me off will make me happy?”
He didn’t answer.
His silence told me everything I needed to know.
Gianna looked away, her fingers tightening in her lap. I could tell she didn’t agree either, but she wouldn’t dare say it aloud.
I swallowed hard. “When?".


