Page 8
D’Angelo wouldn’t have waited a year to avenge the shipping container we blew up last year. He’s angry about the message I sent yesterday. I claimed a girl who owes him, and he’s showing teeth.
I said she was mine, and he’s showing he’s willing to take it all. If I tell my father this, that there’s a woman behind this mess, I know what he’d do. He’d clean up the mess—he’d hand her over. No woman’s worth fighting over, that’s what he’s always said.
So I stay quiet about the real reason, holding my father’s stare without flinching. “We’ll hit back. Harder. Send our own message.”
“Always so quick to violence.” He shakes his head. “This isn’t the time for displays of force. The Costas have the mayor in their pocket, half the city council. We start a war now, we’ll find ourselves fighting the law as well as them.”
“So what do you suggest?”
My father stands, moving to the window that overlooks the compound. Outside, men move purposefully between buildings, cars come and go. Our small kingdom, built on blood and fear.
“An alliance of our own.”
“With who? The Russians? The Colombians?”
He turns, fixing me with a stare that’s lost none of its power to make me feel like a boy again.
“Not with another family. A marriage.”
The word lands between us like a grenade with the pin pulled. I keep my face carefully blank.
“Who?”
“Valentina Costa.”
I remember her from a charity gala two years ago.
Tall, model-thin, with a practiced smile that never reached her eyes.
She’d flirted with me, brushing her hand against mine as she took the champagne I offered.
Later, I’d overheard her telling a friend she could “fix” me, turn the crude gangster’s son into someone worthy of her family name.
“No.” The word comes out harder than I intended.
My father’s eyebrows rise. “No? You’d rather we go to war? Watch our men die, our business crumble, because you’re too proud to make a strategic alliance? If Costa is backing D’Angelo, he’ll stop the minute his daughter is married to you. Don’t you see that?”
“It’s not pride.” I stand too, refusing to let him loom over me.
Even at thirty-eight, these conversations with my father make me feel like I’m fighting for solid ground.
“Valentina Costa is manipulative, calculating, and has made it clear she thinks we’re beneath her family.
You want to put someone like that in our home?
Give her access to our operations, our finances? ”
“She’d be your wife, not your business partner.”
“In this life, they’re the same thing. Besides, you won’t even realize it, but through her, Aldo Costa will be the one calling the shots on what we do. That man gives nothing for free.”
He studies me, head tilted slightly. Then understanding dawns in his eyes, followed by disbelief. “You have someone else in mind.”
It’s not a question, but I answer anyway. “Yes.”
The lie comes easily, unexpectedly. I hadn’t planned it—wasn’t thinking beyond my refusal of Valentina—but as soon as the word leaves my mouth, I see Chiara’s face again. Her sleepy smile this morning when I slipped out of bed. The catch in her breath when I first touched her.
I have to keep her safe. And now that D’Angelo knows I stepped in—knows I staked a claim—he won’t let it go.
If she stays where she is, she’s a target. Exposed. Vulnerable.
But if she’s with me—publicly with me—he won’t touch her.
A marriage… the thought hits like a punch to the chest, sudden but solid. It gives me control. Access. Protection. Legitimacy.
She becomes untouchable.
And if I drop it now, maybe it’ll shut my father up. He’s too obsessed with bloodlines and power plays to see what this really is—strategy, not sentiment.
I didn’t plan this. But the second the idea forms, it feels inevitable. She’ll be mine in name. In law. In every damn way that matters.
“Who the hell is she?” he snaps. “What family? What does she bring to the table besides a pretty face?”
I move behind the desk, taking my rightful place, forcing him to be the one standing before me. “She’s not connected. Not powerful.”
“Then what use is she to us?”
I meet his gaze steadily. “She’s who I’ve chosen.”
My father’s laugh is sharp, disbelieving. “Since when do you make decisions with your heart and not your head? This isn’t like you, Marco. This kind of emotional thinking will get you killed. Get us all killed.”
“It’s not emotional,” I lie again. “It’s practical. Valentina Costa would be a viper in our nest. This woman… she’s loyal. Straightforward. No hidden agendas.”
“You sound like a lovesick boy, not the man I raised to lead.”
I say nothing, letting his words bounce off the armor I’ve built over decades of his disappointment. He paces the office now, agitated in a way I rarely see him.
“Who is she? Where did you even find her? And why the hell haven’t you mentioned her until now?”
“It’s recent,” I say, each lie building on the last, creating a structure I’m now committed to. “And she’s not part of our world.”
My father stops pacing. Stares at me like I’ve gone mad. “A civilian? You want to marry a civilian? Someone with no understanding of what we do?”
“She’ll learn.”
“If she doesn’t run screaming first.” He shakes his head, dropping heavily into the chair I’d vacated. “Marco, think about what you’re saying. The Costas are moving against us. D’Angelo is growing stronger by the day. We need allies, not liabilities.”
“I’ve made my decision.”
We stare at each other, two predators marking territory. Finally, he sighs, the sound of a man conserving his energy for battles he can win.
“Fine. Marry your nobody if you must. But when she can’t handle this life—when she breaks under the weight of who we are, what we do—don’t come to me for sympathy.
” He stands, straightening his suit jacket with a sharp tug.
“Just make sure she gives you sons. Even a child from an unwise match is better than no heir at all.”
He leaves without another word, the door closing firmly behind him.
I sink into my chair, the weight of the decision I’ve just made settling around my shoulders. Marriage. To Chiara. A woman I met yesterday, took to bed last night, and left sleeping in her sheets this morning.
I close my eyes, and there she is—soft, warm, wrapped around me. No games in her eyes. No agenda. Just raw, unfiltered need. For a few hours, I wasn’t a Bianchi. Wasn’t heir to an empire. I was just a man—wanted for himself.
The decision hardens in my chest, solid and final. Chiara is mine now. Mine to protect. Mine to own. Mine to bring into my world and keep, whether she’s ready or not. She’ll understand soon enough. She’ll come willingly—or she’ll be convinced.
I pick up my phone and call Nicolo. There’s work to do. Arrangements to make. A future to take.
Table of Contents
- Page 1
- Page 2
- Page 3
- Page 4
- Page 5
- Page 6
- Page 7
- Page 8 (Reading here)
- Page 9
- Page 10
- Page 11
- Page 12
- Page 13
- Page 14
- Page 15
- Page 16
- Page 17
- Page 18
- Page 19
- Page 20
- Page 21
- Page 22
- Page 23
- Page 24
- Page 25
- Page 26
- Page 27
- Page 28
- Page 29
- Page 30
- Page 31
- Page 32
- Page 33
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- Page 36
- Page 37
- Page 38
- Page 39
- Page 40
- Page 41
- Page 42
- Page 43
- Page 44
- Page 45
- Page 46
- Page 47
- Page 48
- Page 49
- Page 50
- Page 51
- Page 52
- Page 53
- Page 54
- Page 55
- Page 56
- Page 57