Chapter 3
The warehouse on Pier 17 smelled of salt, rust, and expensive perfume—a fitting cocktail for the business at hand. They called it ‘the Gilded Cage’, a traveling, clandestine auction house for things that couldn’t see daylight: blood diamonds, stolen art, encrypted ledgers containing rivals’ secrets.
The air was cold enough to see your breath, yet the women glittered in gowns worth more than the cars idling outside. I stood near a corroded steel pillar, a glass of champagne I wouldn’t drink held like a prop in my hand, watching the spectacle.
Isabella, of course, was a vision in silver silk that clung to her like moonlight on water. She played her part perfectly—the wide-eyed, fragile mafia princess fascinated by the dangerous baubles.
The auctioneer held up a velvet case. Inside, nestled on black silk, was a parure of Kashmir sapphires—a necklace, earrings, a bracelet. The stones were the color of a deep, cold twilight, flawless. The kind of blue a woman could drown in.
Isabella’s breath caught, audibly. She leaned forward, a hand drifting to her throat.
A fire, petty and self-destructive, ignited in my chest. Before I could think, my gloved hand lifted, the numbered paddle a stark white in the gloom. “Fifty thousand.”
Heads turned. A murmur rippled through the crowd. Bidding against your own sister? How deliciously tense.
Isabella’s eyes met mine, a flicker of surprise, then wounded confusion. She bit her lip, a picture of thwarted desire. Her admirer, a brutish captain from the Genovese crew, immediately raised the bid. “Seventy-five!”
“One hundred,” I said, my voice cutting through the murmur. It wasn’t about the stones. It was about the space I occupied in this room, in this family. It was about proving I could still take something, anything, for myself.
The Genovese man scowled, but before he could speak, a new voice cut in, amplified and electronically disguised, echoing from the shadowed balcony that overlooked the warehouse floor. It was a voice stripped of identity, yet its timbre resonated in my bones, cold and absolute.
“Two hundred and fifty thousand.”
The crowd gasped. A jump like that wasn’t just a bid; it was a statement. It was a dismissal.
I knew who stood in those shadows. Nicholas. Playing his role as the mysterious benefactor, ‘Mr. Rossi.’
My knuckles whitened around the paddle. I forced my chin up. “Three hundred.”
The disguised voice didn’t hesitate. “Five hundred.”
Silence, thick and smothering, fell. The auctioneer’s gavel hovered. I was frozen. The sum was reckless, even for Castellano funds, and my father would skin me alive. More importantly, I saw the look on Isabella’s face—a blend of awe and triumphant vindication. She turned her face upwards toward the balcony, a saint gazing at a miracle.
I lowered my paddle. The gavel fell. “Sold to Mr. Rossi, for the lady in silver!”
It didn’t end there. It became a grotesque coronation. A Boucher painting Isabella sighed over? His voice claimed it. A set of pre-Columbian gold figuratives she admired from afar? His. A vintage Alfa Romeo sports car on display? His. He lit up the entire grim sky of that warehouse for her, spending fortunes on every trinket that caught her eye, a public, breathtaking declaration of infinite reach and devotion.
The final humiliation came when the auctioneer announced a rare, ten-carat black diamond. Isabella merely glanced at it, a curious tilt of her head.
“One million,” the voice from the balcony declared, preempting all bids.
A collective, sharp intake of breath. For a glance.
I couldn’t look away from the balcony. As the lots were finalized, a service door up there opened, spilling a slice of yellow light. For a second, I saw him. Nicholas, no longer a shadow, but in a crisp black suit, leaning over the railing. His gaze wasn’t on the stage or the diamond. It was fixed on Isabella.
A glacier of hollowing ache spread through my chest. I was a ghost at my own funeral, watching him shower another woman with a king’s ransom.
He had never been mine. And tonight, in front of everyone who mattered in our world, he made sure I knew it.
Chapter 4
I found a sliver of space at the end of the polished mahogany bar and ordered a neat bourbon. The burn as it went down was the first real sensation I’d felt in hours. I was trying to numb the hollow ache when the atmosphere around me shifted.
He smelled of cheap cigars before I saw him. Marco, a mid-level enforcer for the rival Scarpetta syndicate, all bulk and swagger. He slid onto the stool far too close to me, his elbow jabbing into my ribs.
“Well, well. The Castellano ice princess, melting all alone,” he slurred, his breath foul. “Heard your daddy’s selling you off to that vegetable Moretti. Guess no one wants used goods, huh?”
I stiffened, keeping my eyes on my glass. “Walk away, Marco.”
He leaned in closer, his voice a wet, threatening whisper. “Or what? Your pretty-boy guard dog ain’t here. Saw him cozy with your sister upstairs in the VIP lounge. Seems he’s got a new mistress to heel for.”
His hand, thick and calloused, landed on my thigh, squeezing through the silk of my dress. “Maybe I can keep you warm ‘til the wedding. Bet you’re desperate for a real man.”
Revulsion, sharp and clean, cut through the numbness. I was about to drive my stiletto heel into his instep when a cool, familiar voice cut through the jazz.
“Remove your hand.”
Nicholas. He stood a few feet away, having descended from the VIP level. His expression was devoid of anger, just a cold, professional detachment that was somehow worse.
Marco, drunk but not stupid, jerked his hand back, raising both in mock surrender. “Easy, Rossi. Just having a chat with the lady.”
“The lady,” Nicholas said, his tone flat, “is leaving. You’re leaving. Now.”
It was efficient. It was effective. And it was utterly devoid of any personal stake in me. He wasn’t here out of jealousy or protectiveness. This was a maintenance issue, like removing a stain from the family’s property.
As Marco slunk away, grumbling, Nicholas’s eyes finally met mine. There was nothing in them. No apology for his absence at the auction, no concern for the harassment that never should have happened. Just the blank, polished surface of a hired tool. “You should return to the estate, Miss Castellano. It’s getting late.”
Before I could muster a scathing reply, hell broke loose.
It started with the shattering of glass—a bullet tore through the window, killing a business tycoon instantly. Then a scream, raw and terrified. The music died with a screech of feedback.
From a service entrance near the dance floor, three massive, muscle-corded Rottweilers burst into the room. Maybe they had been sent for someone. It didn’t matter anymore. Chaos erupted. Tables overturned. People screamed, scrambling, a panicked herd.
My brain short-circuited. Time fractured.
I saw Isabella, frozen near the grand staircase, her hands flying to her mouth, a perfect statue of fear.
I saw Nicholas’s head snap toward her. He was a blur of black. He crossed the distance in three long strides, his body a shield as he threw himself in front of Isabella, pinning her back against the wall, his arms caging her in, his own back presented to the threat. He was her human bunker.
He chose.
In that split second, one of the dogs, diverted from its original target or simply choosing the nearest obstacle, slammed into my side. I crashed to the sticky floor, the world tilting.
A hot, agonizing pressure clamped onto my left forearm, just below the elbow. Teeth sank through silk, through skin, meeting bone with a crunch I felt more than heard.
A soundless gasp ripped from my throat. The dog shook its head, a terrifying, powerful motion, and I was dragged across the floor, my shoulder screaming in its socket. Sequins from my dress scattered like tears.
Through the blur of pain and terror, my eyes, stubbornly, found him. Nicholas. Still braced against the wall, Isabella sobbing into his chest. His head was turned, his profile tense, but his position never wavered. He held his ground, protecting his heart’s choice.
The snarls of the dog, the distant screams, the coppery taste of blood in my mouth—it all faded into a roaring static.
The last, brittle shard of hope I didn’t know I’d still been clinging to—the hope that somewhere, beneath the duty and the deception, there was a fragment of something real for me—shattered.
Chapter 5
The first thing I felt was the cold. It was the cold of polished steel instruments, of silent monitoring machines, of solitude. My left arm was a solid block of throbbing pain, wrapped in layers of white bandage that stood out starkly against the slate-gray room.
I was in the Castellano family’s private medical suite, a place that looked more like a luxury hotel than a hospital, reserved for discreetly treating bullet wounds and stab injuries. My own dog bite felt grotesquely mundane.
Then I heard his voice. A low, steady murmur from the hallway. A nurse had objected. I’d silenced her with a look.
“…shhh, Bella. It’s alright. You’re safe. I’ve got you.”
Nicholas. The timbre was soft, sanded down to a velvety roughness I’d never heard directed at me. Not even in my most desperate fantasies.
Isabella’s reply was a watery sniffle, perfectly pitched. “I was so scared, Nico. Those beasts… I thought they’d kill you.”
A faint, hushed laugh. “Nothing could keep me from you. You know that.”
The words were a physical blow, landing squarely on my bruised ribs. I closed my eyes, but it only made the audio clearer. I could picture it. Him standing close, his tall frame angled protectively toward her, one hand perhaps brushing a tear from her cheek.
My lawyer, a grim-faced man named Silas who handled the family’s most sensitive affairs, arrived with the discharge papers. His eyes, magnified by thick glasses, scanned my face. “The disciplinary clause, Miss Castellano. Do you wish to invoke it?”
The Castellano family code was an archaic, brutal thing. Among its many statutes was Article VII, regarding the failure of a sworn protector. The principal had the right to demand physical restitution. It was seldom used, a relic of a more savage time, but it remained on the books. A symbol.
“Yes,” I said, my voice flat. “I do.”
The armory was in the east wing of the mansion, a long, narrow room paneled in dark walnut. Racks of antique rifles, crossed sabers, and glass cases holding dueling pistols lined the walls. It was a room for theatrics of violence. My father stood near the fireplace, his expression unreadable. Isabella hovered near the door, her eyes wide and red-rimmed.
Nicholas stood in the center of the Persian rug, facing me. He’d changed into a simple black shirt and trousers. His posture was correct, but his eyes were dark pools of simmering resentment.
Silas read the charge in a dry, legal monotone. “…failure to maintain proximate defense, resulting in grave bodily harm to the principal. The principal claims the right of discipline under Article VII, Section Three.”
I walked to the wrought-iron stand where the implements were displayed. My fingers closed around the cinta, its handle worn smooth by generations of Castellano hands.
“Kneel,” I said, not looking at him.
For a heartbeat, he didn’t move. The tension in the room spiked. Then, with a stiffness that betrayed his fury, he went down on one knee, his head bowed slightly.
I raised the cinta. This was for the teeth in my arm, for the terror on the club floor, for the sound of his gentle voice in the hall promising another woman safety.
The leather whistled as I brought it down.
Isabella’s shriek cut through the air a fraction of a second before she moved. She launched herself across the space, throwing her body over Nicholas’s back, arms spread wide. “No! Please, Victoria, don’t! It was my fault! I distracted him!”
The cinta halted mid-air, my muscles locking. Nicholas’s head snapped up. His arms came around Isabella, cradling her protectively against him. His gaze lifted past her trembling shoulders and found mine.
There was no hesitation in his eyes. No doubt. Only a clear warning.
If I hurt her, he would stop me.
The power of the whip in my hand evaporated. He had chosen his side with an absolute clarity that left no room for doubt. The weapon was mine, but the true power had already flowed to him, through her.
I lowered the cinta. The leather felt inert, silly.
“Get out,” I said, my voice hollow. “Both of you.”
He rose, Isabella clinging to him, and guided her from the room without a backward glance.