Chapter 5

Bound by Secrets

Sophia's POV

"Leonard, let go of my daughter." Dad's voice came from behind, calm, too calm. No trace of anger, just quiet authority.

Leonard let go of me immediately. No hesitation. His eyes flickered as he stepped back, sliding his hands into his pockets like nothing had happened. Like he hadn’t just cornered me. Like this wasn’t chaos unfolding.

His guards stirred, but Leonard gave them a single glance, a silent command. They froze.

I rushed to Dad and grabbed his hand, my heart racing.

"Dad, it's nothing. I swear. Where have you been? I thought you were at the reception?" I blurted, trying to sound casual, trying to dismiss whatever conclusion he might have jumped to.

Leonard didn't flinch. "I think it's time you explain to your daughter, my friend."

I turned to glare at him. My hands clenched. The fury boiling inside me could light a city. I wanted to claw out his eyes.

Dad’s tone changed—pleading. "Leo, my daughter is still a child."

"What's going on here?" I tugged at my father’s arm, desperate now.

Leonard exhaled deeply and tilted his head. "You better do so. I don't have enough patience on my side."

Dad nodded solemnly. "I will explain everything to her.

Leonard turned and walked away toward his car, the guards parting respectfully as he passed. There was something almost royal in the way they treated him. I hated it.

My dad walked into the hospital without another word. I followed him, voice rising, question after question spilling from my mouth.

"What does he mean, explain? Explain what?"

"Why did he call you his friend like that, didn't you say you were best friends?"

"What did he mean by 'your daughter'?"

"Dad, you’re scaring me, please say something."

"Is this about Mom? Did she know him?"

"Was that why you went missing at the reception? To meet him?"

He didn’t respond. Not once. Not a glance, not a sigh. Nothing. Just kept walking. Each unanswered question made my chest tighter.

He led me to the top floor, then out onto the rooftop of the hospital. The city looked small beneath us, the night sky stretched wide and indifferent. I was still talking, still asking, begging him to talk.

Finally, he stopped. Slowly, he turned to face me.

His eyes were glossy. A kind of sorrow I’d never seen before rested on his face. My heart thudded with dread.

"Sophia... I'm sorry," he said, and tears began rolling down his cheeks.

"Dad, please don't cry," I whispered, shaken. "I'm the one that's supposed to be crying here. What the hell is going on, please?"

He took both my hands gently.

"Sophia, I'm so sorry. I kept a huge secret from you and your mom... thinking this day wouldn't come."

The chill in the air felt sharper. My skin prickled.

"Dad, what's with Uncle Leonard? You know him, right? You know everything? What's the secret? What do I need to know?"

He nodded slowly.

"Ava got pregnant with you when I was just 18. Leonard was my best friend, he was 17. We were about to finish high school. When your mom told me she was pregnant... it hit like lightning. I was happy, but terrified."

His voice cracked, and I gripped his hands harder.

"Our parents... they disowned us. Both of us. Ava went into depression from the shock. She started having complications, bleeding that wouldn't stop. It wasn't a miscarriage, but it was bad. The doctors needed to perform regular transfusions. It was too much. We were kids. We had no one...

He paused, swallowing the lump in his throat.

"I worked like crazy, three jobs, sometimes four. It still wasn't enough. She needed blood, medications, care. And then..."

He trailed off. His jaw tightened like he was holding something back.

"Then what?" I asked softly.

He closed his eyes.

"Leo introduced me to his dad. Augustus Morano. That was when I learned who they really were. Powerful. Untouchable. Dangerous. Augustus promised to help. He said he'd save Ava... but on one condition. If the child survived, the child would belong to Leonard."

Everything inside me went silent.

The wind seemed louder suddenly, brushing past my ears like whispers.

Belong? To Leonard?

"Leo didn't like the idea either," Dad added quickly. "But... Augustus doesn’t deal in choices. The rich, Sophia... they never give without taking."

I stared at him, unmoving.

The world around me tilted. My knees felt weak.

Belong. That word kept ringing in my head.

I was just a deal?

My breath hitched. I didn’t even realize I had started crying until a tear landed on my wrist.

My entire body stung. My chest, my heart, everything. Like I had been struck from the inside. I took a step back.

"I'm sorry, Sophia," Dad said, stepping forward. "If I hadn't done it, you and your mom would have died. I had no choice."

No choice.

I wiped my tears away angrily.

No choice?

What kind of father signs away his child like property?

A thousand questions fought to leave my lips but none of them made it past my throat.

What was I now?

Why did Leonard treat me like I was his possession?

Was I really just some payment for a favor?

A transaction?

A silence so thick filled the rooftop that even the wind seemed to stop.

I turned away, eyes brimming with a new wave of tears.

I didn’t know who I was anymore. Or what I was supposed to do.

I couldn’t look at my father.

And for the first time in my life... I wasn't sure I wanted to.

The stars above blurred through my tears.

My thoughts tangled like vines.

Was I truly someone else's to claim?

Had my life been a lie from the start?

What did dad mean by “belong”?

Was I even… me?

One question echoed louder than the rest:

If Leonard owned me... what exactly did he intend to do with me?

Chapter 6

The Look that Froze Me

Sophia's POV

Three Days Later

“Knock knock,” Dad said, gently pushing the door open with his shoulder. His hands trembled slightly as he balanced a tray of tea and buttered bread.

I didn’t respond. I hadn’t responded in days.

Since the moment I learned the truth, that I had been offered like some token, bartered away to a man I barely remembered, I had barely moved. Just lying on my side, the same spot on my pillow still damp from tears that refused to stop falling.

Dad set the tray down on the little table by the window. The scent of warm bread filled the room, but it only made my stomach churn. He sat beside me on the bed, his weight barely dipping the mattress.

“Sophia,” he said softly, “you haven’t eaten in three days.”

I turned my face toward the wall, away from him. Silence was easier than rage.

He rubbed his fingers together, a nervous habit he’d had since I was a child. Guilt. He was swimming in it, but I didn’t care. It couldn’t undo what he had done.

“I’m so sorry,” he whispered. “If I hadn’t… if I didn’t do what I did, I would’ve lost you. And Ava.”

His voice cracked on her name, Ava, my mom. His wife. The pain in his eyes when he said it was enough to crush any anger I still held. “If I hadn't agreed to the arrangement, I would’ve lost you and Ava both,” he said, each word drenched in guilt. “I had no power to do anything for Ava back then. I still don’t. But Leo... he gave me a choice, to save your life.”

“But you gave up my entire life, Dad,” I finally said, voice muffled against my pillow. “How do you expect me to marry your age mate?”

Tears wet the side of my face again, hot and angry. My fists clutched the pillow tight, holding in the scream clawing at my throat.

“I’m older than Leo,” Dad said, as if that made it better. “And the Leo I know… he’s a good man. He’ll take care of you.”

He was crying now too. I didn’t turn to see it, I didn’t need to. I could feel the shame dripping off his words like blood from a wound.

“Just leave me alone,” I said, voice hoarse.

“I’ll leave the food here,” he whispered. “I’ll come back for the tray later.”

The door clicked shut behind him.

I rolled onto my back, staring at the ceiling like it held all the answers. No matter how I twisted it in my mind, I couldn’t see a future where I belonged to someone like Leonard Morano. Not with our age difference. Not with the way he looked at me like I was his before I even had a say. Not with the power imbalance stretching like a chasm between us.

“No,” I whispered to the ceiling. “No, I won’t let this happen.”

I sat up.

If Leo thought he could choose my life for me, he didn’t know who I was.

He didn’t know I could fight back.

**********

KINGS BAR

It was like stepping into another world.

The outside was plain enough, just a black-bricked building with a red neon sign. But once I pushed through the heavy double doors, my breath caught.

The bar was magmatic in atmosphere, dim lighting that glowed like embers, velvet-lined booths nestled in shadow, glass chandeliers that shimmered like molten gold. Music played low and sensual, a jazzy undertone that made your heart thrum without knowing why.

I wore a short black velvet dress, the hem brushing just above mid-thigh, showing enough leg to be noticed but not enough to be mistaken. My hair was swept into a soft updo, curled tendrils falling across my cheeks, and my makeup was dramatic, smoky eyes, bold lips, just the kind of fire I needed to wear as armor.

I didn’t want to look lost, even though I was. I kept my back straight and my stride confident, weaving through bodies and perfume-heavy air as if I belonged.

I was looking for him.

Guards loitered around every exit, their eyes scanning lazily, but they didn’t stop me. My dress earned me passage. Appearance was currency here, and I was wearing mine like a weapon.

I found the room toward the back, behind beaded curtains that pulsed red with the ambient lighting. I peeked through and my breath hitched.

There he was.

Leonard Morano.

Sitting at the head of a long velvet booth like a king on his throne, flanked by dangerous-looking men who leaned in as he spoke. He wasn’t smiling, Leo rarely did. He didn’t need to. His presence was enough. That tailored suit, the way he draped his arm along the top of the booth, the way everyone listened when he spoke. He was in his world, commanding it like it belonged to him.

And technically… so did I.

I started to move toward the curtain.

A hand landed on my shoulder, firm, uninvited.

“Where do you think you’re going?” a low voice asked.

I turned, heart jumping into my throat. The man was tall, broad-shouldered, dressed in a fitted black suit. His jaw was squared, his tone clipped.

“You can’t go in there,” he said, eyes scanning me. “It’s dangerous.”

I stepped back slightly, nodding. “Okay,” I murmured.

He didn’t trust me. Good.

He went back to his post beside another suited guard. I shifted course and moved to the bar, taking a seat at a high stool with a view of the private room. I could still see Leo, still hear fragments of his voice.

I didn’t know what I was going to do, slap him, scream, throw wine in his face? Maybe all of it.

But something about the way he sat, the way his fingers tapped once on the table and men immediately quieted, it stirred something beneath my anger.

Control. He radiated it.

And then something odd caught my eye.

The guard who had spoken to me earlier, he kept glancing my way. Not in the usual sleazy bar way. No. His gaze was puzzled, searching. Like I was a riddle he was trying to solve.

Did he recognize me?

“Hey, beauty,” a voice slurred next to me.

I turned, a man with too much cologne and not enough sense stood with a wine glass in hand, clearly mistaking my silence for an invitation.

I rolled my eyes.

“I love that,” he chuckled. “The way you roll your eyes. You’ve got beautiful ones.”

I ignored him.

The bartender set a glass down in front of me. Pale gold, chilled.

“You’ve been sitting here long enough,” he said. “Here, juice. You need something in your system.”

I gave him a tight smile, took a sip. Sweet, slightly tart. My throat welcomed it.

The man next to me was still talking.

“You don’t want to talk to me? Let’s just get to know each other, you know...”

“I’m waiting for someone,” I cut in.

He backed off with a laugh, moving down the bar.

I turned back toward the room.

And that’s when I saw it.

The guard who had been staring earlier was now inside the private room, leaning down and whispering something into Leo’s ear.

Leo’s face turned toward him. Then, slowly, his gaze followed the direction the guard pointed.

To me.

Our eyes met.

In that moment, the entire bar seemed to fall silent.

His expression didn’t change immediately. But then it did.

Fury.

His eyes narrowed, jaw clenched. A flicker of something primal passed over his features. That look… it sent a chill all the way down my spine.

It wasn’t confusion. It wasn’t curiosity.

It was command.

“What the hell are you doing here?” his eyes seemed to ask.

And I had no answer.

I had just lit the match.

And now I was about to find out how fast the fire would spread.

Chapter 7

The King's Trap

Sophia's POV

“What the hell are you doing here?”

Leonard’s voice thundered above the bass-heavy music. He stormed toward me like a wave crashing onto shore-rage twisting his features, his steps quick and calculated. I barely had time to set my glass down before he reached me. No, scratch that, he didn’t let me. He snatched the glass of wine from my hand and shoved it onto the nearest table with a sharp clink.

Then his fingers clamped around my wrist, tight and unrelenting, and he yanked me closer.

“I asked you a question!” he seethed.

His face was inches from mine now, his breath hot and sharp with fury. The low lighting of the bar flashed across his face, illuminating the cold fire in his eyes.

“I came looking for you,” I managed to say, though my throat was tight.

His expression twisted further. He glanced down, his gaze traveling to the short hem of my dress that barely covered my thighs. His eyes darkened, not with desire, but with something more dangerous possession. “And what in the world are you wearing?” he spat.

“I want us to talk,” I said, trying to keep my voice calm, but the bass of the music, the press of people around us, and the weight of his anger were all closing in on me.

He didn’t answer. Instead, he grabbed my arm again and pulled me toward the exit. I stumbled slightly, the heels I wore offering little resistance to his force.

Outside, the night air hit me like a slap, cool and sharp against my flushed skin. Leonard spun around and shoved me gently, but firmly, against the alley wall beside the bar. His body blocked mine from the street.

“You want to talk?” he asked, his tone edged with something unreadable. “Talk about what? Do you have any idea how dangerous this place is?”

“You’re more dangerous to me,” I whispered.

He blinked. “What?”

“I understand my father didn’t have a choice back then,” I continued, voice shaking. “But I can’t belong to you. I... I just can’t.”

His stare hardened. “So what’s your point, Sophia?”

It was now or never.

I swallowed the lump in my throat and said, “I don’t know what you plan to do with me, but I would rather have you sleep with me than force me into a marriage.”

He stared at me in stunned silence, then, he chuckled. It wasn’t a warm laugh. It was slow, cruel, and heavy.

“Sophia,” he murmured, stepping close. His voice dropped to a whisper. “If I wanted you just for your body, I would have taken you a long time ago. But what I desire now is far more than your body.”

His voice echoed in my ears, but everything else began to fade. The world was tilting. The lights around us dimmed and warped. Something was wrong, terribly wrong.

My knees buckled slightly.

“Sophia? What’s wrong?” Leonard’s voice sounded far away. My heart was pounding too fast, the beat in my chest like thunder. My eyelids grew heavier with each blink.

“I...” I tried to speak, but the words wouldn’t form. My vision blurred completely.

The last thing I saw was his face, alarmed and unguarded, for the first time.

Then, darkness.

**********

MORNING

The scent was the first thing I noticed. Clean linen. Faint sandalwood. Something luxurious.

I rolled to the side, groggy, expecting the familiar feel of my bed’s worn sheets and narrow space, but the surface beneath me was far too soft. Too wide. And there was no side table.

My eyes fluttered open. The ceiling above me stretched high, ornate with golden moldings and an elaborate chandelier that hung like it belonged in a palace.

“What the...?”

I sat up immediately, dragging the blanket with me. I glanced around the room, my breath catching in my throat.

The room was massive walls the color of ivory, adorned with antique frames and wall sconces. A fireplace stood across from the bed, unlit but regal. The bed I lay in was carved from mahogany, dressed in satin sheets and layered with rich, embroidered blankets. A massive dressing table with a three-way mirror sat by the far wall, beside tall glass windows that let in morning light.

I looked down, and nearly gasped.

I was no longer in the skimpy dress I wore last night. I was in a pale blue nightgown that shimmered in the light. Expensive silk. Delicate lace on the collar and sleeves. This wasn’t mine.

Before I could process any more, the door creaked open.

Leonard Morano stepped in, wearing striped pyjamas with the shirt hanging open, revealing a sculpted chest that shouldn’t belong to a man in his forties. His skin was taut, his abs defined, his presence commanding.

“You’re awake,” he said casually, walking toward the cradle chair beside the bed like this was the most normal morning in the world.

I clutched the blanket tighter. “Where am I?”

“My kingdom,” he said, sitting with his arms resting along the chair’s armrests like a ruler in his throne.

My brows furrowed. “How did I get here?”

He smirked. “You asked me to sleep with you, remember?”

My blood ran cold.

I touched my body, my arms, my thighs, anywhere that might hint something had happened. I felt nothing, no soreness, no bruises, no unfamiliar sensation.

Leonard burst into laughter.

“You seriously think I’d take advantage of you?” he asked. “The drink you took at the bar—it was spiked. Not by me, but someone else. Lucky for you, I was there.”

“And my clothes?” I asked, my voice cracking slightly.

“I have no interest in your nakedness, Sophia,” he replied. “The maids changed your clothes.”

I sank back slightly in relief, though my heart continued its frantic rhythm.

“Anyway, I’m not here to comfort you,” he said coldly. He nodded toward the dressing table. “Look there.”

I followed his gaze. On the polished wood sat a sheet of paper and a fountain pen.

“What’s that?” I asked.

He stood, all traces of teasing gone. “Business. You have one hour to decide.”

“To decide what?”

He didn’t answer immediately. Instead, he walked toward the door, his steps slow, calculated.

“You’re very curious, Sophia,” he said, pausing at the frame. “Read it yourself. But know this, if you make the wrong choice, your family will pay the price.”

He pulled open the door. “Oh, and you should probably call your father. He rang all night.”

With that, he disappeared behind the massive double doors.

I scrambled to the table, my hands fumbling for my phone.

20 missed calls.

I opened the messages.

From Dad: Where are you? Call me, I’m worried.

From Me: I’m okay, Dad. I won’t be home tonight.

From Dad: Okay. Stay safe.

Wait... From me?

I didn’t remember sending that message.

A chill ran down my spine.

Who sent it? When?

My fingers trembled as I reached for the paper on the dressing table.

I turned it over.

And froze.

My breath caught in my throat. My pulse stopped. My eyes widened in disbelief as they skimmed the words on the page.

My hands trembled violently as I read the headline of the document.

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