Chapter 10

Luca POV

I waited twenty minutes.

"Elena," I called out, rapping my knuckles against the bathroom door. "You’re dragging this out."

Silence.

I knocked harder, impatience flaring in my chest. Still nothing.

With a curse, I kicked the door open.

Empty.

The window was thrown wide, the sheer curtains fluttering in the wind like restless ghosts. I rushed to the sill and looked down.

The fire escape.

She ran away.

I let out a sharp, frustrated breath and ran a hand through my hair. She was being impossible. A tantrum. That’s all this was. She was hurt, she was embarrassed, and she wanted me to chase her.

I wasn't going to play that game.

I left the hospital without a backward glance. I drove straight to the villa—our villa.

It was dark when I arrived.

"Elena?" I shouted.

My voice echoed off the marble walls, hollow and unanswered.

I walked into the kitchen. The counters were bare. Usually, there was a crystal vase filled with fresh lilies. Usually, the air carried a faint, comforting scent of vanilla.

Now, it smelled of nothing but cold air.

I checked the closet. Her clothes were there, hanging in neat rows. Her jewelry was there. Even the engagement ring I had given her—the one she had thrown into the pool—was sitting on the dresser, catching a stray beam of moonlight.

She hadn't taken anything.

"She’ll be back," I told the empty room, my voice rough. "She has nowhere else to go. She has no money. Her accounts are frozen. She’s just hiding in a motel, waiting for me to come save her."

I poured myself a stiff drink and waited.

Two days passed.

Then a week.

The silence in the house began to grate on me, turning from peaceful to oppressive.

I couldn't find my grey tie. Elena always laid it out for me, perfectly matched to my suit. I couldn't find the file on the port deal. Elena always organized the paperwork, anticipating exactly what I would need for the morning briefing.

The coffee tasted bitter. She was the one who calibrated the machine, dialing it in to perfection.

I sat in my office, staring at her empty desk across from mine.

"Where the hell are you?" I muttered to the dust motes dancing in the light.

My phone buzzed against the mahogany. It was Dante.

*Still no sign of the rat?*

I stared at the screen, a muscle ticking in my jaw.

*No,* I typed back.

*Good riddance,* Dante replied instantly. *Sofia is asking if you’re coming over. She needs help with the press release for the algorithm.*

I scoffed at the message. Sofia didn't know the first thing about the algorithm. I had to explain basic encryption to her three times yesterday, and she still looked at me with glazed eyes.

I missed Elena’s sharp mind. I missed the way she understood the complexities of my business before I even asked.

I grabbed my keys and headed for the door, needing to escape the suffocating quiet.

I stopped dead in the entryway.

Her rain boots were gone.

The ones she wore that night she stood outside my gate, shivering in the storm.

A cold feeling settled in my gut, heavy and leaden. A feeling I hadn't experienced in years.

Uncertainty.

I shook it off, forcing my shoulders back. She was bluffing. She was trying to scare me.

I walked out, slamming the door on the silence. But as I drove away, gripping the steering wheel until my knuckles turned white, I couldn't shake the feeling that the house wasn't just empty.

It was dead.

Chapter 11

Luca POV

The champagne in my glass was tepid. It tasted like stale piss and sugar.

I was late. I was drunk. And I didn't care.

Sofia’s birthday gala was in full swing at the Genovese estate. Crystal chandeliers trembled overhead, vibrating under the heavy swell of the orchestra. Five hundred of the city's most dangerous people were milling about, pretending to be civilized.

I stood near the periphery, loosening my tie. It felt like a noose.

"Luca!"

Sofia appeared out of the crowd. She was wearing a dress that cost more than most people earned in a decade. It was pink. It was loud. It was everything Elena wasn't.

"You missed the opening speech," she pouted, latching onto my arm. Her grip was tight, possessive.

"I had work," I lied. I had been sitting in my car for an hour, staring at the steering wheel, unable to turn the ignition.

"Did you bring my gift?" she asked, her eyes scanning my empty hands.

"I forgot."

Her smile faltered. Just for a second. Then the mask slid back into place.

"It’s okay," she cooed, smoothing my lapel. "You being here is the best gift."

She dragged me toward the center of the room. Dante was there, holding a glass of scotch. Frank and Maria Russo were beaming, playing the role of proud parents to the hilt.

They looked relieved. Their "real" daughter was finally being paraded in front of the Commission.

Dante raised his glass. "To the birthday girl," he announced. "And to the future."

He winked at me. It was a signal. He wanted me to make a speech. He wanted me to announce something. A merger. A proposal.

Sofia looked up at me, her eyes wide and wet with expectation.

"I love you, Luca," she whispered, loud enough for the circle to hear. "You’ve been my rock."

The room went quiet. People were watching. Waiting.

I looked at her. I looked at the way she clung to me, desperate for validation.

Then I looked at the empty space where Elena usually stood. To my right. Just behind my shoulder. Ready to whisper a name I’d forgotten or hand me a drink before I knew I was thirsty.

The space was empty. The air felt cold.

I pulled my arm away from Sofia.

"I see you as a sister, Sofia," I said. My voice was flat. It carried over the music.

Sofia froze. Her mouth opened, but no sound came out.

"I’m engaged to Elena," I continued, taking a sip of the warm champagne. "You know that."

Tears welled up in her eyes. Real tears this time? I couldn't tell. I didn't care.

"Elena is gone," Sofia cried, her voice cracking. "She abandoned us. She abandoned you!"

"She’s just angry," I said, swirling the liquid in my glass. "She has a temper. She’ll be back when she cools off."

Frank Russo stepped forward, his face red.

"That ungrateful girl is dead to us, Luca. Don't ruin Sofia’s night over a runaway stray."

I slammed my glass down on a passing waiter’s tray. The sound of breaking crystal silenced the orchestra.

"Watch your mouth, Frank," I warned. "She’s still my fiancée. And until I say otherwise, she is the only woman who matters in this room."

I turned my back on them. I walked toward the bar.

I needed something stronger than champagne to drown out the voice in my head that whispered I was lying.

Elena wasn't coming back. And for the first time in my life, I was terrified.

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