Chapter 3
My head throbbed as I blinked away sleep. Silk sheets whispered against my skin, and I froze. This wasn’t my bed. The room
swam into focus – all dark wood and muted lighting.
A figure sat in a leather armchair across from me. Not the kind man from the bar.
“Sleep well?” His voice carried an edge of authority that made my spine straighten.
I clutched the sheets tighter. “Where am I? Who-”
“Vincent Moretti.” He leaned forward, elbows on his knees. “Marco brought you here last night. Said you needed a safe place.”
The bar came rushing back – the gentle stranger who’d offered me water and a room. “Marco?”
“My right hand.” Vincent’s blue eyes pinned
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me in place. “He has good instincts about people. Though he usually doesn’t bring strays home.”
“I’m not a stray.” I moved to get up, then realized I still wore my clothes from last night. Thank god for small mercies.
“No? Running from something then?”
“That’s none of your business.” I swung my legs over the side of the bed. “Thank you for the hospitality, but I should go.”
“Where?” One word, but it stopped me cold. “Marco mentioned you had nowhere to stay.”
Heat crept up my neck. “I’ll figure something out.”
“Stay.” He stood, and the room seemed to shrink around his presence. “At least until
you get your bearings. There’s plenty of space.”
“I don’t even know you.”
“True.” A ghost of a smile crossed his face.
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“But you trusted Marco enough to come here. Trust me enough to let you stay.”
Something in his tone made me pause. This wasn’t just courtesy – it was an order wrapped in velvet.
“Why?”
“Let’s say I have a soft spot for people starting over.” He moved toward the door. “Think about it. Breakfast is downstairs. when you’re ready.”
I made my way down the curved staircase, my fingers trailing along the polished mahogany banister. The mansion stretched before me, a maze of opulent hallways and towering windows.
The scent of coffee and bacon drew me toward what had to be the dining room. My
breath caught as I entered the space
opened into a grand room with a table that could seat twenty.
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Marco’s familiar face broke into a warm smile. “Good morning.”
Around the table sat at least eight men in sharp suits, their shoulders rigid with an unmistakable air of danger. One of them, sporting a nasty scar across his cheek, gestured to an empty chair.
My hands trembled as I lowered myself into the seat. These weren’t businessmen everything from their posture to their concealed bulges under their jackets screamed ‘mafia.’
“Boss incoming,” someone muttered.
The atmosphere shifted as Vincent entered. Every man shot to their feet, a synchronized display of respect that made my stomach clench. He moved with fluid grace, commanding attention without effort.
Marco pulled out the chair at the head of the table. Vincent settled in, and Marco took his place at his right hand.
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“Please, eat.” Vincent’s voice carried across.
the table.
I stared at my plate, feeling like a mouse.
that had wandered into a den of cats.
I pushed the eggs around my plate, too nervous to eat, when I felt his gaze lock onto me. Vincent’s confidence radiated across the table, making my skin prickle.
A man in a tailored suit, bent down and whispered in Vincent’s ear. The sound that followed sent chills down my spine – a deep, rumbling laugh that filled the room.
“I finally found you, Cheryl Swanson.”
My fork clattered against the china. “What did you call me?”
“Swanson. Your maiden name.” His blue
eyes glittered with amusement.
“That’s impossible. I don’t know my birth name. I was adopted by the Rivers after my parents-”
“Died in a car crash?” Vincent leaned back
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in his chair. “Is that what they told you?”
My hands began to shake. “How do you. know about that?”
“I make it my business to know everything about the people under my roof.” He took a slow sip of coffee. “But you – you’re special. I’ve been looking for you for a very long
time.”
“Why?” The word came out as barely a whisper.
“Because, Cheryl Swanson, your parents
didn’t die in a car crash.”
The room spun. I gripped the edge of the table to steady myself. “What are you talking about?”
“The Rivers family – they’ve been lying to you. About everything.”
“No.” I shook my head. “They took me in, they-”
“They bought you.” Vincent’s voice turned hard. “Like property. To be Thomas’s
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perfect little wife.”
“It doesn’t matter anymore.” Vincent waved his hand. “What matters is I found you.”
My chair scraped against the marble floor as I stood. “Like hell it doesn’t matter. You can’t drop something like that and expect me to just accept it.”
“Sit down, Cheryl.”
“No. Tell me what you know about my parents. The real story.”
Vincent’s jaw tightened. His presence filled the room, suffocating in its intensity. “This isn’t the time.”
“When is the time then? You brought it up.” My voice rose, hands planted on the table. Five years of being the perfect, quiet wife had shattered. “If you know something-”
“I said shut your mouth, woman!” A gravelly voice cut through the tension.
I whipped my head toward the sound. One of the men, red–faced and sneering, had
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half–risen from his chair.
The gunshot cracked through the air before I could blink.
The man’s body slumped forward, blood pooling on the pristine tablecloth. A neat hole marked the center of his forehead, his eyes frozen wide in surprise.
Vincent lowered his arm, the gun still smoking. His expression hadn’t changed – as casual as if he’d just taken another sip of coffee.
“Clean this up,” he ordered, tucking the weapon back into his jacket.
My legs gave out and I collapsed into my chair. The other men moved with practiced efficiency, dragging the body away while others began removing the bloodied tablecloth.
Marco appeared at my side, pressing a glass of water into my trembling hands. “Drink.”
I couldn’t tear my eyes from the crimson
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stain spreading across the marble floor. “You… you just…”
“He interrupted you.” Vincent’s voice. carried across the table, matter–of–fact. “That was rude.”
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