



Two
The sun was barely rising when I was jolted awake by the sound of hurried footsteps echoing down the hallway. The soft light of dawn filtered through the curtains, casting a pale glow over my room. For a moment, I lay still, listening, my heart pounding in my chest. Something wasnât right.
I slipped out of bed, my bare feet padding quietly across the cool marble floor as I moved toward the door. The voices in the hallway grew louder, more frantic. I recognized them immediatelyâmy fatherâs deep, commanding tone, laced with anger, and the strained, nervous replies of the servants.
I cracked the door open just enough to peer out. The corridor was a flurry of activity. Two of the maids were speaking in hushed whispers, their expressions anxious. My father stood at the end of the hallway, his face ashen, barking orders at anyone within earshot.
âFind her!â he shouted, his voice reverberating off the walls. âI want every inch of this house searched and Alecia brought to me! Go! Find her, she couldnât have gone far!â
Find Alecia?
It took my mind a few seconds to comprehend what was happening- perhaps because of the sleep, but once I understood my blood ran cold. I felt the seed of doubt that had been planted in my mind the night before blossom.
AleciaâŠAlecia had indeed pulled a crazy stunt, just like when our father wanted her to become valedictorian.
âOh God,â Dread settled in the pit of my stomach along with the thought.
She was gone. Alecia was gone.
Pulling myself out of my thoughts, I pulled the door open fully and stepped into the hallway, the maids falling silent as they noticed me. My father turned his gaze in my direction, his expression a storm of fury and fear.
âPapa, whatâs going on?â I asked, though I already knew the answer.
âSheâs gone,â he said, his voice low and dangerous. âYour sister has run away.â
My heart sank. I had hoped, despite the obvious signs, that she hadnât done so. Another wishful thinking on my path.
âWhen did she leave?â I asked, my voice barely above a whisper.
âDuring the night, sometime after midnight,â he replied, his tone clipped. âHer room was empty when the maids went to wake her this morning. They found this.â
He held up a small piece of paper, crumpled from where he had been clutching it in his fist. I stepped closer, my stomach churning as I took the note from him.
The handwriting was unmistakably Aleciaâs, the letters scrawled hastily across the page.
[I wonât be a pawn or bargaining chip in anyoneâs game. Donât bother looking for me. Iâm gone.]
That was it. No explanations, no apologies. Just a terse declaration of her departure. I felt a wave of anger and hurt crash over me. How could she do this? How could she leave us to face the consequences of her actions alone?
Did she always have to be selfish at the wrong time?
Sure, guaranteed, the thought of marrying someone as dangerous as Luca was scary, petrifying even, but so was the thought of letting your family face the brunt of his wrath, all because whatâŠshe was too scared to step up and do one simple job? Because she had an unknown boyfriend she saw future with?
Whichever one of the two it was, I found it highly disappointing.
Thankfully, my fatherâs voice cut through my thoughts before I could get any more angrier at Alecia.
âSheâs thrown everything away, Valentina. Everything weâve built, everything weâve worked forâgone.â His voice was cold, laced with an edge of desperation that I had never heard before.
I glanced between the note and my father for a few seconds. As much as I would love to dwell on Aleciaâs stupidity and the fact that she had just put our entire family in jeopardy, I knew doing that wouldnât provide any form of solution.
âWhat are we going to do?â I asked after a heartbeat.
My father didnât respond immediately. Instead, he began pacing the hallway, his brow furrowed in deep thought. I could see the tension in his posture, the weight of the decision he knew he had to make.
Finally, he stopped and turned to face me, his expression unreadable. âWe have no choice,â he said slowly, each word measured and deliberate. âThe marriage contract was drawn up in Aleciaâs name, but the Carusos donât care about that. All he cares about is securing the money we owe him, or better yet, getting a reassurance that the money we owe him would be paid back.â
He stared right at me as he added. âWe must honor the deal.â
For a few seconds, it felt like his words were spoken in a foreign language, like I couldnât understand the meaning behind them. But the moment the meaning of his words became clear to me, a pit opened up in my stomach and I swallow thickly.
âYouâre going to send me instead,â I spoke reality, rather than asking a question.
My fatherâs eyes met mine, and for a moment, I saw something close to regret flicker in his gaze. But it was gone as quickly as it had appeared, replaced by the stern resolve of a man who had made up his mind.
âThereâs no other way, Valentina,â he said, his tone softer now but no less determined. âAt the moment, I donât even have half of the money and Luca Caruso is not a man to cross. If we donât honor our end of the bargain, he will destroy us.â
Of course he would. That shit wasnât up for debate. I had seen times without number, when his name would be written in the news, displaying the gory violence caused by him, the feared mafia king with no face to his name.
His reputation was already brutal enough for me to even think of doubting my fatherâs words. And for that, the anger I felt for Alecia simmered down, diluted a bit with understanding.
No one would want to marry a criminal man, most definitely in his late fifties with residing hairline and pot like belly. Yet, here I, listening to my father as he suggested I do so.
âPapa,â I began, hesitantly so. âYou know I canât do thatâŠI have a Fiance, weâve-â
Whatever light had been in my fatherâs eyes turned cold at the mention of Macro. It was obvious he wasnât taking the fact that both his daughter using their relationship as excuses, lightly.
âSo what?â He advanced towards me, glaring. âYouâre going to abandon your family, just like Alecia, over some boy.â
I took a few steps back. âPapa-â
âDonât forget Valentina, this family isnât just me and you, your motherâs there, in the hospital! Sheâs part of the reason why Iâm in so much debt and you are the reason why sheâs in that condition!â
My heart clenched at his words. Whoever said the truth is painful, was right. Because no matter how many times Iâve heard this, I couldnât myself from believing that if I hadnât carelessly played in the center of the road as a child, then my mother wouldnât have had any need to get hit by a car and end up in a coma.
He was right in a way; I put my mother in that situation and I knew one of these days, Iâd pay the price for it. But I had never imagined this. Never imagined that I would be offered up like some kind of sacrificial lamb, in place of the sister who had always been deemed more valuable.
âDonât be selfish, Valentina, be of use to this family for once.â
I shook my head. âNot in this way, Papa.â
My words caused him to stop walking, talking and he just stared blankly at me for a few seconds. The next words he said, weâre ones I never expected to hear.
âYou either go in your sister's place or I swear Valentina, I will call the hospital and tell them to disconnect your mother.â
My eyes fluttered in disbelief. âWhat?â
âIf this family is going to go down because of your stupidity, Iâll make sure to drag her down with me. So we can be a complete family.â
My stupidity? Shaking my head, I backed into my room and shut the door, not bothering to lock it because I knew my father wouldnât bother opening it.
This wasnât my fault, it was Aleciaâs! She was the one who decided to be so foolish and run away, so why was I being blamed? Why was everything falling on my head?
My breathing became labored as anger set in and I tried everything in my power not to scream or kick things. Rather, I located my phone and dialed Aleciaâs number.
It rang once, twice and thrice, before going directly to voice mail. I tried calling again and this time, the line was busied.
Tears of frustration pooled in my eyes and I knew then and there that I needed a source of peace and Marco seemed like the perfect option.
I called him instantly, but was met with the same fate. My frustration doubled and then and there, I was about to throw my phone against the wall, when I received a text message from him.
In seconds, my frustration seemed to lessen down. But the relief was short lived, because the moment I opened his text message, I felt like the floor had been strip away from my feet.
In the message that I had expected to find comfort in, weâre words I didnât ever to see, yet feared.
[Iâve found someone I truly love. Letâs break up Valentina.]