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NO ONE SPOKE ITALIAN—UNTIL THE WAITRESS ANSWERED LIKE A NATIVE
Chapter 2 / 3

Chapter 2

PART 2: NO ONE SPOKE ITALIAN—UNTIL THE WAITRESS ANSWERED LIKE A NATIVE

9,752 words

NO ONE SPOKE ITALIAN—UNTIL THE WAITRESS ANSWERED LIKE A NATIVE

PART 2

The next morning dawned with a relentless headache and the lingering sensation of being watched.

I had barely slept. My dreams were haunted by dark eyes and whispered Italian.

As I shuffled to my tiny kitchenette to make coffee, my roommate Zoe was already there, her hospital scrubs wrinkled from her overnight shift.

“You look like hell,” she announced, passing me a chipped mug of coffee. “Late night?”

I accepted the caffeine gratefully, avoiding her curious gaze.

“Just the usual double shift.”

“Hmm.” She studied me over the rim of her own mug. “You sure that’s all? Because Mrs. Herschel in apartment 3B said she saw you getting out of a fancy black car last night. Said the man inside looked like he belonged in a movie.”

My stomach twisted. The last thing I needed was neighborhood gossip.

“Just a customer from the restaurant. He offered me a ride when I missed the bus.”

Zoe’s eyebrows shot up.

“A customer in a car worth more

than this entire building. Sophia, what aren’t you telling me?”

“Nothing,” I insisted, the lie bitter on my tongue. “It was just a ride.”

She looked unconvinced, but mercifully dropped the subject when her phone chimed.

“Got to run. Extra shift. Bills won’t pay themselves.”

She squeezed my shoulder as she passed.

“Be careful, okay? Men who drive cars like that usually want something in return.”

After she left, I stood motionless in our silent apartment, my coffee cooling forgotten in my hands. Zoe’s warning echoed what I already knew. Men like Alessio Moretti did not do anything without purpose.

What did he want from me?

The question followed me into the shower, through getting dressed, and onto the bus that would take me to my morning shift at Carmela’s Café, my second job.

The small Italian café was quieter than Bellissimo, frequented by students from the nearby community college

and locals looking for authentic espresso. The owner, Carmela, was a widow in her 60s who had taken a liking to me when I correctly pronounced all the Italian pastry names during my interview. She reminded me of my grandmother: fierce, loving, and perpetually worried that I was not eating enough.

“Sophia, you’re early,” she called as I entered through the back door. Her sharp eyes immediately narrowed. “And you look terrible. Sit. Sit. I’ll make you something to eat.”

“I’m fine, Carmela. Really.”

“Nonsense. You’re pale as my pizza dough.”

She ushered me onto a stool at the small prep table and bustled around the kitchen.

“That fancy restaurant is working you too hard. You should quit. Work here full-time.”

I smiled tiredly.

“You know I can’t afford that. Bellissimo pays better.”

She muttered something in Italian that sounded distinctly unflattering toward my other employer as she placed a

plate of frittata in front of me.

“Eat. Then we talk.”

The routine of the café gradually eased my tension. I lost myself in the rhythm of pulling espresso shots, steaming milk, arranging pastries, and chatting with the regulars. Here, in this warm space smelling of coffee and baked goods, last night felt like a strange dream.

Until the bell over the door chimed at precisely 10:47 a.m.

I did not need to look up to know who had entered.

The café went quiet, conversation stuttering to a halt as Alessio Moretti stepped inside, followed by a single bodyguard who positioned himself near the door. Unlike last night’s formal attire, today Moretti wore a charcoal-gray cashmere sweater over dark jeans. The casual clothes somehow made him look even more dangerously attractive.

My hands froze on the espresso machine.

How had he found me here? I had not told him about my second job.

His eyes found mine immediately, a small smile playing at the corners of his mouth as he approached the counter. The other customers gave him a wide berth, conversations resuming in hushed tones.

“Good morning, Sophia,” he said, my name still rolling off his tongue like a caress.

“Mr. Moretti,” I managed, wiping my suddenly damp palms on my apron.

“Alessio,” he corrected, resting one hand casually on the counter. The signet ring gleamed under the café lights. “I think we’re past formalities, don’t you?”

Before I could respond, Carmela emerged from the kitchen, stopping short when she saw who was at my counter. Recognition followed by wariness flashed across her face.

“Mr. Moretti,” she said, her voice carefully neutral. “An honor to have you visit my humble café.”

He turned to her with a respectful nod.

“Mrs. Ricci, it’s been too long. My father always spoke highly of your late husband. And your cannoli.”

A complex emotion crossed Carmela’s face, something like grief mixed with caution.

“Antonio was fond of your father as well. Before everything.”

Whatever everything was hung in the air between them, laden with history I did not understand.

Moretti merely inclined his head again before turning back to me.

“A double espresso, per favore,” he said. “And whatever pastry Sophia recommends.”

Carmela gave me a sharp look before retreating to the kitchen, leaving me alone with him.

I busied myself with the espresso machine, grateful for something to do with my trembling hands.

“The almond croissants are good,” I offered, not looking at him. “Carmela makes them herself.”

“Then an almond croissant it is.”

He watched me work, his gaze so intense I could feel it like a physical touch.

“You’re surprised to see me.”

It was not a question, but I answered anyway.

“I didn’t tell you I worked here.”

“You didn’t have to.”

He accepted the espresso I slid across the counter, his fingers brushing mine deliberately.

“I make it my business to know things, Sophia.”

The implication sent a chill down my spine. Had he been having me followed? Looking into my life?

I placed an almond croissant on a plate with more force than necessary, powdered sugar dusting the counter.

“Why?” I demanded, keeping my voice low. “Why would you care where I work or what I do?”

His eyes held mine, dark and unreadable.

“You intrigue me.”

“I’m a waitress,” I said flatly. “There’s nothing intriguing about me.”

“I disagree.” He took a sip of his espresso, nodding appreciatively. “A half-Italian waitress who works 2 jobs, speaks her grandmother’s language, and wears grief and exhaustion like armor, yet still carries herself with quiet dignity. I find that very intriguing indeed.”

My face heated at his assessment.

“I’m just trying to survive.”

“Aren’t we all?”

Something flashed in his eyes, a vulnerability so brief I might have imagined it. Then his mask of cool control returned.

“I have a proposition for you.”

Alarm bells rang in my head.

“I’m not interested in—”

“It’s not what you’re thinking,” he interrupted, amusement flickering across his face. “Though your assumption is illuminating.”

I flushed deeper, mortified.

“My mother is hosting a charity gala this Saturday,” he continued. “I find these events tedious, but an appearance is required. I’d like you to accompany me.”

I stared at him, certain I had misheard.

“You want me to go to a charity gala with you?”

“Is that so difficult to believe?”

“Yes,” I said honestly. “You could have anyone. Models, socialites, women who actually own evening gowns and know which fork to use.”

His lips quirked.

“Perhaps that’s precisely why I don’t want them.”

A customer cleared their throat behind him, waiting to order. I welcomed the interruption, needing space to think. Moretti stepped aside, taking his espresso to a small table in the corner. He sat with his back to the wall, sipping his coffee and watching me as I served other customers, his bodyguard standing impassively nearby.

When the morning rush subsided, he approached the counter again, setting down his empty cup.

“You haven’t given me an answer.”

I wiped my hands on my apron, buying time.

“I don’t have anything to wear to something like that.”

“That can be arranged.”

“I’m working Saturday night at Bellissimo.”

“No, you’re not. I’ve already spoken to Donati. You have the evening off.”

My head snapped up.

“You spoke to my boss without asking me first?”

A flash of annoyance crossed his face.

“I anticipated your practical objections.”

“That’s not your decision to make,” I said, anger overriding my fear. “You can’t just rearrange my life because you’ve decided I’m intriguing.”

For a moment, his expression darkened, and I remembered exactly who I was talking to. A man whose family name made people tremble, whose business dealings were whispered about but never openly discussed.

I had crossed a line, speaking to him this way.

To my surprise, the darkness passed, replaced by something that looked almost like respect.

“You’re right,” he said, the admission clearly costing him. “It was presumptuous of me. I apologize.”

The words sounded foreign on his tongue, as if he rarely had cause to use them.

I blinked, thrown off balance by his concession.

He reached into his pocket and withdrew a small white card, different from the one he had given me the night before.

“My mother’s charity supports medical research for rare childhood cancers. The gala raises funds for families struggling with medical bills.”

He placed the card on the counter between us.

“Perhaps that might interest you, given your own recent experiences.”

My breath caught.

How did he know about my mother? About the medical bills that had consumed my life savings and then some?

“The invitation stands,” he continued, his voice gentler than I had heard it before. “A car will come for you at 7 on Saturday if you decide to accept. If not…”

He shrugged one shoulder elegantly.

“I’ll understand.”

He turned to leave, his bodyguard immediately moving to open the door. At the threshold, he paused, looking back at me.

“For what it’s worth, Sophia, I think you’d bring more genuine compassion to that ballroom than all the socialites and their designer gowns combined.”

The bell chimed as the door closed behind him, leaving me clutching the invitation card with shaking hands.

It was thick cream-colored cardstock embossed with gold lettering.

The Moretti Foundation Annual Charity Gala: Supporting Families Fighting Childhood Cancer.

Carmela emerged from the kitchen as soon as he was gone, her face tight with concern.

“Sophia, mia, what have you gotten yourself into?”

“Nothing,” I insisted, still staring at the invitation. “He’s just a customer.”

She made a sound of disbelief.

“Alessio Moretti is not just anything. I’ve known that family for 40 years. They don’t take interest in people without reason.”

“What did you mean before?” I asked, seizing the opportunity. “About his father and everything.”

Carmela sighed, suddenly looking every one of her 60-odd years.

“Old history. Chicago was different then. Territories. Families. Loyalties.”

She waved a hand dismissively.

“What matters is the present. And in the present, you need to be careful. The Morettis live in a different world, a dangerous one.”

“I know who they are,” I said quietly. “What they’re rumored to do.”

“Then you understand why I worry.” She patted my cheek affectionately. “Beautiful girls like you don’t enter their world without paying a price.”

I tucked the invitation into my apron pocket, trying to ignore the way it seemed to burn against my hip for the rest of my shift.

By closing time, I had convinced myself I would not go. Could not go. Entering Alessio Moretti’s world, even for one night, was a risk I could not afford.

But as I unlocked the door to my apartment that evening, I found a large white box waiting on my doorstep, tied with a simple black ribbon. No card. No note.

There did not need to be.

Only one person would have sent it.

With trembling fingers, I carried it inside and placed it on my bed. The ribbon slid away like silk, and when I lifted the lid, I gasped.

Nestled in tissue paper lay the most beautiful dress I had ever seen, deep emerald green with a fitted bodice and flowing skirt that would fall just below my knees. It was elegant without being ostentatious, expensive without screaming its price tag. More disturbing was that it would fit me perfectly.

Alongside it was a pair of black heels sized exactly right for my feet and a small velvet jewelry box containing simple diamond drop earrings.

My phone chimed with a text from an unknown number.

The green will complement your eyes. —A.

I sat heavily on the edge of my bed, staring at the dress and the text message.

How had he gotten my number?

The same way he had known where I lived, where I worked, what size I wore. He had resources, connections, power, and for some unfathomable reason, he had turned that power toward me.

I should have returned the dress, sent a polite but firm refusal, kept my distance from a man whose world would swallow mine whole without a trace.

That would be the sensible choice.

The safe choice.

Instead, I found myself replying.

How did you know my size?

His response came immediately.

I pay attention to details, cara. Does this mean you’ll come?

I stared at my phone, my thumb hovering over the keyboard. One word would commit me to stepping into his world, if only for a night. One word would change everything.

Yes.

The moment I sent it, a strange sense of inevitability washed over me, as if I had been moving toward this decision from the instant his dark eyes first met mine across the restaurant.

Saturday arrived with unseasonable warmth for late September in Chicago. I spent the day in a state of nervous anticipation, alternating between certainty that I should cancel and a strange excitement for the evening ahead. Zoe had left for her shift at the hospital with a knowing smile and a whispered, “Be safe.” That left me alone with my thoughts and the emerald dress that hung on my closet door like a challenge.

At precisely 6:55, my phone chimed with a text.

Your car is waiting. —A.

I took one final look in the mirror. The dress fit as if it had been made for me. The color made my hazel eyes look more green than brown. I had swept my dark hair up into a simple chignon, applied minimal makeup, and added the diamond earrings, the only truly valuable things I now owned. My mother’s bracelet gleamed at my wrist, the small silver key catching the light.

“Just 1 night,” I whispered to my reflection. “Then back to reality.”

But as I stepped outside to find the same black Bentley waiting at the curb, its driver holding the door open with respectful deference, I could not shake the feeling that reality as I knew it was already slipping away, replaced by something far more dangerous and alluring.

The car glided through Chicago’s evening traffic, carrying me toward the glittering lakefront, where the city’s elite gathered in their mansions and penthouses. We eventually turned through ornate gates, following a curved driveway toward a sprawling estate that looked more like it belonged in the Italian countryside than on Lake Michigan’s shore.

“Whose home is this?” I asked the driver, finding my voice at last.

“The Moretti family residence, miss,” he replied. “Mr. Alessio grew up here.”

The car stopped at the foot of marble steps leading to massive wooden doors thrown open to reveal warm light and the distant sounds of an orchestra.

As the driver opened my door, a familiar figure appeared at the top of the steps.

Alessio Moretti stood waiting for me, devastatingly handsome in a perfectly tailored black tuxedo.

As our eyes met, something passed between us, a current of recognition, of inevitability. Though every instinct warned me to run back to the safety of my small life, I found myself climbing the steps toward him instead, drawn by a force I could not name and was not sure I wanted to resist.

Alessio’s eyes darkened as I approached, his gaze traveling from my face to the emerald dress and back again.

“You are stunning, Sophia,” he said, his voice low enough for only me to hear.

“Thank you,” I replied, suddenly aware of how out of place I was. “For the dress, too. It’s beautiful.”

“The dress is merely fabric,” he said, offering his arm. “You’re what makes it beautiful.”

I placed my hand on his arm, feeling the solid strength beneath the expensive suit. As we entered the mansion, I fought to keep my expression neutral, but it was difficult not to gape.

The foyer alone was larger than my entire apartment, with soaring ceilings, marble floors, and a grand staircase that curved elegantly upward. Paintings that looked like they belonged in museums hung on the walls, and fresh flowers spilled from crystal vases taller than I was.

“Try not to look so impressed,” Alessio murmured, amusement coloring his voice. “Most of these people mistake awe for weakness.”

I squared my shoulders, lifting my chin slightly.

“Is that why you brought me? To impress them with how easily awed I am?”

Something flashed in his eyes. Surprise, followed by that same respect I had glimpsed in the café.

“I brought you because I wanted you here,” he said simply. “The rest doesn’t matter.”

But it did matter, as became immediately clear when we entered the main ballroom. Conversation stuttered to a halt as heads turned in our direction. Women in designer gowns and men in custom tuxedos stared openly, their expressions ranging from curiosity to blatant disapproval.

“Alessio, darling,” a woman’s voice called, and the crowd parted to reveal an elegant woman in her 60s, her silver-streaked dark hair swept into an immaculate updo. Despite her age, she moved with the grace of someone half her years, her black gown whispering against the marble floor as she approached.

“I was beginning to think you wouldn’t come.”

“Mother.”

Alessio greeted her, bending to kiss her cheek.

“You know I wouldn’t miss your gala.”

Her sharp eyes, the same midnight color as her son’s, turned to me with undisguised interest.

“And who is your lovely guest?”

“Sophia Parker,” Alessio said, his hand coming to rest at the small of my back. “Sophia, this is my mother, Elena Moretti.”

I extended my hand, hoping she could not see it trembling.

“It’s an honor to meet you, Mrs. Moretti. Your home is beautiful.”

She took my hand, her grip surprisingly strong.

“Italian?” she asked, though I was certain she already knew the answer.

“My grandmother was from Florence,” I replied, the same answer I had given her son.

A smile that did not quite reach her eyes curved her lips.

“How delightful. Alessio, do introduce Sophia around. I must check on the auction items.”

She patted his cheek in a gesture both affectionate and proprietary before gliding away, leaving a cloud of expensive perfume in her wake.

“She doesn’t approve of me,” I murmured as Alessio guided me deeper into the room.

“She doesn’t know you,” he corrected. “My mother reserves judgment until she has all the facts.”

“And what facts are those?”

His hand pressed more firmly against my back.

“That you’re not like the women I usually bring to these events.”

Before I could ask what he meant, we were approached by a group of men in tuxedos, their expressions a careful blend of deference and caution as they greeted Alessio. I stood silently as they discussed business matters in vague terms: property acquisitions, import challenges, staffing issues at establishments with Italian names.

One of them was Vince, the man who had made me uncomfortable at the restaurant. His eyes slid to me repeatedly, his gaze assessing and cold.

“Miss Parker,” he said during a lull in the conversation. “That’s quite a dress. I barely recognized you without your waitress uniform.”

Heat rushed to my face. Before I could respond, Alessio’s arm slid around my waist.

“Sophia is my guest tonight, Vince,” he said. His tone was pleasant, but there was an undercurrent of warning. “I trust you’ll remember that.”

Vince’s smile froze.

“Of course, boss. Just making conversation.”

“Find someone else to converse with,” Alessio suggested, his voice still light despite the unmistakable command.

The group dispersed quickly after that, leaving us momentarily alone in the crowded room. I stepped away from his hold, needing space to breathe.

“You didn’t have to do that. I can handle myself.”

“I know you can,” he said, surprising me. “But tonight you’re under my protection. That means something in my world.”

“And what exactly is your world, Alessio?” I asked, emboldened by the champagne I had sipped and the frustration of being treated like a possession. “Everyone here looks at you like you’re either royalty or a predator they’re afraid to turn their backs on.”

His expression remained impassive, but something flickered in his eyes.

“Perhaps I’m both.”

Before I could press further, the orchestra began playing a waltz and couples moved to the center of the ballroom. Alessio extended his hand.

“Dance with me.”

It was not a request, but neither was it quite a command. It was something in between, an expectation that assumed compliance while offering the illusion of choice.

I hesitated only briefly before placing my hand in his. He led me onto the dance floor with confident grace, one hand at my waist, the other clasping mine. I was grateful for the dance lessons my mother had insisted on when I was younger, though I had never danced with a partner who moved with such practiced ease.

“You surprised me, Sophia,” he said as we turned smoothly among the other couples. “Most women would be asking about my cars, my properties, my businesses by now.”

“I’m not most women,” I replied. “And I’m more interested in why you brought me here than in what you own.”

A genuine smile curved his lips, transforming his severe features.

“Direct. I appreciate that.”

He pulled me fractionally closer as we turned again.

“I told you. You intrigue me.”

“That’s not an answer.”

His eyes held mine.

“When you’ve had everything handed to you your entire life, Sophia, you develop a sensitivity to authenticity. The women I usually meet want something. Status, money, the thrill of danger. You…”

He paused, considering.

“You look at me like you’re trying to solve a puzzle, not secure an advantage.”

“Maybe I’m just better at hiding my motives,” I suggested.

He laughed then, the sound rich and unexpected.

“No, cara mia. You’re many things, but duplicitous isn’t one of them. Your face reveals everything you feel.”

As if to prove his point, his hand at my waist slid slightly lower, and I felt heat rush to my cheeks.

His smile deepened, satisfied.

The music ended, and he led me from the dance floor toward a set of French doors that opened onto a terrace overlooking manicured gardens. The night air was cool against my flushed skin, the distant sound of Lake Michigan a soothing counterpoint to the orchestra inside.

“Better?” he asked, watching me closely.

I nodded, grateful for the momentary escape.

“It’s a bit overwhelming.”

“The wealth?” he asked. “Or me?”

“Both,” I admitted honestly. “I don’t belong in this world, Alessio.”

“Perhaps this world doesn’t deserve you,” he countered, moving to stand beside me at the stone balustrade. “These people, with their old money and older secrets, play at charity while protecting their fortunes. At least I’m honest about who I am.”

“Are you?”

I turned to face him.

“Because I still don’t know. Everyone whispers about your family, but no one says anything directly.”

His expression hardened slightly.

“What do they whisper, Sophia?”

I hesitated, suddenly aware of how isolated we were on the terrace.

“That your family controls half of Chicago’s businesses. That people who cross you disappear. That your father didn’t really retire to Sicily.”

Something dangerous flashed in his eyes, there and gone so quickly I might have imagined it.

“And do these whispers frighten you?”

“They should,” I said softly. “But I’m still here.”

He studied me for a long moment, his gaze so intense I had to resist the urge to look away.

“My father was weak,” he finally said, his voice low. “He let sentimentality cloud his judgment, allowed rivals to encroach on what belonged to our family. I did what was necessary to preserve our legacy.”

A chill ran down my spine that had nothing to do with the night air.

He had not denied anything. In fact, he had all but confirmed the darkest rumors.

“Why are you telling me this?” I asked.

He reached out, his fingertips brushing a loose strand of hair from my face with surprising gentleness.

“Because you asked. And because I find I don’t want to lie to you, Sophia.”

The intimacy of the gesture, coupled with his words, left me momentarily speechless.

I was saved from having to respond by the arrival of another guest on the terrace, a tall, striking woman in a red gown that clung to her model-thin figure.

“Alessio,” she purred, her accent distinctly European. “I’ve been looking everywhere for you.”

His hand dropped from my face, his expression cooling instantly.

“Francesca. I wasn’t aware you were in Chicago.”

“Your mother invited me.” Her heavily lidded eyes flicked dismissively over me before returning to Alessio. “She thought you might appreciate some familiar company.”

The implication hung in the air between them. Clearly, they had history. The woman was stunning, with the kind of polished beauty that came from expensive care and genetic good fortune. Next to her, I felt painfully ordinary in my borrowed finery.

“I have company,” Alessio said flatly, his hand finding the small of my back again. “Sophia, this is Francesca Ricci, an old acquaintance. Francesca, Sophia Parker.”

Francesca’s perfectly sculpted eyebrows rose fractionally.

“Parker. Not Italian, then.”

“My father was American,” I said, oddly defensive. “My mother’s family was from Florence.”

“How quaint.”

Her smile was sharp as a knife.

“And what is it you do, Sophia Parker?”

Before I could answer, Alessio cut in.

“Sophia works in hospitality. She’s remarkably accomplished.”

Francesca’s laugh was like glass breaking, beautiful but dangerous.

“Hospitality. Alessio. Your mother will have a fit.”

“My mother’s opinions are her own,” he said coldly. “As are mine.”

She stepped closer, placing a manicured hand on his arm.

“Don’t be difficult, toro. You know how these little diversions of yours always end. Why put the poor girl through it?”

I felt my face burn with humiliation.

Was that what I was?

A diversion. A brief entertainment before he returned to women like Francesca.

“That’s enough,” Alessio said, his voice dropping to a register that made the hairs on the back of my neck stand up. “You’re being rude to my guest, Francesca.”

She withdrew her hand as if burned, something like fear flashing across her perfect features.

“My apologies. I simply misunderstood the nature of your relationship.”

Her smile was brittle as she turned to me.

“Enjoy your evening, Sophia Parker. However long it lasts.”

She swept back into the ballroom, leaving a chill in her wake.

I stepped away from Alessio’s touch, suddenly needing distance.

“Is she right?” I asked, hating the vulnerability in my voice. “Am I just a diversion? Something different to amuse you until you get bored?”

His jaw tightened.

“Francesca is bitter. We were engaged once, briefly. It ended badly.”

“That doesn’t answer my question.”

He moved toward me, and though everything in me wanted to retreat, I held my ground.

“I don’t know what this is yet, Sophia,” he said, his voice softer than I had heard it before. “But it’s not a diversion.”

The sincerity in his eyes was disarming. I wanted to believe him, even as every rational part of me screamed that this was dangerous. He was dangerous. A man like him did not enter the life of a woman like me without devastating consequences.

Before I could respond, a discreet cough interrupted us. One of Alessio’s men stood at the terrace doors.

“Excuse me, sir. There’s a situation that requires your attention.”

Alessio’s expression darkened.

“Now?”

“I’m afraid so, sir. Your mother suggested the study.”

He sighed, clearly annoyed at the interruption.

“Tell her I’ll be there momentarily.”

When the man had gone, he turned back to me.

“I need to deal with this. Will you be all right on your own for a few minutes?”

Part of me was relieved for the reprieve, a chance to gather my scattered thoughts away from his overwhelming presence.

“I’ll be fine. Go handle your situation.”

He hesitated, then reached for my hand, bringing it to his lips in a gesture that seemed both archaic and intimate.

“Don’t disappear on me, cara,” he murmured against my skin, sending a shiver up my arm. “I’m not finished with you yet.”

The words could have sounded threatening, but the warmth in his eyes transformed them into something closer to a promise.

Then he was gone, striding through the ballroom with purpose, people instinctively moving from his path.

I remained on the terrace for several minutes, trying to calm my racing heart and sort through the confusing jumble of emotions Alessio Moretti evoked in me: fear, fascination, and a dangerous attraction I could not afford to indulge.

When the night air became too cool, I reluctantly returned to the ballroom, where the gala was in full swing. I made my way to the bar, ordered a glass of water, and tried to blend into the background.

It was an impossible task given the curious glances and whispered comments that followed me. Clearly, my appearance with Alessio had caused quite the stir.

“You’re making quite an impression,” a voice said beside me, and I turned to find Elena Moretti, a champagne flute balanced delicately between her fingers. “Though perhaps not the one you intended.”

I straightened my spine.

“I didn’t come here to make an impression, Mrs. Moretti.”

“No?”

Her smile was cool, but not unkind.

“Then why did you come, Sophia Parker?”

The direct question caught me off guard.

“Your son invited me,” I said, opting for simple truth.

“My son invites many women to many events,” she replied, her gaze assessing. “Most of them arrive with an agenda.”

“I don’t have an agenda,” I said firmly.

“I came because…”

I hesitated, unsure how to articulate my reasons when I barely understood them myself.

“Because you’re curious about him,” she finished for me. “About his world. About the power he wields so effortlessly.”

She sipped her champagne.

“It’s a natural response. Alessio has that effect on women. Always has.”

“It’s not about power,” I insisted, though I was not entirely sure that was true. There was something undeniably compelling about the way he commanded a room, the way people deferred to him without question.

Elena’s expression softened marginally.

“Perhaps not entirely. But be careful, my dear. My son doesn’t give his interest lightly, but neither does he give his heart. Men like him, men like his father, they take what they want and move on. It’s their nature.”

Before I could respond to this maternal warning, a commotion near the entrance to the ballroom caught our attention. Raised voices, then a man stumbling backward as if pushed.

Alessio appeared in the doorway, his expression thunderous, his hand gripping the arm of a younger man who looked vaguely familiar.

“What on earth?” Elena murmured, setting down her champagne. “Excuse me.”

She moved swiftly toward the disturbance, the crowd parting for her as it had for her son.

I remained where I was, watching as Alessio released the man with a slight shove, speaking words I could not hear but whose tone was unmistakable: cold fury barely contained. The younger man straightened his jacket, his face flushed with either embarrassment or anger.

He said something in return, his gaze suddenly shifting in my direction. Alessio followed his line of sight, our eyes meeting across the room.

Something in his expression changed, hardened, and he gestured sharply to one of his men, who immediately began moving toward me.

Alarm flared in my chest.

What was happening?

The bodyguard reached me before I could decide whether to stay or flee.

“Miss Parker,” he said respectfully. “Mr. Moretti asks that you join him. Now.”

I followed the bodyguard through the crowd, acutely aware of the eyes tracking our progress. Whatever confrontation had occurred seemed to have been temporarily diffused. Alessio now stood with his mother and the younger man in what appeared to be a tense but controlled conversation.

As we approached, I could hear Elena speaking in rapid Italian, her elegant hands gesturing emphatically. The young man, perhaps in his early 30s, with the same dark coloring as the Morettis but lacking Alessio’s commanding presence, was shaking his head, his expression sullen.

“I’ve done nothing wrong,” he was saying as we came within earshot. “You’re overreacting as usual, Marco.”

Alessio’s voice was deceptively calm.

“This is neither the time nor the place.”

His eyes flicked to me as I stopped beside his bodyguard, and something in his expression shifted.

“Sophia, come here.”

It was not quite an order, but neither was it a request. I moved to his side, hyperaware of the curious onlookers pretending not to watch the family drama unfolding.

“Sophia, this is my younger brother, Marco,” Alessio said, placing a hand at the small of my back in what was becoming a familiar gesture of both possession and protection. “Marco, Sophia Parker.”

Marco’s eyes, the same midnight shade as his brother’s and mother’s, widened in recognition.

“Parker. The waitress.”

He gave a disbelieving laugh.

“So the rumors are true. You’re slumming it these days, brother.”

Elena made a sharp noise of disapproval.

“Enough, Marco. You’re embarrassing yourself and the family.”

“I’m embarrassing the family?” Marco’s voice rose slightly before he caught himself, lowering it to a hiss. “While he parades his latest conquest at Mother’s charity gala? A waitress, for God’s sake.”

I stiffened, humiliation burning through me.

“I should go,” I murmured to Alessio, starting to pull away.

His grip tightened, keeping me firmly at his side.

“No,” he said, his eyes never leaving his brother’s face. “Marco is just leaving.”

“You can’t dismiss me like one of your employees,” Marco snapped. “This is Mother’s event, not yours.”

“And as such, I expect my sons to behave with dignity,” Elena interjected smoothly. “Marco, we’ll discuss this tomorrow. For now, I suggest you make your apologies to Miss Parker and take your leave.”

Marco’s jaw worked as he visibly struggled with his temper. Finally, he gave a stiff nod.

“My apologies, Miss Parker,” he said, not sounding remotely sorry. “Family disagreements shouldn’t involve outsiders.”

He turned to his mother, kissing her cheek.

“I’ll call you tomorrow.”

He pointedly ignored Alessio as he left, shouldering his way through the crowd with none of his brother’s grace or authority.

The moment he was gone, Elena turned to us, her expression carefully composed.

“Well, that was unfortunate,” she said, as if discussing a minor catering mishap. “Sophia, I must apologize for my younger son’s behavior. Marco has always struggled with decorum.”

“It’s fine,” I said automatically, though it was anything but.

I felt distinctly out of place, caught in the middle of a family power struggle I did not understand.

“It’s not fine,” Alessio said, his voice tight with controlled anger. “And we both know this wasn’t about decorum.”

Elena sighed, smoothing an invisible wrinkle from her gown.

“Perhaps we could discuss this privately after the gala.”

“There’s nothing to discuss,” he replied. “I’ve made my position clear. Marco needs to accept it or there will be consequences.”

Something unspoken passed between mother and son, an entire conversation conducted through subtle shifts in expression that left me feeling like I was watching a foreign film without subtitles.

“Very well,” Elena finally said. “But this isn’t over, Alessio. The family expects unity, especially now.”

Her eyes darted briefly to me before she added, “We can’t afford distractions.”

With that cryptic comment, she turned to greet an approaching couple, smoothly transitioning back into her role as gracious hostess.

Alessio’s hand remained at my back, his touch tense.

“What was that about?” I asked quietly. “Why was he so upset to see me?”

Alessio guided me toward a quieter corner of the ballroom.

“Family business,” he said dismissively. “Marco has always resented my position. He thinks he should have a greater role in the family’s affairs.”

“And my presence upset him because?”

Alessio’s jaw tightened.

“Because he knows I value you, and he looks for any perceived weakness to exploit.”

The statement that Alessio Moretti valued me, a waitress he had known for all of 3 days, should have seemed absurd. Yet something in his eyes, in the protective way he had positioned himself between me and his brother, made me believe him.

“Come,” he said, taking my hand. “I think we’ve provided enough entertainment for 1 evening.”

He led me through a side door and down a corridor lined with paintings that looked valuable enough to fund my entire education. We climbed a sweeping staircase, the sounds of the gala fading behind us until we reached a set of double doors. Alessio opened them, revealing a large study with floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking the lake.

“Your office?” I asked, taking in the massive desk, the leather chairs, the shelves lined with books that looked well read rather than merely decorative.

“One of them,” he replied, closing the doors behind us. “I thought you might appreciate a moment away from the spectacle.”

I moved to the windows, gazing out at the moonlight reflecting on Lake Michigan. The view was breathtaking, the dark water stretching endlessly, the city lights twinkling in the distance. It was a view that spoke of wealth, of power, of a world so far removed from my own that it might as well be another planet.

“Your brother really hates me,” I said, still facing the window. “Or at least he hates that I’m here with you.”

Alessio moved to stand beside me, his reflection in the glass solemn and unreadable.

“Marco doesn’t know you well enough to hate you. He hates what you represent.”

“And what’s that?”

“Change.”

He turned to face me, his dark eyes searching mine.

“I’ve been different since I met you. People have noticed.”

I laughed nervously.

“We met 3 days ago. How different could you possibly be?”

“You’d be surprised,” he said softly. “I’ve been distracted. Less focused. I’ve missed meetings, delegated decisions I would normally handle personally. All because I can’t stop thinking about a waitress who cursed in Italian and looked at me without fear.”

My heart stuttered in my chest.

“That sounds like a problem for someone in your position.”

“It is,” he agreed, reaching up to brush a strand of hair from my face, his touch lingering on my cheek. “A very dangerous problem.”

I should have stepped back, maintained some distance between us. Instead, I found myself leaning slightly into his touch.

“Why me?” I whispered. “You could have anyone.”

“That’s precisely the point, isn’t it?” His thumb traced the line of my jaw, sending shivers down my spine. “I can have anyone. Women who want my money, my power, my name. But you…”

His eyes darkened.

“You look at me like you see beyond all that. Like you see me.”

“I don’t even know you,” I protested weakly.

“Don’t you?” he challenged. “You see more than most, Sophia Parker. It’s what makes you dangerous.”

Before I could respond, a sharp knock on the door interrupted us. Alessio dropped his hand from my face, his expression closing.

“Enter,” he called, stepping back from me.

The door opened to reveal one of his men, not the bodyguard who had escorted me, but an older man with silver at his temples and hard eyes.

“Apologies for the interruption, sir, but there’s a situation that requires immediate attention downstairs.”

Alessio’s jaw tightened.

“Can it wait?”

“I’m afraid not, sir. It concerns the matter we discussed earlier.”

The man’s eyes flicked briefly to me, then back to Alessio with clear meaning.

Alessio nodded once.

“I’ll be right there.”

When the man had closed the door again, Alessio turned to me with obvious reluctance.

“I need to handle this.”

“More family business?” I asked.

A ghost of a smile touched his lips.

“Something like that. Wait for me here. I won’t be long.”

“I can return to the gala.”

“No,” he said, his tone brooking no argument. “After Marco’s display, I’d prefer you stay where I know you’re safe.”

He paused.

“Please,” he added, the word sounding unfamiliar on his tongue. “Make yourself comfortable. There’s a bar by the bookshelf if you’d like a drink.”

With that, he was gone, leaving me alone in the study of one of Chicago’s most notorious men.

I wandered to the bookshelves, running my fingers along leather-bound volumes of Italian poetry, history texts, and, surprisingly, classic literature. A well-worn copy of Dante’s Inferno caught my eye, the same edition my grandmother had kept on her nightstand throughout my childhood.

I pulled it from the shelf, leafing through the pages marked with annotations in a strong masculine hand. The notes were in Italian, but I recognized enough words to realize they were thoughtful, scholarly observations.

This was not the reading material I had expected from a man rumored to rule Chicago’s underworld.

Replacing the book, I moved to his desk, knowing I should respect his privacy but unable to resist the temptation to learn more about him. The surface was meticulously organized: files stacked neatly, a silver pen set positioned just so, a laptop closed and centered perfectly.

The only personal item was a small framed photograph of a much younger Alessio with an older man who must have been his father. They shared the same commanding presence, the same penetrating gaze.

A noise at the door made me step back, guilty, but it was only the house staff delivering a tray with a carafe of water and 2 crystal glasses. The woman placed it on a side table without a word, her eyes carefully averted from mine as she slipped out again.

I poured myself a glass of water, trying to calm my racing thoughts.

What was I doing here? Alone in Alessio Moretti’s private study, waiting for him.

Like what?

A girlfriend?

A possession?

A diversion, as Francesca had so cruelly suggested.

Minutes stretched into nearly half an hour. I had just decided to ignore Alessio’s instructions and return to the gala when the door opened.

But it was not Alessio who entered.

It was Elena Moretti, regal and composed as ever.

“Miss Parker,” she said, closing the door behind her. “I thought I might find you here.”

I set down my water glass, suddenly nervous.

“Mrs. Moretti. Alessio asked me to wait for him.”

“Yes, I’m aware.” She moved farther into the room, her gown whispering against the carpet. “My son is detained. He asked me to check on you.”

Something about her explanation felt off, but I had no grounds to question it.

“That’s very kind of you.”

She gestured to one of the leather chairs.

“May I? There are some things I think we should discuss. Woman to woman.”

I nodded, taking the seat opposite her. Up close, I could see the fine lines around her eyes, the only indication of her age in an otherwise perfectly preserved face. She folded her hands in her lap, studying me with the same intensity her son often displayed.

“You’re very beautiful,” she said at last. “Though I suspect you don’t fully realize it. That’s part of your appeal to Alessio, I think. He’s surrounded by women who weaponize their beauty. You wear yours unconsciously.”

“Thank you,” I said cautiously, unsure where this conversation was heading.

She smiled slightly.

“That wasn’t entirely a compliment, my dear. Innocence can be as dangerous as calculation in our world.”

“Your world,” I corrected gently. “Not mine.”

“Yet here you are,” she pointed out. “In my home, wearing a dress my son selected, waiting in his private study. Whether you acknowledge it or not, you’ve already stepped into our world.”

I could not argue with her logic, uncomfortable as it made me.

“What did you want to discuss with me, Mrs. Moretti?”

She studied me for a moment longer before sighing softly.

“My son is at a critical juncture in his life, Sophia. The family business is expanding. New territories. New alliances. It requires his complete focus, his unwavering commitment.”

“I’m not distracting him,” I said defensively.

Her laugh was gentle but dismissive.

“My dear, you’ve done nothing but distract him since the moment you met. Alessio has built his reputation on control, on focus. Yet in the past 3 days, he’s been late to meetings, delegated important decisions, and spent hours personally investigating your background.”

The confirmation that he had been looking into my life sent an uneasy chill down my spine.

“I didn’t ask him to do any of that.”

“You didn’t have to.”

She leaned forward slightly.

“I don’t doubt that you’re a good person, Sophia. Your circumstances, your mother’s illness, your sacrifice of your education to care for her speak to your character. But good people get hurt in our world. Sometimes simply because they’re in the wrong place at the wrong time.”

My mouth went dry at the implied threat.

“Are you warning me away from your son, Mrs. Moretti?”

“I’m offering you an opportunity,” she corrected smoothly. “Alessio tells me you left nursing school to cover your mother’s medical bills. That you’re still struggling with that debt. Working 2 jobs just to keep your head above water.”

I stiffened.

“I don’t want your money.”

“Everyone wants money, my dear. Some are simply more honest about it than others.”

She reached into a small evening bag, withdrawing an envelope that she placed on the table between us.

“Inside, you’ll find a cashier’s check for $50,000. Enough to clear your debts and return to school. All I ask in return is that you end whatever this is with my son tonight.”

I stared at the envelope, shock and indignation warring within me.

“You’re buying me off.”

“I’m offering you a way out,” she said, her voice softening. “Before you’re in too deep to escape. Alessio can be overwhelming. When he wants something, he pursues it with single-minded determination. It can feel flattering, intoxicating even. But men like my son, like his father, they don’t change, Sophia. Not even for women they believe they love.”

The implication that Alessio might come to love me was so absurd that I almost laughed.

“We barely know each other. You’re overreacting to… to what? A few days of attention?”

Elena’s expression remained serious.

“My son doesn’t give his attention lightly. When he focuses on someone this way, it’s consuming for him and eventually for them. I’ve watched it happen before.”

A shadow passed over her face.

“I’ve lived it myself.”

Something in her voice, a thread of old pain carefully contained but still present, gave me pause.

“You’re talking about your husband.”

She nodded once.

“Antonio was much like Alessio is now. Powerful. Charismatic. Dangerous. I was younger than you when we met. He swept me off my feet, promised me the world.”

Her perfectly manicured fingers traced an invisible pattern on the arm of her chair.

“What he didn’t mention was the cost of that world. The compromises. The fear. The isolation.”

“I’m sorry,” I said softly, genuinely moved by the glimpse of vulnerability beneath her polished exterior.

She straightened, the moment of openness passing as quickly as it had appeared.

“Don’t misunderstand me. I made my choice, and I’ve never regretted it. The Moretti name has given me power, influence, security. But it’s not a life I would wish on a young woman with other options.”

She nudged the envelope closer to me.

“Take the money, Sophia. Go back to school. Become a nurse. Help people. Live a life where you don’t have to check under your car for explosives or wonder if the new friend you made is actually an informant.”

Her blunt description of her reality was chilling. I looked from the envelope to her face, searching for signs of manipulation, finding only what appeared to be genuine concern.

“And if I don’t take it?” I asked, my voice barely above a whisper.

Her expression softened with what looked like genuine regret.

“Then I fear you’ll learn the hard way what it means to be chosen by a Moretti man.”

She rose gracefully.

“The car that brought you tonight is at your disposal. You needn’t say goodbye. In fact, I think it’s better if you don’t. A clean break is kinder in the long run.”

She moved toward the door, pausing with her hand on the knob.

“For what it’s worth, I think in another life, under different circumstances, you might have been good for my son.”

Her smile was sad.

“But we don’t live in that life, do we?”

With that, she was gone, leaving me alone with an envelope containing more money than I had ever seen at once and a decision that somehow felt like it would change the course of my life, no matter which way I chose.

I sat motionless for several long minutes, staring at the envelope.

$50,000.

Freedom from debt. A return to the life I had planned before my mother’s illness had derailed everything. All I had to do was walk away from a man I barely knew, a man whose world was so far removed from mine that any connection between us seemed doomed from the start.

It should have been an easy decision.

The rational choice was clear.

So why did the thought of never seeing Alessio again make my chest ache as if something vital were being torn away?

I rose from the chair, the envelope still untouched on the table. Moving to the window, I stared out at the moonlit lake, trying to make sense of the conflicting emotions warring within me.

Three days.

I had known Alessio Moretti for just 3 days. Yet somehow, he had managed to upend my carefully constructed world, forcing me to question everything I thought I wanted.

The practical part of me, the part that had been paying bills and making sacrifices since I was old enough to understand money, urged me to take Elena’s offer. It was generous. More than generous. With $50,000, I could clear my debts, return to nursing school, and rebuild the life I had planned before grief and poverty ground my dreams to dust.

Yet something deeper, more instinctive, rebelled at the idea of being bought off, of having a price tag attached to whatever was developing between Alessio and me.

And there was something.

I could not deny it. I could not pretend that the electricity sparking between us whenever we were close was merely my imagination.

I was so lost in thought that I did not hear the door open. It was only when I caught a reflection in the window, a tall figure standing motionless in the doorway, that I realized Alessio had returned.

“Your mother was here,” I said without turning, my eyes still fixed on the distant horizon where lake met sky.

He moved into the room, stopping a few paces behind me.

“I know.”

Of course he did. Very little seemed to escape Alessio’s notice.

“She made me an interesting offer.”

His reflection in the glass stiffened almost imperceptibly.

“Did she?”

I turned to face him, needing to see his expression clearly.

“$50,000 to walk away from you tonight. No goodbyes. No explanations.”

I gestured to the envelope still sitting on the table.

“Enough to pay off my debts and go back to school.”

Something dangerous flashed in his eyes as they moved from my face to the envelope and back again.

“And what did you tell her?”

“Nothing,” I admitted. “She didn’t stay long enough for me to respond.”

He moved closer, stopping just a foot away, his dark eyes searching mine.

“Yet you’re still here.”

“I am.”

“Why?”

The question was soft but intense, as if my answer mattered more than he wanted to admit.

I swallowed, suddenly finding it difficult to maintain eye contact.

“I don’t know,” I said honestly. “By any rational measure, I should take the money and run as far from you and your world as possible.”

One corner of his mouth lifted in a humorless smile.

“Yet you haven’t.”

“Not yet,” I agreed.

He reached out slowly, giving me time to pull away if I wanted to, and tucked a strand of hair behind my ear.

“My mother means well,” he said quietly. “In her own way, she’s trying to protect both of us.”

“From what?”

“From each other. From what we might become together.”

His hand lingered near my face, his thumb brushing lightly against my cheekbone.

“She’s not wrong about the dangers of my world, Sophia. The life I lead isn’t compatible with normalcy. With safety.”

“Then why bring me into it at all?” I asked, my voice barely above a whisper. “Why pursue this, whatever this is, if you know it can only end badly?”

His eyes darkened.

“Because from the moment you looked at me across that restaurant, something in me recognized something in you. Something I didn’t know I was missing until I found it.”

The raw honesty in his voice stole my breath. This was not the smooth charm of a man accustomed to getting what he wanted through manipulation. This was something else entirely. A confession that seemed to surprise him as much as it did me.

“That doesn’t make sense,” I protested weakly. “We’re from completely different worlds. I’m nobody, a waitress drowning in debt. You’re…”

I gestured vaguely at our surroundings, the opulent study that spoke of generations of wealth and power.

“I’m a man,” he said simply. “Behind the name, the reputation, the power, I’m just a man who hasn’t been seen, truly seen, in longer than I can remember.”

His hand moved to cup my cheek fully.

“Until you.”

I should have pulled away. I should have reached for the envelope and walked out the door, back to the safety of my small life with its modest dreams and manageable expectations.

Instead, I found myself leaning into his touch, my eyes closing briefly at the warmth of his palm against my skin.

“This is insane,” I whispered. “We barely know each other.”

“Then let me know you,” he replied, his voice deepening. “And let me show you who I am. Not the man everyone fears, not the mask I wear for the world. Just me.”

The sincerity in his eyes was my undoing.

Without conscious decision, I closed the small distance between us, my hand coming to rest on his chest, where I could feel his heart beating strong and steady beneath expensive fabric.

His response was immediate and overwhelming. One arm wrapped around my waist, pulling me firmly against him, while his other hand tangled in my hair, tilting my head back as his mouth claimed mine.

The kiss was nothing like the hesitant explorations I had experienced before. This was possession, pure and unrestrained. A man taking what he wanted with absolute certainty that it was his to take.

And God help me, I gave myself over to it completely, my arms winding around his neck as I pressed closer, answering his hunger with my own unexpected desire.

He tasted of expensive whiskey and something darker, more dangerous. A flavor I instantly knew I would crave for the rest of my days.

When we finally broke apart, both breathing heavily, his eyes had darkened to near black, his usual control visibly fraying at the edges.

“Sophia,” he murmured, his voice rough with restraint. “If you’re going to take my mother’s money and walk away, do it now. Because if you stay…”

He drew a ragged breath.

“If you stay, I won’t let you go easily.”

The warning should have frightened me. Instead, it sent a thrill of something dangerously close to excitement through my veins.

“I don’t want your mother’s money,” I said, the decision crystallizing as I spoke the words. “And I don’t want easy.”

Something primal flashed in his eyes at my response. His hands tightened on me possessively.

Before he could speak, a sharp knock on the door forced us apart.

“Not now,” Alessio growled, his eyes still fixed on mine.

The door opened anyway, revealing the same silver-haired man from earlier.

“Sir, I wouldn’t interrupt if it wasn’t urgent. There’s been an incident at the docks. Salvatore’s crew. It can’t wait.”

Alessio closed his eyes briefly, frustration evident in the rigid line of his shoulders. When he opened them again, I could see the transformation. The man who had held me with such tender passion was receding behind a mask of cold authority.

“I’ll be right there,” he said, his voice now devoid of the warmth it had held moments ago.

The man nodded once and withdrew, leaving the door slightly ajar.

Alessio turned back to me, conflict clear in his expression.

“Go,” I said softly, understanding without being told that whatever required his attention was serious. “Handle your business.”

He reached for my hand, bringing it to his lips in a gesture that was becoming familiar.

“This isn’t how I wanted tonight to end,” he said against my skin.

“The night isn’t over yet,” I replied, surprising myself with my boldness.

His eyes darkened again.

“Wait for me here, please. I’ll have someone bring you anything you need. When I return…”

He paused, his thumb tracing circles on my wrist.

“We’ll continue our conversation.”

The promise in his voice sent heat coursing through me. I nodded, unable to trust my voice.

With visible reluctance, he released my hand and moved toward the door, pausing on the threshold to look back at me once more. His gaze was so intense it left me breathless.

Then he was gone, the sound of his footsteps fading down the corridor.

To be continued… Click “PART 3” to read the final part : PART 3

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