Elena didn't sleep.
Her apartment felt different now. Familiar walls. Familiar furniture. Yet every shadow seemed to hold a watcher. Every sound made her heart jump.
She wasn't alone-not really.
The agreement was clear. She could stay here, in her own space. Her freedom, however limited, came with a condition: surveillance. Cameras tucked in corners. Men in the walkways, always nearby but unseen. Not a prison. Not safe. But enough to keep her alive.
Within reason, she whispered bitterly.
Dawn crept into the city, spilling light across her room. Elena wrapped her arms around herself, scanning her apartment like it had become a battlefield. Somewhere across , Alessandro Moretti was awake too. Men like him didn't rest easily.
And she hated that she could feel his presence without seeing him.
_________________
Alessandro was in the gym when Luca found him.
The heavy bag swung violently as Alessandro struck it again and again. Sweat darkened his shirt, but his expression remained unreadable.
"You're pushing yourself," Luca said.
Alessandro didn't stop. "She should've been afraid."
"That's what bothers you?" Luca asked.
Alessandro paused, breathing evenly. "People who aren't afraid make choices. Choices complicate things."
"And yet you didn't eliminate the complication."
He dragged a towel across his face. "She's not lying."
"You're sure?"
"I am."
What he didn't say was why Elena's defiance lingered in his thoughts far longer than it should have.
Later that evening, after work ,Elena was asked to come again-this time voluntarily.
A knock. Polite. Controlled.
"Mr. Moretti requests your presence," the man in suit said.
Requests. That was new.
She followed as she was led to the waiting car. Silence followed as the car drove the familiar mansion. They followed the quiet hallways until they opened into a private dining room. One table. Two chairs. Floor-to-ceiling windows glowing with city lights.
Alessandro stood by the window, sleeves rolled up, jacket off. Less armor. More man.
Elena hated that her breath caught.
"Am I being interrogated again?" she asked, arms crossing instinctively.
"No," he said. "You're being evaluated."
She scoffed. "I didn't apply for the position."
A ghost of a smile appeared. "Sit."
She considered refusing-then chose her battles. Food was already there. Untouched.
"You haven't eaten," he noted.
"How did you know" she asked him with her eyes narrowing.
"I wasn't hungry." She replied after a beat.
"That's a lie."
Her eyes snapped to his. "Do you always assume you know what people feel?"
"Yes," he said evenly. "I'm usually right."
She pushed her chair back slightly. "Then tell me what I'm feeling now."
Alessandro studied her-not her posture, not her words, but her eyes. For a moment, the room felt too small.
"Angry," he said. "Tired. And trying very hard not to care."
Her jaw tightened.
"Wrong," she said. "I care. I just refuse to let you use it against me."
That earned her silence. Thoughtful silence.
"You shouldn't be here," Alessandro said finally.
"This world destroys people like you."
"People like me?" she asked sharply.
"People who still believe they have choices."
Elena stood. "I do have choices."
"Then choose wisely," he said, voice lower now. "Because every decision you make echoes far beyond you."
She stepped closer-too close. "And what about you, Alessandro Moretti? Do you believe you have choices?"
The use of his name hit harder than it should have.
For the first time, he didn't answer immediately.
"No," he admitted quietly. "I believe I have responsibilities."
Their eyes locked. The tension wasn't hostile anymore. It was something far more dangerous-understanding.
Elena exhaled slowly. "Then maybe we're both trapped."
Alessandro stepped back, regaining control. "You'll where you are" he said. "In your apartment. On your terms-but under surveillance. As long as it keeps you alive."
"And if I push back?" she asked.
His gaze darkened. "Then we'll both regret it."
She nodded once. "Good. I'd hate for this to be easy."
As she returned to her apartment, Elena couldn't shake the feeling that someone was watching-not Alessandro, but someone else. The city lights glittered below, and she knew her freedom was fragile.
Cracks were forming.
And they weren't just in Alessandro's control.





