Isabella POV
The silence at the head table was louder than the string quartet's desperate attempt to restore normalcy. From my vantage point near a pillar, I watched the dynamic shift between the two most dangerous men in Chicago.
Irvin Pope, the Underboss and Damien's own brother, leaned in closer. He was a sharper, leaner version of the Don, with eyes that usually held a calculating gleam. But now, those eyes were narrowed in disbelief. I couldn't hear his words, but the tension radiating from him was palpable. He was questioning the King. He was asking why Damien had just publicly severed ties with a woman whose father had bled for this family, all for the sake of a temporary employee.
Damien didn't speak. He didn't even turn his head fully. He simply lifted his gaze from his wine glass and locked eyes with Irvin.
It was a look of absolute zero.
There was no anger, no heat, just a void so deep and cold it promised annihilation. It was the look of a man who did not explain himself, a man whose will was the only law that mattered. The air around them seemed to crystallize. Irvin's jaw clenched, a flicker of genuine fear passing through his expression. He leaned back slowly, breaking the stare, effectively submitting to the alpha.
My stomach churned with nausea. Damien had silenced his second-in-command, but the message was clear to me: I was a fissure in their foundation. I was the problem.
Needing to escape the suffocating weight of their attention, I slipped away toward the ladies' powder room.
The sanctuary of the restroom was lined with Carrara marble and smelled of expensive lilies. I gripped the edge of the sink, staring at my pale reflection, trying to command my heart to slow down.
The door swung open, and the reflection in the mirror shifted from my terrified face to a mask of pure venom.
Katerina Webb entered, locking the door behind her.
"You think you've won," she spat, her voice trembling with rage. She stalked toward me, her crimson dress rustling like dry leaves. "You think because he looked at you, you matter?"
I turned, pressing my back against the cold marble counter. "I was doing my job, Katerina. Nothing more."
"Your job?" She laughed, a harsh, brittle sound. "You are nothing. You are collateral. A debt payment wrapped in silk. My father took a bullet for the Maddox name. My blood is woven into this family's history. You? You're just a passing amusement."
She invaded my personal space, her eyes manic. "You humiliated me."
"You humiliated yourself," I said quietly, though my hands shook.
Katerina's face twisted. In a blur of motion, she snatched a half-empty glass of red wine left on a vanity tray by a previous guest. Before I could react, she threw the contents at me.
The cold liquid splashed across my chest, soaking into the white fabric of my gown instantly. It looked like a gunshot wound, a jagged stain of blood-red spreading over my heart.
"Oops," she sneered. Then, her hand raised, aiming for my face.
Instinct took over. I caught her wrist mid-air, my grip fueled by adrenaline and a sudden, sharp anger.
"Let go of me!" she shrieked, struggling against my hold.
"This is the Don's hotel," I hissed, my voice low and steady, surprising even myself. I tightened my grip, digging my nails in slightly. "There are cameras in the hallway. There are likely cameras in the vents. You just damaged the Don's property. Do you really want to add assaulting his... staff to your list of offenses tonight?"
Katerina froze. The mention of Damien's ownership—even over something as trivial as his staff—struck a nerve. Fear flickered in her eyes, replacing the rage.
I released her abruptly. She stumbled back, clutching her wrist where my fingers had left angry red marks.
"You will regret this," she whispered, her chest heaving. "I will make sure you burn for this."
She spun around and stormed out.
I stood there for a moment, trembling, looking down at the ruin of my dress. The red stain was hideous, a mark of shame I couldn't hide. But I couldn't stay here. Hiding would only make me look guilty.
I forced myself to walk out, head high, despite the disaster on my chest.
As I re-entered the ballroom, the atmosphere had shifted again. It was heavy, thick with anticipation.
I saw Katerina. She wasn't leaving. She was at the head table, standing right in front of Damien.
But the predator was gone. In her place was a weeping victim.
She was sobbing, her shoulders shaking violently. She held up her wrist—the one I had grabbed—displaying the red marks like war wounds. She pointed a trembling finger across the room, directly at me.
I couldn't hear her lies, but I saw the performance. She was invoking the blood debt. She was painting me as the aggressor, the outsider who dared to harm a daughter of the family.
Damien sat motionless, listening.
Then, he moved.
He turned his head slowly, his dark eyes scanning the crowd until they found me.
I froze. The distance between us felt like a chasm filled with knives. He saw the red stain on my dress. He saw my pale face.
His expression was unreadable, a mask of stone carved by violence. But his eyes... they were two pits of darkness, swirling with a storm I couldn't comprehend. There was no reassurance there. No protection. Only a terrifying, silent judgment that pinned me to the floor.
He stood up.





