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 The Mafia 's Moonlight

The Mafia 's Moonlight

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About

No one slept in the city while it was held in the mafia's thrall. And she didn't. During the day, Luna Marcelli was a quiet mystery, browsing through books in the nooks of a cobblestone Sicilian alleyway bookstore, living a life deliberately ordered to remain secret. But at night, her monsters came for her. Her father's betrayal of the notorious De Luca syndicate had branded her, alive only because one man decreed it so. Dante De Luca. The name that brought most men to their knees. Cold, calculating, and deadly, he was the offspring of an empire founded in blood and devotion. And yet, curiously, it was her name that he whispered as a vow when no one was around to hear him. Their initial encounter had not been deliberate. It had been a threat. His black eyes flared into hers in a Sicilian moonlight, the wind sending her skirt flying, the pressure of his hand upon her waist like branding. "You should have run when you had the chance," he breathed, the tone of his voice low promise. "And you should have murdered me when you had the chance," she gasped in answer. A murder it was not, however, but a kiss. Slow. Risky. Forbidden. A bitter kiss of wrath and destiny, for in the mafia's world, love did not come softly. It came savage, untamed, and most likely fatal. And yet, against the moonlight, they chose to have it anyway.

Chapter 1 The Calm Before the Storm

The soft tinkle of a bell announced the entry of a customer, but Luna Marcelli didn't glance up at first. She was reading page three of a dog-eared Wuthering Heights, lost in the stormy moors and Heathcliff's mournful voice. It was a familiar haven, one to which she'd come a great many times. In books, there were ghosts. In life, hers would kill you.

A wind slipped in behind her, rustling the weak aroma of old books and espresso. She at last met his eye and smiled.

"Welcome to Belladonna Bookshop," she said, her voice was calm but sound more friendly. "I'm happy to assist you in finding whatever you need.

The man slowly nodded and walked towards the shelves, silent as a ghost. Luna watched him for a moment, too polished for the regular foot traffic. In black with a tailored coat and shoes that outweighed the cost of her rent each month, he didn't belong in this downtrodden area of town. No one did, not really. That was the point.

Belladonna nestled between a boarded-up bakery and a graffiti-covered apartment building in the old part of town, down a crooked street. It was the sort of building that no one would notice. People walked by without slowing down. That was how Luna liked it. Obscurity protected her. Or had, anyway.

She exhaled and thrust herself back into the book. Her fingers brushed the pages as if in prayer. Her unobtrusive life, so carefully built in the last five years, was based on three commandments: no late evenings, no familiarity with the past, and never, attract attention.

Then the stranger spoke.

"He said, is it true what they say about this place?"

Luna blinked. The man stood behind the counter and his hands was resting on the lightly glass, his voice smoother than she could ever imagine. He had an accent, quiet and expensive. Old money.

"That depends," she said cautiously, setting the book aside. "What do they say?"

"That the daughter of Enzo Marcelli has a bookstore here. That she sells novels during the day and escapes from reality at night."

Blood poured out of her face.

She couldn't answer him. Her heart beating fast against her ribs, a mad rush of fear. She stood, slow, gaze locked on his.

He smiled.

"Still so composed," he said. "Just as your father said you'd be."

Luna's mouth went dry. "You knew my father?"

"Knew him," the man said again, "and owed him more than I wish to speak. But I'm not here for stories, Luna."

He said her name like a challenge.

"I'm here for the debt."

Luna took a step back instinctively. "Please i don't understand what you're talking about. My father is-"

"Dead," he said, cutting her off. "Yes. A shame, really. He was a man of honor. misguided, but loyal."

"Who are you?" she demanded, voice cracking.

The man put his hand into his overcoat. Luna flinched. But he only pulled out a sleek black card and slid it along the counter.

Dante De Luca.

She stared at the name as if it would vanish.

No. No, this was not correct.

Her surname was uttered as an oath in the locations where she used to hang out with them. Enzo Marcelli had formerly spoken of the De Lucases as "Rome's silk devils." Chilled, intelligent, and above all-heartless.

"You shouldn't be here," she panted. "Whatever you desire, whatever you believe I owe you, you're mistaken."

Dante shifted his head to one side, twisting his mouth.

"You are not aware of what your father did, are you?

"I'm no longer live that life," she snapped, a flicker of fire rising in her chest. "Five years ago. I'm not part of it anymore."

Dante leaned in closer, and for a moment the light danced off his face. Dark hair, square jaw, a scar at the arch of his temple, just out of reach, but it gave him the look of something cut from war. His eyes, though, those were the threat. Icy gray, unsmiling, locked on her like the game was already lost.

"No one escapes, Luna Bella," he whispered. "They just get weary of running before someone catches up to them."

She flinched at the nickname. you don't deserve it.

"I have nothing to give you."

"Oh, I don't think so," Dante snapped to his feet. "You have your name. Your blood. And a debt that your father signed in both."

Luna's breath caught.

"I'm not asking," he continued. "I'm warning you. You can come willingly. or we'll do this the hard way."

A thousand memories flowed at once, her father's last words before he disappeared, the silent phone calls that stopped ringing, the sudden silence of all who were ever family. She had kept it all under dust and books and night-time tea. She had hoped to hide in plain sight, but it never was.

Luna looked around her bookstore, the bookshelves made of wood, the string lights spread over the windows, the cozy armchair in the corner. Her small world. Her freedom.

Dante noticed where she was staring.

"Great store. Shame if it burned down."

Her eyes flashed over to him, outraged. He didn't wink. Didn't smile. He simply turned and walked towards the door.

"I'll be back tomorrow," he said over his shoulder. "You have until then to decide."

And then he was gone, swallowed by the fog outside.

Luna stood frozen, heart racing. Her fingers dug into the edge of the counter as if holding on could stop the world from spinning. It couldn't.

She looked down at the card still resting on the glass.

Dante De Luca.

She realized what tomorrow would be like. Her idyllic life, her illusion of peace. was over.

The past had not simply caught up.

It had walked in dressed spick and span in a tailored suit and smelling of roses and gunpowder.

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