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BASTARD SON OF THE VIKINGS

BASTARD SON OF THE VIKINGS

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About

Palermo does not forgive. Neither does it forget. When Guerrero Valenti, the feared leader of the Vikings, vanished, the city exhaled a dangerous calm-but only for a moment. In the shadows, enemies waited. Rivals sharpened their knives. And one woman bore a secret that could ignite every street in the city. Lucia Romano carried the child of a man who had disappeared into legend and rumor. A son who had not been claimed, not protected, not named. The city whispered of him with venom: the bastard of the Vikings. The boy was fragile, but he was a storm waiting to erupt. And every night, Palermo tested him. Masked men tried to snatch him from his crib. Fire, steel, and blood became his lullabies. Yet he survived. Every threat only sharpened his instincts, every scream hardened his mother's resolve. But whispers spread faster than steel through the night-rumors of a man returning. A shadow that would claim everything, sparking fear in every heart: Guerrero Valenti. The father who abandoned him. The legend whose name alone commands obedience. The storm that will rise, carrying vengeance, blood, and fire. And when he comes, Every man who dared call the bastard his enemy will fall. Every street, every roof, every whispered corner will bow to the son of Guerrero Valenti or be washed in blood. This is the story of survival. Of fire and steel. Of a mother and her son. Of a father's return. Even the earth is getting ready to absorb blood ... the blood of those who call the legitimate son of the Vikings a "BASTARD", and collect necks........the necks of those fallen by the sword of GUERRERO VALANTI. And upon his return Heads will bow to the one they called a BASTARD .

Chapter 1 NIGHT OF THE VIKINGS

Palermo lay like a wounded beast beneath the bruised night sky. Its narrow streets glistened with rain-slicked stones, mirroring the city's pulse in fractured streaks of red and gold. The old churches held their breath, bells silent, watching from the shadows as sin painted the hours.

Tonight was not a night for silence.

It was a night of blood and triumph.

The Luce Rossa Nightclub throbbed like a living heart at the center of Via Roma, its crimson neon bleeding into the dark. Luxury cars lined the curb, engines cold, their guards standing like statues hewn from stone. To step inside was to be swallowed-by heat, by bodies, by the cloying mix of perfume and smoke, by the desperate energy of men who lived one breath from death and celebrated each night as if it were their last.

The Vikings owned the hour.

Their victory roared through the walls, shaking the very foundations. A shipment worth millions had crossed continents untouched. Lieutenants, drunk on power and whiskey, slammed glasses and threw money, boasting of scars and close calls. Women laughed in their laps, fingers tracing faces hardened by violence.

And in the center of the storm stood a man who commanded the room without uttering a word.

Guerrero Valenti.

Tall, broad-shouldered, carved from shadow and tempered steel. His dark hair was tied back, a few strands escaping to brush a jawline that looked carved from stone. His white shirt clung to his frame as if afraid to fall out of line. His hands-large, scarred, deceptively still-rested at his sides. Those who knew him understood they could end a life between heartbeats.

Guerrero did not shout. He did not boast. His silence was more dangerous than another man's rage.

Lucia Romano knew the stories. All of Palermo did.

But seeing him tonight was different.

She leaned against the bar, one hand wrapped around a chilled glass, the other resting lightly on the polished wood. Her dark hair cascaded in waves down her back, her olive skin steady under the strobing lights. Every man in the room watched her. She watched only one.

She had been raised among monsters. She knew the performance of power-the posturing, the empty threats, the show of teeth without bite. Guerrero was no performer. He simply was, and the world around him bent to that truth.

Her own pulse quickened. She despised the betrayal.

Her cousin Enzo, the club's sharp-eyed guardian, leaned close, his breath warm with whiskey. "He hasn't stopped looking at you," he murmured. "Guerrero only notices what matters."

Lucia took a slow sip. "Let him look."

Enzo's grin was a slanted, knowing thing. "He doesn't look lightly."

Before she could reply, Guerrero moved.

He didn't walk; he cut. The crowd parted for him like silk beneath a blade. The noise near him dimmed to a hush.

When he reached her, he didn't speak. His gaze traveled over her face, her hair, her mouth. Lucia held that gaze, refusing to yield. If he wanted to stare, let him drown in what he found.

"You've been watching me," he said finally, his voice like smoke over low coals.

"You're difficult to ignore."

He stepped closer. His scent wrapped around her-expensive liquor, warm skin, something dark and unmistakably male beneath it. "Dance with me."

"I don't dance."

His hand settled at her waist as if her refusal were irrelevant. "You will tonight."

The music deepened, becoming a slow, threatening pulse. Guerrero guided her onto the floor. His grip was firm, absolute, yet beneath it ran a current of electricity, coiling heat into her veins.

"You're trouble," he murmured against her ear.

"So are you," she replied. "Worse, I think."

His low laugh was a promise and a warning. "That's why you're here."

His fingers traced the line of her spine, and she felt herself coming undone, stitch by careful stitch. When his mouth found hers, the world shattered.

The kiss tore open something she had spent years fortifying.

He guided her back, through a curtain, into the relative quiet of a dim corridor. The music became a distant throb. His hands lifted her, pressing her against the cool plaster. Her fingers tangled in his hair as he kissed her like a man starved.

When they parted, the silence between them felt heavier than any sound.

He studied her face, intensity burning in his eyes. "You belong to no one," he stated, voice rough.

"Neither do you."

His mouth curved, barely. "Not tonight."

When she left, the night air felt thin, insubstantial. She didn't look back.

Yet the memory of him lingered on her skin like a brand.

---

Weeks passed.

Two. Four. Six.

Rumors swirled-Guerrero Valenti shot, betrayed, missing, dead. No body was found. Nothing was confirmed.

Lucia told herself she didn't care.

She lied.

On a night when rain hammered the rooftops of Palermo, she stood in her bathroom, staring at the small white stick on the edge of the sink. Thunder rattled the windowpanes. Her own heart was louder.

Two lines.

Dark. Bold. Final.

Positive.

Her breath left her in a rush. The room swayed. She gripped the sink until her knuckles turned bone-white. The test blurred behind the sudden heat in her eyes, but the result remained, glaring back.

She was carrying his child.

Guerrero Valenti was gone. Vanished. Dead, perhaps.

And now she carried the one tie that could not be severed.

A life born from a single night of danger and reckless passion.

A life that would inherit his blood, his legacy, his enemies.

A life she had no idea how to shield.

"What have you done to me, Guerrero?" she whispered into the roaring dark.

Lightning split the sky. Thunder followed, shaking the very foundations of her quiet apartment.

For the first time in years, Lucia Romano-once untouchable, once feared-felt it again.

Fear.

Deep, chilling, soul-shaking.

She looked down once more.

Two lines.

Two lines that had just rewritten her future, and the future of a city that slept unaware.

Far away, in the hidden corners of the underworld, a name for the unborn was already being whispered on the wind, long before his first cry.

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