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Chapter 4 The Devil Wears Silence

Silence became Elena's first real enemy.

Not the kind filled with rest or peace, but the deliberate, oppressive quiet that followed her everywhere she went in Alessandro De Luca's house. It wrapped around her like invisible chains, tightening with every unanswered question, every guarded glance, every door that closed without explanation.

She learned quickly that silence here was never empty.

It was observant.

It listened.

It judged.

Elena spent the morning alone.

After the interrogation room, Mara escorted her back to her quarters without a word. No reassurance. No explanation. Just the soft echo of footsteps against marble and the distant murmur of men conducting business that shaped lives far beyond these walls.

She tried to read. Tried to rest. Tried not to pace.

But her mind refused stillness.

Alessandro's words replayed again and again.

Everyone has something.

She stared at her reflection in the mirror, searching for whatever he thought she possessed. She saw a woman with tired eyes, hair pulled back too tightly, shoulders stiff with determination and fear. She saw no leverage. No secrets. No hidden power.

And yet, he had looked at her like she mattered.

That unsettled her more than his threats.

A knock came just after noon.

"Elena," Mara called. "You're to come with me."

"Where?" Elena asked.

Mara didn't answer.

They walked deeper into the estate, descending a staircase Elena hadn't been allowed near before. The air changed as they went lower-cooler, heavier, tinged faintly with iron and gun oil.

The walls here were stone, unadorned. Functional. Men stood guard outside reinforced doors, nodding respectfully at Mara but watching Elena with open curiosity.

"This level," Mara said quietly, "is not meant for guests."

"Then why am I here?" Elena asked.

Mara stopped before a door marked only by a biometric lock. "Because Alessandro wants you to see."

The door opened.

Inside was a control room.

Screens lined the walls-dozens of them-each displaying live feeds from different parts of the world. Ports. Warehouses. City streets. Airports. Men moved across the screens like pieces on a vast chessboard.

At the center of it all stood Alessandro.

He had his back to them, sleeves rolled up, dark hair slightly disordered as if he'd dragged his hands through it too many times. He was speaking quietly into a headset, his voice calm, precise, lethal.

"No warnings," he said. "If they cross the line, burn the route."

He removed the headset and turned.

His gaze found Elena instantly.

Mara slipped away without a word, leaving them alone among the hum of machines and distant violence.

"You wanted to show me something," Elena said, breaking the silence.

"Yes."

"Why?"

"Because you think I enjoy this."

She frowned. "Don't you?"

Alessandro studied her for a long moment before gesturing toward the screens. "This is what your father stole."

Elena stepped closer despite herself.

On one screen, a shipment was being unloaded at a port. On another, armed men guarded crates stamped with symbols she didn't recognize. On a third, a meeting room filled with dangerous-looking men froze mid-conversation.

"Every route. Every alliance. Every weakness," Alessandro continued. "Information is power. Without it, empires fall."

Elena's stomach twisted. "And my father took this from you."

"Yes."

"Did he sell it?"

Alessandro's jaw tightened. "He tried."

"Then why keep me alive?" she asked again. "Why not just kill me and be done with it?"

He turned to face her fully now. "Because killing you wouldn't fix what he broke."

"And keeping me does?"

"No," he said. "But it changes the game."

She met his gaze. "I'm not your pawn."

"No," Alessandro agreed quietly. "You're the variable."

The word sent a chill through her.

He stepped closer, lowering his voice. "People behave differently when something innocent is involved. They make mistakes. They reveal themselves."

Realization struck her like ice water.

"You're using me as bait."

"Yes."

Anger flared hot and sharp. "You don't get to use my life like that."

Alessandro's eyes darkened. "In my world, everyone's life is currency."

"Then your world is broken."

Something flickered across his face-too fast to name.

"Perhaps," he said.

A sudden alarm blared.

Both of them turned sharply as one of the screens flashed red. Alessandro moved instantly, barking orders into his headset. Elena watched as his men responded with military precision, the calm chaos of organized violence unfolding in real time.

Gunfire erupted on one feed. Bodies fell.

Elena pressed her hands together, fighting the urge to look away.

"You don't even flinch," she said, horrified.

Alessandro removed the headset slowly. "If I flinched at every death," he said, "I'd be useless."

"That doesn't make it right."

"No," he agreed. "But it makes it necessary."

Silence stretched between them again-thick, charged.

Finally, Alessandro spoke. "You should be afraid of me."

Elena lifted her chin. "I am."

"Good." He stepped closer, his presence overwhelming. "But fear isn't the only thing you feel."

Her breath caught.

She hated that he was right.

"You don't get to decide what I feel," she said.

"No," he replied softly. "But I can see it."

Their eyes locked. The room seemed to shrink, the hum of machines fading into the background as something dangerous and intimate settled between them.

Then Alessandro stepped back.

"Take her back upstairs," he said into his headset.

Mara returned moments later.

As Elena followed her out, she glanced back once more.

Alessandro was already facing the screens again, his shoulders rigid, his expression carefully blank.

The devil wore silence well.

That night, Elena couldn't sleep.

Gunfire echoed faintly in the distance-far away, yet close enough to remind her that violence was never truly out of reach here.

She lay awake, staring at the ceiling, Alessandro's words circling her thoughts.

You're the variable.

She didn't know how.

She didn't know why.

But she knew one thing with absolute certainty:

Alessandro De Luca was losing control.

And somewhere beneath the gunfire, beneath the fear and the silence, something far more dangerous was beginning to grow between them.

Something neither of them was prepared for.

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