Genre Ranking
Get the APP HOT

Chapter 5 A Prison Made of Silk

By the third day, Elena understood something essential about Alessandro De Luca's house.

It was not designed to comfort.

It was designed to convince.

Convince its occupants that everything they needed was already provided. That resistance was unnecessary. That submission could be mistaken for peace.

She woke before dawn again, her body seemingly incapable of rest now. Sleep came in shallow fragments-moments where her mind drifted before snapping awake at the slightest sound. The house was never truly quiet. It breathed. It shifted. It reminded her constantly that she was not alone.

The ceiling above her was smooth and uncracked, painted a soft neutral shade meant to soothe. She stared at it anyway, counting breaths, grounding herself. Outside the sealed window, guards changed positions with mechanical precision. She could hear their boots faintly, the soft click of radios, the distant hum of engines starting somewhere below.

Violence preparing itself.

Elena sat up and pressed her feet to the floor. The rug was thick beneath her toes, luxurious, absurdly so. She hated how soft everything was. Hated how easily comfort could dull alertness.

She dressed slowly, deliberately, choosing control where she could find it. Dark trousers. A black blouse that fit well but not provocatively. Clothes that said I see where I am, but I will not be reduced by it.

When Mara knocked, Elena was already standing near the door.

"You're awake early again," Mara observed as she entered.

"I don't sleep well in cages," Elena replied evenly.

Mara didn't correct her.

Instead, she studied Elena for a moment longer than usual, her sharp eyes assessing posture, expression, breathing. "You're adapting," she said finally.

"Is that what you call it?"

Mara allowed herself a faint, unreadable smile. "Adaptation is survival."

They walked the east wing as they had every morning since Elena's arrival. The same corridor, the same paintings-men and women immortalized in oil and gold, all of them powerful, all of them watching. Elena wondered how many had lived and died in service of the empire that now held her.

"How many of them were happy?" Elena asked suddenly.

Mara glanced at her. "Happiness is not a measure men like Alessandro respect."

"And you?" Elena pressed. "Do you?"

Mara didn't answer.

Instead, she stopped at a tall glass door Elena had never been allowed near before.

"You may walk the inner garden today," Mara said. "With guards."

Elena masked her surprise quickly. "Why the change?"

"Privileges here are not given," Mara replied. "They are tested."

The garden was enclosed, but open to the sky. Stone walls rose high on all sides, topped with iron latticework that caught the morning light. Flowers bloomed in precise rows-roses, jasmine, white lilies-carefully maintained, painfully alive.

Elena inhaled deeply.

For the first time since being taken, she smelled earth instead of marble and gun oil. The air felt different against her skin. Real.

She walked slowly, savoring each step, each breath. The guards followed at a respectful distance, their presence a constant shadow.

"You don't need to trail me like that," she said quietly.

"Orders," one of them replied, not unkindly.

"From Alessandro," she said, not asking.

"Yes."

She stopped walking and turned slightly. "Does he watch everything?"

The guard hesitated. That alone was an answer.

"Enough," he said at last.

That word followed her back into the house.

The evening meal was served privately again. Elena noticed the pattern now-public visibility in the morning, isolation at night. Alessandro controlled when she was seen and when she was hidden.

She barely touched her food.

A low vibration rippled through the floor beneath her feet, subtle but unmistakable. Elena froze, every muscle tightening.

Another tremor followed.

Then the sound reached her ears.

Gunfire.

Not distant. Not muted.

Close.

The sharp cracks echoed through the corridors, followed by shouted commands and the unmistakable chaos of armed men moving quickly through the house. Elena's chair scraped loudly as she stood, her heart pounding violently against her ribs.

Mara appeared almost instantly, as if summoned by the noise.

"Stay here," she said firmly.

"What's happening?" Elena asked, already knowing the answer would be bad.

"An intrusion."

Before Elena could respond, Alessandro entered the room.

He moved like controlled violence given form-jacket gone, shirt sleeves rolled, a weapon already in his hand. There was blood on his knuckles, smeared carelessly as if he hadn't noticed it yet.

"Stay behind me," he said, his voice low and commanding.

The words were not a suggestion.

"I can help," Elena said, though the admission surprised even her.

Alessandro shot her a sharp look. "No. You can survive."

A gunshot rang out somewhere nearby, closer than any before.

Instinct took over. Elena stepped closer to him without thinking.

Alessandro shifted immediately, positioning himself slightly in front of her. Not dramatically. Not consciously. Just enough.

Shielding.

The realization hit her with startling force.

Men burst into the room seconds later, weapons raised, scanning corners. One of them spoke quickly. "False alarm. Perimeter breach was a decoy. They wanted to draw us out."

Alessandro exhaled slowly. "Sweep again. No assumptions."

When the men left, the silence that followed was thick and intimate, charged with adrenaline and unspoken truth.

"You didn't have to do that," Elena said quietly.

"Yes," Alessandro replied without hesitation. "I did."

"Why?" she asked.

He looked at her then, truly looked-at the fear she hadn't let break her, at the way she still stood upright, refusing to crumble.

"Because if anything happens to you," he said, his voice dropping, "everything I've built becomes meaningless."

Her breath caught. "You told me lives are currency."

"They are."

"And mine?"

A pause-brief, but telling.

"Yours," Alessandro said carefully, "is complicated."

She studied his face. "You're losing control."

His eyes darkened. "Don't mistake restraint for weakness."

"I'm not," Elena replied softly. "I'm recognizing it."

For a moment, neither of them moved. The house seemed to hold its breath.

"You live like this every day?" she asked.

"Yes."

"Doesn't it exhaust you?"

"I don't have the luxury of exhaustion."

"You've built a prison for yourself too," she said gently.

His jaw tightened. "That is none of your concern."

"But it is," she replied. "Because I'm trapped inside it with you."

The words landed harder than any accusation.

Alessandro didn't respond.

Later that night, Elena lay awake again, staring into the darkness. She replayed the moment he had stepped in front of her-not as a boss, not as a strategist, but as a man acting on instinct.

This house was a prison made of silk.

And Alessandro De Luca was just as bound by it as she was.

The thought unsettled her.

Because prisons didn't just keep people apart.

Sometimes, they forced them dangerously close.

Previous
            
Next
            
Download Book

COPYRIGHT(©) 2022