First conflict! The dead coming back to claim what they were owed.
"Lower the gun," I growled. "Or I swear to God I will end this myself."
My mother smiled, slow and disappointed. "Still emotional, That's always been your flaw, Lucien.
The cars behind us revved louder, Matteo's men, My men. Enemies circling like sharks who smelled blood in the water. This wasn't a rescue, It was a stage.
"You're supposed to be dead," I said
She shrugged lightly, "So were you. Yet here we are." Ava's voice shook but held, You're his mother?
"Yes," she replied "And you are the problem." That snapped something in me.
I shoved the door open and stepped out, gun raised, body angled in front of Ava. Headlights burned my back. If she pulled the trigger, I would drop first.
"You don't get to judge her," I said. "You don't get to touch her."
"She signed your death warrant," my mother said, "Twice."
Ava sucked in a breath, "I didn't know about the second one." My mother's gaze sharpened. You knew enough!
Second conflict: Truth versus manipulation.
I turned back to Ava. What second warrant?
Her eyes filled again, shame flooding her face. After Milan, they came back. They said if I ever contacted you again, if I ever warned you, they would finish the job. They made me sign a sealed clause. A contingency."
My chest tightened painfully. A contingency for what?
For the heir, my mother answered smoothly. "For the bloodline."
Everything inside me went cold.
"You authorized a hit on my unborn child," I said slowly, disbelief and fury twisting together. She didn't flinch, "A Moretti heir raised by weakness would destroy us all."
I laughed then, a broken sound that scraped my throat raw. You killed your own grandchild!
Her eyes hardened, "I protected the empire." Ava stepped out from behind me before I could stop her. "You don't get to decide who lives and dies anymore."
My mother's gun followed her movement instantly. "I do."
Third conflict, Power versus love
The air vibrated with tension. One wrong breath and everything would explode.
"Lucien," Ava whispered without looking at me. "If she pulls the trigger, don't hesitate."
The thought of losing her again made my vision blur red. Fate was cruel, but this felt intentional.
"You think I wouldn't choose her" I said to my mother. "Over you and Over the empire."
She tilted her head, studying me like a failed experiment. "I know you would. That's why you can't rule."
She raised her gun higher, Time slowed.
I moved.
The shot rang out, deafening in the tunnel, and chaos erupted. My men fired, Matteo's men fired back, Screams echoed off concrete walls. I tackled Ava to the ground as bullets sparked against metal.
When the smoke cleared enough for me to see, my mother was gone.
No body, No blood, Just empty space and retreating engines.
Ava clung to me, shaking violently. Is she gone? "For now," I said.
We didn't stay, Staying meant dying.
We drove hard and fast, ditching the car two miles out and switching vehicles twice before sunrise. By the time we reached the safe house, the sky was turning gray and my nerves were shredded.
I locked the door behind us and turned to her. Silence pressed in.
"You should have told me," I said quietly.
"I was trying to protect you," she replied. "I always was."
I paced the room, fists clenching and unclenching. By lying! By signing my death?
Her voice cracked, "By surviving." I stopped.
She looked so small then, standing in the center of the room with dried blood on her sleeve and fire still burning in her eyes. The woman fate refused to let me forget.
"You still love me," I said
It wasn't a question. She didn't deny it, "I never stopped." That truth hit harder than any bullet. I crossed the room and pulled her into my arms, holding her like if I let go she would disappear again. Her body fit against mine like it was always meant to.
Fated mates, A curse and a promise.
Her breath hitched, "Lucien, there's something else." I pulled back, What now?
She hesitated, then reached into her bag and pulled out a folded medical report. My stomach dropped before I even opened it.
"You said they took the baby," I said slowly.
She nodded, "They told me he died."
I unfolded the paper with shaking hands.
Positive, Eight weeks, Alive.
My heart slammed against my ribs.
"You're pregnant," I whispered, Her eyes shone with tears. "Yes"
Hope flared bright and dangerous, And then my phone rang, I answered without looking.
Matteo's voice poured through the line, smug and satisfied. "Congratulations, cousin! On the baby." Cold dread flooded my veins. How do you know? I demanded.
He chuckled, "Your mother told me, She tells me everything now."
The floor seemed to drop away
"She's working with you," I said
"No," he replied, "She's working for me."
Ava stared at me, fear dawning on her face as she read my expression.
Matteo continued, his tone almost gentle. "You have twenty four hours to hand over Moretti Global Or I end the bloodline myself." The call ended.
I looked at Ava, at the woman carrying my child, the woman who signed my death and held my heart in the same hands.
Outside, engines roared in the distance.
They had found us again.