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No Escape from His Gilded Cage
img img No Escape from His Gilded Cage img Chapter 2 No.2
2 Chapters
Chapter 6 No.6 img
Chapter 7 No.7 img
Chapter 8 No.8 img
Chapter 9 No.9 img
Chapter 10 No.10 img
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Chapter 13 No.13 img
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Chapter 21 No.21 img
Chapter 22 No.22 img
Chapter 23 No.23 img
Chapter 24 No.24 img
Chapter 25 No.25 img
Chapter 26 No.26 img
Chapter 27 No.27 img
Chapter 28 No.28 img
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Chapter 30 No.30 img
Chapter 31 No.31 img
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Chapter 2 No.2

Alessio's POV

Eleonora leaves with Joey as the door to the private office closes. My gaze, cool and analytical as a surgeon's scalpel, settles on Matteo. He stands not like a man, but like a boy caught stealing, shifting his weight from one foot to the other, unable to find solid purchase on the Persian rug. Even in the dim, amber glow of the desk lamp, I can see the sheen of nervous sweat on his upper lip, a pathetic gloss over his weak features.

I do not speak immediately. The silence amplifies fear, allows imagination to conjure its own demons. I let it stretch, thicken, press down on him. He is a gnat, buzzing with irritating persistence around the fringes of my empire, drawn to the glitter of money and the illusion of influence, yet utterly lacking the spine for the grit that built it all.

Finally, when the silence has done its work and Matteo looks ready to jump out of his own skin, I lean forward. "Your sister, Eleonora," I begin, my voice devoid of any inflection, a flat plane of sound. "How old is she now?"

The question, so simple, so seemingly peripheral, seems to startle him. His eyes, watery and evasive, dart around the room as if the trap might be hidden in the bookshelves or the shadows of the drapes. "She's, uh, twenty-three, sir."

"Twenty-three." I repeat the number, not as a question, but as a fact to be examined. I let it hang in the silent air between us, heavy with unspoken implications. Old enough. Old enough for many things in our world, a world that often trades in youth and beauty as coldly as it does in contraband. A vague memory surfaces: her father's funeral years ago. A pale, slender figure swathed in black, a quiet shadow trailing behind her stepbrother. A girl, then. But more recently, a different impression lodged itself in my mind: not a girl, but a woman. Striking-yet beneath it, the tremor of fear in her lowered gaze, the tight clasp of her hands, stirred in me a dark and unexpected current of desire.

Matteo puffs out his chest slightly, a pathetic attempt to inflate his own importance. "Yes. A fine age. Marriageable, certainly." He ventures a weak, complicit smile, man-to-man. "But I plan to wait. Another two years, perhaps. There are... considerations."

"Considerations?" My left eyebrow lifts a mere fraction of an inch. I need Larry to dig into Eleonora's life.

"Family matters," he says. Then, he adds with a clumsy, almost laughable attempt at patriarchal authority, "But yes, the arrangements will be made when the time is right. A good alliance can stabilize many things."

"You will make no arrangements for Eleonora's marriage," I state, my voice dropping into a lower register, a tone that has silenced boardrooms and settled territorial disputes. It brooks no argument. "Not in two years. Not at all. Not without my express say-so. Is that clear?"

No one fucking gets to have her until I lose my interest inher.

All the false bravado drains from Matteo's face, leaving behind the pallor of raw fear. He swallows hard, his Adam's apple bobbing convulsively. "Crystal clear, Mr. Marino."

"Good." I lean back slowly, the fine leather of my chair giving a soft sigh of protest. "Now," I continue, my eyes locking onto his, "explain to me why she was here at the Elysian Reverie tonight to see Antonio Conti."

The blood drains from Matteo's face so completely he looks cadaverous. This line of questioning, the specific name, has blindsided him. He stammered, "She... I thought it would be good for her. To get out, to meet an associate of mine..."

"Cut the crap, Matteo." My voice slices through his prevarication like a shard of ice. The temperature in the room seems to drop several degrees. "You are wasting my time and trying my patience. Why was she really there?"

Under the relentless pressure of my gaze, Matteo utterly crumples. His shoulders sag, deflating as if the bones within had dissolved. The last vestige of pretense falls away. "Antonio..." he whispers, the name itself sounding like a confession. "He's been pressing me. Hard. About a debt." He takes a shuddering breath. "He suggested... he said if Eleonora joined us for a few drinksl, lent a bit of... charm to the evening, he'd be more flexible with the terms."

A red haze, hot and immediate, blurs the edges of my vision for a single, dangerous second. He suggested. The phrase echoes in my skull. Using a woman, a sister, as a bargaining chip. As a sweetener. It is cowardice of the most despicable, venal order. I've seen this play before, a tired and sordid script acted out by small men with big debts. Men who cannot stand on their own two feet, so they prostitute the dignity of their daughters, sisters, or wives, using them as currency or human shields. It is the antithesis of everything I demand in my organization-a sign of profound weakness that inevitably leads to larger, messier problems.

Without taking my eyes off Matteo's wretched face, I give a slight, almost imperceptible nod to Larry, who has stood by the door as still and silent as a granite statue. There is no hesitation, no theatrical wind-up. In one smooth, efficient motion, Larry steps forward, his massive fist connecting with Matteo's midsection with a dull, sickening thud. The air explodes from Matteo's lungs in a choked, agonized gasp. He folds in half like a pocket knife, staggering back until his shoulders crash against the bookshelf, making the crystal decanters on a nearby cart tremble and chime softly.

I wait. The only sounds are Matteo's ragged, wheezing attempts to draw breath and the steady, mocking tick of the clock. When he's managed to straighten slightly, his face a mask of pain and humiliation, hands clutched to his stomach, I speak again. My voice is dangerously calm, the calm of deep, still water that hides a lethal undertow. "Let that be a lesson in economics, Matteo. A true man settles his own debts. He does not put his sister on the negotiating table like a complimentary bottle of house wine to improve the fucking terms. Do you understand the difference?"

Matteo can only nod weakly, his eyes watering, still fighting for air.

I let him suffer for another long moment before continuing. "You're a regular in the gambling rooms here, right?."

"Yes, sir," he gasps, instantly wary, his body tensing even through the pain.

"Your debt to me," I say, leaning forward again, my eyes like chips of flint. "Not to Antonio Conti, to me. You have one month to square it. In full. Clean money."

I let the ultimatum hang, watching the scale of the impossibility dawn on his face. "And listen to me very carefully," I continue, my voice dropping to a near whisper that forces him to strain to hear. "If I hear even a whisper that you have used Eleonora's name, her presence, her future, or even her photograph to negotiate for so much as a discounted newspaper or a favorable parking spot, you will find the terms of all your arrangements, with me and with everyone else, becoming significantly less... flexible. The interest will compound in ways you cannot imagine. Do we understand each other now? Completely?"

"Yes, sir," he wheezes, the color not returning to his face. He looks like a man who has just signed his own death warrant and is only now comprehending the small print. "One month. Absolutely. And Eleonora... she won't be involved. I swear it. I promise."

"See that she isn't." I dismiss him with a flick of my hand, as one might shoo away the gnat he is. "Get him out of my sight, Larry."

As Matteo limps toward the door, bent over, each step a small agony, Larry's large hand grips his arm not to support, but to steer and expedite his removal. The door closes behind them with a solid, final thunk.

"Larry," I say, not turning around, knowing he would re-enter once the trash was deposited in the alley.

The door opens and closes softly. "Boss?"

"I want a background check on Eleonora Greco. Quiet. Thorough. I want to know everything."

A flicker of surprise, quickly mastered, passes over Larry's usually impassive face. Such a request, focused on a woman with no apparent direct connection to business, is unusual. But his loyalty is absolute. He simply nods once. "Consider it done."

My gaze lingers on the Tuesday 5 p.m. calendar entry. The biweekly sit-down. What started as a bloody necessity-five predators in a room, teeth bared, establishing borders without a war-has settled into a grim ritual. We're not friends. We're survivors who've found a temporary equilibrium. Now, we settle scores and broker deals over a bottle of grappa and a game of darts. The soft thud of a bullseye often carries more weight than a shouted threat.

Darts make me think of my unle, who's very good at it. His latest obsession is my marital status. To him, I need an heir soon because I might die being a boss of the Cosa Nostra.

And then, like a ghost slipping through a locked door, her face appears. Eleonora.

I dismiss it instantly. The Grecos are negligible. Aligning with them would be a step sideways at best, more likely a step down.

But... her blood is ours. Sicilian, through and through.

The thought curdles as I picture her brother, Matteo-a spineless leech with the morals of a stray cat. The mere concept of that man at my family table, calling me family, is viscerally repulsive.

My focus drifts to my hand. I rub my thumb and forefinger together, chasing the phantom sensation of a single, silken strand of hair I'd brushed aside. The violent shudder that went through her, the way her whole body braced for a blow... that's a lesson taught with fists, not words.

A familiar, icy current of disgust runs through me. My own childhood home was a training ground in fear, my mother's silent tears the only protest against my father's temper. I emerged from that house determined on one thing: my power would never be used that way. My hands would never bring that kind of terror to a woman.

Yet, the memory of Eleonora flinch is tattooed behind my eyes. She's all fragile angles and startled eyes that held a bewildering mix of terror and a quiet, unbroken will. Her hair was a cascade of unruly chestnut curls, a wildness utterly foreign to the sleek, controlled women in my orbit.

"Boss?" Larry's voice is a low rumble, pulling me back. I'd forgotten he was there, a mountain of quiet vigilance by the door. I clear my throat, a sharp, physical action to banish the persistent image, and tuck my phone away.

Standing, I smooth my jacket. "Let's move. I have other places to be."

I am surrounded every day by women crafted to be appealing. They are part of the scenery. But Eleonora, inexplicably, become a fixation. And I can't seem to shake it.

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