The deal had been struck, sealed with wine and handshakes. To my father, the night was a triumph. To me, it was a cage snapping shut.
When Adrian finally rose from the table, all dark lines and quiet menace, my father's hand clamped down on my shoulder.
"Isabella," he said firmly, as though I might resist. "Escort your future husband to his car. It is only proper."
Future husband. The words soured on my tongue. Still, I nodded, because defiance in front of him was unthinkable.
Adrian waited near the door, his expression unreadable, as if he already knew I would obey. Without a word, he gestured for me to lead. The weight of his presence trailed after me, heavy, suffocating.
The night air outside was cool, the scent of rain clinging to the stone walkway. His sleek black car waited at the edge of the drive, flanked by two men in suits whose eyes never wavered.
I turned to face him, chin lifted despite the thundering of my heart. "Do you always agree to marriages like business contracts?"
His brows arched slightly, the barest flicker of amusement crossing his features. "You don't approve?" His voice was smooth, deep, carrying an edge that mocked me for even questioning him.
"I don't belong to anyone," I said quietly, though my voice trembled.
He stepped closer, invading my space with calculated ease. I could feel the heat of him, the subtle spice of his cologne. His eyes locked onto mine, sharp and consuming.
"You already do," he murmured, so low I thought I imagined it. "You just don't realize it yet."
My breath caught, anger and fear tangling in my chest. "You're wrong."
Something flickered in his gaze-challenge, maybe
even intrigue-but just as quickly, the mask returned. He leaned back, his lips curving into the faintest, cruelest smile.
"You'll learn," he said simply.
Before I could retort, one of his men opened the car door. Adrian slid inside without a glance back, leaving me standing alone in the night, my fists clenched at my sides.
For the first time, I understood exactly what it meant to be prey.
Adrain POV
The ride home was silent, the hum of the engine filling the space while the city lights bled past the tinted windows. I leaned back against the leather seat, loosening my tie, letting the events of the night replay with mechanical precision.
The deal was solid. Giovanni would provide me with access to his docks, his network, and his silence. In return, I gave him what he craved-protection, fear, the weight of my name.
And his daughter.
I almost laughed at the thought. Isabella had looked at me as if I'd stolen the ground from beneath her feet. Fire in her eyes, trembling in her voice. She was naïve, raised in silk and shadows, but there was steel under the surface. I saw it when she dared to speak back to me, when she tried to claim she belonged to no one.
That defiance would break. They all broke eventually.
"Home," I said flatly, my voice cutting through the stillness.
"Yes, sir," Marco replied from the driver's seat.
When the car pulled up the long drive to my mansion, the iron gates closed behind us with a metallic groan. The house loomed in the night-sharp lines, dark windows, a fortress carved from wealth and fear.
Marco stepped out quickly, hurrying to open my door. "I'll stay with the men, make sure everything is secure."
I nodded once. "Good. Take the night when you're done."
"Yes, sir."
Inside, the silence was different. Not the tense quiet of negotiations, but the hollow kind that clung to empty halls. I shrugged off my jacket, handed it to the maid without a glance, and climbed the staircase.
The master suite was dark until I flicked on the light. I stripped away the armor of the day-tie, shirt, cufflinks-before stepping into the shower. Hot water pounded against my skin, streaking down the scars I never bothered to hide. Scars earned, scars that reminded me of why softness had no place in my world.
Marriage. The word tasted strange. It wasn't about loyalty, or love. It was strategy. Control. Giovanni's daughter was nothing more than another asset-beautiful, yes, but still a pawn.
And yet... her eyes lingered in my mind. Green fire behind the fear. The way she stood her ground, even when I claimed her.
I shut off the water abruptly, irritated by the thought. She meant nothing.
Wrapping a towel around my waist, I crossed the room to the balcony. The city stretched below me, restless and alive. From here, I owned it. Every deal, every debt, every life taken in my name.
Still, as I lit a cigarette, I caught myself wondering how long it would take before Isabella realized the truth.
She wasn't entering a marriage.
She was stepping into a cage.
And I held the key.