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MARRIED TO THE MAFIA KING WHO KILLED MY FATHER  Novel Cover

MARRIED TO THE MAFIA KING WHO KILLED MY FATHER

She came to kill him. He made her his queen. Valeria Romano spent five years with one purpose ... destroy Lorenzo De Luca, the mafia king who murdered her father. She trained in silence, sacrificed everything, and finally had him in her crosshairs on a cold Sicilian night. Then he showed her the truth. Her father's killer was never Lorenzo. It was the man who held her at the funeral. The man she called every week for five years. The man who handed her the wrong name and watched her walk toward the wrong target while he rebuilt his empire on her father's grave. Her uncle Marco. Now Valeria is bound to the enemy she came to destroy ... in a contract marriage she didn't choose, inside a world she doesn't yet understand, hunting a man who has been ten steps ahead of everyone for twenty years. But Marco has never faced a woman who has nothing left to lose. As the truth unravels and the bodies pile up and the line between hatred and something far more dangerous begins to blur ... Valeria must decide who she is willing to become to protect the people she loves. Because in Lorenzo De Luca's world, power is everything. And she is about to become the most powerful thing in it. Some wars are fought with guns. The deadliest ones are fought from the inside.
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Chapter 1

The bullet had his name on it.

Valeria knew because she had written it herself... in the small leather notebook under her mattress, the one with the cracked spine and the coffee stain on the cover. Three words on the first page, the night of her father's funeral when she was nineteen and the world had caved in on her.

Lorenzo De Luca. Dead.

Five years of planning. Tonight she was finally ready.

"Talk to me, Val." Rino's voice cut sharp through the earpiece. "Guards rotate the east wall in three minutes. You need to move."

"I'm moving."

"You're standing still."

"Rino." She pressed her back flat against the stone ledge, rain soaking through her jacket. "What does moving look like from your angle?"

"Like a woman who's been on this rooftop forty minutes doing nothing."

"I'm thinking."

"Think faster. Ninety seconds."

She wasn't thinking. She was watching him... Lorenzo De Luca through the scope. Courtyard below. No jacket, sleeves rolled, phone to his ear. Standing like a man who had never once imagined someone might be aiming at his skull from two hundred meters up.

Arrogant. Everything about him screamed it.

He was about to find out how wrong that was.

"Sixty seconds, Val."

Slow breath in. Slower out. Her father's voice somewhere in the back of her head, steady hands, piccola. Never rush the thing you can only do once.

Her finger curved around the trigger.

She never heard them coming.

One second the scope was perfectly aligned. The next, the rifle was gone... ripped from her grip and her face hit concrete hard enough to split her lip. A knee drove into her spine. Zip tie on her wrists before she could even process it.

She twisted, got her knee into a ribcage, heard someone curse.

Then a forearm across her throat killed the fight completely.

"Don't." The voice was almost bored.

Five men. She counted from the ground. Tactical gear, weapons drawn, positioned like they'd been there for hours.

They'd known she was coming.

"Val? Val, what's-" Rino's voice cut to static.

Just rain. Just five pairs of boots on wet concrete and the fountain still running in the courtyard below like absolutely nothing had happened.

The hood came off in a study that smelled of cedarwood and old money.

Dark wood. Books that had actually been read. A dead fire. Rain on tall windows.

Behind the desk is Lorenzo De Luca.

Nothing like what five years of hatred had built. She had expected a monster. Instead he sat with one leg crossed, jacket off, looking at her with the patience of a man who had already decided how this conversation ended.

Dark eyes. A jaw that had taken hits and not moved. A thin white scar near his left temple, someone had gotten close enough to mark him once.

Just once.

He let the silence stretch. She refused to fill it.

He spoke first.

"You're bleeding," he said.

She'd forgotten about her lip. She said nothing.

"There's a cloth on the desk."

"I don't want your cloth."

"Suit yourself." He picked up a glass of water, sipped slowly, set it down. Unbothered. "You had a clean shot tonight."

She stared.

"Two hundred and twelve meters," he continued. "Wind was low, I was stationary four minutes. Any competent shooter makes that." He tilted his head. "Your instructor in Zagreb... Borek, said you were better than competent."

Her blood went cold. "You know about Zagreb."

"I know about Zagreb. I know about the eighteen months before that in Palermo. I know about the contact you used for this rifle and that she overcharged you." He leaned forward. "I know about the notebook, Valeria. The coffee stain. What's written on the first page."

The room felt smaller.

"How long have you been watching me?" she said.

"Three years."

Three years. She had been careful. Obsessively careful. Different cities, different names, cash only. She pressed her nails into her palm to keep her face still.

"Why?" she said.

He placed a thick folder on the desk between them.

"Because the same night you decided I killed your father," he said, "I was in a Rome hotel room watching the news and finding out Enzo Romano was dead. And I spent the next six months trying to understand why someone killed my business partner and made it look like me."

"My father was not your business partner."

"Everyone knows what Marco told them."

The name hit her like a slap. "Don't say his name like that."

"Like what?"

"Like you know something."

"I know a great deal." He pushed the folder toward her. "Page seven. Just the photograph. Tell me if you recognize the man next to the port authority officer. Tell me the timestamp." A pause. "Then tell me where your uncle said he was the night your father died."

She looked at the folder. Looked at him. No smirk. No satisfaction. Just those dark steady eyes, like a man who had been carrying something heavy and had finally found who he needed to put it down in front of.

"If this is a trap..." she started.

"It isn't."

"Then why are we here? Why not let your men put a bullet in me on that rooftop?"

"Because I want to offer you a deal." He stood, moved to the window, looked out at the rain. "Your father's real killer. Exposed. Destroyed. Everything he built, gone." He turned. "Marco Romano has been using both our families against each other for five years. I am finished letting him."

"There's a condition," she said flatly.

"Yes."

"What?"

His eyes met hers. Steady. Not a flicker of doubt.

"Marry me."

The rain hit the windows. The dead fire breathed cold into the room.

Valeria laughed... short, sharp, disbelieving.

"You're serious."

"I am always serious."

"A contract marriage. Six months, maybe twelve." He said it like a business proposal. "Together we're the only two people in Italy with the motive and resources to bring Marco down. Separately, you keep shooting the wrong man and I keep waiting for an opening he keeps closing."

She stared at the man she had hated for five years. Who had just dismantled everything she knew in ten minutes.

"And if I say no?"

He reached over and cut the zip tie. Her hands came free. She didn't move.

"You walk out. Your rifle is at the front gate. Rino is in the car park, my men released him already." He sat back. "And tomorrow you go back to planning a murder that will never fix what happened to your family."

She rubbed her wrists. Said nothing.

"Open the folder, Valeria."

She opened it. Page seven. Grainy CCTV, two men shaking hands outside a port warehouse three kilometers from where her father was shot.

She recognized the warehouse.

She recognized the man.

Her uncle Marco. Face turned just enough toward the camera to be unmistakable.

Timestamp - 11:47 PM.

Her father died at 11:52.

Five minutes. Marco had been five minutes away.

The room went quiet inside her, not the study, the study had rain and a ticking clock and her own breathing. But inside her, where five Qyears of certainty had lived like a foundation.

Silence.

Like something had just collapsed.

She closed the folder. Placed her hands flat on the desk. Looked up at Lorenzo De Luca.

"Tell me everything," she said.

And the real nightmare began.

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