
The Mafia Debt
Chapter 3
The sobs didn't last long. They were a luxury her new reality couldn't afford. They left her feeling hollowed out and raw, but the panic had receded, replaced by a numb, chilling clarity. She was here. This was happening.
With stiff, mechanical movements, she peeled off her wet clothes, leaving them in a damp heap on the pristine floor. The silk of the camisole felt alien against her skin—cool, slippery, and expensive. It was another reminder that nothing here was hers. She was a doll being dressed for its owner.
A digital clock on the bedside table glowed 7:48 PM. Punctual. The word echoed in the silence. She had twelve minutes.
She used the time to explore her cage. The bathroom was stocked with everything—toiletries, towels, a hair dryer—all high-end and utterly impersonal. The desk drawer was empty. The closet held more clothing, all in her size, all in the same palette of ivory, grey, and black. No vibrant colors. Nothing that spoke of Elara.
At 7:59, she stood by the locked door, her hand hovering near the knob. She jumped when the lock disengaged with a soft, electronic buzz right at 8:00. The precision was unnerving.
Taking a deep breath, she turned the knob and stepped out.
The penthouse was different at night. The city lights through the floor-to-ceiling windows were a dazzling carpet of diamonds, but inside, the lighting was low, casting long, dramatic shadows. It felt even more like a stage.
He was waiting for her at a dining table she hadn't noticed before, a long slab of dark wood that seemed to float in the space. He had changed into dark trousers and a simple black sweater that made him look less like a CEO and more like a panther at rest. He was studying something on a tablet, which he set aside as she approached.
“Sit,” he said, not as a command, but a simple directive. His eyes tracked her every movement as she pulled out the heavy chair and sat opposite him. The distance between them felt both vast and infinitesimally small.
A silent woman in a chef’s jacket emerged from the kitchen and placed two bowls of steaming soup in front of them. She disappeared as quickly as she came.
“Do you like art, Miss Rossi?” Kaelan asked, picking up his spoon. The question was so mundane, so utterly out of place, that it threw her completely.
She stared at him. “I… I’m an artist. So yes.”
“I know what you are,” he said, his tone implying he knew far more than that. “What moves you? The Old Masters? The Impressionists? The chaotic nonsense they push now?”
It was a test. She could feel it. He was probing her, trying to find a lever, a pressure point.
“I appreciate the skill of the Masters,” she said carefully, picking up her own spoon. The soup was some kind of fragrant broth, light and perfect. She had no appetite. “But I’m drawn to the emotion in the Expressionists. Schiele. Modersohn-Becker. The ones who painted feeling, not just form.”
He watched her, his expression unreadable. “Schiele. Dark. Introspective. Often considered grotesque.” He took a sip of wine from the crystal glass beside him. “Interesting.”
They ate in silence for a few minutes. The only sound was the soft clink of silverware on fine china.
“Why am I here?” The question left her lips before she could stop it, fueled by the surreal normalcy of the moment.
He finished his soup and dabbed his mouth with a linen napkin. “You are here because your brother is a fool, and you are not.”
“That’s not an answer.”
His eyes flicked up to hers, and the air in the room grew colder. “You are here because I allowed you to be. You offered a trade. I accepted. The ‘why’ beyond that is mine to know and yours to discover, should I choose to show you.”
The woman returned to clear the bowls and bring the main course—seared fish with delicate vegetables arranged like a sculpture on the plate. The artistry of it was lost on Elara. It was just more evidence of his controlled, perfect world.
“What happens now?” she asked, her voice quieter.
“Now,” he said, cutting into his fish with precise movements, “you finish your dinner. Then you will go to your room. Tomorrow, you will have breakfast. We will repeat this process.”
“And when will you…” she trailed off, unable to finish the sentence. When will you collect on the rest of the debt? When will you touch me?
He knew exactly what she meant. A slow, knowing smile touched his lips, the first genuine expression she’d seen from him, and it was more terrifying than his coldness.
“All in good time, myshka,” he murmured, the endearment a dark promise. “I don’t rush my acquisitions. I savor them. I learn them. Every brushstroke, every reaction.” He held her gaze, and she felt utterly laid bare. “The anticipation is often more… instructive… than the event itself.”
He was studying her. Her fears, her reactions, her breaking points. This entire evening—the fine food, the cultured conversation, the locked door—was all part of his examination.
The rest of the meal passed in a blur. She ate what she could, her throat tight. When the silent woman brought out a dish of glistening berries for dessert, Elara shook her head. “No, thank you. I’m finished.”
Kaelan didn’t insist. He simply nodded.
She stood, her legs feeling weak. “May I be excused?” The words tasted like gall.
He leaned back in his chair, swirling the dark red wine in his glass. “You may.”
She turned to leave, desperate for the relative safety of her locked room.
“Elara.”
She froze at the door, her back to him. He had never used her first name before.
“The painting in the foyer,” he said, his voice casual. “What do you think it’s about?”
She closed her eyes, seeing the slash of crimson on black. “It’s about violence,” she whispered, the truth of it falling from her without thought. “It’s about one brutal, beautiful thing trying to survive in a world of darkness.”
The silence behind her was profound.
When he spoke again, his voice was low, with a new, unfamiliar edge. “Go to your room.”
She didn’t need to be told twice. She all but fled down the hallway. She heard the lock engage behind her the second she closed the door. She stood there, back against the wood, her heart pounding.
Out in the dining room, Kaelan Thorne remained at the table, staring at the foyer where the painting hung unseen. He brought his glass to his lips, but he didn’t drink.
A slow, genuine smile finally spread across his face.
“Myshka,” he whispered to the empty, perfect room. “You see too much.
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