
The Mafia Debt
Chapter 4
The lock disengaging at 8:00 AM was as jarring as an alarm bell. Elara was already awake, had been for hours, staring at the seamless join where the wall met the ceiling. She had slept in fits and starts, her dreams a chaotic montage of running through endless, sterile hallways while a pair of winter-blue eyes watched from the shadows.
The door opened to reveal not Lysander, but the silent woman from dinner. She was older than Elara had realized, with a stern, lined face and hair pulled into a severe bun. She held a stack of fresh towels.
“Breakfast is in thirty minutes,” the woman said, her voice as neutral as her expression. She placed the towels in the bathroom and turned to leave.
“Wait,” Elara said, the word coming out in a rush. “What’s your name?”
The woman paused, looking at her as if she’d asked for the nuclear codes. “Irina,” she said finally. “Mr. Thorne prefers punctuality.” And with that, she was gone, leaving the door open. An invitation. A test.
The freedom to leave her room felt like another trap. Elara showered quickly, the water impossibly hot and powerful, and dressed in another set of the provided clothes—soft, grey linen pants and a simple black top. She braided her damp hair over one shoulder, a small attempt to impose order on the chaos.
She found him not at the dining table, but on the vast terrace outside the living room. The morning air was crisp, the city sprawled below them humming with a life she could see but not hear, muted by the height and the thick glass barriers.
Kaelan stood at the railing, a mug of black coffee in hand. He wore another perfectly tailored suit, this one a deep charcoal. He looked like he’d been awake for hours, his energy focused and intense.
A small table was set for two. He didn’t turn as she approached.
“Sit.”
She sat. The table held a spread of fresh fruit, pastries, yogurt, and a carafe of coffee. It looked like a magazine shoot. Irina appeared, poured her a cup of coffee, and vanished.
“Did you sleep well?” he asked, his back still to her. It wasn’t a polite inquiry. It was a demand for data.
“No,” she said truthfully. There was no point in lying. He’d probably known the moment her breathing had changed in the night.
He finally turned. The morning light was unforgiving, etching the sharp lines of his face, the faint shadows under his eyes. He looked, for the first time, like a man who carried a weight, not a monster who was one.
“You will,” he stated, taking the seat opposite her. “The body acclimates to its environment. Even a hostile one.”
He picked up a newspaper—an actual, physical broadsheet—and began to read. The message was clear: her presence was noted, but not required for conversation. She was part of the scenery now.
Elara picked at a strawberry, its sweetness cloying in her dry mouth. The silence stretched, thick and heavy. She watched him over the rim of her coffee cup. He read with an unnerving focus, his eyes scanning the columns, occasionally flicking to a smartphone beside his plate, its screen lighting up with silent notifications. This was his morning ritual. This was the calm, controlled center of the storm that was his life.
After ten minutes, he folded the paper neatly and set it aside. His eyes landed on her, and she felt the familiar jolt of his full attention.
“You will need something to do,” he announced. “Idleness breeds dissent. And stupidity.”
Before she could respond, he gestured with his chin toward the living room. “There’s a studio. North light. It should be adequate.”
Elara’s heart stumbled. A studio? He was giving her a studio? The part of her that had been shriveling inside leapt at the word. It was a hook, baited with the one thing she truly loved.
“Why?” The question was out before she could stop it, laced with suspicion.
One dark eyebrow arched. “I told you. I don’t want you idle. And I’m curious.”
“About what?”
“About what happens when I give a caged bird something to sing about.” He took a sip of coffee, his gaze never leaving hers. “I want to see what you create when you have nothing left to lose but the favor of your keeper.”
The cruelty of it was breathtaking. He was giving her art not as a comfort, but as another lens through which to examine her. He would study her creations like a psychologist studying a Rorschach blot, looking for cracks, for weaknesses, for hope he could systematically dismantle.
Irina appeared to clear the plates. Kaelan stood, straightening his cufflinks. “Lysander will show you. The supplies are there. Use them or don’t. It’s of no consequence to me.”
He walked back inside, heading for his study. The audience was over.
A moment later, Lysander stood in the doorway to the terrace. He didn’t speak, merely waited.
Elara rose on unsteady legs and followed him. He led her not to the hallway with the bedrooms, but to a different door, one she had assumed was a closet. He opened it.
Her breath caught.
It was a studio. A serious one. The north wall was indeed a single large window, flooding the room with perfect, cool, shadowless light. Canvases of various sizes leaned against one wall, blank and pristine. A taboret held a collection of oils, acrylics, brushes—professional grade, everything of the highest quality. There was an easel, a sketching table, even a small kiln for ceramics. It was a world, entire and complete, hidden behind a door in her prison.
It was the most beautiful and horrifying thing she had ever seen.
Lysander left, closing the door behind him. She was alone.
She walked to the window first. The view was different here. She could see the curve of the river, the bridges, the endless flow of tiny cars. It was life, happening at a distance.
She trailed her fingers over the bristles of a new brush, picked up a tube of cobalt blue. The weight of it in her hand was familiar and alien. This was a gift from the devil. Taking it felt like accepting a part of her sentence. Using it felt like surrendering a part of her soul.
But not using it… that felt like dying.
With trembling hands, she selected a small canvas and set it on the easel. She squeezed a dollop of phthalo blue onto the palette, the color vivid and accusing.
What did one paint when one had nothing left to lose?
She didn’t know. So she just started. She mixed the blue with white, with black, making a storm of grey. She made broad, angry slashes across the pristine white, not painting anything, just feeling the drag of the bristles, the release of the motion.
She lost track of time. There was only the smell of the paint, the growing storm on the canvas, and the terrifying, liberating feeling of having one small piece of herself back, even if it had been given to her by her jailer.
She didn’t hear the door open.
“An interesting start.”
She jumped, spinning around, the brush slipping from her fingers and splattering grey paint on the polished concrete floor.
Kaelan Thorne stood in the doorway, watching her. He had removed his suit jacket and loosened his tie. He’d been watching her for how long?
He stepped into the room, his eyes on the canvas, not on her. He studied the chaotic, angry strokes of grey and blue.
“It’s nothing,” she said quickly, moving to block his view. “Just… messing around.”
He stopped in front of her, so close she could smell the clean scent of his soap mingling with the sharp odor of the paint. He looked down at the splash of grey on the floor, then back at her.
“A mess can be cleaned,” he said, his voice low. He reached out, not for her, but for the brush she’d dropped. He picked it up, his fingers brushing against hers. A deliberate contact. Her skin prickled.
He held the brush, studying the bristles coated in grey. “But the impulse to make the mess… that’s more interesting.” He finally looked at her, his gaze intense, probing. “What were you trying to erase, Elara?”
He handed the brush back to her, his fingers lingering for a fraction of a second against hers.
“Keep going,” he said, turning to leave. “I’m watching.”
The door closed behind him, and Elara stood alone in the perfect light, holding the brush like a weapon, her heart thundering in her chest.
He wasn’t just giving her a way to pass the time.
He was giving her a way to confess.
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