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Chapter 3 - Heaven And Damian POV's

//HEAVEN'S POV//

By the time I reach Moretti Manor, the sun is rising.

The world looks different in daylight — softer, slower, easier to lie to. But not me.

I've never been fooled by light.

The mansion looms like a relic of a dead empire. Marble floors, heavy chandeliers, stained glass windows telling stories no one cares to remember. My boots echo down the long hall as I enter my father's old office.

It still smells like him.

Whiskey. Smoke. Steel.

His chair is empty now, but not for long.

Because I'm taking it back.

I run my hand along the mahogany desk, fingers brushing the grooves he used to drum when he was thinking. He built an empire that rotted from the inside out — because he trusted the wrong people. Because he wasn't ruthless enough.

I won't make the same mistake.

I won't trust anyone.

Especially not the man with ash in his soul and a mouth that tastes like damnation.

A phone buzzes.

Private number.

I answer, already knowing.

"You're home," Damien says.

Of course he knows. He always knows.

"You watching me now?" I ask.

"Always."

I sit in the chair — his chair — and kick my feet up on the desk. "Enjoy the view?"

He chuckles. "Immensely."

There's a pause.

Then he says something that wraps around my spine like a cold blade.

"You're in danger, Heaven."

I smirk. "So are they."

"No. Not them." His voice lowers. "You've made enemies within your own ranks."

I go still.

"How do you know that?"

"I read people better than they read their own thoughts."

There's another pause.

Then he adds, "You should let me help."

I laugh softly. "And become what? Your kept queen in a kingdom of corpses?"

"No," Damien says darkly. "My equal."

The silence that follows is suffocating.

Because for the first time… I don't know if I want to say no.

//DAMIEN'S POV//

She hung up.

Didn't need to speak. Didn't need to thank me.

Heaven Moretti doesn't say thank you.

She says don't bleed too much when I ruin you.

I sit in my armchair in the penthouse, staring out at the skyline, holding her necklace in my hand. The one she left behind during our last war. A delicate silver chain with a charm shaped like a flame.

Fitting.

She burns through every room she walks into — a wildfire in red lips and leather.

And the men around her?

They're either falling in love or falling dead.

I light a cigar.

Take one slow drag.

And then I make a call.

"Put eyes on Marcellus," I say. "He's planning something behind her back."

"Copy that, boss."

I hang up and look down at the glass of bourbon in my hand.

For the first time in years, I'm not sure if I want to destroy someone.

Or worship them.

//HEAVEN'S POV//

I didn't sleep.

By nightfall, the manor feels like a ticking bomb.

My phone buzzes again.

This time, it's a message.

From an unknown number:

You're not your father. And we don't kneel for little girls who play dress-up with death.

Attached is a photo.

Of my father's grave.

The headstone has been vandalized — slashed with red paint.

TRUST NO ONE.

Beneath it, a single rose.

Black.

And on the stem, a small tag:

D.

Damien's warning wasn't just noise.

It was a siren.

And I ignored it.

But I won't make that mistake again.

//Heaven's POV//

I don't sleep.

The manor stays silent, but my head doesn't. Every creak in the floorboards, every flicker of shadow under the doors feels like a whisper from the grave.

Whiskey. Smoke. Steel.

His scent still clings to everything. The walls. The desk. Me.

I don't know how long I sit there in my father's chair, but my legs ache from staying still. My phone lies face-down on the desk, that message burned into my skull:

You're not your father. And we don't kneel for little girls who play dress-up with death.

The paint. The grave. The black rose.

The tag with Damien's initial.

But it wasn't from him. I know it wasn't.

Damien would never sign a threat.

No, this was someone trying to turn the blade sideways — twist his presence into a threat.

But it did something else instead.

It made me want him closer.

A soft knock comes at the glass balcony door. My body goes stiff, and I reach under the desk for the pistol I keep taped to the underside.

I step softly to the curtains and pull them aside.

Damien.

Standing on the terrace, dark suit, no tie, hair wind-swept. As if he's been walking through a warzone and only paused now to catch his breath.

I unlock the door and open it.

"What the hell are you doing here?" I whisper.

His eyes flick to the gun in my hand.

"Cute," he murmurs. "You gonna shoot me or invite me in?"

I don't move.

He steps closer, until we're chest to chest. His cologne hits first — clean, sharp, masculine. Like winter fire.

Then comes the heat.

"The grave," I say.

"I know."

"It wasn't you."

"No."

"Then why—"

His hand lifts, fingers sliding into my hair, gripping just enough to make me inhale.

"Because they wanted you to doubt me," he says. "And it worked."

I should push him away.

But I don't.

Instead, I press the barrel of the gun to his chest.

And his lips part like I just kissed him.

"You're not scared of me," I murmur.

"No."

"You should be."

His other hand comes to my waist, dragging me against him. "You think I haven't already imagined how you'd taste with a gun in your hand and vengeance on your tongue?"

My pulse kicks. "Then why are you here?"

"To remind you that you're not alone."

A long beat passes. The gun between us. The silence thick.

And then I lower it.

He wastes no time. His mouth crashes to mine like a man unchained, and I meet him with teeth and fire. His hands grip my thighs, lifting me onto the desk. Papers scatter. My back hits cool wood. I wrap my legs around his waist.

I don't want gentle.

I want war.

Because we are both made for it.

His lips move to my jaw, my neck, the pulse beneath my skin.

"You came here to warn me," I whisper. "But this—this is something else."

He pauses, breath ragged. "This is me forgetting every rule I made for myself the second you sat in that chair."

He tears open the buttons of my blouse.

And I let him.

Because tonight, I don't need a crown.

I need ruin.

suddenly something flashed by in a moment, it was Damien with the back of my pistol.

He knocked me unconscious with it, motherfucker.

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