The courtroom was buzzing with whispers, the kind that always followed high-profile cases. Ishani Mehra adjusted her black robe, her fingers brushing the rim of her glasses as she neatly stacked her documents. She was aware of the eyes on her—judges, opponents, journalists—but she had long learned to ignore them.
At twenty-eight, Ishani had already made a name for herself in the legal world. Not because she was the most beautiful, not because she fit the sleek image of a power lawyer, but because she won. Her curves and dusky complexion often made people underestimate her, but the moment she opened her mouth, her words cut sharper than any blade.
Today, she was up against a notorious corporation with deep ties to organized crime. And sitting at the back of the hall, watching with the stillness of a predator, was the man whispered about in every underworld tale—Dante Moretti, the Italian devil himself.
He didn't belong in a courtroom, not really. With his dark tailored suit, silver cufflinks, and icy blue gaze, he looked like a king who had wandered into a peasant's squabble. But Ishani knew better. The Moretti name carried blood and fear across continents.
Their eyes met once, briefly, during the cross-examination. His gaze didn't waver. Cold. Unblinking. Almost amused. She didn't flinch. If anything, she let her lips curve into the faintest smile before she tore his ally's testimony apart with precise, ruthless logic.
By the time the gavel struck, the verdict was in her favor. A small but significant victory. Another thorn in his empire's side.
She didn't celebrate. She simply packed her files, adjusted her dupatta over her robe, and walked out with her chin held high.
But victory came at a price.
The underground parking lot was dim, the echo of her heels sharp against the concrete floor. Ishani's phone buzzed with congratulatory messages, but she ignored them. She wasn't naïve. Winning against men like Dante Moretti came with consequences.
She sensed him before she saw him. A ripple in the silence, the heavy weight of presence.
"Avvocato."
The voice rolled out like velvet dipped in poison. Smooth. Dangerous. Italian accent thick enough to make her heartbeat stumble for half a second. She turned, spine straight, and found him leaning against a black Maserati like it was his throne.
"Mr. Moretti." She kept her tone professional, crisp. "Parking lots aren't usually open to spectators."
He pushed off the car, each step deliberate, predatory. "You enjoy playing savior, don't you? Defending men who have no right to breathe, much less freedom."
"I defend the law," she corrected sharply. "Something tells me you wouldn't understand the concept."
His lips curved, but the smile didn't touch his eyes. He closed the distance, his cologne—dark cedar and leather—flooding her senses. "The law is a toy. And you?" His gaze swept over her, slow and dismissive. "A pretty, plump distraction dressed like a warrior. Cute. But fragile."
Ishani's chin lifted. "Funny. For a king, you seem awfully rattled by a woman you call 'fragile'."
The smirk vanished. His eyes narrowed, ice turning to steel. For a heartbeat, silence thickened between them. Hatred, yes—but beneath it, something hotter. Something he would never admit.
Dante leaned down, his lips hovering just above her ear. "Careful, bella. I don't hate losing. And I don't forgive those who make me bleed."
Her pulse betrayed her, hammering hard, but her voice stayed steady. "Good. Because I don't forgive bullies who mistake fear for respect."
Their eyes locked—fire against ice, lawyer against mafia king.
And then, just as quickly, headlights slashed across the parking lot. A car screeched to a halt. Ishani turned, startled—long enough for Dante to murmur one last warning, his voice a low growl.
"This is only the beginning."
By the time she looked back, he was gone.
Her hands trembled as she clutched her files tighter, but her lips curved into the faintest smile. If Dante Moretti thought she would run, he had just made his biggest mistake.