Ficool

Chapter 2 - Chapter 2 – The Glass Fortress

‎(Lucien Moretti's POV)

‎The moment I saw her, I knew.

‎She didn't belong here. Not in my world. Not in my city. Not anywhere near me.

‎Aria Reyes.

‎The name alone made the blood in my veins tighten. I'd heard it whispered, associated with someone else—someone I had reason to despise—but I had never expected her face to appear like this.

‎Confusion. Fear. Innocence.

‎Danger.

‎All wrapped in one fragile human being.

‎She had the same defiance in her eyes I'd seen once in my mother before… before she made a mistake I would never forgive.

‎And that mistake had cost her life.

‎I clenched my fists, trying to suppress the memory. Rain. Blood. Screaming. My mother's terrified face. The taxi. Her betrayal.

‎But she wasn't her. Not Aria. Not yet.

‎Her voice trembled. "I didn't do anything."

‎Typical. The first instinct of the guilty or the innocent is the same: denial. But her denial rang different. Genuine. Naive. Dangerous in its honesty.

‎I should hate her immediately. She was connected—somehow—to the web of deceit I had been tracing. And yet, something about her refusal to beg for mercy drew my attention.

‎The men who brought her in melted into the background. She was mine now. I could feel the pulse of control in the room tighten around me.

‎She didn't know it yet, but she had stepped into a glass fortress. And every step she took would be measured. Every breath watched. Every move cataloged.

‎I motioned toward the desk. "Sit."

‎She hesitated. I waited. Patience was a weapon I had honed since childhood.

‎Finally, she lowered herself onto the leather chair, trembling but trying to mask it. I studied her. Her hands were delicate.

Intelligent. Tense.

‎I pulled up the laptop. Screens flickered to life. Bank accounts. Transaction histories. Shell corporations. Millions in movement—all traced back to her name.

‎She gasped. Her lips parted. "I don't… I don't understand."

‎I studied her reaction. Every micro expression. Fear? Yes. Shock? Absolutely. And yet… indignation. Anger. She was not meek. Not fully. Not yet broken.

‎Good.

‎I had no interest in innocent weakness. Only in control. Only in leverage. Only in ensuring that she survived long enough for me to unravel the truth.

‎"You tell me, Aria Reyes… how do you explain all this?" My voice was low, dangerous, each word a whip. "Every account. Every transfer. Every wire traced straight to you. Who are you working for?"

‎She stumbled back, her chest tight, mind spinning. "I—I don't know what you're talking about!" Her voice cracked, high and panicked. "I didn't do anything! I don't work for anyone!"

‎I stepped closer. Too close. Her heart hammered, adrenaline screaming at her to run. "Don't lie to me. Do you think I can't see it? Every movement. Every trace. Your name. Everything points to you."

‎"I—how could that be?" She stammered, shaking her head. "I'm a college student! I have a life, I have friends, I have—" Her hands trembled as she tried to gesture, "I have no idea what's going on! I didn't do this!"

‎My jaw tightened. The storm in my eyes darkened. "Don't think your protestations mean anything. People lie. People hide. You? You're clever. Too clever to be innocent."

‎"I swear!" She shouted, stepping forward despite the fear clawing at her. "I don't even know how this happened! Maybe… someone… maybe—maybe som—"

‎I cut her off, sharp as a blade. "Don't name anyone. Don't make excuses. You will answer to me, not your past mistakes. Right now, you are the problem."

‎She swallowed hard. Her throat burned. Aria wanted to run. She wanted to scream. But also wanted me to understand. "I—I'm not involved! Please, you have to believe me! I don't even know what you think I did!"

‎I stepped so close that the heat from my body brushed hers. "I don't need to believe you. I need results. You answer, or you stay under my control. Do you understand?"

‎Aria's knees felt weak. Her chest heaved. She nodded, barely able to form words. "Y-Yes… I… I'll answer…"

‎My lips curved slightly—just a hint—but my eyes stayed sharp, calculating. "Good. Because I will find the truth, Aria. And if it turns out you lied… there is no mercy."

‎She gasped. Her lips parted. "I don't… I don't understand."

‎"I don't even know what this is about. I just want to go home."

‎The moment the word left her mouth—

‎Something changed.

‎It was subtle.

‎I froze. My chest tightened.

‎No.

‎Home. That word. That lie disguised as comfort. That echo of betrayal. My mother had said it. My mother had begged for it. My mother had died for it.

‎And yet here she was, using it like it meant safety.

‎I stepped closer. My voice calm, but ice beneath every syllable: "Home is where people die."

‎She flinched. Good. Fear kept people alive.

‎But her eyes… she didn't cry. Didn't beg. She stared. Bright, defiant. Dangerous in her innocence.

‎I let the tension sit. I let the threat linger. I had always been patient. Always calculating. Always waiting.

‎Every instinct in me told me she was more than a name on a list.

‎She was a variable. And variables intrigued me.

‎She might die. She might live. That was not for her to decide.

‎I leaned back slightly, allowing a fraction of space between us. "You are connected to things you do not understand. Your life is… compromised. And yet, you speak as if you are free."

‎She swallowed hard. "I… I don't even know what this is about!"

‎Precisely. Ignorance is power. But I would wield it.

‎And slowly, inexorably, she would realize that the devil tracing her name was not a myth. Not a rumor. Not a threat.

‎It was a man in a black suit.

‎A man with gray eyes.

‎A man who would burn the world before he let her leave.

‎Her pulse quickened. Mine did not.

‎But inside, a small, dangerous part of me—the part that had survived blood, betrayal, and trauma—stirred.

‎Because she didn't belong in my world.

‎And I would make sure she stayed.

‎Not because I needed her.

‎But because I wanted to see if she could survive me.

‎My expression hardened.

‎The air grew colder.

‎I stepped closer.

‎Too close.

‎"If you try to run," I said quietly, my voice calm and terrifying all at once, "I will burn the world before I let you leave."

‎Her breath caught.

‎This wasn't a misunderstanding.

‎This wasn't a mistake.

‎The devil had traced her name.

‎And had found her.

More Chapters