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I move through the exhibits, scanning every sculpture, every corner. Nothing’s been moved. But my skin still prickles like I’ve walked into a crime scene. Something’s off.

I force my legs to move toward my office—toward the one place where I still have a shred of control. The safe holds the pieces of a life I can’t afford to lose. I need them. Desperately. But as I round the doorway, I stop cold. My breath snags in my throat. A sharp gasp tears loose before I can stop it. There—on my desk. Placed with surgical precision.

A single white envelope. No markings. Just… placed. Perfectly centered on my desk.

I open it with a blade from the supply drawer—reflex more than choice. Inside is a high-resolution photograph of Daniel. Taken yesterday, judging by the clothes. He’s walking to school. Smiling. Unaware.

My stomach drops.

There’s no note. No demand. Just the image.

But it’s enough.

I slide to the floor, my back against the filing cabinet, clutching the photo like it might dissolve in my hands. They know. Not just where I am—who I love.

My phone buzzes again. A voice memo this time. I hit play. Luca’s voice floods the space—low, furious, unmistakable: “You should’ve told me the truth.”

The sound of his voice slices through me, cold and intimate. I haven’t heard it in nearly a decade, but my body remembers it like a song I used to sing when I thought I was in love.

I clutch the phone tighter, pulse hammering in my ears. He knows. Somehow, some way, he’s found me.

And if Luca’s in Vegas… everything is about to come undone.

I scramble to my feet, heart crashing in my chest as I lock the office door behind me. It was a mistake coming back to the gallery. Scared to turn on the lights, I move fast, checking windows, entry points, anything that might’ve let him in.

Or someone working for him.

Luca Moretti isn’t asking questions.

He’s coming for answers.


My breath hitches.

The pitch-black silence is instant, suffocating. A mafia blackout.

This isn’t a glitch.

I fumble for my phone, the screen flaring to life like a flare in a warzone. Shadows stretch long and sharp across the gallery walls. Somewhere, beyond the silence, I know someone’s waiting.

My pulse pounds like footsteps.

This is how they do it. Psychological warfare.

A whisper of movement behind one of the larger installations snaps my body into full alert. I step back, clutching my phone like it could ward off death. But there’s no one there.

Then a second sound.

The softest exhale.

Someone is here.

My flashlight beam catches a glint of steel—just for a second—tucked low in the shadows. A knife. Not mine. And it's still wet.

I freeze, every breath a razor. The blade gleams with something darker than light—thicker than water. Blood.

Is it a message? A warning? Or a signature?