Chapter 1
 
 Cassia
 
 Antonio Luca Salvatore was a man that men feared. Rich
 
 and poor alike, powerful or average, just the name of the Don
 
 of the Salvatore family could inspire strong feelings. Cassia
 
 Salvatore had never been afraid of her father. She’d grown up
 
 the baby of the family, and after her mother died, though he
 
 was never there to raise her and he was never fatherly like she
 
 imagined other men must be, he still cared for her.
 
 Out of his three children, all daughters, she was his favorite.
 
 With her white-blonde hair and striking blue eyes, she looked
 
 the most like her mother. Her sisters, Sofia, and Anna, had
 
 their father’s black hair and deep brown eyes. Cassia was
 
 always afraid they’d hate her for being their father’s obvious
 
 favorite, but they never did. Not even when they were married
 
 off, one after another, to men their father chose. Men they
 
 didn’t love.
 
 Cassia thought she was different. She thought she’d be
 
 spared. She wasn’t just the youngest daughter, she was also the
 
 most naïve to think her father’s favor made her immune.
 
 Cassia was called to his study just after ten, which in her
 
 father’s world wasn’t late. He conducted business well into the
 
 night. Ever since she was a little girl, she’d understood that
 
 most of the things her family did were best done under the
 
 cover of darkness. He lived in and for those inky black hours.
 
 She found her father wearing his normal expensive and
 
 immaculate black suit. His hands were on his desktop. On the
 
 right he wore two gold rings. On the left, nothing at all. A
 
 cigar sat half smoked in the ashtray on his huge mahogany
 
 desk, a crystal glass half full of brandy close by. He had one of
 
 those ancient green desk lamps on the corner of his desk, like
 
 his study was a normal place and not one where life and death
 
 were decided. With a single look, he could either save or
 
 condemn a man.
 
 Cassia slid into the chair he motioned for her. He had two
 
 modern wooden ones in front of his desk. They were
 
 uncomfortable and looked more like they belonged in an art
 
 gallery than anyone’s house. Cassia had always imagined that
 
 the men her father met with squirmed in these chairs, mostly
 
 out of discomfort and not because they’d fallen out of favor.
 
 “Cassia…”
 
 She winced at the way her father said her name. There was
 
 something not right about the way he was staring at her, the
 
 way his dark eyes, the color of rich coffee, stared straight
 
 through her.
 
 She forced herself to sit straight and not fidget. Her father
 
 hated any signs of weakness. She knew that by not appearing
 
 to give him her full attention, he’d take that as a sign of
 
 disrespect, and that was even worse.
 
 “Yes?” She forced her voice not to waver, even though her