Three Months Before the Wedding
The first time Seraphina Vale saw Alessandro Moretti, he did not look at her.
He stood at the head of her father’s dining table like he owned it — which, in every way that mattered, he did.
Rain streaked down the tall windows of the Vale estate, the storm outside a polite echo of the one unfolding inside. The chandeliers trembled faintly with thunder. Or perhaps that was just her hands.
Her father poured him wine.
Her father never poured anyone wine.
Alessandro Moretti did not touch the glass.
He was not loud. Not theatrical. Not cruel in the obvious ways men like him often were.
He was worse.
He was calm.
“Your debt,” Alessandro said quietly, his voice smooth as polished marble, “is no longer financial.”
Seraphina stood near the fireplace, fingers clasped in front of her ivory dress. She had been told to stay. To listen. To be seen if required.
Not to speak.
Her father swallowed. “Then name your price.”
There was a long pause.
Measured.
Intentional.
Alessandro finally turned his head — just slightly.
His eyes found her.
Not her face first.
Her posture.
Her lowered gaze.
The stillness.
Assessment.
Ownership.
Then he looked at her fully.
Dark eyes. Unreadable. Intelligent. Cold.
“Your daughter,” he said.
The word did not echo.
It landed.
Her father stiffened. “She is not part of this.”
“She is the only part of this.”
Silence swallowed the room whole.
Seraphina’s pulse pounded in her ears, yet her body did not move. Years of training held her upright. Composed. Obedient.
Alessandro studied her as one might study a porcelain statue.
Fragile.
Decorative.
Breakable.
“She will marry me,” he continued. “The alliance restores your honor. Your name survives. Your men remain untouched.”
Her father looked at her then.
Not with apology.
With expectation.
This is your duty.
Seraphina lifted her chin a fraction.
She met Alessandro Moretti’s eyes properly for the first time.
There was no warmth there.
But there was curiosity.
As if he were waiting to see if she would shatter.
She did not.
She lowered her gaze again and said softly, “If it restores my family, I accept.”
Her father exhaled in relief.
Alessandro did not smile.
He stepped closer — slow, deliberate. The scent of expensive cologne and rain followed him.
He tilted her chin upward with one finger.
The touch was not cruel.
But it was possessive.
“You understand,” he said quietly, for her ears alone, “that my world is not gentle.”
“I was not raised to expect gentleness,” she replied.
For the first time — just for a flicker — something shifted in his gaze.
Interest.
Then it was gone.
“Three months,” he said, releasing her. “Prepare her.”
And he walked out.
The storm swallowed him.
Seraphina stood perfectly still long after the doors closed.
Only when she was alone did her fingers curl into her palms.
Not in fear.
In resolve.
If she was to be sacrificed—
She would learn the altar.