Chapter 53: THE PROPOSAL
The rain had stopped hours ago, leaving the villa wrapped in a cool hush. Aria stood barefoot on the balcony, her fingers wrapped around the iron railing, staring at the moonlight spilling over the courtyard below. The scars on her heart still ached from betrayal, kidnapping, and almost losing herself, but something else pulsed louder now, a feeling she had fought for months and could no longer ignore.
"Couldn’t sleep?" His voice was low and deep, the kind that slid into her bones before she even turned.
Luca stepped out from the shadows of the hallway, still dressed in his black shirt, sleeves rolled up, hair mussed from running his hands through it. He looked less like the terrifying Don who made empires kneel and more like a man stripped bare, vulnerable, and uncertain.
Aria’s lips curved faintly. "I could ask you the same thing."
"Sleep hasn’t been kind to me lately," he admitted, walking closer. "Not when you’re awake and miles away, even when you’re right here."
She swallowed, looking back toward the stars. "A lot’s happened."
"I know." He came to stand beside her, their arms brushing. "And I hate that most of it hurts you."
Silence stretched between them. The night hummed softly with cicadas. She didn’t move when his hand brushed hers, didn’t pull away when he laced his fingers through hers and drew a slow breath.
"Aria..." His tone shifted, heavier now. "I’ve spent my whole life building walls. Power. Fear. Control. That’s how you survive in my world. But you" He turned to face her fully, and for once, his dark eyes held no mask. "You walk into my life and those walls start falling without permission."
"Luca..." Her heart beat too fast. "What are you saying?"
He stepped closer, close enough that the heat of him sank into her skin. "I’m saying I tried not to feel this. I tried to tell myself you were just a means to an end, an arrangement, a way to stop the blood wars. But the truth is..." He paused, his jaw tightening as though the words themselves were dangerous. "The truth is, I’m in love with you. I’ve been in love with you for a long time."
Aria’s breath hitched. Every defense she’d built around herself trembled. "You don’t mean that."
"I mean every word," he whispered, cupping her face. "I meant it the first time I nearly lost you. I meant it when I carried you out of that warehouse half-dead and swore I’d never let anyone touch you again. And I mean it now, more than I’ve ever meant anything."
Her eyes stung, tears pricking at the edges. "Why now? Why tell me this now?"
"Because..." He exhaled shakily. "Because I’m about to do something I’ve never done for anyone."
Before she could ask, he stepped back, reached into his pocket, and pulled out a small velvet box. Aria’s breath caught as he sank to one knee, the Don of the Moretti family, the man feared by kings and killers, kneeling like a boy terrified of losing the only thing that mattered.
"Aria," he began softly, his voice trembling just enough for her to hear the weight beneath it. "I once thought love was weakness. That letting someone close enough to break you was a risk I could never afford. And then you happened. You crashed into my life and broke every rule I lived by. And now, I can’t imagine a life without you in it."
Her hand flew to her mouth, a sob catching in her throat.
"This..." He opened the box. A ring shimmered inside, elegant and breathtaking, not gaudy, but timeless. "This isn’t about alliances. It isn’t about duty or territory or power. This is me, Luca, the man beneath the Don, asking you to be my everything. Will you marry me? For real. No contracts. No conditions. Just us."
Her knees almost gave out. For months, she’d told herself it was just business, that she could walk away at any moment. But the way her heart raced now told her the truth she had been too afraid to face: she didn’t want to walk away.
"Luca..." Her voice broke, tears streaming freely now. "I don’t even know how to breathe when you look at me like that."
"Then don’t think," he whispered, rising slowly to his feet and cradling her face in his hands. "Just tell me the truth. Do you feel it too?"
"I tried not to," she confessed, her lips trembling. "I tried to hate you. I tried to remind myself of every lie, every reason I should run. But every time I close my eyes, I see you. Every time I’m hurt, it’s your name I want to call. Every time I think of home..." She swallowed hard, a tear slipping down her cheek. "It’s you."
His breath shuddered out, as though those words had shattered something inside him. "Say it, Aria. Please. I need to hear you say it."
"I love you," she whispered, the words falling like rain on parched ground. "God help me, I love you."
The sound he made was half a laugh, half a breathless groan as he pulled her against him and kissed her, not with the fire and fury of their stolen moments before, but with something deeper. Reverent. Desperate. Like a man who had found the only thing that ever mattered.
Her fingers tangled in his shirt as she kissed him back, the world spinning and slowing all at once. When they finally broke apart, their foreheads rested together, breath mingling.
"Marry me," he murmured again. "Not because you have to. Because you want to."
"Yes," she whispered, smiling through her tears. "Yes, Luca. I’ll marry you."
His arms wrapped around her, lifting her off the ground as laughter, raw and disbelieving, escaped him. "You’ve just made me the happiest fool alive."
"And you’ve ruined every plan I had to keep you out of my heart," she teased, brushing her nose against his.
"Good," he whispered. "Because I never planned to leave."
They stood like that for a long time, the world narrowing to the sound of their breaths and the steady beat of two hearts that had spent too long denying the inevitable. And as the first light of dawn crept over the horizon, Aria realized that for the first time in her life, she wasn’t afraid of the future.
Because whatever storms waited ahead, they’d face them together, not as enemies, not as pawns in a bloody game, but as two people who had found love in the unlikeliest of places.