Chapter 50: BREAKING WALLS
The rain had stopped hours ago, but the scent of it still lingered on the night breeze drifting in through the half-open balcony doors. The room was dim, lit only by the soft glow of the moon that slipped between parted curtains, painting pale silver across the sheets where she lay. Aria hadn’t slept much. Every time she closed her eyes, the darkness behind her lids wasn’t peaceful, it was a cage. The men’s laughter, the metallic clang of the chains, the sound of her own heartbeat thundering as she tried to stay brave, it all echoed too clearly.
She flinched when the door creaked open, then relaxed only slightly when she saw him standing there. Luca. He didn’t speak right away. He rarely did anymore, not since the rescue. He just stood by the door, watching her like he wasn’t sure he was allowed to come closer. Like she might break if he did.
"You should be resting," he said finally, voice low, rough around the edges.
"I tried," she whispered, eyes fixed on the ceiling. "Didn’t work."
He stepped into the room, the sound of his footsteps slow and deliberate against the floor. "Nightmares?"
"Something like that." She shifted slightly under the blanket, pulling it tighter around herself even though she wasn’t cold. "They come even when I’m awake."
Luca moved closer, stopping a few feet from the bed. He looked different lately. The usual armor he wore that mix of confidence and danger was cracked. Guilt had replaced it, plain and raw. He rubbed a hand over his jaw, as though searching for words and finding none.
"Aria," he said softly, "I know I can’t take away what happened. But I’m here. You’re safe now."
"Safe," she repeated bitterly, a humorless laugh escaping her. "Safe is not a word I know anymore." She sat up, hugging her knees. "Do you know what they said to me? That they’d make you pay by hurting me. That I was just a tool. A message." Her voice broke, and she swallowed hard. "I believed them."
Lucas’ jaw clenched. "And I believed I’d never see you again. Every second you were gone, I died a little. Every hour they kept you away, I tore the city apart trying to get you back."
"Then why does it feel like I’m the one who’s still gone?" Her voice was small, almost a whisper. "Like part of me is still locked in that room."
He didn’t answer immediately. Instead, he sat on the edge of the bed, careful to leave a space between them. His presence was solid, grounding, but he didn’t reach for her, not yet. "Because healing isn’t instant," he said quietly. "It’s slow. Brutal. And it happens when you stop pretending you’re fine."
"I’m not fine," she admitted, her voice trembling. "I don’t even know if I remember how to be."
"Then we start with that," Luca said. "Not fine is a place we can work from."
For a long time, neither of them spoke. The silence wasn’t comfortable, but it wasn’t crushing either. It was something in between, a fragile bridge over water too deep to measure. Finally, Aria shifted slightly, her shoulder brushing his arm. It wasn’t intentional, but Luca froze all the same, as if terrified that even that tiny contact might scare her away.
"Do you hate me?" she asked suddenly. "For getting caught? For being weak?"
His head snapped toward her, eyes wide. "Weak? Aria, you’re the strongest person I know."
"I’m not," she whispered. "I broke. I begged them to stop. I thought about giving up."
"And yet you didn’t." His voice was fierce now, unwavering. "You survived. You endured. You’re here. That’s not weakness. That’s strength most people will never understand."
Something inside her cracked at that. She had been expecting blame, disappointment, maybe even distance. Not this. Not reverence. Her throat tightened. "Why do you care so much?"
Luca inhaled slowly, his gaze softening. "Because somewhere along the way, you stopped being just a contract to me. You stopped being part of the deal. You became... everything."
The words landed like a heartbeat against her chest. She stared at him, lips parted, unable to look away. "You mean that?"
"Every word."
The silence that followed was charged, humming with a different kind of tension now, one that wasn’t born of fear but of closeness. He reached out slowly, his hand hovering inches from hers. "May I?" he asked.
Aria’s breath caught. It was such a simple gesture, asking permission, but it unraveled her more than any declaration could. She nodded, and his fingers closed gently around hers. Warmth. Steady. Real.
They stayed like that for a long time, saying nothing. Then, softly, she began to speak about the little things she hadn’t told anyone. The fear that crept in every time she closed her eyes. The way certain sounds made her flinch. The guilt that she was still breathing when others might not have. Luca listened, never interrupting, his thumb tracing gentle circles against her skin.
And when her words dissolved into tears, he didn’t try to stop them. He just pulled her into his arms, carefully, like holding something precious. "You don’t have to carry this alone," he murmured against her hair. "Not anymore."
It was the first time she’d let herself cry in front of him. The first time she allowed herself to lean into the strength he offered instead of pushing it away. And in that moment, something shifted. The walls she had built, high and impenetrable, began to crumble.
Hours passed like minutes. They talked about nothing and everything, the stars outside, the future neither of them had planned for, the weight of choices made long ago. He told her about the first time he saw her smile and how it had terrified him. She told him about the dreams she once had before debt and death had rewritten her life.
When dawn began to creep over the horizon, painting the sky with streaks of gold, Aria was curled against his chest, the rise and fall of his breathing steady beneath her cheek. "I’m scared," she whispered.
"So am I," Luca admitted. "But I’d rather be scared with you than fearless without you."
Her lips curved into a small, tired smile. "That was almost poetic."
"Don’t tell anyone," he murmured, brushing a strand of hair from her face. "I have a reputation to maintain."
She laughed, a real, soft laugh, and for the first time in weeks, it didn’t feel forced. It felt like healing.
They didn’t solve everything that night. The nightmares would still come, the scars would still ache, and the road ahead was far from smooth. But they had started something important: rebuilding trust, brick by careful brick.
And as the first light of morning bathed them in warmth, Aria realized something she hadn’t dared hope for since the day she was taken.
She was home. Not in a mansion. Not in a city. But herein his arms, in this fragile, beautiful space they were creating together.
And maybe, just maybe, that was enough.