Current location: Novel nest The Enemy in My Arms Chapter 1: The Wife in Black Silk

"The Enemy in My Arms" Chapter 1: The Wife in Black Silk

The Moretti mansion glittered beneath Manhattan’s winter skyline like a palace built by devils pretending to be kings.

Crystal chandeliers burned overhead. Champagne flowed endlessly through the ballroom. Politicians laughed beside men rumored to own entire shipping routes filled with guns, drugs, and bodies nobody ever found. A string quartet played near the marble staircase while cameras flashed across silk gowns and tailored tuxedos.

To outsiders, it looked like wealth.

To Valentina Moretti, it looked like camouflage.

Every year, the Moretti Foundation Gala transformed criminals into philanthropists for one carefully photographed evening. Millions donated publicly. Smiles exchanged beneath golden lights. Reporters praising “legacy families” while armed guards stood silently near the exits.

Nobody photographed the blood underneath the empire.

Valentina descended the staircase slowly, one hand grazing the polished railing. The black silk of her dress flowed against the marble steps like spilled ink. Diamonds glittered softly against her throat, cold against her skin.

The ballroom noticed immediately.

It always did.

Conversations paused. Men stared too long. Women pretended not to stare at all.

Luca liked that part.

His wife was beautiful enough to silence a room, and Luca Moretti enjoyed owning beautiful things.

A familiar hand settled against the small of her back the moment she reached the bottom step.

“Smile,” Luca murmured beside her. “Half the city’s watching.”

Valentina smiled automatically.

Years of practice made it effortless.

“I’m aware,” she replied softly.

Luca looked perfect tonight. Dark tailored suit. Gold cufflinks. Expensive watch. The polished image of a mafia prince born into inherited power. Men feared him. Women desired him. Newspapers called him sophisticated.

Valentina knew better.

She noticed the faint bloodstain near the edge of his white cuff almost immediately.

Her gaze lowered briefly. “You’re bleeding.”

Luca glanced down, unconcerned. Then he smirked.

“You notice everything.”

“Yes,” she said quietly. “I do.”

That answer made him laugh under his breath.

People always underestimated how dangerous observation could be.

A server passed carrying champagne. Valentina took a glass mostly to keep her hands occupied. Across the ballroom, Luca was already being pulled into conversation by politicians and business partners. Men who smiled too easily. Men who shook hands while quietly ruining lives.

Good.

When Luca focused elsewhere, breathing became easier.

Valentina moved through the crowd gracefully, exchanging practiced smiles with donors, socialites, and crime families wrapped in couture. The air smelled like expensive perfume, cigar smoke, and polished wood.

She hated all of it.

“Mrs. Moretti.”

Valentina turned toward the familiar voice and found Mrs. Bianchi approaching in emerald silk and enough diamonds to bankrupt smaller countries.

Widow. Survivor. One of the few women old enough to stop pretending the mafia was romantic.

“You look stunning tonight,” the older woman said.

“You look dangerous,” Valentina replied.

Mrs. Bianchi smiled approvingly. “That’s why I’m still alive.”

They exchanged the kind of polite air kisses rich people performed for photographers. Up close, however, the older woman’s expression shifted slightly.

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“Be careful tonight,” she said quietly.

Valentina’s smile barely moved. “That’s vague enough to concern me.”

Mrs. Bianchi glanced briefly across the ballroom toward Luca.

Then back to her.

“Your husband has been entertaining very ambitious men lately.”

A cold sensation slid quietly down Valentina’s spine.

“Ambitious how?”

But Mrs. Bianchi simply squeezed her hand once before drifting back into the crowd.

Another warning.

That made three this month.

Valentina lifted her champagne glass to her lips, though she no longer tasted it.

Something was changing inside the Moretti empire. She’d felt it for weeks now. The sudden closed-door meetings. The tension among captains. Luca becoming increasingly paranoid. Guards doubling overnight.

And lately—

women connected to the organization had begun disappearing.

Officially, nobody spoke about it.

Unofficially, Valentina had started keeping records.

Carefully.

Quietly.

Just in case survival someday required leverage.

Music swelled through the ballroom as another wave of guests entered from the main doors.

That was when she noticed him.

At first, he barely stood out among the security detail. Black suit. Broad shoulders. Expression carved from stone. But unlike Luca’s usual men, this one wasn’t trying to intimidate anyone.

He didn’t need to.

He stood near the entrance with unsettling stillness, scanning the ballroom once with cold gray-blue eyes that missed absolutely nothing.

Military, Valentina thought immediately.

Not because of the scars near his jawline.

Not because of his size.

Because of the way he watched exits first and people second.

Predators always watched escape routes.

The stranger’s gaze swept across the room once more before stopping directly on her.

Valentina felt it instantly.

Not attraction.

Something sharper.

Recognition.

Like the terrifying moment before a storm breaks, when the entire world suddenly goes silent.

He held her gaze calmly, unreadable beneath the ballroom lights.

Most men looked at her body first.

This man studied her face like he was trying to solve something.

Valentina forced herself not to look away.

Never show fear.

Her father taught her that before he taught her how to drive.

The stranger finally shifted his attention elsewhere, speaking quietly into an earpiece while one hand remained loosely behind his back.

Even relaxed, he looked dangerous.

Not reckless-dangerous like Luca.

Controlled dangerous.

The worst kind.

“Interesting, isn’t he?”

Luca’s voice appeared beside her again.

Valentina kept her expression neutral. “Who?”

“The new security.”

So he had noticed her staring.

Of course he had.

Luca followed her gaze toward the man near the entrance and smirked slightly. “Adrian Volkov.”

The name sounded foreign and sharp.

Russian, maybe Ukrainian.

Definitely trouble.

“He’s new?” she asked.

“Ex-military.” Luca took a sip of whiskey. “Recommended through Russian contacts. Expensive as hell, but apparently worth every dollar.”

Valentina watched Adrian again. “He doesn’t look like a bodyguard.”

“No,” Luca agreed casually. “He looks like someone you send when you expect bodies.”

Something cold settled heavily in her stomach.

As if sensing the conversation, Adrian lifted his gaze again.

This time his eyes dropped briefly toward the dark silk sleeve covering Valentina’s wrist.

Toward the faint bruise hidden underneath.

A bruise Luca had left two nights ago.

Most people never noticed those things.

Adrian did.

His expression didn’t change.

But something in his eyes hardened almost imperceptibly before he looked away again.

And for reasons Valentina couldn’t explain—that frightened her far more than the bruise itself.

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