Chapter 7 The Walls Are Closing In
Adriano:
The city doesn’t sleep, but I don’t give it the luxury of seeing me. For six years I’ve lived like a shadow, my name sharper than my face, my empire faceless enough to choke the skyline without anyone knowing who holds the chain.
Until her.
The second Isabella walked into that meeting, my carefully built anonymity cracked. And now? Now I need to know everything.
“Pull her file,” I order.
The room is quiet, save for the hum of the servers Luca insists on maintaining like a surgeon with a patient. Information is blood in this city, and I’ve kept my veins full.
Matteo slouches in the corner, flipping a knife between his fingers. “You already know enough. She’s alive. She’s working a desk job. End of story.”
I don’t even glance at him. “No. It’s just the beginning.”
Luca slides a folder across the table. “She’s been here five years. Name: Isabella Valentino. Job: mid-level admin in a consulting branch tied to our shipping routes.” His voice is calm, clinical. “She has a daughter. Five years old.”
The words hit harder than a bullet.
A daughter.
The papers blur for a second before my focus sharpens again. There she is, her photo clipped to the report, older now but still carrying the same quiet fire in her eyes. And next to her—a child. Sofia.
My chest tightens. The shape of her face is all Bella. But her eyes… no, those are mine. Dark, watchful, unyielding.
Matteo whistles low. “Well, well. Seems our ghost left a legacy.”
“Shut up.” My voice is a growl, sharper than I intend.
He smirks but says nothing more.
“She thought you died,” Luca says, matter-of-fact. “That’s why she disappeared into this life. You stayed in the shadows. She stayed small. You were in the same city all along, but you hid your face, Adriano. How could she have known?”
I clench my jaw. He’s right. I chose the mask. I let my empire grow faceless, let the city tremble at my name without attaching it to the man. She only knew Adrian Moreau—the boy who studied beside her, the man she loved before the fire swallowed everything. She buried him in her heart. And I let her.
Until now.
“Announce the acquisition,” I tell Luca.
He blinks. “You already own the company through shell holdings. Why draw attention?”
“Because I want her close. Official. I want her to look up and see my name carved into her walls.”
Luca studies me for a long moment, then exhales slowly. “Fine. But it’ll send ripples through the sector.”
“Let them ripple,” I say. “Let the city know its master is stepping into the light.”
Isabella
Sofia is quiet on the walk home. Too quiet.
Her little hand feels hot in mine, her cheeks flushed in the fading sun. By the time we reach the apartment, I know something’s wrong. Fever.
My chest twists. “Sweetheart, let’s get you to bed.”
She nods weakly, curling into the blankets with her rabbit clutched tight. Panic bubbles in my throat, but I keep my voice steady. I’ve faced worse. I can handle this.
By midnight I have tried all the home remedies my neighbour swears by, But when her fever spikes past midnight, I crumble.
I don't know how I called Maria, I panicked and asked for help. She arrives with a very familiar face, Luca Moretti, when I see him standing there, calm and precise, medical bag in hand, I want to slam the door.
Except Sofia whimpers behind me.
“I’m a doctor,” Luca says simply, his eyes softer than I expect. “Let me help.”
Against every instinct, I step aside.
He moves with quiet authority, checking Sofia’s vitals, murmuring reassurances. Within minutes he has her cooled down, the fever easing under his care. Relief floods me so hard my knees weaken.
“Thank you,” I whisper.
He nods, packing up his instruments. But his gaze lingers on me, searching, weighing. “You don’t have to do this alone, Isabella.”
I swallow hard. “I’ve been doing it alone for five years.”
Something flickers in his expression—sympathy, maybe, or something sharper. “Not anymore.”
The words leave me unsettled, as if they’re a promise and a warning all at once.
Adriano
From my office, I watch Luca’s report come through. Sofia’s fever, Isabella’s panic, the way she finally let someone in. My brother may have been the one holding the stethoscope, but make no mistake—this was my move.
I’m closing in.
The city has always belonged to me. Now, it’s time Isabella remembers she does too.
But I’m not reckless enough to take her by storm. Not yet. No—this has to be gradual, inevitable, like a tide she can’t fight. First the company, then the office, then the space around her until she realizes there’s nowhere I’m not.
I scroll through the background file on her again—apartment address, school reports, hospital bills she paid late but paid anyway. All of it screams survival. All of it makes me want to burn the world down for every night she went without help while I was convinced she was ashes.
Sofia’s name glares up at me from the page. My daughter. I don't need any DNA proof to tell me she's mine. I know she is. I know it like I know my own name and blood. She doesn’t know it yet. But she will, soon. I won't let my daughter grow up with out her father. not anymore.
And when that truth lands, when the past collides with the present, Isabella won’t just see Adrian—the student she loved. She’ll see me. Adriano Moretti.
The devil she thought she buried.



































































