Her father

1266 Words
Bianca’s Pov I knew my father was coming before anyone told me. The house changed its rhythm. It was subtle. Quieter, but sharper somehow. Conversations stopped when I entered the rooms. The guards doubled near the front gates. Even Lucia moved differently, her usual efficiency tightened into something cautious. I didn’t ask why. By then, I knew better. It was late afternoon when Dante came for me. Not physically. He sent a message through the house, the way he did everything indirect, controlled. “He’s here,” Lucia said, standing in my doorway. My heart jumped so hard it hurt. “Who?” I asked, even though my mouth had already gone dry. She hesitated just long enough to answer honestly. “Your father.” I stood too fast. The chair tipped backward, hitting the floor with a sharp crack. Lucia flinched. I didn’t apologize. “He came to get me,” I said. Lucia’s face didn’t change. “He came to speak.” “With who?” She met my eyes. “Not you.” That should have been the first warning. They didn’t let me go to the main sitting room. Instead, I was taken to a smaller one overlooking the sea, glass walls stretching from floor to ceiling. It felt like a compromise. Close enough to witness. Far enough to control. I paced. Every thought in my head tangled into another. Relief fought with suspicion. My father had always been weak, but he was still my father. He wouldn’t leave me here. He couldn’t. The door opened quietly. Dante stepped in alone. “He asked to see you,” Dante said. My chest loosened. “See? Or take it?” Dante didn’t answer right away. He crossed the room and stopped near the window, hands in his pockets, gaze fixed on the horizon. “You can listen,” he said finally. “But you don’t speak unless I tell you to.” I bristled. “I’m not a child.” “No,” he agreed. “Children are protected.” The words stung. Before I could respond, voices carried from the adjacent room. The wall between us wasn’t solid stone. It was glass layered with soundproofing except someone had left a narrow channel open. On purpose. My father’s voice came first. Low. Nervous. Familiar. “I appreciate you agreeing to meet,” Lorenzo Valenti said. “This whole situation has been… unfortunate.” I closed my eyes. “That’s one word for it,” Dante replied calmly. “I think we can come to an understanding,” my father continued. “My daughter is young. Uninvolved. She doesn’t belong in this world.” I stepped closer to the glass. “She was involved the moment you signed her name away,” Dante said. A pause. “She’s my daughter,” my father said. “I want her back.” I sucked in a breath, relief flooding me so fast my knees went weak. Dante’s response was quiet. “And what are you offering in return?” The silence that followed stretched too long. I opened my eyes. “I can make it worth your while,” my father said carefully. “There are assets. Inheritance arrangements. Bianca’s trust. Future loyalty.” The relief drained out of me. “You don’t have trust,” Dante said. “Not yet,” my father replied. “But Bianca will. She’s the sole beneficiary on her mother’s side. Once certain conditions are met, everything transfers to her.” My stomach twisted. I hadn’t known that. “I can sign over her rights,” my father continued. “Give you legal authority. Full discretion. In exchange, my remaining debts disappear.” I pressed my hand to the glass to steady myself. He wasn’t here to save me. He was here to sell me again. Dante didn’t speak immediately. I imagined him watching my father the way he watched me silent, assessing, already five steps ahead. “You’re offering me something I already own,” Dante said at last. My father laughed nervously. “Ownership is a strong word.” “In my world,” Dante replied, “it’s an accurate one.” “I’m trying to protect her,” my father said quickly. “She doesn’t understand the danger she’s in.” “She understands perfectly,” Dante said. “You just never taught her how to avoid it.” I felt something crack inside my chest. “She’s innocent,” my father insisted. “Innocence doesn’t survive transactions,” Dante said flatly. There was a scraping sound. A chair moving. “So this is about pride?” my father snapped. “You took her to prove a point?” “No,” Dante said. “I took her because you would have killed her slowly.” The words hit like a punch. “What?” my father demanded. “Debt,” Dante continued evenly. “Failure. Panic. You would have sold her piece by piece until there was nothing left worth keeping.” “That’s not…” “Get out,” Dante said. Silence. “I’m not finished,” my father said weakly. “You are,” Dante replied. “If you try to negotiate with her again, you won’t leave my property alive.” My heart was hammered. Footsteps approached the door. I backed away instinctively, wiping my face before anyone could see the tears. The door opened. My father walked in first. He looked smaller than I remembered. Older. His suit hung wrong on his frame. His eyes darted around the room until they landed on me. “Bianca,” he said, relief and guilt colliding in his voice. “You’re okay.” I didn’t move. “I tried,” he said quickly. “I really did.” I stared at him. “You tried to trade me.” He flinched. “You don’t understand.” “I understand everything,” I said quietly. Dante entered behind him. “Time’s up,” Dante said. My father turned to him. “She’s my blood.” “And you’re her liability,” Dante replied. My father looked back at me, desperation creeping into his expression. “Tell him you want to come home.” I swallowed. Home. The word felt foreign. I looked at Dante. He didn’t look at me. He waited. The choice was mine. “I want to live,” I said. My father’s face crumpled. Dante nodded once. “Then we’re done.” Two men appeared at the doorway. My father didn’t resist when they took his arms. He just kept looking at me like he was waiting for forgiveness. I didn’t give it. When they were gone, the room felt hollow. “You let him leave,” I said. “Yes.” “You could’ve killed him.” “Yes.” “Why didn’t you?” Dante turned to me then. “Because he already did enough damage.” I wrapped my arms around myself. “You enjoy this.” “No,” he said. “I'll endure it.” “That’s worse.” He didn’t argue. I sank into the chair by the window, legs weak, mind numb. “He never came for me,” I whispered. Dante didn’t correct me. That night, I stood on the balcony long after the sun went down, watching the sea crash against the cliffs below. I wasn’t waiting to be rescued anymore. I was learning something else. No one was coming. And if I wanted out of this, I would have to take it myself.
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