CHAPTER ONE: Control,Just One Night

968 Words
The first thing people noticed about Luca Moretti was not the money. Not the cars. Not even the name that carried weight in rooms he had never stepped into. It was the control. He sat in the back row of the lecture hall, one leg stretched out, the other crossed lazily at the ankle, fingers tapping once against the edge of his desk before going still again. Around him, voices filled the air—low murmurs, laughter, the shuffle of papers—but none of it touched him. He listened, but he wasn’t listening. Watched, but never seemed to watch. The professor was talking about economic structures, something about risk and reward. Luca almost smiled at that. If there was one thing he understood, it was risk. The kind you didn’t write about in textbooks. The kind that came with blood, loyalty, and consequences that didn’t end with a failed grade. His phone buzzed once against the table. He didn’t look at it immediately. Control. Then, slowly, he picked it up. One message. ''It’s done. But there’s a problem.'' Luca stared at the screen for a second longer than necessary, jaw tightening just slightly before he slipped the phone back into his pocket. No reaction. No shift in posture. Nothing that would tell anyone sitting around him that somewhere in the city, something had just gone wrong. The lecture ended twenty minutes later. Luca was the first to stand, the scrape of his chair sharp against the tiled floor. Conversations swelled around him as students packed up, but they parted without realizing it as he walked past. It always happened like that. An invisible awareness. A quiet understanding. Some people carried noise. Luca carried silence. Across campus, in a building that smelled faintly of old books and coffee, Elena Petrova was laughing. Not loudly. Not in a way that drew attention. But enough that the girl sitting across from her rolled her eyes and nudged her arm. “You’re not serious,” her friend said, shaking her head. “You’re actually going to stay up all night for this?” Elena shrugged, pushing a loose strand of dark hair behind her ear as she flipped her notebook shut. “It’s not all night. Just… late.” “That’s what you said yesterday.” “And I survived, didn’t I?” Her friend snorted. “Barely.” Elena smiled, but there was something steadier underneath it. Determination. The kind that didn’t need to announce itself. Everything she had here, she had worked for. The scholarship. The grades. The quiet respect from professors who had learned her name before they learned how to pronounce it properly. Nothing had been handed to her, and she liked it that way. Control, in her own way. Different from Luca’s. Cleaner. Safer. Her phone buzzed, and she glanced down. A message from one of her roommates: Club tonight. No excuses. You need a break. Elena stared at it for a second, already knowing the argument that would follow if she said no. She sighed, a small smile pulling at her lips despite herself. Maybe just for a few hours. Maybe. By the time night fell, the city had changed. Lights replaced sunlight. Music replaced silence. And in one of the most exclusive clubs tucked behind guarded doors and selective entry lists, everything that was hidden during the day came alive. Luca stood in the private section, one hand resting on the low railing as he looked out over the crowd below. The bass of the music pulsed through the floor, through his chest, but it didn’t touch him the way it touched everyone else. People moved like they had something to prove—money, beauty, status. He had nothing to prove. Behind him, voices blurred together. Laughter. Deals. Conversations that meant nothing and everything at the same time. “Problem’s handled,” someone said to his left. Luca didn’t turn. “It better be.” A pause. Then, “It is.” He nodded once, slow, final. Control restored. Or at least, that’s what it looked like. Elena almost didn’t get in. “Guest list only,” the man at the door said, barely glancing at her. Her friend stepped forward, already arguing, already smiling in that persuasive way she had. Elena half-listened, half-watched the line behind them, wondering if this had been a mistake. Then, suddenly, they were being waved through. Just like that. Inside, the air was thick with music and heat, lights cutting through the dark in flashes of gold and blue. Elena blinked once, adjusting, her senses catching up with the shift. “See?” her friend shouted over the music, grabbing her hand and pulling her further in. “Worth it!” Elena laughed despite herself, letting herself be dragged toward the bar. For a while, she forgot about deadlines. About lectures. About everything waiting for her outside those doors. She let the music settle under her skin, let the moment exist without overthinking it. Until she felt it, not a touch. Not a sound. A presence. Elena turned slightly, her gaze lifting without fully meaning to— and met his. Across the room, above the crowd, standing where the light barely reached, Luca Moretti was watching her. Not in the way men usually looked at women in places like this. Not casually. Not with interest alone. There was something sharper in it. Something deliberate. Like he had already decided she was worth noticing. Elena held his gaze for a second longer than she should have. Then, slowly, she looked away. Not impressed. Not intimidated, just… uninterested. And for the first time that night, Luca smiled. Not wide. Not obvious, but enough to mean one thing. Control had just shifted. And he wasn’t sure how he felt about that.
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