Chapter One: Gravity

384 Words
The De Luca penthouse was designed to remind visitors of their place. Glass walls exposed the city from above, turning Valenro into something owned—lights blinking like obedient signals, streets reduced to lines and arteries. The ceiling was high, the color palette muted. Nothing here begged for attention because attention came automatically. Luca De Luca stood near the center of the room, speaking quietly with two men who controlled ports on opposite ends of the coast. He didn’t gesture. He didn’t raise his voice. Every word landed with the certainty of something already decided. That was when Elena Rossi entered. She came in without ceremony, no announcement preceding her name. The red of her dress cut sharply against the neutral space, not loud but intentional—an interruption that couldn’t be ignored. Several men noticed her at once. Luca noticed her last. Not because she was unimportant—but because he was trained to sense disruption rather than search for it. When he turned, it was because the room had shifted, the way it did when something unstable entered a controlled system. She was standing near the balcony doors, hands relaxed at her sides, gaze moving calmly across the room. She took in the power structure instinctively—who stood close to whom, who spoke and who listened, who was pretending not to watch her. When her eyes met Luca’s, she didn’t look away. That was the first decision she made. Luca excused himself from the men without apology and crossed the room. His pace was unhurried. Each step was deliberate, as though he expected the space to move aside for him. He stopped just short of invading her personal space. “You’re not on the list,” he said. Elena’s expression didn’t change. “Then your list is incomplete.” Around them, conversation dulled. People sensed a fault line forming. Luca studied her face—no fear, no false bravado. Just awareness. “You know where you are,” he said. “I know who you are,” she replied. “Those aren’t the same thing.” A beat. Most people filled silence with excuses. Elena let it hang. Luca smiled faintly. Not approval. Assessment. “Enjoy the view,” he said, turning away first. That was the second decision she made.
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