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Chapter Two – Wolves at the Door
Morning came with golden light spilling over the academy courtyard. Students trickled in, uniforms crisp, chatter buzzing. But today, one name sat heavy on every tongue: Aria DeLuca.
The mafia princess who had just enrolled.
She strolled through the gates with her bag slung lazily over her shoulder, humming an anime opening under her breath. Her midnight hair caught sunlight like spun glass, silver streaks gleaming. Her eyes — amethyst rimmed with gold — scanned the crowd with playful detachment.
People parted around her like she carried plague.
Aria didn’t care. In fact, she relished it. She smirked, tugged her phone out, and snapped a selfie in the middle of the walkway. “First day of school vibes~!” she announced to no one, flashing a peace sign.
Behind her, Lily Volkov scurried to keep up. Lily, bubbly and pink-haired, was the one bright dot in Aria’s monochrome orbit — her only real friend.
“Ariaaa, can you not post that right now? Everyone’s already freaking out,” Lily whispered, tugging on her sleeve.
Aria grinned, tucking her phone away. “Let them freak. Fear is just free advertising.”
And then, like a storm cloud, Marco Romano appeared by the fountain.
Marco’s green eyes locked on Aria as though she’d murdered his family in broad daylight. His jaw clenched, his hands shoved deep into his pockets to hide their shaking. The entire courtyard froze, whispers catching like sparks in dry grass.
“You think this is funny?” Marco hissed. His voice carried, sharp and trembling. “You think humiliating my men makes you untouchable?”
Aria tilted her head, eyes glimmering with mischief. “Depends. Did it work?”
Laughter rippled across the courtyard, thin and nervous. Marco’s face burned crimson. He stepped closer, teeth bared. “You don’t understand who you’re messing with, DeLuca.”
Aria’s lips curved into a slow smile — sweet, almost girlish. “Oh, I understand perfectly. You’re just mad that a fifteen-year-old otaku broke your toys and walked away smiling.”
Gasps. Whispers. A boy choked on his drink.
Marco’s hand twitched as though he wanted to strike her, right there in front of everyone. And that was when another voice cut through the tension, low and commanding.
“Enough.”
Damian Volkov stepped from the crowd.
The courtyard stilled, like the world itself paused to breathe. Damian’s presence wasn’t loud or violent — it was heavy, inevitable. He didn’t need to posture. He simply was.
His steel-grey eyes swept across the scene, lingering on Aria, then Marco. “This is a school. Not your battleground.”
Aria’s smile didn’t falter. In fact, it widened. “Wolfie,” she purred, her tone dripping with mock affection. “Coming to rescue me already? Careful, people might talk.”
Marco turned on Damian, eyes flashing. “Stay out of this. She’s mine to deal with.”
“She’s not yours at all,” Damian replied calmly, his gaze never breaking. “And if you think dragging your family’s name through petty theatrics will make her kneel, you’re already losing.”
The courtyard buzzed with whispers, students craning to catch every word.
Aria hopped up onto the fountain ledge, perching like a cat above the chaos. She stretched her arms wide, soaking in the spectacle. “Boys, boys. You’ll make me blush.”
Her eyes glowed with something sharp, something dangerous. “But if you want a fight… make it interesting. Otherwise, don’t waste my time.”
With that, she hopped down, grabbed Lily’s hand, and skipped off toward the building as though she hadn’t just set two mafia heirs at each other’s throats.
The courtyard exhaled in one collective breath.
Marco’s fists shook at his sides. “She’ll regret this,” he muttered.
Damian watched Aria’s retreating figure, silent. His expression unreadable — except for the faintest curl of a smile.
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The final bell rang, and the academy dissolved into chaos.
Students streamed into the halls, gossip spilling louder than the clatter of shoes on tile. Everyone was whispering about the scene at the fountain.
Aria wandered through the current like a girl window-shopping, earbuds in, swaying to a beat only she could hear. Her blazer was draped over one shoulder, her phone balanced in her palm as she scrolled through anime memes, grinning every few seconds.
She looked like she hadn’t noticed the way people stepped aside to give her space.
And then — a shadow blocked her path.
“Wolf-boy,” she said without missing a beat. She tugged an earbud out, raising a brow. “What’s this? A dramatic hallway ambush?”
Damian stood tall, broad-shouldered, his presence heavy enough to still the flow of students around them. Without a word, he pushed open the nearest classroom door and gestured inside.
“Privacy.”
Aria smirked, twirling her phone between her fingers. “Oooh, scandalous. Dragging me into empty classrooms already? What will the tabloids say?”
Still, she stepped inside.
The room was dim, sunlight slanting through half-closed blinds, dust motes catching in the beams. Desks stood in perfect rows, untouched since the morning.
Aria leaned back on the teacher’s desk, arms folded. “Alright, Wolfie. What’s so important that it couldn’t wait until after my anime marathon?”
Damian closed the door behind him, the click loud in the stillness. His eyes locked on hers. Cold. Calculating. Unyielding.
“I want to know what you are.”
Aria blinked once, then burst out laughing. “Human, last I checked. Unless this is one of those setups where I suddenly sprout fox ears. Should I start calling you ‘senpai’?” She mimed little animal ears on her head.
He didn’t react. “You don’t fight like a human. Not at fifteen.”
Her smile curled sharper. “Flattered.”
“You broke six men in under two minutes.” His voice was steady, but the weight behind it was undeniable. “Men twice your size. Armed. Trained. That isn’t normal.”
She tilted her head. For a heartbeat, her gold-flecked eyes darkened, dangerous. “You spying on me, Wolfie? That’s almost romantic.”
Damian didn’t flinch. “Romance has nothing to do with it. You’re a threat.”
“Aw, you say the sweetest things.” She hopped up to sit cross-legged on the desk, tapping her chin. “So what now? Kill me before I unleash my anime villain plot? Or…” She leaned forward, voice dropping to a whisper. “Are you curious?”
For the first time, something flickered in Damian’s eyes. Not weakness. Not surprise. Curiosity.
Aria’s grin widened. “I knew it. Big bad wolf wants to know how the viper plays.”
“Do not test me,” Damian said softly, but his voice carried steel.
“Oh, I’ll test you.” Her tone was sugar, but her gaze gleamed like a blade. “That’s what makes this fun.”
The silence stretched, charged with unspoken challenges.
And then, outside the half-closed blinds, emerald eyes burned.
Marco.
He stood in the shadow of the lockers, fists clenched so tight his knuckles blanched. His jaw trembled as he watched them through the glass slits in the door.
Aria laughing with him. Aria teasing him. Aria smiling at him.
Marco’s blood roared in his ears. His heart pounded, split between rage and something he didn’t want to name.
“She belongs to me,” he whispered, his breath fogging the glass. “No wolf… no one… will take her.”
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