The chandeliers of the Hôtel de Paris sparkled like frozen stars, each crystal catching the soft whispers around them. The annual Glass Masquerade attracted Europe’s elite, where they gathered to drink, gossip, and subtly sabotage one another.
Amid it all stood Isabella Marcelli, the lone heir to the Marcelli shipping empire. She smiled, appearing untouched by danger.
Her silver lace mask shimmered against her olive skin, concealing the fatigue in her eyes. It had been weeks since her father’s “accidental” death on his yacht—a death she suspected was no accident. Every handshake and every champagne glass could hide the man responsible for it.
She leaned over the balcony with the Mediterranean breeze below her when she caught a glimpse of her reflection in the glass doors: poised, regal, and alone. She didn’t notice the man observing her from across the ballroom—a ghost in a black suit, blending in with the waiting staff, invisible yet completely aware.
Luca Moretti wasn’t there to dance; he was there to kill.
He had been promised a straightforward job: infiltrate the gala, eliminate his target, and vanish before dawn. He had perfected this kind of mission a hundred times before. But when his handler whispered the name—Isabella Marcelli—something shifted inside him. The Marcellis were connected to the same syndicate that once controlled his life and maybe even his soul.
He watched her laugh at a politician’s joke, her hand shaking slightly around the stem of her champagne flute. Was it weakness, fear, or grief? He couldn’t tell. All he knew was that she didn’t look like someone deserving of a bullet.
The orchestra swelled. Gowns rustled. Luca moved through the crowd like smoke. A waiter’s tray, a quick swap of glasses, a silent glide toward the balcony doors.
Isabella stepped outside again, craving fresh air. The scent of night jasmine mixed with the salty breeze. The city lights below twinkled like stars trapped in glass. She took off her mask and whispered into the night, “I know you’re watching.”
For a moment, everything stood still.
A voice behind her—low, smooth, and dangerous—said, “Then stop pretending you don’t want to be found.”
She turned and found the man in the black suit close enough to see her reflection in his dark, deep-set eyes. The waiter’s uniform clung too perfectly to his frame. He wasn’t staff. He wasn’t a guest.
“Who are you?” she asked, her voice barely a whisper.
“Someone who shouldn’t be here,” he replied. “And neither should you.”
Before she could respond, glass shattered somewhere inside, followed by a scream. Then chaos erupted.
Gunfire ripped through the ballroom like thunder. Guests screamed and ducked under tables, diamonds scattering like shrapnel. Isabella froze until Luca grabbed her arm and pulled her back through the balcony door.
“Move!” he shouted.
They dashed through the kitchen, dodging terrified staff. He flung open a service exit and scanned the alley beyond—empty, for now.
“What is happening?” Isabella gasped, breathless. “Who are they after?”
Luca’s jaw tightened. “You.”
A black car screeched to a stop at the end of the alley, the doors opening wide. Armed men in suits poured out.
He cursed under his breath. “Too many.”
“Then why are you helping me?” she snapped.
“Because someone already paid me not to kill you.”
Her eyes widened—confusion, fear, and a hint of trust flickered within them. “Then who—”
The rest of her question was drowned out by a spray of bullets. Luca pushed her behind a dumpster and returned fire with chilling precision. One assailant fell, and another lunged at him.
“Run!” Luca shouted.
She hesitated, her gaze locked on him—the stranger who had saved her life. Then she took off.
When she reached the end of the alley, a blast echoed behind her. Heat and light engulfed the night. She turned and saw the hotel's rear consumed by flames.
“Luca!” she cried.
No response. Just smoke.
Sirens wailed. The world blurred in noise and firelight. She stumbled toward the street, clutching the only reminder of him—a single cufflink glinting silver in her palm.
Etched on it was a name she didn’t recognize: “M. Angelus.”
As firefighters rushed in, Isabella melted into the crowd, unaware that Luca Moretti watched her from a nearby rooftop. Blood seeped through his sleeve, and the fire painted his face in gold and red.
He murmured, “You weren’t supposed to live.”
Then he turned and vanished into the night.
