Chapter 3 Ghosts Don’t Answer Questions

Alessandro De Luca did not sleep that night.

He left the gala with the music still echoing under his skin and her absence burning like a bruise he couldn’t stop pressing. The car ride back felt longer than it was. The city lights blurred past the windows, Naples moving on as if something hadn’t just gone wrong in a way he couldn’t name.

He replayed the moment again and again.

The way she’d looked at him.

The way she’d hesitated before taking his hand.

The way she’d been taken.

Not escorted.

Not persuaded.

Taken.

By morning, Alessandro had torn the gala apart without ever returning to it.

“Find her.”

The words were calm. The room was not.

Raffaele stood across from his desk, tablet in hand, jaw tight. “We’ve gone through the guest list twice.”

“And?” Alessandro asked.

“And she’s not on it.”

That was the first crack.

“She danced in the middle of the ballroom,” Alessandro said. “Under chandeliers. In front of cameras. In front of donors and enemies. She didn’t sneak in.”

Raffaele nodded. “Security footage shows her entering.”

“Name.”

“No name,” Raffaele replied. “She wasn’t scanned.”

Alessandro’s fingers stilled against the desk.

“Impossible.”

“That’s what I said.”

They had reviewed the footage frame by frame. She appeared at the top of the staircase. Walked in like she belonged. Moved through the room without escort. No visible security. No entourage.

Then—nothing.

The cameras didn’t follow her out.

They didn’t follow her anywhere.

“She vanishes between two angles,” Raffaele continued. “Like she knew where the blind spots were.”

That settled something cold and deliberate under Alessandro’s skin.

“Someone planned that,” he said.

“Yes.”

“Someone powerful enough to erase her from a room full of power.”

Raffaele hesitated. “Or someone terrified enough.”

Alessandro didn’t answer.

By noon, rumors had started.

Soft ones. Careful ones.

You saw her too?

The girl in black.

The one who disappeared.

No one knew her name. Everyone remembered her face. And yet when Alessandro asked—directly, indirectly, politely, not politely—doors closed with smiles still attached.

“She’s not part of business,” one man said.

“You imagined it,” another joked.

“Perhaps too much champagne,” someone laughed.

Alessandro smiled back every time.

Then marked names.

By evening, obsession had replaced curiosity.

He drove himself for the first time in years, ignoring Raffaele’s protests, taking streets he didn’t usually take. He watched reflections in storefront windows, crowds at crosswalks, the tilt of every dark-haired head.

Nothing.

She was nowhere.

Which meant she was everywhere.

“She was supposed to stay hidden,” a woman whispered at a private table, unaware Alessandro was listening from the adjacent room.

“Then why bring her back?” another murmured.

That was the closest thing to truth he got all day.

By the third day, the lack of answers had become louder than gunfire.

Alessandro stopped going home.

He moved between offices, cars, shadowed rooms where men waited for orders he didn’t give. His patience was legendary. His focus was not.

“You’re chasing smoke,” Raffaele said carefully that night.

Alessandro looked up from the file he wasn’t reading. “No. I’m chasing someone who was never supposed to be seen.”

That should have ended it.

It didn’t.

Days went by, his obssession growing bigger and stronger.. but he had to return to his duties so he started with the small things.

The hospital the least of his favorite places.

Too clean. Too quiet. Too honest.

One of his men had taken a bullet in a meaningless dispute over territory that hadn’t mattered in years. Alessandro signed papers, spoke to doctors, nodded at reassurances he didn’t absorb.

As he turned down a corridor near the outpatient wing, he felt it again.

That pull.

He stopped.

She was seated near the blood donation center, sleeves rolled neatly to her elbows, dark hair tied back in a way that exposed her face completely. No makeup. No silk. Just a simple sweater and jeans, her posture composed as a nurse checked her vitals.

She looked… normal.

And yet—

Alessandro’s chest tightened like he’d taken a hit.

She laughed softly at something the nurse said, the sound low and brief, like she wasn’t used to letting it out. She thanked the nurse, calm, deliberate, as the needle slid into her arm.

Donating blood.

Of all places.

Of all reasons.

He stood there too long.

She felt it.

Her gaze lifted—and locked with his.

Recognition flared instantly.

Not fear.

Shock.

Then something else.

Control.

Her smile didn’t falter, but her eyes sharpened, like she was already deciding what to say.

Alessandro crossed the distance before he could stop himself.

“You disappeared,” he said quietly.

“So did you,” she replied, voice steady.

He studied her—no jewelry, no guards, no shadow hovering too close. Nothing about her here matched the woman under the chandeliers.

“You weren’t easy to find,” he said.

“I wasn’t trying to be,” she replied.

The nurse cleared her throat. “Sir, you can’t—”

“I’ll wait,” Alessandro said, not taking his eyes off her.

The nurse hesitated, then moved on.

Silence stretched.

“You scared me,” he said finally.

Her lips parted, then pressed together again. “nah, you are not that type.”

“No,” Alessandro agreed. “That’s how I know it mattered.”

She looked down at her arm, watching the blood flow through the line like it was something separate from her.

She looked up again. Held his gaze.

“Why are you here?” he asked.

“To give something back,” she said. “Even if it doesn’t balance anything.”

That answer unsettled him more than any lie.

The nurse returned and removed the needle. “All done. Thank you.”

She nodded, pressing cotton to her arm, then stood.

For a moment, they were too close again.

“This is where you tell me your name,” Alessandro said.

She hesitated—just a fraction too long.

“Isabella,” she said.

No last name.

He smiled slightly. “Alessandro.”

Her expression stayed neutral.

“De Luca,” he added.

The effect was immediate.

Her body didn’t flinch—but something inside her froze solid. Her fingers tightened around the cotton. Her breath caught, then smoothed deliberately, like she was pulling herself back from an edge.

She masked it well.

Too well.

“Nice to meet you,” Isabella said.

The lie sat between them, polished and perfect.

Alessandro felt it then.

Not certainty.

But confirmation.

He didn’t know who she was.

But he knew she knew exactly who he was and yet she did not walk away, looked straight into his eyes touching his soul knowing this is just the beginning.

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