The Mafia Boss Blocked Her Exit and Said, “Dinner Tomorrow at 8, Stubborn Girl.”

I saw the parking spot at the exact same moment he did.
It was the last available space on the entire street, a miracle in Naples’ chaotic Centro Storico, where parking was a competitive blood sport and double parking was treated like a legitimate lifestyle choice. I had already been circling for 20 minutes, late for a client meeting that could make or break my fledgling graphic design business. My ancient Fiat 500 was sputtering ominously. The check-engine light had been on for 3 weeks. I was running on 4 hours of sleep and pure caffeine-fueled desperation.
So when that spot appeared, perfectly sized, legally marked, and blessed by whatever parking gods existed, I did not hesitate. I gunned the engine and aimed my tiny car straight toward salvation.
That was when I heard it: the deep, powerful roar of an engine that cost more than my annual income. A black Maserati, sleek, polished, and predatory, approached the same space from the opposite direction. The man driving it clearly had the same idea I did.
We reached the space simultaneously, our cars angled toward each other like 2 fighters in a ring. Through my cracked windshield, I saw him: tall, dark-haired, wearing sunglasses that probably cost more than my monthly rent, with a jawline sharp enough to cut glass. He looked as if he had stepped straight out of a luxury fragrance advertisement, the kind of man accustomed to getting exactly what he wanted without resistance.
He motioned for me to back up.
I shook my head and pointed at my blinker, which had been flashing first.
He motioned again, more insistently.
I did not move.
This was my parking spot. I had seen it first. I had indicated first. And I was absolutely, definitively not giving it up to some entitled man driving a car worth more than my entire life savings.
The Maserati’s driver door opened. He unfolded himself from the car with smooth, practiced ease, the kind that suggested either elite athletic training or a lifetime of people stepping aside. Up close, he was even more imposing, easily 6’3″, broad-shouldered, dressed in a flawlessly tailored dark-gray suit, the kind only a master Italian tailor could make.
He walked toward my car with unhurried confidence. I could see the exact moment he expected me to roll down my window and comply.
I stayed exactly where I was, engine running, foot on the brake, my little Fiat positioned diagonally across the space and making it impossible for his Maserati to squeeze in.
He rapped on my window with knuckles that looked as if they had seen their share of violence.
I cracked the window approximately 3 cm.
“Yes?” I asked in my sweetest voice.
“You are in my spot.”
His voice was deep and smooth, carrying the kind of Neapolitan accent that suggested he had grown up in the city’s wealthier districts.
“Actually,” I replied, “I am in my spot. I saw it first. I indicated first. And my car is currently occupying the space. That makes it mine.”
One dark eyebrow lifted above his sunglasses.
“You cannot be serious.”
“Completely. And now, if you will excuse me, I am late for a meeting.”
I eased my foot off the brake, starting to inch forward, ready to straighten out and claim the space properly.
His hand came down on my hood. It was not aggressive, but it was firm enough to make 1 thing clear.
He was not going anywhere.
“I will give you 1 more chance to reconsider.” His tone shifted, not quite threatening, almost amused. “I am a busy man. I do not have time for parking negotiations. Move your car.”
“No.”
The word slipped out before I could stop it.
I do not know what possessed me. Maybe it was the lack of sleep. Maybe it was the stress of building a business from nothing while living in a shoebox apartment. Or maybe it was men like him: wealthy, powerful, arrogant men who always assumed they could take whatever they wanted while people like me had to fight for every small victory.
Whatever the reason, I was not backing down.
“No,” he repeated, as if the concept itself offended him.
“No. This is my parking spot. Find another 1.”
“There are no other spots on this street.”
“Then I guess you will have to park somewhere else,” I said calmly. “Via Toledo has a parking garage 2 blocks away. I am sure they will be thrilled to accommodate the Maserati.”
I saw his jaw tighten, the muscle jumping beneath his skin. For a moment, I thought he might explode, yell, threaten, maybe even call a tow truck.
Instead, he laughed.
It started as a quiet chuckle and grew into real laughter, his shoulders shaking. He lifted his sunglasses, and for the first time I saw his eyes. They were dark brown, almost black, sharp with intelligence and something else I could not quite name.
“You have no idea who I am, do you?”
“I do not care who you are. You could be the mayor of Naples and you would still have to find your own parking spot.”
“The mayor would definitely have to,” he said, still smiling. “But I am not the mayor.”
He paused.
“I am Carlo Ferretti.”
He said the name as if it should mean something, as if I should recognize it instantly and apologize or grovel.
I did not.
I stared at him blankly.
“Congratulations.”
He looked delighted.
“You really do not know.”
“Should I?”
“Most people in this town would.”
He leaned down, lowering his face closer to my cracked window.
“Carlo Ferretti,” he said calmly. “I own the building you are parked in front of, and the restaurant on the corner, and roughly 40% of the commercial real estate in the Centro Storico.”
“Oh.”
“Oh, no. That Carlo Ferretti.”
Even I, who paid minimal attention to Naples’ business elite, had heard whispers about the Ferretti family: old money tangled with new power, interests ranging from legitimate freight transport to ventures discussed only in deliberately vague terms. Carlo Ferretti was rumored to be the youngest and most ruthless of 3 brothers, the 1 who expanded the family empire while maintaining a reputation for brilliance and danger.
And I had just told him to park in a garage 2 blocks away.
“Well,” I said, forcing composure, “that is very impressive, but it does not change the fact that I was here first.”
His grin widened.
“Most people realize who I am, apologize immediately, and move their car. You are doubling down.” He studied me closely. “That is either incredibly brave or incredibly stupid.”
“Probably both,” I admitted. “But I am still not moving.”
Carlo examined me for a long moment: my face, my ancient Fiat, then the portfolio bag on my passenger seat.
“Adriana Romano Design,” he said. “You are heading to a meeting.”
It was not a question.
I nodded.
“Important client, potentially. If I get there before they give up on me.”
“And you would risk angering me, someone you now know owns a large portion of this neighborhood, over a parking spot.”
“I would risk angering the Pope himself over this parking spot. I have been circling for 20 minutes. I am not giving it up.”
Something shifted in his expression, amusement turning into something else.
Interest.
“What is your name?”
“Why do you want to know?”
“Because I like knowing the names of people who impress me,” he said. “And you have impressed me. Not many people tell me no. Even fewer do it twice.”
I hesitated, then answered anyway.
“Adriana.”
“Adriana Romano.” He said it slowly. “Well, Adriana Romano, you have put me in an interesting position. I could have your car towed. I could make a phone call and have parking enforcement here in minutes. I could make your life very difficult.”
My heart hammered, but I kept my face calm.
“You could,” I said. “But you will not.”
One dark eyebrow lifted.
“Won’t I? And what makes you so sure?”
“Because you are enjoying this too much.” I gestured toward his face. “You are smiling. You think this is funny. If you were actually angry, you would have already made those calls instead of standing here negotiating.”
Carlo’s smile widened, slowly turning into a full grin.
“Observant,” he said. “Are you this direct with all your clients, or only with men who could make your professional life complicated?”
“Just with men who try to intimidate me over parking spots. In business meetings, I am very professional.”
“I do not doubt it.”
He straightened and stepped away from my car. For a moment, I thought he was conceding, leaving, letting me have the spot.
Instead, he pulled out his phone and made a call. I could not hear what he said, but it lasted less than 30 seconds. He slipped the phone back into his pocket and looked at me again, that same infuriating smile in place.
“I have made arrangements.”
My stomach tightened.
“What kind of arrangements?”
“You will see.”
He returned to his Maserati. I watched in growing confusion as he started the engine, then pulled forward and parked diagonally across the street in what was definitely not a legal parking spot. He got out, locked the car, and walked toward the building he apparently owned.
At the entrance, he turned back.
“You win, Adriana Romano. The spot is yours. But this conversation is not over.”
“What is that supposed to mean?”
“It means I am not accustomed to losing,” he said calmly, “and I am not accustomed to being intrigued by stubborn women who drive cars held together by rust and determination. So I am making a new arrangement.”
“I did not agree to any arrangement.”
“Dinner. Tomorrow night at 8:00. I will pick you up.”
“I do not even know you. I am not having dinner with you.”
“Yes, you are.”
His voice did not rise. It did not threaten. It did not need to.
“Because I am going to find out everything about you: where you live, where you work, who you are meeting today. And tomorrow at 8:00, I will arrive at your door, and you will come to dinner with me.”
“That is stalking. That is literally stalking.”
“That is due diligence.”
He smiled, slow and dangerous.
“And you will come because you are curious. Because in the 5 minutes we have been arguing over a parking spot, you felt more alive than you have in months. Because you want to know what happens next.”
I opened my mouth to tell him exactly what he could do with his dinner invitation, but before I could speak, he turned and disappeared into the building.
I sat there in my car, heart racing, hands trembling on the steering wheel.
What the hell had just happened?
I glanced at the clock on my dashboard.
Fifteen minutes late.
I needed to park, pull myself together, and get to the client before they decided I was too unprofessional to hire. I maneuvered my Fiat into the spot, cut the engine, and took 3 steady breaths.
Carlo Ferretti could make all the declarations he wanted about dinner and not giving me choices. I was a grown woman. I made my own decisions. If he showed up at my door, if he somehow found out where I lived, I simply would not answer.
Problem solved.
Except even as I thought it, I knew I was lying to myself.
He was right.
I was curious.
In those 5 minutes of arguing over a parking space, I had felt more alive than I had in months. Those months had been filled with careful planning, playing it safe, and being the responsible, professional version of myself that clients trusted.
I grabbed my portfolio and headed to the meeting, telling myself I would worry about Carlo Ferretti later.
The meeting took place in a converted palazzo, now home to several creative agencies. The potential client was a boutique hotel chain looking to rebrand. Landing this contract would mean 3 months of guaranteed income, enough to fix my car, pay down some debt, and maybe even afford a better apartment.
I was still rattled from the confrontation outside, but I forced myself to focus.
Somehow, the meeting went better than expected. They liked my portfolio, responded to my vision, and promised a decision within the week. I walked out cautiously hopeful, the kind of hope you earn after years of learning not to count on anything until ink hits paper.
When I reached my car, my phone chimed.
It was a text from an unknown number.
You were 17 minutes late to your meeting at Romano and Associates. The clients waited, which suggests they are genuinely interested in your work. Good sign.
My blood went cold.
Who is this? How do you know where I was? This is harassment.
The unknown number replied almost immediately.
This is information gathering. There is a difference. The clients own 3 boutique hotels. Annual revenue is approximately 8 million euros. They are a good opportunity for you. I hope you impress them.
Stop stalking me.
Dinner tomorrow, 8:00 p.m. Wear something nice, but not formal. We are going to Pizzeria da Michele, not some pretentious establishment. I will pick you up at your apartment on Via San Gregorio Armeno.
My chest tightened.
He knew where I lived.
Of course he did. Men like Carlo Ferretti probably employed entire teams whose sole purpose was knowing things about people.
I am not coming to dinner. Lose my number.
There was a pause. Then another text.
Yes, you are. And I never lose anything I want to keep. See you tomorrow, Adriana.
I blocked the number immediately, my hands shaking with anger and something else, something dangerously close to excitement.
This was insane. I should go to the police, file a report, document everything. Except what would I even say? That a powerful man had invited me to dinner at a pizza restaurant? That he had found publicly available information about my address and a business meeting?
Nothing he had done was technically illegal. Just deeply unsettling.
And if I was honest with myself, in some twisted way, flattering.
When was the last time anyone had pursued me with this kind of single-minded intensity? When was the last time I had felt wanted instead of merely tolerated? My last relationship had ended 18 months earlier, when my ex casually mentioned that he was moving to Milan for work and had not thought to include me in his plans, the way 1 does when the other person is an afterthought, easy to leave behind.
Carlo Ferretti was many things: arrogant, invasive, probably dangerous. But he did not treat me like an afterthought.
I drove home through Naples’ chaotic traffic, my thoughts racing. My apartment was a tiny studio in the heart of the old city, a 4th-floor walk-up with no elevator, overlooking laundry lines and ancient church steeples. It was cramped and loud, and I loved it fiercely, the way you love something you fought hard to earn.
That evening, I buried myself in work. I polished the hotel rebrand proposal, tweaked layouts, refined color palettes. I tried to force Carlo Ferretti out of my mind.
It did not work.
Every time my phone chimed with a legitimate notification, my heart jumped, half expecting him to have found another way through.
Around midnight, there was a knock at my door.
I froze.
No one knocked at midnight unless something was wrong.
“Who is it?”
“Delivery for Signorina Romano.”
I opened the door cautiously. A young man stood there holding an enormous bouquet of flowers. Not roses. Wildflowers, the kind that grew in the hills around Naples, unpretentious and unexpected.
“I did not order flowers.”
“They are already paid for,” he replied. “Card is inside.”
He handed them over and left before I could say another word.
The card was simple.
For being the first person in years to tell me no. Tomorrow, 8:00 p.m. Do not make me come get you.
I should have thrown them away. I should have marched straight to the nearest police station.
Instead, I put them in water and stared at them for 20 minutes, trying to understand what game Carlo Ferretti was playing.
The next day, I threw myself into work. I finalized the hotel proposal, responded to emails, and updated my portfolio website, anything to avoid thinking about 8:00 p.m. I told myself I absolutely would not be ready when Carlo showed up. I would be in my pajamas eating leftover pasta, making it clear that his demands meant nothing to me.
At 7:30, I found myself in the shower.
At 7:45, I was standing in front of my tiny closet, trying to decide what nice but not formal meant.
At 7:50, I was dressed in dark jeans and a silk blouse, with minimal makeup and my hair down, telling myself this did not mean I was going to dinner with him. I was just being prepared in case he actually showed up, so I could tell him to his face that this was unacceptable.
At precisely 8:00 p.m., there was a knock on my door.
I opened it to find Carlo Ferretti looking somehow even more devastating than he had the day before. He wore dark jeans and a black button-down shirt, the sleeves rolled to his elbows, revealing muscular forearms. His hair was slightly tousled, as if he had been running his hands through it. He looked less like a business mogul and more like a very attractive man trying not to look too intimidating.
“You are ready.” His eyes traveled over my outfit with obvious approval. “I knew you would be.”
“I am not going to dinner with you,” I said, even as I grabbed my purse.
“Yes, you are. We have established this.”
He held out his hand.
“Come on. The restaurant gets crowded after 8:30.”
“I do not take orders from strangers.”
“Good. I would not want someone who did. But I am not a stranger anymore. I am Carlo. You are Adriana. And we are going to have the best pizza in Naples while we figure out why we cannot stop thinking about each other.”
“I have not been thinking about you.”
His smile suggested he knew exactly how much I had been thinking about him.
“Then you will have plenty of time during dinner to catch up. Come on, Adriana. Stop fighting this. You know you want to come.”
He was right. Damn him, he was right.
I did want to go. I wanted to understand what this odd rapport was and why this arrogant man, who had stalked my schedule and invaded my privacy, made me feel more energized than I had in years.
“One dinner,” I said firmly. “And then you leave me alone.”
“One dinner,” he agreed.
But the look in his dark eyes suggested he was lying as much as I was.
The Maserati was parked illegally outside my building. Of course it was. A young man stood guard beside it. Carlo nodded to him, and the man immediately disappeared, presumably to make himself scarce.
“You have someone guarding your car?” I asked as Carlo opened the passenger door for me.
“I have someone making sure it does not get towed. There is a difference.”
He waited until I was seated before closing the door with deliberate care.
“Besides,” he added once he had moved into the driver’s seat, “in this neighborhood, an unattended Maserati would be stripped for parts within 1 hour.”
“That is not true. We are not all criminals in the Centro Storico.”
“I did not say criminals. I said pragmatists. There is a difference.”
He started the engine, which purred to life with that same expensive rumble from the day before.
“Actually, I grew up 3 blocks from here, Via Tribunali, above a pasticceria that has been closed for 15 years now.”
I turned to look at him in surprise.
“You grew up in the Centro Storico?”
“You thought I was born in a palazzo in Posillipo?”
He pulled smoothly into traffic, driving along the narrow streets with the confidence of someone who knew every alley and shortcut.
“No. My family had money, but not the kind that bought mansions. My father ran a small shipping company. One boat. Barely profitable. My brothers and I grew up sharing a bedroom the size of your studio apartment.”
“Then how did you…”
I trailed off, not sure how to politely inquire about how he had gone from modest means to owning half the city.
“How did I become this?” He motioned at himself, the car, the expensive watch on his wrist. “Hard work, smart investments, and a willingness to operate in the spaces where others would not. My father wanted to stay small, stay safe. I wanted more. So I took risks he would not take, made deals he would not make. Some of them paid off spectacularly. Others nearly destroyed me. But I survived, and I learned, and I built something bigger than he ever imagined.”
There was pride in his voice, but also something else. Defensiveness, maybe, as if he were still justifying his choices to a father who might not have approved.
“Does your family still live in Naples?”
“My father died 5 years ago. Heart attack. My mother lives in a villa I bought her in Capri. She refuses to come back to the city. She says it holds too many difficult memories. My brothers and I run the family business together, though together is a generous term. Mostly, we tolerate each other and try not to let our mutual irritation interfere with profits.”
We pulled up in front of Pizzeria da Michele, and a valet immediately appeared to take the car. Carlo handed over the keys without a word, then came around to open my door.
“You brought your Maserati to a pizza restaurant?”
“I bring my car everywhere. Why should I have borrowed something more modest to impress you?” His eyes glinted with amusement. “Would you respect me more if I had shown up in a Fiat like yours?”
“My Fiat has character.”
“Your Fiat has rust and a check-engine light that has been on so long it has probably given up hope. But yes, it has character. That is 1 of the things I noticed about you.”
“What else did you notice?”
The question came out before I could stop it.
Carlo’s hand settled at the small of my back as he guided me toward the restaurant entrance.
“I noticed everything,” he said quietly. “That you wear your hair down because you think it makes you look softer, less intimidating in business meetings. That you bite your lower lip when you are thinking. That your right hand is stained with pencil marks because you still sketch by hand even though you finish everything digitally. You are left-handed, and you take your coffee with milk and 1 sugar. Also, when you smile, truly smile, not the professional 1 you use with clients, you have a dimple on your left cheek.”
I stopped walking and turned to face him.
“How could you possibly know all that from yesterday?”
“I do not.”
He said it evenly.
“I had someone follow you today.”
The words should have sent me running. They should have outraged me.
Instead, I heard myself ask, “Why?”
“Because I wanted to know you. Because in 33 years, no one has ever refused me something as insignificant as a parking spot, and I needed to understand why.”
He stepped closer, and I caught the scent of his cologne: dark, expensive, leather and cedar.
“What kind of woman values a parking space more than avoiding conflict with someone like me?” he continued. “And the more I learned, the more fascinating you became.”
“This is insane,” I said, but I did not move away.
“Completely insane,” he agreed. “I should have forgotten you the moment you drove off yesterday, written you off as an amusing story. But I could not stop thinking about you. About the way you looked at me like I was just another man, not Carlo Ferretti. About your stubbornness, your fire, the fact that you built a business from nothing and are fighting to keep it alive in 1 of the most competitive cities in Italy.”
“How do you know I built it from nothing?”
“Because I know everything,” he said simply. “I know you graduated from the Academy of Fine Arts 6 years ago. I know you worked at 3 design firms and hated all of them because they did not respect your vision. I know you went independent 2 years ago and that you have struggled ever since because you refuse to sell your integrity for easy money. I know your rent is 3 months overdue. That you eat mostly pasta and vegetables because they are cheap. That you have not bought new clothes in over 1 year.”
Heat flooded my chest, sharp and humiliating.
He knew everything. Every failure. Every compromise I had refused to make. Every fragile thread holding my life together.
“I should go,” I said, my voice tight. “This was a mistake.”
I turned, and his hand closed gently around my wrist.
“Do not,” he said, then quieter, “please.”
The word stopped me cold.
Carlo Ferretti did not strike me as a man who said please very often.
“I am not telling you this to embarrass you,” he said quietly. “I am telling you because I understand. I have been where you are. I have eaten nothing but bread and olives because it was all I could afford. I have had creditors pounding on my door. I have lain awake at night wondering if I was insane for believing I could build something from nothing.”
His voice softened.
“And I want you to know this. I see you. I really see you. Not the polished professional version you show your clients, but the woman underneath, the 1 barely holding it together and refusing to give up.”
I looked up at him, this powerful, dangerous man who somehow understood my life with unsettling precision.
“Why do you care?”
“Because stubbornness recognizes stubbornness. Because I see in you the same refusal to quit that drove me. And because”—he paused, choosing his words—“in all the years I have spent building my empire, I have been surrounded by people who want something from me. Money. Access. Protection. Opportunity. Everyone wants something.”
His eyes held mine.
“But you did not even know who I was. You fought me over a parking spot like I was nobody special. Do you have any idea how rare that is? How refreshing?”
“So I am entertaining to you. A novelty?”
“No,” he replied firmly. “You are real. And real is something I have not encountered in a very long time.”
He released my wrist but did not step away.
“Now,” he said lightly, “can we please go inside and eat pizza? I have not eaten all day, and if I do not get food soon, I am going to start making very poor decisions.”
Despite everything—the stalking, the invasion of privacy, the sheer audacity of this man—I laughed.
“Fine. One pizza. But I am paying for my own meal.”
“Absolutely not.”
“Carlo—”
“Adriana,” he interrupted calmly, “I have more money than I could spend in 3 lifetimes. You are 3 months behind on rent. This is not a negotiation. I am buying you dinner. Accept it gracefully.”
“I do not accept charity.”
“Good. Neither do I. This is not charity. This is a man taking a woman he is interested in to dinner. Let me do this without turning it into a battle about pride and independence.”
He held out his hand.
“Please.”
There was that word again.
Please.
It disarmed me more than any command ever could.
I took his hand.
The restaurant was exactly as crowded as he had predicted, a line of tourists and locals stretching out the door. But Carlo walked straight past them. The hostess greeted him by name and led us to a table in the back corner, quiet, private, shielded from the noise.
“You have a reserved table.”
“At a pizza restaurant that does not take reservations?”
“I have an understanding with the owner,” he replied. “Our grandfathers were friends. Sometimes old connections matter more than money.”
He did not even glance at the menu, ordering for both of us in rapid Neapolitan dialect. I could barely follow.
“What did you just order?”
“2 margheritas, 1 marinara, caprese salad, and fried zucchini flowers. Trust me.”
“I do not know you well enough to trust you.”
“Then trust that I know good food. I have been eating here since I was 6 years old. My father used to bring us here every Sunday after church. It was the 1 extravagance he would allow himself. Pizza for the family, no matter how tight money was.” His tone mellowed with the memory. “He would always order too much and insist we could not possibly waste food. My brothers and I would compete to see who could eat the most slices. I usually won.”
“Somehow that does not surprise me. You seem like someone who is accustomed to winning.”
“I am accustomed to refusing to lose. There is a difference.”
The waiter brought wine, house red, nothing fancy, and Carlo poured for both of us.
“Tell me about your business. What made you want to be a designer?”
“You probably already know from your research.”
“I know facts. I want to hear it from you. Your version, not the data my people collected.”
I took a sip of wine, considering how much to reveal.
“My grandmother was a seamstress. She made wedding dresses, communion gowns, custom suits for important occasions. I grew up watching her turn fabric and thread into something beautiful. She said design was the art of seeing what could be rather than what is, of taking something ordinary and making it extraordinary.”
“And you wanted to do that.”
“I wanted to create things that mattered, that made people feel something. When I worked at the design firms, everything was about trends and algorithms and what would get the most clicks. Nobody cared about craft or meaning. They just wanted content that would go viral and make quick money.”
I twisted my wine glass between my fingers.
“So I left. I started my own studio. I thought I could do it differently, do it right, build a reputation for quality and integrity. But quality and integrity do not pay the bills as quickly as viral content does.”
“No, they do not.”
I met his eyes.
“But I am not giving up. I will figure it out. I always do.”
“That stubbornness again,” Carlo said, but he was smiling. “What if I told you I could solve all your problems? 1 phone call, and you would have more clients than you could handle. Would you let me?”
“No.”
“Why not?”
“Because then I would owe you. And owing someone like you is dangerous.”
“Someone like me?” he repeated softly. “You mean someone involved in businesses that operate in gray areas? Someone with a reputation for being ruthless? Someone your mother would warn you about?”
“My mother is dead,” I said. “But yes. If she were alive, she would absolutely warn me about you.”
“Smart woman. You should listen to her hypothetical warnings.”
He leaned back as the waiter brought our food. The pizza emitted an incredible aroma. My stomach actually growled.
“But you will not listen, will you?” he said. “Because you are curious. Because part of you wants to see what happens if you step into my world for a while.”
“I am not stepping into your world. I am eating pizza. There is a difference.”
He moved a perfect slice of margherita onto my plate.
“Eat. Then we will negotiate the terms of whatever this is becoming.”
The pizza was transcendent. Simple. Perfect. The kind of food that reminded you why Naples was Naples. We ate in peaceful quiet for several minutes, and I found myself relaxing despite the strangeness of the situation.
Then Carlo spoke abruptly.
“Tell me something real. Something you have never told anyone else.”
“Why would I do that?”
“Because I want to know you. The real you. Not the version you show the world. And because I will tell you something real in return. Fair trade.”
I considered refusing, maintaining my boundaries, playing it safe. But something—the low light, the good wine, the unexpected intimacy—made me reckless.
“I am terrified,” I admitted. “Every single day I wake up terrified that I made a mistake. That I should have stayed at the design firm, swallowed my pride, taken the steady paycheck. That I am going to fail and end up with nothing. That my stubbornness is not strength. It is just foolish pride that is going to destroy me.”
Carlo was quiet for a moment, his dark eyes studying my face.
“Your turn,” I said. “Something real.”
“I am lonely,” he said simply. “I have money, power, respect. I have employees who follow my orders and business associates who court my favor. I have family who tolerate me and women who are available whenever I want them. But I do not have anyone who sees me, really sees me, the way you did yesterday when you looked at me like I was just some annoying man trying to steal your parking spot. Everyone else sees Carlo Ferretti, the reputation. You just saw me.”
The vulnerability in his admission caught me off guard. This was not the arrogant man from yesterday, or even the confident 1 who had ordered me to dinner. This was someone who had everything except what actually mattered.
“That must be exhausting,” I said quietly. “Always performing, always being Carlo Ferretti.”
“It is the price of success in my world. You do not get to be human. You get to be effective.”
He refilled our wine glasses.
“But with you, I do not have to perform. You do not care about my money or my connections. You think I am arrogant and invasive and probably dangerous. You are not wrong about any of that. But at least it is honest.”
“This is the strangest dinner I have ever had.”
“Good. Strange is better than boring. I have had enough boring dinners to last several lifetimes.”
He picked up another slice of pizza.
“Now tell me about your grandmother, the seamstress. Is she still alive?”
“No. She died 4 years ago. Cancer.”
The familiar pain lingered in my chest.
“She was the 1 who encouraged me to go to the academy, who told me I had talent worth developing. My parents thought art was impractical and that I should study something sensible, like accounting or law. But Nana believed in me. And when she died, I almost gave up. I thought maybe my parents were right, that I was being foolish. But then I realized that giving up would dishonor everything she taught me. So I kept going. For her.”
Carlo reached across the table and took my hand. The gesture should have felt presumptuous. We barely knew each other. Instead, it felt grounding.
“She would be proud of you,” he said. “Struggling but refusing to quit is more honorable than succeeding by compromising your values.”
“You sound like you are speaking from experience.”
“I have done both. The compromising and the refusing to compromise. I can tell you which 1 lets you sleep at night.”
His thumb moved slowly over the back of my hand.
“But I have also learned that sometimes survival requires flexibility. There is a difference between compromising your values and being strategically practical.”
“Is that what you tell yourself? That your gray-area business dealings are strategic practicality?”
“Yes. And also that the world is not black and white. The legal system is often just a reflection of who has power, not what is actually right or wrong. I operate in the spaces where the rules do not quite reach. Does that make me a criminal or a pragmatist?”
“Depends on who is judging.”
“And how do you judge yourself?”
Carlo was quiet for a moment, his dark eyes unreadable.
“I judge myself by whether I keep my word. I make promises sparingly, but when I do, I keep them. I protect what is mine. I do not betray people who trust me. The law may see me as questionable, but my conscience is clear.”
“And am I yours to protect now?” I asked, not sure whether I was challenging him or testing him.
“I am deciding.”
“Are you deciding to let me?”
He leaned forward, his intensity focused entirely on me.
“Because here is what I am proposing, Adriana. I want to see you again. Not just once. Not just casual dinners where we pretend we are normal people. I want to see where this goes. You and me. Whatever this connection is.”
“That is insane. We just met yesterday.”
“I have made decisions with longer-lasting consequences in less time. I am good at reading situations, and this 1 is clear. You are interesting, intelligent, stubborn, and real. Those qualities are rare enough individually. Together, in 1 person, they are worth pursuing.”
“And what would pursuing look like?” I asked, my heart beating fast. “Because I am not interested in being some rich man’s temporary entertainment.”
“Good. Because I am not interested in temporary. When I commit to something, I commit completely. If we do this, if you agree to see me, to explore whatever this is, then you are not some casual distraction. You are someone I am choosing, someone I am investing in.”
“Investing in?” I repeated. “That sounds transactional.”
“Everything is transactional. The question is whether the transaction is fair, whether both parties gain respect and honesty in the exchange.”
He tightened his grip on my hand.
“I can offer you things. Not charity, but opportunities, introductions to clients who have money and taste, security, protection, a life that is not defined by struggling to survive.”
“And what do you want in return?”
“You. Your time. Your attention. Your honesty. I want someone who will tell me when I am being an arrogant bastard. Someone who will fight with me over parking spots and dinner reservations and whatever else strikes your stubborn fancy. I want real, Adriana. I want you unfiltered and uncompromising.”
I should have said no. I should have recognized it for what it was: a powerful man used to getting what he wanted, making an offer that sounded generous but came with strings I could not even see yet.
But God help me, I was tempted.
Because when was the last time someone had looked at me the way Carlo was looking at me now? Like I was valuable. Like I was worth pursuing. Like my stubbornness was an asset rather than a character flaw.
“I need to think about it,” I said at last.
“Fair enough. Take your time. I am not going anywhere.”
He released my hand and signaled for the check.
“But while you are thinking, let me show you something.”
“Show me what?”
“My world. The parts that are not dark and dangerous. The parts that might appeal to someone like you.”
He smiled.
“Come on. The night is young, and Naples is beautiful this time of year.”
We left the restaurant and walked along the narrow streets of the Centro Storico. Carlo pointed out buildings he owned, told stories about the neighborhood’s history, and introduced me to shopkeepers who clearly knew and respected him. This was not the dangerous mob boss from rumors. This was a man who belonged to the city, who knew its flows and secrets.
We ended up at Castel dell’Ovo, overlooking the bay. The castle was closed for the evening, but Carlo made a phone call, and somehow we were granted access to walk along the ramparts.
The view was spectacular. Naples spread ahead of us, its lights dazzling like fireflies, Vesuvius a dark shape against the night sky.
“I come here when I need to think,” Carlo said, leaning against the stone wall. “When business gets complicated or family drama becomes overwhelming. Up here, everything feels manageable. Problems that seem insurmountable at street level shrink to proper perspective.”
“It is beautiful,” I admitted.
“It is. But it is not why I brought you here.”
He turned to face me fully.
“I brought you here because I wanted you to see me somewhere I am not performing. Not Carlo Ferretti the businessman. Just Carlo. A man who is tired of being alone, who saw something in you that made him willing to risk rejection, who is standing here hoping you will say yes to seeing him again.”
The vulnerability in his tone undid me. This was not the arrogant man demanding I come to dinner. This was someone genuinely asking, hoping, risking.
“One more date,” I whispered. “Let me get to know you. The real you, not the reputation. If it feels right, we will see where it goes. If it does not, we part as… well, not friends exactly. But as 2 people who shared some good pizza.”
Carlo’s smile was like a sunrise.
“One more date. I can work with that.”
He moved closer, and I knew he was going to kiss me. I should have stepped back, maintained boundaries, kept things professional and cautious.
Instead, I leaned in.
The kiss was nothing like I expected. It was soft, almost tentative, as if he were afraid I might bolt if he pushed too hard. His hand came up to cup my face, his thumb tracing along my cheekbone, and I felt something inside me shift. Some wall I had built after too many disappointments began to crack.
When we finally broke apart, both breathing harder, Carlo rested his forehead against mine.
“You are going to destroy me,” he said quietly. “I can feel it. You are going to get under my skin and into my head and make me want things I have convinced myself I do not need.”
“Good,” I said, astonishing myself with my boldness. “You deserve to want things. To be human instead of just effective.”
He laughed, low and intimate.
“See, this is what I am talking about. You say things like that, and I am lost. Completely lost.”
“We are both lost, then, because I have no idea what I am doing here with you.”
“Then let us figure it out together.”
He pulled back, his dark eyes searching my face.
“Come on. I will take you home. And tomorrow, I am taking you somewhere special. Wear comfortable shoes.”
“Tomorrow? We just agreed to 1 more date. You are already planning it?”
“I told you. When I commit to something, I commit completely. I am not letting you back out now.”
But the way he said it, not as a command but as a promise, made it sound less like a warning and more like something I wanted to hear.
Part 2
Carlo drove me home along empty streets, his hand occasionally finding mine on the center console. We did not talk much. There was a peaceful quiet between us that seemed earned somehow, despite the fact that we had known each other for less than 48 hours.
When we pulled up in front of my building, he got out, opened my door, and walked me to the entrance.
“Thank you for dinner,” I said, feeling it suddenly and abruptly. “And for the castle. And for not being completely terrifying.”
“I can be terrifying when necessary,” Carlo said with a slight smile. “But not with you. Never with you.”
He brushed a strand of hair from my face.
“Sleep well, Adriana. I will pick you up at 10:00 tomorrow morning.”
“You still have not told me where we are going.”
“That is because it is a surprise.”
“Do you trust me?”
“Absolutely not.”
“Smart woman.”
He kissed my forehead, a gesture so unexpectedly tender that it made my chest ache.
“But come anyway.”
I watched him drive away, then climbed the 4 flights to my apartment, my mind spinning with everything that had happened.
I had just agreed to see Carlo Ferretti again. I had kissed him. I was potentially entering a relationship with a man who operated in moral gray areas and had people following me to gather information.
I should have been terrified.
Instead, I felt exhilarated.
My phone chimed softly as I was getting ready for bed. A text came from an unknown number, different from the 1 I had blocked the day before.
Do not block this 1. I need to contact you.
How many phone numbers do you have?
Enough. Did you have a good evening?
You were there. You know I did.
I know I did. I wanted to ensure you felt the same. Sometimes people enjoy themselves in the moment, but later regret it.
I do not regret it. But ask me again after whatever mysterious adventure you have planned for tomorrow.
It is not mysterious. It is perfect. You will see. Sleep well, bella.
Bella.
Beautiful.
The easy endearment made me smile despite myself.
I fell asleep with my phone in my hand and dreamed of dark eyes and dangerous promises.
The next morning, I was ready at 9:30, wearing jeans and comfortable sneakers as instructed. I had no idea where we were going, but I had learned that Carlo did not do anything halfway. Whatever he had planned would be memorable.
He arrived exactly at 10:00, looking unfairly attractive in dark jeans and a navy Henley that showed off his athletic build. He held 2 paper cups of coffee and a bag carrying the aroma of fresh cornetti from the bakery around the corner.
“Breakfast,” he announced, handing me both. “We have a drive ahead of us.”
“Where are we going?”
“You will see. Come on.”
The drive took us out of Naples and up into the hills, along winding roads that offered spectacular views of the coast. Carlo navigated with easy confidence, 1 hand on the wheel, occasionally pointing out landmarks or telling stories about the region.
“My father used to bring us up here when we were kids,” he said as we climbed higher. “He would rent a small house for 1 week every summer, all he could afford, and we would spend the time hiking and swimming and eating too much. Those were good days, before everything got complicated.”
“When did it get complicated?”
“When I got old enough to understand what my father’s small shipping business was actually shipping. When I realized the men who came to our house late at night were not just business partners. When I had to choose between following the safe, small path he wanted for me or taking risks to build something bigger.”
He glanced at me.
“I chose bigger. He never quite forgave me for that.”
“Do you regret it?”
“Sometimes. Usually at 3:00 a.m., when I cannot sleep and I am thinking about all the choices that brought me here. But then morning comes, and I remember why I made those choices. The freedom. The power to protect what is mine. The ability to build something that will outlast me.”
He took my hand.
“And now, the chance to share it with someone who might actually understand.”
We turned onto a narrow private road that led to a villa perched on the hillside. It was beautiful, but not ostentatious, stone and stucco with terracotta tile roofs, surrounded by olive groves and gardens that looked as if they had been there for centuries.
“This is yours?” I asked as we pulled up.
“This is mine. I bought it 3 years ago and had it restored. I come here when I need to escape the city, to think, to remember who I am underneath all the Carlo Ferretti performance.”
He got out and came around to open my door.
“I have never brought anyone here before. You are the first.”
The significance of that admission was not lost on me. This was not just a date. This was him showing me something private, something real.
Inside, the villa was furnished simply but elegantly: comfortable furniture, broad windows that let in abundant light, artwork that looked original and carefully chosen. There was a large kitchen with commercial-grade appliances, a living room with a fireplace, and glass doors that opened onto a terrace with views that took my breath away.
“Carlo, this is…”
I struggled for words.
“It is beautiful.”
“Wait until you see the studio.”
He took my hand and led me down a hallway to a door I had not noticed. Behind it was a large, light-filled room with hardwood floors, blank walls, and windows on 3 sides.
“It is empty right now,” he said quietly. “I bought the villa thinking I would do something with the space, but I never figured out what. And then yesterday, when I was researching you, learning about your work, I thought this could be her studio. A place to create without distractions, without financial pressure. A place that is hers.”
I stared at him, not quite believing what I was hearing.
“You want to give me this?”
“I want to offer it,” he corrected gently. “No strings. You do not have to decide now. But if you want it, and if you decide this thing between us is worth exploring, then this space is yours to work in, to create in, and to build your business from. I will handle the logistics. You handle the art.”
“Carlo, I cannot accept this. It is too much. We barely know each other.”
“We know each other better than most people who have been together for months,” he replied calmly. “You know I am arrogant, invasive, and probably bad for you. I know you are stubborn, talented, and barely surviving financially. Those are facts.”
He stepped closer.
“What we are figuring out is whether the connection between us is strong enough to build something on.”
His hands rose, framing my face, gentle and steady.
“I am not asking you to move in with me, or marry me, or commit to anything permanent. I am asking if you want a place to work, a chance to focus on your art without worrying about rent. That is all.”
“That is not all,” I said softly. “That is everything.”
“That is security. Freedom. That is what you deserve.” He interrupted before I could argue. “What you have earned by refusing to compromise yourself.”
His gaze did not waver.
“Let me give you this, Adriana. Not as payment for your time, not affection, but because I have resources you need, and using them costs me nothing while giving you relief. Why would I not do that?”
Because it came with expectations. Because nothing was ever truly free. Because accepting help from Carlo Ferretti meant becoming entangled with him in ways I could not yet predict.
But also because he was right.
This was exactly what I needed. It was what I had been fighting to create on my own, and he was offering it openly, without visible strings.
“I need time to think,” I said again.
“Take all the time you need. The villa is not going anywhere. Neither am I.”
He pressed the access key into my palm.
“This is yours regardless. Come here whenever you want. Use the space. See if it inspires you. Maybe that will help you decide.”
We spent the rest of the day at the villa. Carlo made lunch, pasta with fresh tomatoes and basil from the garden, simple and perfect. We ate on the terrace, talking about everything. He told me about his brothers, about the strange balance of running a family business where everyone had opinions but only 1 person carried the weight of final decisions.
I told him about my failed relationships, about the pattern of choosing men who wanted to fix me or save me but never truly saw me as an equal. And for the first time in a long while, it felt as if I was not explaining myself.
I was simply being understood.
“I do not want to fix you,” Carlo said, refilling our wine glasses. “You are not broken. You are just temporarily resource-constrained. There is a difference.”
I huffed a quiet laugh.
“Most men see a struggling artist and either want to rescue her or run away. You are offering me a studio and acting like it is nothing.”
“Because to me, it is nothing,” he said calmly. “I own more properties than I can keep track of. This villa sits empty 11 months out of the year. Offering you 1 room costs me nothing and potentially gives you everything. Why would I not do that?”
He leaned back, studying me.
“Unless you think there are hidden strings, hidden expectations.”
“Are there not always?”
“With most people, yes. But I am trying to be different with you. I am trying to be honest.”
He reached across the table and took my hand.
“So let me be completely transparent. Yes, I want you. Yes, I hope this becomes something serious. Yes, I am investing time and resources because I am interested in you. But the studio…”
He squeezed my hand gently.
“That is not contingent on you sleeping with me, or committing to me, or doing anything for me except creating good work. If you decide tomorrow that you are not interested in me romantically, the studio is still yours. I will not take it back. I will not guilt you. My word.”
I studied his face, searching for cracks, for manipulation, for calculation.
All I saw was sincerity.
Somehow, that was more frightening.
“Why me?” I asked softly. “You could have anyone. Why pursue someone who is broke, stubborn, and comes with no advantages whatsoever?”
“Because everyone else does come with advantages. Connections. Family. Money. Social status. They are with me because of what I can do for them, what doors I can open. You did not even know who I was. You fought me over a parking spot like I was just some annoying man in an expensive car. That is not just refreshing.”
His voice softened.
“That is intoxicating.”
“So I am still a novelty. Someone different from your usual type.”
“No.” His voice was firm. “You are real in a world full of performance, and I am selfish enough to want that for myself.”
He stood, pulling me gently to my feet.
“Come on. There is something else I want to show you.”
He led me through the olive groves behind the villa to a small structure I had not noticed before, a converted barn with wide windows and a chimney. Inside was a workshop. Woodworking tools lined the walls. Half-finished furniture stood in careful rows. Sawdust coated every surface.
“This is my space,” Carlo said. “Where I come when I need to work with my hands. To create something tangible instead of managing, negotiating, and playing politics.”
I walked slowly through the room, taking in a table, a set of chairs, a beautifully crafted bookshelf. The craftsmanship was undeniable.
“You made these?”
“My father taught me. Every man should know how to build things, not just buy them. It is 1 of the few lessons from him I actually valued.”
He ran his hand along the surface of the table.
“When I am here working with wood, I am not Carlo Ferretti. I am just Carlo, the kid from Via Tribunali who learned to measure twice and cut once, who understands that some things cannot be rushed, that quality takes time.”
The vulnerability in showing me this space—his private retreat, his creative outlet—touched something warm inside my chest. This was not the powerful businessman or the dangerous man with questionable connections. This was someone who needed to create, just as I did. Someone who understood that making things with your hands fed your soul in ways making money never could.
“Thank you for showing me this,” I whispered.
“I wanted you to see that I understand what it means to need to create. To have that drive that does not make financial sense but makes every other kind of sense.”
He moved closer.
“We are not that different, Adriana. We both came from nothing. We both built something from stubbornness and refusal to quit. The only difference is that I compromised more along the way, operated in darker spaces. But the core drive is the same.”
“You are trying to seduce me with philosophical compatibility,” I said, but I was smiling.
“Is it working?”
“Maybe.”
I moved closer, closing the distance between us.
“Or maybe I am just enjoying getting to know the real you, the 1 who makes furniture and eats too much pizza and brings women to secret villas.”
“Just 1 woman. You are the only 1 who has been here.”
His hands found my waist, pulling me against him.
“And I am hoping you will come back often. Maybe even stay sometimes. No pressure. Just an open invitation.”
“You are moving very fast.”
“I am 33 years old. I have wasted enough time on things and people that did not matter. When I find something, someone, who does matter, I do not see the point in playing it slow and cautious. Life is short. We should spend it with people who make us feel alive. And I make you feel alive.”
“You make me feel human, which is better.”
He leaned down, his lips grazing mine.
“Now stop overthinking and kiss me.”
So I did.
This kiss was different from the 1 at the castle. Deeper. More urgent. Fueled by a growing connection and the privacy of a space where no 1 could see us. His hands moved to my hair. Mine found his shoulders. For a few perfect minutes, nothing existed except this.
When we finally broke apart, both breathing hard, Carlo rested his forehead against mine.
“Stay for dinner,” he said. “Stay the night. Not in my bed, unless you want to. But that is not what I am asking. Just stay. Let me cook for you. Let us talk more. Let this day last a little longer.”
Every rational voice in my head screamed that I should go home. Spending the night at Carlo Ferretti’s private villa was a terrible idea. I was moving too fast, getting in too deep, risking too much.
But the voice that won out was the 1 that asked when I had last felt this alive. This wanted. This seen.
“Okay,” I said. “I will stay for dinner.”
“Good.”
He smiled, that transforming grin that lit up his face and made him look younger, less dangerous.
“I am making osso buco, my mother’s recipe. It takes hours, which means you are stuck with me for the evening.”
“Somehow, I think I will survive.”
We spent the rest of the afternoon in comfortable companionship. Carlo cooked while I explored the villa, eventually settling in the empty studio with my sketchbook. Ideas poured in in a way they had not in months. Designs for the hotel rebrand. Personal projects I had been neglecting. Fresh ideas that excited me.
The light was perfect. The space was perfect. And I could feel my creativity awakening in a way it had not since before my financial difficulties had consumed all my energy.
Carlo appeared in the doorway, drying his hands on a dish towel.
“Dinner in 30 minutes. How is it going in here?”
I looked up from my sketchbook, realizing I had been working for over 2 hours without noticing the time passing.
“It is perfect. This space is absolutely perfect.”
“Good. Then it is yours. No more discussion. No more hesitation. This is your studio now.”
He moved closer, looking at my sketches.
“These are beautiful. Is this for the hotel project?”
“Some of them. Others are just ideas. Things I have been wanting to explore but have not had the time or mental space for.”
“Now you have both time and space. Use them.”
He held out his hand.
“Come on. Let us eat before the risotto gets cold.”
Dinner was spectacular. Osso buco that fell off the bone. Risotto alla Milanese that was perfectly creamy. Vegetables from the garden. We ate by candlelight on the terrace while the sun dipped below the horizon, painting the sky in shades of amber and rose.
“Tell me something you have never told anyone,” Carlo said, echoing his request from the night before. “Something new.”
I thought about it, drinking my wine.
“I am afraid I am going to wake up tomorrow and realize this was all a dream. That you are not real. That this villa is not real. And I am still just struggling to survive in my tiny apartment.”
“I am very real,” Carlo said. “And you are not dreaming, though I understand the impulse to question it. This has been a strange few days.”
“Strange does not begin to cover it. Forty-eight hours ago, I was fighting you over a parking spot. Now I am eating osso buco at your private villa and contemplating accepting a studio space that would change my entire life.”
“Life changes fast when you let it. When you stop being so careful and controlled and allow yourself to take risks.”
He refilled our wine glasses.
“My turn for something new. I have not felt this relaxed in years. Usually, I am calculating, strategizing, thinking 3 moves ahead. But with you, I can just be. It is unsettling and wonderful in equal measure. Unsettling because I do not know where this goes. I cannot control it or manage it or predict the outcome. That is new for me. Uncomfortable, but also exciting.”
We finished dinner and moved inside as the evening cooled. Carlo lit a fire in the living room fireplace, and we sat on the sofa with more wine, talking about everything: childhoods, dreams, fears, failures. He told me about deals that had gone wrong, about the violence he had witnessed and occasionally participated in, about the burden of running an organization where people’s livelihoods depended on his decisions.
“Do you ever want to just walk away?” I asked. “Leave the family business? Start over somewhere new where no 1 knows Carlo Ferretti?”
“Every day,” he admitted. “But I cannot. Too many people depend on me. My brothers are not capable of running things alone. They are excellent at their specific roles but lack the vision for the bigger picture. The people who work for us, the families who rely on our businesses for their income, they would suffer if I just walked away. So I stay. I do what needs to be done. And I look for small moments of peace where I can. Like this villa. And now, like you.”
He tucked a strand of hair behind my ear.
“You are my moment of peace, Adriana. In a life that is mostly chaos and calculation, you are the 1 thing that feels simple and right.”
“I do not feel simple. I feel complicated and confused and like I am making decisions I will probably regret.”
“Good decisions usually feel that way. It is the bad ones that feel easy and obvious.”
He stood, holding out his hand.
“Come on. I will show you the guest room. You must be exhausted.”
The guest room was beautiful, with a large bed, soft linens, an en suite bathroom, and windows that would let in the dawn’s glow. Carlo remained in the doorway, clearly not wanting to leave but respecting the boundaries we had established.
“Thank you for today,” I said. “For sharing this place with me. For dinner. For everything.”
“Thank you for staying. For giving this, giving us, a chance.”
He moved closer, cupping my face.
“I know I am moving fast. I know this is probably overwhelming. But I meant what I said. I am not letting you back out. Not now that I know what this could be.”
“And what could it be?”
“Everything, if we let it.”
He kissed me softly, a promise rather than a demand.
“Sleep well, bella. I will make breakfast in the morning.”
After he left, I lay in the comfortable bed, staring at the ceiling and attempting to make sense of all that had happened in the past 2 days.
I had gone from struggling designer to what? Girlfriend of a mafia boss? An artist with a private studio? A woman falling dangerously fast for a man who operated in moral gray areas and made her feel more alive than she had in years?
All of the above, apparently.
My phone chimed with a text. It was Carlo.
Are you awake?
Yes. Too much to process to sleep.
Same. I am down the hall if you want to talk or if you just want company. No expectations. Just offering.
I should have stayed in bed. I should have maintained the boundaries.
Instead, I found myself padding down the hallway in borrowed pajamas to the master bedroom, where light shone from under the door.
Carlo opened it at my knock, wearing only sleep pants, his chest bare and showing the kind of lean muscle that came from actual physical work rather than just gym time. He looked surprised, but pleased to see me.
“Cannot sleep?”
“Cannot stop thinking about everything. About this.”
I motioned indistinctly between us.
“About whether I am being incredibly stupid or incredibly brave.”
“Both, probably. Come here.”
He pulled me into the room and onto the bed, sitting against the headboard with me tucked against his side.
“What are you thinking about most?”
“About how this ends. Because it has to end eventually, right? You are Carlo Ferretti. I am nobody. This is a novelty that will wear off. And then what?”
“You keep saying you are nobody. You need to stop that.”
His arm closed tightly around me.
“You are Adriana Romano. You are talented and stubborn and real. Those qualities do not diminish just because you do not have money or connections. If anything, they are more impressive because you achieved what you have without advantages.”
“But your world, the people you associate with, they are not going to accept me. I do not come from the right family. I do not have the right connections. I am going to embarrass you.”
“First of all, my world can go to hell. I did not build everything I have just to let other people dictate who I can be with. Second, you could not embarrass me if you tried. You are authentic, which is rarer and more valuable than any pedigree.”
He tilted my face up to look at him.
“And 3rd, this is not ending. Not in 1 week. Not in 1 month. I am in this for as long as you will have me.”
“You cannot know that. We barely know each other.”
“I know enough. I know you make me laugh. I know you challenge me. I know that for the first time in years, I am excited to wake up in the morning because I get to talk to you. That is enough to build on.”
“You are insane.”
“Probably. But you are here anyway, in my bedroom, in my arms, instead of safely in the guest room maintaining appropriate boundaries. What does that tell you?”
It told me I was just as insane as he was. Just as willing to take this risk to see where it led, consequences be damned.
“It tells me I am terrible at self-preservation.”
“Good. Self-preservation is overrated.”
He shifted, pulling me closer.
“Stay here tonight. Sleep next to me. Nothing more. Just sleep. I want to know what it feels like to wake up with you here.”
“Carlo…”
“I know. Too fast. Too intense. Too everything. But I am done pretending to be cautious when everything in me wants to be reckless with you. Stay. Please.”
That word again.
Please.
The 1 that undid all my defenses.
“Okay,” I said quietly. “I will stay.”
We settled under the covers, his arms around me, my head on his chest. I could hear his heartbeat. Steady. Strong. Real.
This was real. Crazy, impossible, and probably a terrible idea.
But real.
Carlo’s voice was quiet in the darkness.
“Adriana, I am not going to hurt you. I know my reputation. I know what people say about men like me. But I am not going to use you, or discard you, or make you regret this. My word on that.”
“Okay.”
“Do you believe me?”
“I am choosing to believe you. There is a difference.”
“That is fair.”
He pressed a kiss to the top of my head.
“Sleep, bella. Tomorrow, we will figure out the rest.”
I fell asleep in his arms. And for the first time in years, I felt safe. Protected. Chosen.
When I woke the next morning, the sun was shining through the windows, and Carlo was gone. I found a note on the pillow.
Making breakfast. Come down when you are ready. Take your time. C.
I showered in the en suite bathroom, stocked with expensive toiletries and everything I could need, then dressed in yesterday’s clothes. When I made my way downstairs, I found Carlo in the kitchen cooking what looked like enough food to feed 10 people.
“You are awake,” he said, smiling. “Perfect timing. Coffee is ready, and breakfast will be done in 5 minutes.”
“You really like to feed people, do you not?”
“My father’s influence. He believed that sharing food was how you showed love. I might have internalized that more than I realized.”
He plated eggs, bacon, fresh bread, and fruit.
“Eat. Then I need to take you back to the city. I have meetings this afternoon that I cannot cancel.”
“Back to reality,” I said, feeling a stab of disappointment.
“Back to reality,” he agreed. “But this is not over. Tonight, I am taking you to an art opening. One of my business associates is a collector. He is opening a new gallery and wants me there. Come with me. Let me show you off.”
“Show me off? I am not some trophy.”
“No. You are the woman I am choosing. There is a difference. And I want people to see that Carlo Ferretti has found someone worth his time. Someone real.”
He sat down across from me.
“Also, there will be potential clients there. People with money who appreciate good design. Consider it networking.”
“You are mixing business and personal.”
“I am using my resources to help someone I care about. If that benefits us both, where is the harm?”
I did not have an answer. The logic made sense, even if it left me uneasy.
“What time?”
“I will pick you up at 7:00. Wear something elegant, but not too formal.”
He paused, then reached across the table to take my hand.
“And Adriana, do not overthink this. Just enjoy it. Let me help you. Let yourself have something good, for once.”
The drive back to Naples felt different from the trip up. Smoother. More settled. Carlo held my hand whenever he was not shifting gears, glancing at me occasionally with an expression I could not quite place. Satisfaction, maybe. Contentment. As if he had accomplished something important.
When we pulled up outside my building, he insisted on walking me to my door despite my protests.
“I want to. Let me be old-fashioned occasionally.”
At my door, he kissed me goodbye, slow and deep enough to leave my knees unsteady. Then he pressed something into my palm.
A key.
“This is yours now,” he said firmly. “The villa. The studio. The quiet. All of it.”
“Carlo, I cannot—”
“You can and you will. Stop arguing with me about this. I have more money than I know what to do with. Let me use some of it to make your life easier. It costs me nothing. It gives you freedom. Why would you refuse that?”
“Because I am not used to accepting help.”
“I know,” he said softly. “That is 1 of the things I like about you. But sometimes accepting help is not weakness. It is strategy. Use the resources available to you so you can focus on what matters. In this case, your art.”
He kissed my forehead.
“7:00 tonight. Be ready.”
After he left, I stood alone in my small apartment, feeling as if I had just returned from another planet. The contrast between the villa’s open spaces and my compact studio was almost comical. But this was my reality.
At least for now.
I spent the afternoon working on the hotel proposal, incorporating ideas that had come to me in the villa’s studio. The work flowed in a way it had not in months. By 5:00, I had something I was genuinely proud of, work that showcased my talent without sacrificing my artistic point of view.
At 6:30, I began getting ready for the gallery opening. I owned exactly 1 dress that could be described as elegant, a simple black sheath I had bought years ago for job interviews. It was not remarkable, but it would do.
Carlo arrived precisely at 7:00.
The look on his face when he saw me was worth every flicker of doubt.
“You look beautiful,” he said simply. “Perfect.”
The gallery was in an upscale neighborhood, a converted warehouse with soaring ceilings and white walls displaying contemporary art that I recognized as both expensive and significant. Carlo moved me through the crowd with a possessive hand on my lower back, introducing me to what appeared to be half of Naples’ cultural elite.
“This is Adriana Romano,” he would say. “An exceptional designer. You should see her work.”
Not my date. Not my girlfriend.
An exceptional designer.
He positioned me as a professional first, which I appreciated more than he probably realized.
We were examining a particularly striking abstract piece when a woman’s voice rang out over the crowd.
“Carlo Ferretti. I heard you were bringing a date tonight. I had to see for myself.”
I turned to find a stunning woman in her early 30s, blonde and polished in the way that suggested old money and expensive maintenance. She looked at me with barely concealed disdain.
“Bianca,” Carlo said, his tone carefully neutral. “I did not know you would be here.”
“Paolo invited me. He thought I would appreciate the collection.”
Her eyes roamed over me.
“So this is the mysterious woman everyone has been talking about. The 1 who fought you over a parking spot. How charming.”
“Adriana,” Carlo said, “this is Bianca Conti. An old acquaintance.”
“Old girlfriend,” Bianca corrected. “We dated for nearly 1 year before Carlo decided he preferred being alone to being with me.”
The awkwardness was palpable. I started to excuse myself, but Carlo’s grip firmed on my waist.
“Bianca and I dated briefly 3 years ago,” Carlo said calmly. “It did not work out. We wanted different things.”
“You mean I wanted commitment and you wanted to play the field.” Bianca’s smile cut. “But I see you have changed your tune. Is Carlo Ferretti actually bringing a date to a public event? That is headline news. She must be very special.”
“She is,” Carlo said simply. “Now, if you will excuse us.”
“Wait. I am curious.”
Bianca moved closer, examining me as if I were 1 of the art pieces.
“What do you do, Adriana? Let me guess. Model. Actress. The usual type Carlo goes for.”
“I am a designer. Graphic and brand design.”
“How interesting. And where did you study?”
“The Academy of Fine Arts here in Naples.”
“Lovely. And your family? Are they in the arts as well?”
It was a trap. A way to determine my social class, my connections, my worthiness.
Carlo clearly recognized it too. His face stiffened.
“Bianca, this interrogation is tedious. Adriana does not need to prove herself to you or anyone else here.”
“I am just making conversation,” Bianca said sweetly. “Getting to know the woman who has captured Carlo Ferretti’s attention. That is no small feat. Most of us barely manage to hold it for a few months.”
“Maybe that says more about you than it does about Carlo,” I replied, surprising even myself. “If you could not hold his attention, perhaps you were not as interesting as you thought.”
Bianca’s eyes narrowed.
“Careful, dear. You do not know who you are dealing with.”
Carlo’s voice cut in, low, controlled, dangerous.
“Neither do you. Adriana is under my protection. Which means if you have a problem with her, you have a problem with me. I suggest you move along, Bianca, before this becomes unpleasant.”
The threat was clear. Undeniable.
Bianca’s face flushed with anger, but she pasted on a smile.
“Of course. I did not mean to cause trouble. Enjoy the opening.”
She swept away, leaving tension in her wake.
When she was gone, Carlo said quietly, “I am sorry about that. Bianca has never handled rejection well. I should have warned you she might be here.”
“It is fine,” I said, taking a breath. “I can handle jealous ex-girlfriends.”
Then, more carefully, I added, “Though I am curious. How many of your exes am I going to encounter at these events?”
“Not many. I have not dated seriously in years. Bianca was the last relationship that came close to serious, and even that was more convenience than connection.”
He guided me toward a quieter corner of the gallery.
“But I should be honest with you,” he continued. “My history is complicated. There have been women, many women, if I am being truthful, but none of them mattered. None of them was you.”
“That sounds like a line.”
“It is not,” he said simply. “I have had relationships that were transactional, mutually beneficial arrangements with no emotional investment. I have had brief affairs with women who wanted the status of being seen with me. And I have had exactly 1 relationship that felt real. It ended 3 years ago when I realized we were together out of habit, not genuine feeling.”
He took my hands.
“But this, what I feel with you, is different. It is real. It is intense, and it is probably too much, too soon, but it is genuine. I need you to know that.”
“I believe you,” I said softly. “But you need to understand this is frightening for me. Your world, these people, the expectations, the judgments. It is overwhelming.”
“I know. And if it ever becomes too much, tell me. We will find another way.”
He pulled me closer.
“But do not let people like Bianca make you doubt yourself. You belong here. You are talented, intelligent, and you have every right to be in this room with these people.”
“Even though I do not come from money? Even though my family is not connected?”
“Especially because of that. You earned your place through talent and hard work rather than inheriting it. That is worth more.”
He kissed my temple.
“Now come on. Let me introduce you to Paolo. He is the collector I mentioned, the 1 who might be interested in your work.”
The rest of the evening unfolded in a whirlwind of introductions and conversations. Paolo Santoro turned out to be a gregarious man in his 50s who loved art and had the money to indulge that passion. He looked at my portfolio, which Carlo had somehow acquired and had on his phone, with genuine interest.
“This is excellent work,” Paolo said, scrolling through images. “Sophisticated, but accessible. Exactly what we need for the hotel rebrand I am planning. Can you come to my office next week? I would like to discuss hiring you for the project.”
I tried not to look too eager.
“Of course. I would be happy to.”
Paolo smiled.
“Carlo has good taste in art and, apparently, in women. You are very talented, Adriana. I look forward to working with you.”
As we left the gallery hours later, I felt as if I were floating. A potential major client. Validation from someone respected in the industry. And all because Carlo had taken me there, introduced me, positioned me as someone worth knowing.
Once we were in the car, I said, “Thank you. For tonight, for introducing me to Paolo, for making me feel like I belonged there.”
“You did belong there. I just made sure people noticed.”
He took my hand.
“And now I am taking you back to my apartment. We need to talk.”
“That sounds ominous.”
“Not ominous. Just honest. There are things you should know about me, about my business, about what being with me means.”
He glanced at me.
“And you need to decide if that is something you can accept.”
Carlo’s apartment was in Chiaia, overlooking the bay. It was refined, but surprisingly lived-in. Books were stacked on tables. Artwork looked personally chosen rather than decorator-selected. The space carried a sense that someone actually inhabited it rather than simply using it as a showpiece.
He poured us both wine and motioned to the sofa.
“Sit. Let me be completely honest with you about who I am and what I do.”
I sat, my heart beating fast.
This was the moment. The full truth about Carlo Ferretti’s business dealings. The gray areas he had mentioned. The reasons people murmured his name quietly, with a mixture of respect and fear.
“My family’s shipping business is legitimate,” he began. “We move commercial goods—electronics, textiles, machinery—through established legal channels. That business generates steady, reportable income and employs over 200 people. It is the foundation of everything else.”
“And everything else?”
“Everything else operates in spaces where the law is ambiguous. We facilitate transactions between parties who prefer discretion. We move goods that might not have perfect paperwork but are not strictly illegal. We provide security and logistics for people who cannot or will not use traditional channels.”
He met my eyes.
“I am not dealing drugs. I am not trafficking people. I am not involved in anything that directly harms innocents. But I am operating outside the strict boundaries of legal commerce.”
“Why? If the legitimate business is successful, why risk the illegal stuff?”
“Because the legitimate business has limits. Growth is slow, profits are modest, and there are people in my family, in my organization, who need opportunities that legal channels do not provide. Ex-convicts who cannot get traditional jobs. People with skills but no papers. Families who need income and cannot wait for the slow grind of legitimate employment.”
He leaned forward.
“I am not justifying it. I am explaining it. This is who I am. This is what I do.”
“And the violence? The rumors about people who cross you?”
“Some of those rumors are true. I have hurt people who threatened me or mine. I have made examples of people who stole from me or betrayed my trust. I am not proud of it, but I am not ashamed, either. In my world, reputation is currency. If people think you are soft, they take advantage. So yes, I have been ruthless when necessary.”
The honesty was simultaneously refreshing and terrifying. Most people would have softened the truth, made themselves sound more sympathetic. Carlo was giving it to me straight.
“Why are you telling me all this?” I asked. “You could have kept it vague, let me discover it gradually.”
“Because you deserve to know what you are getting into. And because if we are going to do this, really do this, I need you to accept me as I am. Not some sanitized version. The real me, with all the complications and moral ambiguities.”
He took my hands.
“I will not lie to you, Adriana. I will not pretend to be something I am not. But I also need you to decide if this is something you can live with.”
I thought about it. Really thought about it.
Carlo Ferretti was involved in illegal activities. He had hurt people. He operated outside the law and justified it through his own moral framework.
Any sensible woman would walk away.
But I also thought about the man who had cooked me dinner, who had shared his private villa, who had shown me his woodworking and talked about his dead father with genuine emotion. The man who believed in my talent, who offered me opportunities without expecting anything in return, who made me feel seen in ways I had never experienced before.
“I am not naive,” I said at last. “I know what you are telling me, and I know I should probably be smart and walk away. But I do not want to. I want to see where this goes. I want to be with you, even knowing what you are. Does that make me foolish?”
“It makes you brave or reckless. Maybe both.”
He pulled me closer.
“But it also makes me happier than I have been in years. I was prepared for you to leave. Expected it, actually. The fact that you are staying, that you are choosing this, choosing me, means everything.”
“I have conditions.”
“Name them.”
“First, you do not lie to me. Ever. If I ask a direct question, you give me a direct answer, even if the answer is, ‘I cannot tell you that for your own safety.’”
“Agreed.”
“Second, you do not involve me in the illegal stuff. I do not want to know details, and I do not want to be present for anything questionable. I will accept that it is part of your life, but I will not participate.”
“Also agreed. I would never put you in that position.”
“Third, if this ever puts me or my career at risk, if being with you brings legal trouble or destroys my professional reputation, we end it immediately. No argument.”
Carlo’s jaw stiffened, but he nodded.
“If you are ever at risk because of me, I will remove myself from your life. You have my word.”
“Okay, then.”
I took a breath.
“I am in. For real this time. Not just 1 more date or seeing where things go. I am choosing this. Choosing you.”
The smile that broke across his face was like a sunrise.
He pulled me into his arms, kissing me with a force that caught my breath. When we finally broke apart, both breathing hard, he rested his forehead against mine.
“You will not regret this,” he promised. “I will make sure of it.”
“I might regret it,” I said honestly. “But I am doing it anyway.”
We spent the rest of the night talking about his family, my dreams, and what a relationship between us would actually look like. Carlo was clear about his expectations. He wanted me to move into the villa, at least part-time, so I could use the studio and we could spend more time together. He wanted to be seen publicly with me, to make it clear that I was his. He wanted to help my career through introductions and opportunities, but only if I was comfortable with it.
“I am not trying to control you,” he said. “But I am also not good at halfway measures. If we are together, I want to be really together. Not just casual dating where we see each other occasionally. I want you in my life fully.”
“That is intense.”
“I know.”
“Too intense, maybe.”
“But I think I like it. I have spent too long with men who did not care enough. Maybe intense is what I need.”
I stayed that night in his apartment, in his bed, and this time we did not stop at kissing. Being with Carlo was like everything else about him: intense, passionate, overwhelming in the best possible way. He was attentive and demanding in equal measure, learning what I liked and pushing me to places I had not known I could go.
Afterward, lying entwined in his sheets, I was simultaneously satisfied and somewhat alarmed by the intensity of what I was feeling.
“You are overthinking again,” Carlo murmured against my hair. “I can practically hear your thoughts.”
“I am just processing. This is a lot.”
“It is. But good things usually are.”
He pulled me closer.
“Sleep, bella. We will figure out the rest in the morning.”
Part 3
The next few weeks fell into a pattern.
I worked from the villa studio most days, the space and quiet allowing my creativity to blossom in ways it had not in years. The hotel proposal I had been working on was accepted, and suddenly I had my first major client in over 1 year. Paolo Santoro hired me for his hotel rebrand, and word of mouth brought in 2 more potential clients.
Carlo and I spent most evenings together, either at his apartment or at the villa. We fell into an easy domesticity, cooking together, working in parallel spaces, talking about our days. He taught me about wine and introduced me to his favorite restaurants. I taught him about design principles and forced him to visit art exhibitions he would not have otherwise seen.
His family was another matter.
Meeting his brothers was intimidating. Luca and Marco Ferretti were as imposing as Carlo, though less polished. They treated me with careful politeness, clearly waiting to see if I would last before investing in getting to know me.
His mother was worse.
Maria Ferretti made it clear that she had expected Carlo to marry someone from a comparable family, someone with connections and status. I was a disappointment, though she was too polite to say it directly.
Following a notably awkward Sunday lunch, Carlo said, “Give her time. She will come around once she sees we are serious. And if she does not, then she does not. I am not choosing a partner based on my mother’s approval. I am 33 years old. I will make my own decisions.”
Yet I noticed the tension it caused him, the way he tried to balance his mother’s expectations with his own desires. It was another reminder that being with Carlo meant entering a complicated world with rules and expectations I did not fully understand.
One night, about 6 weeks after the parking spot confrontation that had started everything, Carlo came home to the villa looking more serious than usual. I was working in the studio, finalizing designs for Paolo’s hotel, and I knew immediately something was wrong.
“We need to talk,” he said.
A pit formed in my stomach. Those 4 words were never good.
“What happened?” I asked, setting down my stylus.
“Nothing bad. Just a decision we need to make together.”
He sat across from me.
“I am being pressured by some business associates to formalize our relationship. To get engaged.”
My heart stopped.
“Engaged? Carlo, we have been together 6 weeks.”
“I know. And I am not proposing. Not yet. Not like this. But in my world, serious relationships are marked by formal commitments. The fact that we have been together this long without any public declaration is raising questions, making people wonder if this is real or just another brief affair.”
“So what are you asking?”
“I am asking if you would be willing to wear a ring. Not an engagement ring, but something that signals commitment. A promise ring, essentially. Something that tells my world that you are mine and I am serious about you.”
He reached into his pocket and pulled out a delicate velvet box.
“I had this made for you. No pressure. If it is too much, too soon, we will find another way.”
He opened the box to reveal a stunning ring. Simple but elegant. A single diamond set in white gold. Not ostentatious, though clearly expensive and meaningful.
“It is a choice,” he said. “You can say no. I will understand. But if you say yes, it means you are in this with me publicly. No more hiding. No more uncertainty about what we are to each other.”
His dark gaze held mine.
“I want you to say yes. I want the world to know you are mine. But only if that is what you want too.”
Six weeks earlier, I had been fighting over a parking spot with a stranger. Now, I was being offered a promise ring by that same man, a man who had become essential to my life in ways I could not have predicted.
It was too fast. Too intense. Too much.
It was also exactly what I wanted.
“Yes,” I said, my voice steady despite my racing heart. “I will wear your ring. I will be yours publicly. I choose this. I choose you.”
The smile that broke across Carlo’s face was worth every risk I was taking.
He placed the ring on my finger. It was a perfect fit, because of course he had found out my size somehow. Then he pulled me into his arms.
“You will not regret this,” he promised against my hair. “I will make sure of it.”
“You keep saying that,” I said, but I was smiling. “Eventually, you are going to have to prove it.”
“I will spend the rest of my life proving it if I have to.”
He pulled back to look at me, his face intense.
“I know this is fast. I know it is crazy. But I have never been more certain of anything. You are it for me, Adriana. The real thing. The person I want to build a life with.”
“You are insane,” I said.
But I was kissing him, the ring dazzling in the light as I ran my hands through his hair.
“Completely insane,” he agreed between kisses. “But you are here anyway. You are wearing my ring. You are choosing this life with me. So what does that make you?”
“Just as insane as you are. Maybe more.”
“Perfect. We will be crazy together.”
Later that night, lying in bed with Carlo’s arms around me and the ring on my finger catching moonlight from the window, I thought about the road that had brought me here.
From fighting over a parking spot to wearing a promise ring from 1 of Naples’ most powerful men. From struggling alone to building a successful business with support and opportunities that were previously unthinkable.
It was fast. It was reckless. It probably violated every rule of sensible relationship building.
It was also the best decision I had ever made.
Carlo’s voice was soft in the darkness.
“Adriana, thank you for being stubborn. For refusing to give up that parking spot. For fighting me when everyone else would have just moved their car.”
He pressed a kiss to my shoulder.
“You changed my entire life in the span of a 5-minute argument. That is impressive.”
“You are welcome. Though technically, you changed my life. I was just protecting my parking space.”
“You were protecting your right to exist in a space someone else wanted. You were refusing to be moved or dismissed or treated as less important.”
He tightened his arms around me.
“That is what made me fall for you. That stubborn refusal to be anything other than exactly who you are.”
“I love you,” I said, the words surprising me even as I said them.
I had not planned to say it. I had not thought I was ready. But lying there in his arms, wearing his ring, I realized it was simply true.
Carlo went very still.
Then he rolled me onto my back, looking down at me with an intensity that caught my breath.
“Say it again.”
“I love you, Carlo Ferretti. Crazy, dangerous, impossible you.”
His voice went husky.
“I love you too. From the moment you refused to move your ridiculous Fiat, from the moment you looked at me like I was just an annoying man instead of someone to fear, I have been falling for you.”
It felt like a vow, like a beginning instead of just another moment.
Six weeks earlier, I had been fighting for a parking spot.
Now, I was fighting for a future with a man who had seen me when I was invisible and valued me when I felt worthless. He had refused to let me back out, even when the smart thing would have been to walk away.
It was the best fight I had ever picked.
And I had no intention of surrendering.
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