Salvatore Esposito became Don at fifteen, inheriting an empire built on blood and a war he never asked for. For nineteen years, he has stood as the wall between his family and the predators circling them, chief among them Enzo Domenico, the rival kingpin who has coveted what the Espositos possess for three decades. Salvatore knows how to navigate treachery, how to read men's intentions in the space between words, and how to eliminate threats before they take root.
What he does not know is what to do about Valdina Greco.
She arrives on Massimo Domenico's arm. The same Massimo whose reckless night with Salvatore's sister left Francesca pregnant and vulnerable, a pawn the Domenicos now intend to use to force a merger Salvatore would burn the world to prevent.
Valdina is beautiful, poised, and performing a role so flawlessly that most men never see past the surface.
But Salvatore is not most men. He recognizes the intelligence behind her careful smiles, the way she catalogs exits like someone trained for extraction, the manufactured past that reads like fiction dressed as fact.
When he discovers the truth, that Valdina Greco is actually Valentina Vitale, a federal agent whose mission includes dismantling both the Domenico and Esposito empires, he should eliminate her without hesitation.
Instead, he offers protection.
Her evidence destroys his enemy. His silence keeps her alive long enough to gather it. It is a devil's bargain built on mutual destruction, strategic and transactional, nothing more. But as Massimo's violence begins to mark her skin and a wedding draws both families under one roof, the alliance between a ruthless Don and the agent sent to destroy him becomes far more dangerous than either anticipated.
Bound by necessity and haunted by an attraction neither can afford, Salvatore and Valentina step into a partnership where every truth is a weapon, every lie a lifeline, and every moment together pulls them toward a reckoning that could save them both or destroy everything they've fought to protect.
Because in Sicily, the line between ally and enemy, between duty and desire, is far thinner and far deadlier than either of them imagined.