Chapter 6: The Charity Gala
The northern property was vastly different from the sprawling, ostentatious mansion. It was a modern, minimalist fortress of steel and glass hidden deep within twenty acres of dense, private woods. Security was absolute. Every guard had been vetted twice.
Over the next six weeks, the boundaries between Franco and me began to irreversibly blur.
He no longer sat in the chair when I had nightmares; he would sit on the edge of the bed, his warm hand resting on my shoulder until my breathing slowed. We spent hours in his massive library, arguing over Dante’s Inferno and the ethics of Machiavelli. I wasn’t just his resident nurse anymore. I was becoming his equal.
On a rainy Tuesday evening, Franco walked into the kitchen while I was reviewing medical charts on my laptop. He was wearing a perfectly tailored charcoal suit.
“There is a charity gala Friday night,” Franco announced, pouring himself a glass of water. “Real estate moguls, venture capitalists, local politicians. I am expected to attend.”
“Okay,” I said, not looking up from my screen. “Have fun.”
“I want you to come with me.”
My fingers froze over the keyboard. I looked up. “Why? To use me as a human shield against boring conversations?”
A rare, genuine smile tugged at the corner of his mouth. “Because appearing alone reinforces the narrative that I am merely a ruthless mob boss. Having a highly intelligent, accomplished medical professional on my arm changes the optics.” He paused, his dark eyes softening. “And because I would vastly prefer your company.”
“I don’t have anything to wear to a high-society gala,” I deflected, my heart racing.
“Lucia has already procured five options in your exact size,” Franco countered smoothly. “Control is my native language, Megan.”
Friday night arrived in a rush of anxiety. I chose a deep emerald silk gown that draped perfectly, leaving my shoulders bare but hiding the fading scar on my ankle. When I walked down the glass staircase, Franco was waiting in the foyer.
He didn’t say a word. He simply tracked his eyes from the hem of my dress up to my face. The raw, unfiltered hunger in his gaze made my breath hitch.
“You look remarkable,” Franco finally rasped, offering me his arm.
The ballroom at the downtown hotel was a glittering sea of crystal chandeliers and fake smiles. Franco moved through the crowd with surgical precision. He was charming, commanding, and utterly untouchable. But he never let go of my hand. He kept his palm pressed firmly against the small of my back, a constant, grounding presence.
Midway through the evening, a silver-haired man with an arrogant smirk approached us.
“Ravellini,” the man sneered, swirling a glass of scotch. “I didn’t expect to see you at something this… wholesome. Are your usual associates busy breaking kneecaps?”
Franco’s posture turned to granite. “Marcus. Still pretending your philanthropic foundation actually helps the community instead of laundering your hedge fund’s dirty money?”
Marcus scoffed, looking me up and down with obvious disdain. “And who is this? Another one of your temporary distractions?”
Before Franco could unleash the violence I saw brewing in his eyes, I stepped forward, extending my hand with a bright, professional smile.
“I’m Megan Turner,” I said loudly enough for the surrounding guests to hear. “I work in community healthcare consulting. Mr. Delacroix, Franco was just telling me about your foundation’s tax-exempt status. I would love to hear exactly how much of your overhead actually goes to pediatric clinics, considering the recent IRS audits in this sector.”
Marcus blanched. His smug smile vanished entirely. He muttered a pathetic excuse about needing a refill and quickly disappeared into the crowd.
Franco looked down at me, his eyes wide with a mixture of shock and deep amusement.
“That was highly strategic,” Franco murmured, his breath warm against my ear.
“I’m tired of arrogant men thinking they can bully people without consequences,” I whispered back.
The drive home that night was thick with unspoken tension. Franco drove his own Aston Martin, having dismissed his driver. The city lights blurred past the rain-slicked windows.
“You defended me,” Franco said suddenly, his hands gripping the leather steering wheel.
“I shut down a jerk. There’s a difference.”
Franco pulled the car over onto a scenic overlook, the engine idling with a low, powerful hum. He turned his entire body to face me in the dim cabin.
“We need to talk about what is happening between us,” Franco said, his voice stripped of all its usual control. “It isn’t just protection anymore, Megan. It hasn’t been for weeks.”
I swallowed hard. “I know.”
“I think about you constantly,” he confessed, leaning closer. “I memorized how you take your coffee. I know you read the last page of a medical journal first. People in my position don’t have real relationships. We have transactions. Caring about you is a vulnerability. It is a weapon my enemies can use against me.”
“Are you telling me to leave?” I asked, my voice barely a whisper.
“I am warning you that staying with me is a risk most people would run from,” Franco said, reaching across the center console. His calloused fingers gently traced my jawline. “I am feeling things I didn’t think I was capable of anymore. I am terrified that something will happen to you because of me.”
I leaned into his touch, the warmth of his palm overriding my logic.
“Franco, my life stopped being simple the night I woke up chained to a pipe,” I told him softly. “There is no safe option for me anymore. But I am tired of letting fear make my decisions. I don’t care about the risk.”
He didn’t answer with words. He leaned across the console and kissed me. It wasn’t rushed or desperate; it was deep, devastating, and absolute. It was the promise of a man who was willing to burn the world down to keep me safe.