Inside, the house was a masterpiece of restraint: exposed brick, dark wood floors, and a narrow, spiraling staircase. She walked straight to the top floor. The studio, bathed in the soft, diffused northern light of late afternoon, was exactly as she had described her dream space years ago on the pier. The ceilings were soaring, and a massive industrial sink sat ready for clay and plaster. It was a sanctuary, pristine and perfect, and it choked her with gratitude and resentment.
She spent the first few hours moving mindlessly, arranging her boxes of supplies. She didn't unpack personal items-no photos, no mementos-as if refusing to fully commit to this life of borrowed safety. She was a tenant, not an owner, and certainly not his lover.
The first rain of the evening started, tapping a melancholic rhythm against the skylight. Eliza had just collapsed onto a makeshift bed on the floor of the second-floor library-a room filled with shelf after shelf of first-edition classics and obscure philosophy texts, clearly Rocco's taste-when she heard the discrete sound of the ground-floor lock turning.
Her pulse instantly ratcheted up. She grabbed the first heavy object she could find-a weighty, leather-bound volume of Dante's Inferno-and held it like a weapon.
Rocco entered the library, carrying two oversized paper bags. He was dressed in worn jeans, a thick gray Henley, and the expression of a man doing something mundane for the first time in a decade. He looked less like the Boss and more like the boy from the pier, only harder, more scarred, and infinitely more dangerous.
"Don't stab me with Dante," he said, his lips curling into a rare, genuine smile. "I brought supplies."
"You broke the agreement," Eliza hissed, keeping the book raised. "No sudden appearances. You said this was just for my safety. I need privacy."
He set the bags down on the sleek wooden table, the sound of glass jars clinking loudly. "I know what I said. And I intend to keep it. But I also know you haven't eaten, and the refrigerator is empty. It's hard to create art when you're hypoglycemic."
He reached into a bag and pulled out containers of fresh pasta, imported olive oil, and a bottle of expensive red wine. "And I'm installing the network firewall myself. I don't trust Dante's guys with the architecture of your house."
"My house has an architecture now?"
"It has walls that talk," he replied, walking toward a small, built-in panel near the fireplace. He opened it, revealing a nest of wires, and started working instantly, his large hands surprisingly dexterous with the fine electronics.
Eliza slowly lowered the book. He wasn't intimidating her; he was... domestic. It was a bizarre, jarring role reversal that left her utterly confused.
"You're doing tech support now, Valeriano?" she asked, walking over and leaning against the fireplace.
"When I was eighteen, I could rewire a building in the time it took my father to finish a cigar. I know every wire that runs through this city, Eliza. It's the original family business-construction, security, plumbing. Before the bloodshed, it was bricks and mortar. I still prefer building things to breaking things." He glanced up, his eyes holding hers for a fraction of a second. "Though I seem to have developed a talent for the latter."
The admission of his own damage was the first crack in her armor. She looked at the food he brought. "I don't want your money, Rocco. I don't want your wine."
"It's not money," he said, pulling out a coil of black cable. "It's time. I spent three hours tracking down a specific brand of artisanal salt I remembered you liking ten years ago. Now I'm spending twenty minutes ensuring that no one can listen to you curse my name through your phone line. Consider it the interest payment on the emotional trauma I inflicted when I ran off to become a monster."
The casual way he acknowledged the pain he caused was devastating. It wasn't an apology, but a statement of fact, delivered without melodrama.
She walked over to the desk where her own boxes lay open. She had been sketching ideas for her next sculpture. One small charcoal sketch lay exposed-a rough outline of two hands pulling apart, the negative space between them screaming with tension.
Rocco finished the wire work and closed the panel. He cleaned his hands meticulously, then walked over to the table and saw the sketch. He didn't touch it, but his focus was absolute.
"That's new," he murmured, his voice softening, dropping the guard they both wore. "It's the most honest thing I've seen you do since the Siren. The space between them... it's a universe."
"It's separation," Eliza whispered, forgetting her anger for a moment. "The space you live in, the space I'm forced to orbit."
He reached into one of the bags, not for food, but for a small, thin, leather case. He opened it and pulled out a perfect set of charcoal sticks-the specific, soft density she had always insisted upon.
"I know," he said simply. "I remembered. You always hated the dustier ones." He placed the case on the table, a gift more intimate than the diamond ring.
This was the compromise. Not the house, which was cold steel wrapped in velvet, but this small, perfect memory, this shared language of art. She couldn't refuse it, because it came from the part of him she had loved, the part he claimed to have buried, but which still observed her with terrifying clarity.
Eliza felt a sudden wave of exhaustion, the ten-year fight draining out of her. She picked up a stick and felt its familiar roughness.
"Thank you," she said, her voice barely audible. It was the first time she had thanked him for anything.
Rocco looked at her, his expression unreadable. "You are welcome. Now, eat your pasta. I have a war to run, and I need to know the artist is functioning."
He turned to leave, but stopped at the doorway. "And Eliza? Don't worry about the keys. I have my own set. But I'll use them less often than you think."
The door closed, leaving her alone in the immense, quiet house. She walked to the window, the city lights shimmering through the rain, and looked at the charcoal in her hand. The chain wasn't steel; it was memory, care, and the perfect knowledge of her heart's desires. She had accepted the gift, and in doing so, had made her first, terrible compromise. She was letting him be more than just her bodyguard.