PART 2 — THE HOUSE ON CALLE VALLARTA 009

PART 2 — THE HOUSE ON CALLE VALLARTA 009

Maddie almost laughed.

She had spent months sleeping lightly with a gun hidden beneath her mattress. Months changing routes, avoiding familiar places, cutting herself away from every person connected to the Morettis.

She looked exhausted.

But Brandon had never commented on weakness directly.

He circled it.

Pressed on it.

Waited.

“I’m surviving,” she answered.

Something moved behind his eyes at that.

A flash of anger.

Gone instantly.

Savannah noticed again.

Interesting.

Very interesting.

The boutique owner suddenly emerged from a side hallway, nervous energy hidden beneath practiced elegance.

“Mr. Moretti,” he greeted quickly. “We prepared the private viewing room upstairs.”

Of course they had.

Men like Brandon did not shop publicly.

Savannah tilted her head toward Maddie. “Perhaps your former wife would like privacy too.”

Former wife.

The words landed intentionally.

Maddie saw the challenge beneath them.

You lost him.

I didn’t.

Brandon’s expression remained unreadable.

Then, quietly, he said, “Give us the room.”

The owner blinked. “Sir?”

“I want the showroom empty.”

Every muscle in Maddie’s body tightened.

No.

Absolutely not.

Being alone with Brandon Moretti was the last thing she needed.

Savannah looked surprised too, though she concealed it beautifully.

“Brandon—”

“Now.”

One word.

Soft.

Deadly.

The owner moved immediately.

Within seconds, employees vanished toward the back hallways. Security repositioned themselves outside the glass entrance. The boutique fell silent.

Savannah remained still beside Brandon.

Then she smiled faintly at Maddie.

“I’ll wait upstairs,” she said.

But before she turned away, her eyes drifted meaningfully toward Maddie’s stomach.

She knew too.

Or suspected enough to become dangerous.

Wonderful.

Just wonderful.

The second Savannah disappeared up the staircase, Maddie grabbed her purse from beside the crib.

“I’m leaving.”

Brandon stepped into her path.

Not aggressively.

He simply occupied space the way storms occupied sky.

“You’re pregnant.”

No greeting.

No pretense.

Straight to the kill.

Maddie lifted her chin. “Observant as always.”

His jaw flexed once.

“How far along?”

“That’s not your concern.”

Something cold entered his eyes.

“It becomes my concern if someone tied to my name is carrying a child.”

“There is no one tied to your name here.”

A mistake.

She saw it instantly.

Because Brandon’s attention sharpened with terrifying precision.

“You divorced me six months ago,” he said slowly.

Maddie said nothing.

“Eight months pregnant,” he continued.

Silence stretched.

Brandon took one step closer.

“Whose child is it?”

The question should not have hurt.

But it did.

Deeply.

Because after everything they had been to each other, after every secret and wound and sleepless night, part of him still believed she could belong to another man.

Maddie forced steel into her spine.

“You don’t get to ask me that.”

“The hell I don’t.”

The sudden edge in his voice sliced through the room.

For the first time since entering the boutique, emotion cracked through his composure.

Rage.

Real rage.

Maddie saw nearby security glance toward the glass doors.

No one entered.

No one would dare.

Brandon lowered his voice again with visible effort.

“Answer me.”

Maddie met his stare.

And lied.

“He isn’t yours.”

The silence afterward became monstrous.

Brandon did not move.

Did not blink.

But Maddie watched the impact hit him anyway.

A tiny shift in breathing.

A hardening around the mouth.

The kind of damage only someone who knew him intimately would notice.

Good.

Let him hurt.

She had hurt enough.

“You expect me to believe that?” he asked quietly.

“Yes.”

“Why?”

Because if you know the truth, our child becomes a target.

Because your enemies would cut my baby from my body to punish you.

Because I watched what your world did to innocent people.

Because I left to save him.

But Maddie only said, “Because whether you believe it or not changes nothing.”

Brandon stared at her for a long moment.

Then he laughed once.

The sound held no amusement.

“You disappeared without warning,” he said. “You emptied accounts I told you to keep. Changed your name. Hid for months. And now I find you pregnant in a protected boutique built for organized crime families.”

His eyes darkened.

“You’re either carrying my child, or you’re in more danger than I imagined.”

Maddie’s fingers tightened around her purse strap.

Danger.

There it was.

Always.

Every road led back to it.

“I can handle myself.”

“Can you?”

The question struck harder than it should have.

Because Brandon knew exactly what she had survived beside him.

Kidnapping attempts.

Bomb threats.

A sniper bullet through a restaurant window three years ago.

The night his enemies burned a warehouse while she was still inside.

He had reached her in time.

Barely.

Afterward he had held her against his chest while the building collapsed behind them.

And for the first time in their marriage, Maddie had seen him afraid.

Truly afraid.

Not for himself.

For her.

That was the problem with loving dangerous men.

Sometimes they loved you back.

And that made leaving almost impossible.

Almost.

Brandon’s voice lowered.

“Who’s protecting you?”

“No one.”

“Then you’re vulnerable.”

“I’m careful.”

“That isn’t enough anymore.”

Maddie’s stomach tightened.

The baby shifted again.

Brandon noticed instantly.

Every line of his body went still.

His gaze locked onto the movement beneath her coat.

For one terrible second, emotion crossed his face so openly it nearly broke her.

Wonder.

Raw and unguarded.

He stepped closer before she could stop him.

“Maddie—”

She backed away immediately.

The movement sliced through him visibly.

His hand stopped midair.

The memory flashed between them both.

The last night.

The screaming.

The shattered whiskey glass.

Brandon ordering her into lockdown after another assassination attempt.

Maddie accusing him of loving control more than her.

And then—

The words.

The unforgivable words.

If you walk out that door, don’t come back.

She had left anyway.

Because by then she already knew she was pregnant.

And she knew her child would never survive inside Brandon’s empire.

Not untouched.

Not innocent.

Footsteps clicked softly from the staircase.

Savannah returned.

Perfect timing.

Her eyes moved instantly between them, reading tension like language.

“Am I interrupting?” she asked pleasantly.

“Yes,” Maddie answered.

“No,” Brandon said at the same time.

Savannah’s smile sharpened.

Interesting again.

She approached Brandon slowly, slipping beside him with practiced intimacy.

“We should go,” she murmured. “Your father’s expecting us at dinner.”

At the mention of Matteo Moretti, cold slid down Maddie’s spine.

The old don rarely appeared publicly anymore, but his influence remained everywhere.

If Matteo learned Brandon had an unborn child—

No.

She could not let that happen.

Brandon ignored Savannah completely.

His eyes remained on Maddie.

“Where are you staying?”

Maddie nearly smiled.

There was the real Brandon.

Direct.

Relentless.

Always gathering information.

“Not your business.”

“It becomes my business if someone’s hunting you.”

“Nobody is hunting me.”

A lie.

And judging from his expression, Brandon knew it.

Because she had seen the black SUV parked outside her Brooklyn street three nights ago.

The same SUV that appeared again yesterday.

She had changed routes twice afterward.

Still, it returned.

Maybe paranoia.

Maybe not.

In Brandon’s world, surviving depended on assuming the worst.

Savannah crossed her arms lightly. “This seems dramatic for an ex-wife.”

Maddie finally looked directly at her.

“You should leave before dramatic becomes dangerous.”

Savannah’s eyes flashed.

There.

A crack beneath the polished surface.

“She always spoke to people like that?” Savannah asked Brandon.

“She usually had a reason.”

The automatic defense startled all three of them.

Especially Brandon.

Silence followed.

Then Savannah laughed softly.

“How nostalgic.”

Maddie suddenly felt exhausted beyond words.

She did not belong here anymore.

Not among the silk blankets and hidden weapons and old loyalties masquerading as luxury.

She belonged in her tiny brownstone with the peeling kitchen paint and the secondhand crib mattress waiting in storage.

She belonged somewhere anonymous.

Safe.

If such a place even existed.

“I’m done here,” she said quietly.

This time, Brandon stepped aside.

But his voice stopped her before she reached the doors.

“Maddie.”

She paused.

“You should’ve told me.”

Pain threaded beneath the words.

Real pain.

She closed her eyes briefly.

No.

He didn’t get to sound wounded.

Not after years of dragging violence home like it belonged there.

Not after making her choose daily between loving him and surviving him.

Without turning around, she said, “You lost the right to know things about me when you made me afraid to raise a child in your world.”

The silence behind her became suffocating.

Then she walked out.

The cold Manhattan air hit her immediately.

A black town car waited near the curb.

Not hers.

Of course not.

Brandon’s security detail lingered nearby pretending not to watch her.

Maddie ignored them and started down the sidewalk.

Steady.

Controlled.

Do not run.

Running invited pursuit.

She turned the corner.

Then another.

Only when the boutique disappeared behind buildings did she allow herself to breathe.

Her hands trembled.

Damn it.

This changed everything.

Brandon knew.

Maybe not fully.

But enough.

And Brandon Moretti never stopped searching once suspicion took hold.

A vibration buzzed inside her purse.

Maddie froze.

Very few people had this number.

She pulled out the phone carefully.

Unknown caller.

Every instinct screamed at her not to answer.

She answered anyway.

“Hello?”

Static crackled briefly.

Then a man’s voice said quietly:

“You need to disappear again.”

Maddie stopped walking.

The voice was distorted.

Artificial.

“Who is this?”

“They found out.”

Ice spread through her chest.

“Who found out?”

“The people who killed Luca Moretti.”

Maddie’s blood turned to stone.

Luca.

Brandon’s younger brother.

Dead eighteen months.

Officially murdered during a port negotiation gone wrong.

Unofficially?

Nobody knew.

“They know about the baby,” the voice continued. “And they think Brandon doesn’t.”

Maddie’s breath caught.

Impossible.

How?

“Listen carefully,” the caller said urgently. “If Brandon learns the truth before you reach safe ground, they’ll use you both to start a war.”

“Who are you?”

But the line disconnected.

Maddie stared at the dead screen.

Her pulse thundered so violently she felt dizzy.

No.

No, no, no.

Someone knew.

Someone had known long enough to track her.

And if enemies connected her unborn child to Brandon—

A black SUV rolled slowly around the far corner.

The exact same SUV she’d seen near her brownstone.

Maddie’s heart slammed.

The windows were tinted.

The vehicle slowed.

Watching.

She turned instantly and walked the opposite direction.

Not too fast.

Not panic.

Think.

Crowded areas.

Multiple exits.

The SUV continued behind her.

God.

She slipped into a busy crosswalk just before the light changed. Horns erupted as traffic halted.

The SUV could not follow immediately.

Maddie kept moving.

Left.

Another block.

A hotel entrance.

She crossed through the lobby, exited through a side corridor, then emerged onto another street.

Still there.

The SUV appeared again at the far intersection.

Definitely following.

Fear threatened to overtake her at last.

Not now.

Not now.

The baby kicked sharply.

Maddie pressed a hand protectively against her stomach while hurrying toward the subway entrance.

A hand closed suddenly around her arm.

She nearly screamed.

“Easy.”

Brandon.

Relief and fury collided so violently she almost struck him.

“What are you doing?” she hissed.

“You’re being followed.”

Of course he noticed.

Brandon pulled her into the shadow beside the station stairs.

Two men in dark coats appeared nearby instantly—his security.

The black SUV rolled past the intersection slowly.

One of Brandon’s men touched an earpiece. “Driver confirmed. Unknown plates.”

Brandon’s expression became terrifyingly calm.

“How long?” he asked Maddie.

“A few days.”

“You should’ve called me.”

“I’d rather set myself on fire.”

His eyes flashed despite the situation.

“Still dramatic.”

“Still arrogant.”

One corner of his mouth almost moved.

Then vanished.

He looked back toward the street.

“Get her into the car.”

“No.”

Brandon turned slowly.

“Maddie—”

“I’m not going with you.”

“You don’t have a choice anymore.”

Anger surged hot through her fear.

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