Current location: Novel nest The Enemy in My Arms Chapter 7:Eyes Like a Killer

"The Enemy in My Arms" Chapter 7:Eyes Like a Killer

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The broken necklace sat on Valentina’s bedside table for three days before she finally touched it again.

Not because she didn’t care.

Because she cared too much.

The tiny gold locket remained cracked down the middle where it had struck the marble floor, the chain twisted beyond repair beside it. Every time Valentina looked at it, she saw Luca’s expression again—that casual cruelty, that effortless destruction men like him used whenever they wanted to remind people who held power.

Pretty things break easily.

The words stayed with her longer than she wanted them to.

Outside the penthouse windows, Manhattan had finally thawed from the storm. Snow melted slowly from rooftops while evening traffic painted the streets below in streaks of white and red light.

Valentina stood alone in the dressing room fastening diamond earrings when she heard Adrian’s voice through the open bedroom doorway.

“Two additional vehicles will follow tonight.”

She glanced toward the mirror. Adrian stood near the entrance in a black suit and dark overcoat, one hand resting loosely behind his back while speaking into an earpiece.

Even standing still, he looked dangerous.

Not flashy dangerous like Luca’s men.

Controlled dangerous.

Like violence lived comfortably inside him.

“You’re overreacting,” Valentina said while adjusting the neckline of her dress.

Adrian’s gaze lifted briefly toward her reflection in the mirror. “After last week, that would be difficult.”

Tonight’s event was smaller than the gala. Private dinner. Political donors. A few high-ranking members of the organization. Exactly the kind of evening Luca enjoyed because it allowed him to perform power in a quieter setting.

Valentina hated those dinners even more than the public events.

At least public humiliation came with witnesses.

She slipped on her heels and reached for the repaired necklace resting beside the mirror. The chain had been replaced that afternoon, though the locket itself still carried the thin fracture through the center.

Adrian noticed immediately.

His eyes lingered on the necklace for less than a second before returning to her face.

“You fixed it,” he said.

“It mattered to my mother.”

The answer came softer than she intended.

Something unreadable crossed his expression again.

That kept happening lately.

Tiny shifts beneath the control.

Small moments where Adrian almost seemed human before locking himself away again.

Valentina fastened the necklace carefully around her throat. “Try not to threaten anyone tonight.”

“No promises.”

“That wasn’t reassuring.”

“It wasn’t supposed to be.”

She exhaled quietly through her nose. “You know, most bodyguards try harder to sound civilized.”

Adrian opened the penthouse door for her. “Most bodyguards aren’t expecting an assassination attempt at dinner.”

Unfortunately, he said it like someone discussing weather.

The private restaurant occupied the top floor of a luxury hotel overlooking Central Park. Gold lighting reflected across black marble floors while waitstaff drifted silently between tables carrying wine expensive enough to pay college tuition.

Luca arrived separately, already halfway drunk and charming by the time Valentina and Adrian entered.

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There were senators at the table tonight.

Developers.

Judges.

Men who publicly condemned organized crime while privately accepting envelopes full of Moretti money.

Valentina smiled through introductions and polite conversation while Adrian remained near the back wall beside the other security personnel.

Except he didn’t blend with them.

Not even close.

Luca’s men stood like ordinary armed guards—too stiff, too obvious, too eager to look intimidating.

Adrian looked relaxed.

That was the unsettling part.

His attention moved constantly across the room without appearing rushed. Exit points. Hands. Jacket bulges. Reflections in nearby windows.

Watching.

Calculating.

Waiting.

Bodyguards didn’t move like that.

Soldiers did.

Halfway through dinner, Valentina noticed another detail.

Adrian never drank anything.

Not water.

Not coffee.

Nothing.

Always alert.

Always ready.

The realization sat heavily in the back of her mind throughout the evening.

By dessert, Luca had become louder, the senators more dishonest, and the conversation increasingly unbearable. Valentina excused herself shortly afterward and slipped out toward the hallway leading to the private restrooms.

The quiet felt like relief.

Soft piano music drifted faintly through hidden speakers while the city glowed beyond towering windows overlooking Central Park.

Valentina leaned briefly against the marble wall and closed her eyes.

Just one minute of silence.

That was all she wanted.

A voice interrupted behind her.

“You shouldn’t stand alone in hallways.”

She opened her eyes without surprise. “And yet somehow you keep finding me in them.”

Adrian approached slowly, hands empty, expression unreadable beneath the low lighting.

“You disappeared from visual range,” he said.

“I went to the bathroom, not witness protection.”

“That distinction matters less than you think.”

Valentina folded her arms. “You say alarming things very casually.”

“It saves time.”

A faint smile almost touched her mouth.

Almost.

Then she heard it.

Fast footsteps.

Too fast.

Adrian heard them at the exact same moment.

His entire body changed instantly.

Not dramatically.

Not obviously.

But every trace of stillness sharpened into something lethal.

A young waiter rounded the corner carrying a silver tray and moving far too quickly for someone trained in luxury service. His eyes flicked toward Valentina once before dropping toward the inside of his jacket.

Everything after that happened terrifyingly fast.

Adrian moved first.

One second he stood beside her.

The next he crossed the hallway with explosive force, grabbing the waiter’s wrist before the man fully reached inside his jacket. The tray crashed violently against the marble floor as Adrian twisted the man downward with brutal efficiency.

A handgun clattered across the tiles.

The waiter screamed.

Or tried to.

Adrian slammed him face-first into the wall hard enough to silence him instantly.

The entire confrontation lasted maybe three seconds.

Three terrifyingly precise seconds.

Valentina stared motionless as Adrian pinned the man against the marble with one arm while retrieving the weapon smoothly with the other.

No panic.

No wasted movement.

No hesitation.

The waiter gasped in pain beneath Adrian’s grip. “Please—”

“Who sent you?” Adrian asked calmly.

Calmly.

As though he wasn’t one movement away from breaking the man’s arm completely.

Security flooded the hallway moments later, including Luca’s men.

But by then it was already over.

Because Adrian had handled it before anyone else even understood danger existed.

Luca appeared seconds later looking furious. “What the hell happened?”

Adrian handed off the weapon without taking his eyes off the attacker. “Your waiter was carrying a concealed Glock and approaching your wife.”

Luca looked toward the trembling young man in disbelief. “Who hired him?”

“Nobody from hotel staff,” Adrian replied.

One of Luca’s captains dragged the attacker away while security locked down the hallway.

The chaos around them blurred briefly into noise.

Valentina barely noticed any of it.

Because she was still staring at Adrian.

At the speed.

The control.

The terrifying precision.

Bodyguards didn’t move like that.

Not even trained ones.

That had not looked defensive.

It had looked practiced.

Like muscle memory built from years of surviving violence.

Adrian finally turned toward her. “Are you hurt?”

Valentina realized she was still gripping the edge of the marble table beside her.

“No.”

“You’re shaking.”

Only then did she notice the slight tremor in her fingers.

Adrian stepped closer instinctively before stopping himself halfway.

Again.

That restraint.

Always that restraint.

Valentina lifted her eyes slowly toward him. “You disarmed him before he even pulled the gun.”

“Yes.”

“That wasn’t security training.”

Adrian said nothing.

The silence answered enough.

For several seconds, neither of them moved while hotel security swarmed the hallway around them.

Then Valentina spoke quietly.

“Who exactly are you, Adrian?”

His gray-blue eyes held hers steadily beneath the hotel lights.

And for the first time since meeting him—

he looked almost dangerous enough to tell her the truth.

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