THE DON'S SECRET WIFE-Chapter 137: THE MAN WHO BELIEVES HE IS RIGHT
The building did not look important.
That was the point.
It stood along a narrow street in Naples, its facade chipped and unremarkable, wedged between a closed tailor shop and a café that never seemed to shut its doors. No guards outside. No cameras visible. No signs of wealth or power.
Inside, everything changed.
The walls were lined with screens. Dozens of them. Live feeds. News replays. Surveillance angles pulled from drones and hacked city cameras. At the center of the room, Aria’s face filled the largest screen, frozen mid-sentence.
I choose.
The man seated before the screens leaned back in his chair, fingers steepled beneath his chin.
He was calm.
That unsettled everyone else in the room.
"Play it again," he said.
One of the men hesitated. "We have already analyzed her speech. The message is clear. She is rejecting the doctrine."
"Yes," the man replied softly. "But I want to hear how she does it."
The video restarted.
Her voice filled the room. Steady. Warm. Certain.
The man watched without blinking.
When it ended, he smiled.
"She is brilliant," he said.
The room went quiet.
A woman standing near the wall frowned. "She dismantled everything we have built. Our followers are confused. Some are already questioning the texts."
"That is because they were never meant to lead," the man replied. "Belief requires pressure. Weakness cracks under truth."
"You sound impressed," another man said cautiously.
"I am," the leader replied. "She did not deny the bloodline. She redefined it. That takes instinct."
The woman crossed her arms. "She embarrassed us."
He turned slowly to face her. "No. She challenged us."
There was a difference.
And he understood it deeply.
"What is your command?" the woman asked.
The leader stood.
He was tall, dressed simply in dark trousers and a pressed shirt, no tie, no jewelry. His hair was streaked with gray at the temples, his face sharp with intelligence rather than cruelty. His eyes were clear.
Dangerously clear.
"We adapt," he said. "We do not strike yet."
A murmur of confusion moved through the room.
"She exposed herself," one man argued. "She walked into the open. We could take her now."
"And lose everything," the leader countered calmly. "Violence now would make her a martyr. Martyrs are stronger than leaders."
The woman tilted her head. "Then what do we do?"
"We teach," he replied. "We let the believers see her contradiction. We let doubt spread. Then we give them a reason to choose us again."
He turned back to the screen.
"The bearer believes she controls the narrative," he continued. "She does not yet understand that belief is not controlled by truth. It is controlled by fear of loss."
The room fell silent.
He smiled faintly. "And she has much to lose."
Back in Palermo, the compound buzzed with activity.
The captured Ascendant sat in an interrogation room, hands folded tightly in his lap, eyes hollow. He had stopped resisting an hour ago. Not from fear. From confusion.
Luca watched through the glass as Marcelo questioned him gently.
"Who sent you?" Marcelo asked calmly.
The young man swallowed. "You already know."
"Tell me anyway."
"The one who sees," the man whispered.
Marcelo’s expression remained neutral. "That is not a name."
"He does not use one," the man replied. "Names limit meaning."
Marcelo leaned forward. "Does he believe he is a prophet?"
The man shook his head. "No. He believes he is right."
Luca stiffened slightly.
Marcelo glanced at the glass briefly, then continued. "Where is he?"
The man laughed softly. "You think location matters."
"It always does," Marcelo replied.
"Not when belief is the weapon," the man said. "He does not need to be near her to reach her."
Marcelo nodded slowly. "And what does he want?"
The man hesitated.
Then whispered, "To save the world."
Marcelo exhaled and stood. "We are done for now."
As the guards led the man away, Luca entered the room.
Marcelo closed the door behind them. "He is not lying."
"I know," Luca said quietly.
"He truly believes this."
"That makes him dangerous."
Marcelo nodded. "He will not rush. He will not act emotionally."
Luca’s jaw tightened. "He will wait."
"Yes," Marcelo said. "And he will strike where it hurts most."
Aria sat alone in the inner suite, the room dim except for soft afternoon light filtering through the curtains.
Her hands rested over her stomach, feeling the gentle rhythm beneath her skin. The baby was calm again. Untroubled.
Aria closed her eyes.
She did not reach.
She did not open doors.
She simply listened.
And something listened back.
Not the Patron.
Something colder.
Smarter.
Human.
Her breath caught.
She opened her eyes, heart pounding.
The scent was faint but unmistakable.
Someone had noticed her.
Not watched.
Not followed.
Understood.
When Luca entered the room, she looked up immediately. "He is real."
Luca closed the door behind him. "I know."
"He is not like the Patron," she said. "He does not want power for its own sake."
"He wants control," Luca replied.
"Yes," she whispered. "But he believes it is mercy."
Luca sat beside her. "That is the most dangerous kind."
Aria nodded. "He will not hurt me yet."
"Why?"
"Because he wants me to choose him."
Luca’s expression darkened. "He will never have that."
Aria leaned into Luca’s chest. "He believes I will break. That I will fear for our child. That I will come to him willingly to prevent bloodshed."
Luca wrapped his arms around her protectively. "He does not know you."
"No," she agreed softly. "But he understands belief."
Luca kissed her hair. "Then we prepare."
Aria nodded. "He is patient. We must be smarter."
Outside, the city breathed on, unaware that its fate now rested not on ancient ghosts or blood soaked traditions, but on a quiet war between two kinds of conviction.
One born of fear.
And one born of choice.
And somewhere in Naples, the leader of the Ascendants stood at a window, watching the city lights flicker on, certain of one thing.
Aria DeLuca would come to him.
Because he believed.
And belief, he thought, always won.







