“Less.”
“That’s not an answer.”
“No,” he said. “It’s the most honest answer I have.”
You appreciated that more than a lie.
But you also stepped back.
He noticed.
“I won’t ask you to love a man you have to excuse,” he said.
Your chest tightened.
“I didn’t say love.”
His eyes softened.
“You didn’t have to.”
For weeks after that, you kept distance.
Not because you didn’t care.
Because you finally understood that attraction was not enough reason to ignore danger.
Damian respected the distance.
No flowers.
No pressure.
No midnight declarations.
Just steady support from afar.
A security check when threats came in.
A quiet donation routed through the board without his name.
One text on the anniversary of the almost-wedding:
“You survived the day they tried to turn you into property.”
You stared at that message for a long time.
Then you replied:
“I’m still surviving it.”
He answered:
“I know.”
That was all.
And somehow, it was enough.
Leonardo took a plea deal eight months after the wedding.
His lawyers tried to keep the details sealed.
They failed.
He admitted to assaulting you twice.
Only twice.
The number made you furious.
As if the other times didn’t count because no camera saw them.
As if terror needed perfect documentation to be real.
But the plea put him in prison.
Not long enough.
Never long enough.
But long enough for you to sleep through the night when you saw his face on the news and knew he could not reach your door.
At his sentencing, you gave a statement.
You wore a navy suit.
No lace.
No veil.
No makeup hiding anything.
Leonardo sat at the defense table, jaw clenched.