Luca Saw Nia’s Name on the Guest List. Then He Saw the Two Seats-eirian

The first year of Luca Moretti’s second marriage looked effortless to anyone standing outside the glass.

Evelyn Shaw Moretti knew how to keep a house running without ever making it look managed.

She knew the names of donors before they arrived, the allergies of judges’ wives, the preferred cigars of men who never wanted their vices spoken aloud, and the exact flowers that made a dining room look warm instead of staged.

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In Chicago, that kind of knowledge was power.

Luca respected power.

He had built his life around it.

People called him many things in lowered voices, some flattering and some careful, but Luca had always preferred simpler words.

Control.

Discipline.

Order.

He did not tolerate mess, not in business, not at home, not in himself.

That was why his second marriage to Evelyn appeared to make sense.

She was calm where his first wife had been alive.

She was polished where Nia had been warm.

She never cried in hallways, never asked questions at the wrong time, never looked at him like his silence was hurting her.

Evelyn gave him a house without noise.

For a while, Luca mistook that for peace.

The penthouse on Lake Shore Drive had floor-to-ceiling windows, a private elevator, limestone bathrooms, and staff who moved through rooms as quietly as shadows.

At night, the city glittered below them, but the apartment itself often felt preserved rather than lived in.

Nothing was out of place.

No mug stayed in the sink.

No blanket was thrown over a chair.

No woman laughed barefoot in the kitchen while tea steeped too long because she had forgotten it during a story.

Nia had done that.

Nia Carter Moretti had filled rooms without trying.

She had sung under her breath while cooking, left books facedown on furniture, and written grocery lists on the backs of envelopes even though Luca kept staff for that.

She had been untidy in small, human ways.

Once, early in their marriage, she had fallen asleep on his shoulder during a late drive back from a gala, her hand still tucked inside his.

He remembered thinking then that power was useless if it did not bring a man home to someone who made breathing easier.

Years later, he would remember that thought like an accusation.

The first crack had come quietly.

There was no scandal at first, no shouting, no public humiliation.

There were only doctor appointments and test results, calendars and pills, hope rising and falling until hope itself became cruel.

Nia tried everything the specialists asked of her.

She tracked dates in careful handwriting.

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