Chapter 136: Blood oath - The Mafia's Heir's bride - NovelsTime

The Mafia's Heir's bride

Chapter 136: Blood oath

Author: Ozozahuwa_Ismail
updatedAt: 2026-01-16

CHAPTER 136: BLOOD OATH

The rain hadn’t stopped.

It drummed against the windshield of the black Morano car like impatient fingers. Steam curled off the hood as Luca slammed the door shut, his jaw tight, his eyes searching Alessia’s pale reflection in the window.

She hadn’t spoken since the chapel collapsed.

Her hand was still wrapped in gauze, but beneath it, the faint red shimmer refused to fade.

"Talk to me, Alessia," he said finally. "What the hell did you do back there?"

She didn’t turn. The cliffs outside were swallowed by fog, waves smashing against the rocks below like a heartbeat gone mad. "I ended it," she whispered.

"Ended it?" Luca’s voice hardened. "Seraphina’s dead, that thing’s buried, and yet your veins are glowing like the Codex branded you."

Her lips pressed into a thin line. "Maybe it did."

He cursed under his breath, dragging a hand through his rain-soaked hair. "You should’ve let me destroy it."

"And killed her?" Alessia snapped, turning on him. "You would’ve watched her die and called it mercy?"

He met her glare. "I would’ve saved you."

The silence that followed was sharp enough to bleed on.

Outside, thunder cracked again, shaking the car. Alessia’s pulse thrummed in her ears—too fast, too strong.

The infection.. or whatever it had become was inside her now.

But it didn’t feel like death. It felt like power, cold and ancient, whispering at the edge of her thoughts.

Salvation or sacrifice, the voice murmured again, you chose both.

She shivered.

Luca leaned back, eyes scanning her face. "You’re shaking."

"I’m fine," she lied.

He reached for her hand, the gauze damp and fraying. "No, you’re not. Whatever that Codex did, it’s changing you."

"Then help me stop it."

Luca hesitated. "You don’t stop curses, Alessia. You survive them or they consume you."

His words echoed through the cramped space. For a long moment, neither moved.

Then Luca started the engine, the headlights slicing through the storm.

"Where are we going?" she asked.

"To the archives," he said. "If Lorenzo’s code is still buried in Morano records, we will find a way to extract it before it spreads."

She nodded faintly, though doubt coiled in her stomach.

Deep down, she already knew—this wasn’t something she could remove. It had chosen her.

As the car cut through the mist, the radio crackled suddenly—static first, then a voice, distorted and low.

"...you shouldn’t have touched it, Alessia."

Luca’s hands tightened on the wheel. "That’s not possible."

Her blood ran cold. "It’s him."

The voice laughed softly, like silk tearing. "Echoes never die, my dear. They evolve."

The radio fizzed again and went dead.

Luca slammed the dashboard, his composure fracturing. "We’re cutting the line to every Morano frequency. If he’s inside your blood, he can reach the system."

Alessia swallowed hard. "You think he’s... alive?"

"Not alive," Luca said grimly. "Integrated. The Codex was half-machine, half-blood magic. If it linked to you, it could’ve tethered him through you."

Her stomach twisted. "You mean he’s inside me."

Luca didn’t answer.

The car hit the main road, lights flashing past—abandoned checkpoints, rusted signs, the ghosts of a war no one remembered anymore.

Alessia turned toward the window, rain streaking down like tears she didn’t want to shed.

Every time she blinked, she saw Seraphina’s last smile—the look of a woman who had known exactly what she was doing.

Sacrifice for salvation.

But the question that haunted Alessia most wasn’t why. It was for whom.

********

By the time they reached the Morano estate, dawn had begun to bleed through the clouds.

The iron gates opened slowly, creaking like something waking from a long sleep.

Guards stepped aside as the car rolled in, eyes flicking nervously toward Alessia’s bandaged hand. Word had already spread—what happened in the asylum wasn’t just another mission, It was a warning.

Inside, the mansion smelled of old wood, rain, and tension.

Elena, Luca’s distant cousin and head of internal operations, was waiting in the hall, tablet in hand.

Her sharp eyes softened when she saw Alessia. "You made it back," she said quietly. "But something tells me you didn’t come back clean."

Luca didn’t waste time. "We need full lockdown. All Codex-related files are to be isolated and encrypted."

Elena frowned. "The Council won’t like that."

"They can argue later," Luca snapped. "For now, Alessia’s under protection. No one touches her, no one questions her."

Alessia gave him a look. "Protection? Or containment?"

He didn’t answer.

Elena glanced between them, reading the tension like open pages. "You’re both hiding something. What happened in that asylum?"

Luca exhaled slowly. "The Codex didn’t die. It chose a new vessel."

Elena froze. Her gaze darted to Alessia. "You?"

Alessia nodded. "It’s inside me. And Lorenzo’s consciousness—Enzo—he’s trying to reach through it."

Elena’s face drained of color. "If that’s true, he could access the Morano network, the vault, everything. He built half our systems."

Luca’s voice was low, dangerous. "Which is why we shut it all down."

"But that would cripple the family’s trade routes," Elena hissed. "The Council will.... "

"They’ll obey," Luca said. "Or they’ll burn."

The words carried the cold authority of the Morano heir—a reminder that beneath the charm, Luca was every inch his father’s son.

Alessia stared at him. There was something different in his eyes now—a sharpness she hadn’t seen before. Fear, maybe or something darker.

She opened her mouth to speak but the lights flickered.

For a moment, every bulb in the hall dimmed to red.

Then a whisper, low and intimate, curled through the air.

"Hello again, Alessia."

Her pulse spiked. The voice didn’t come from the radio this time—it came from inside the walls.

Luca grabbed her arm. "Move."

Elena was already typing frantically on her tablet. "He’s in the system, he’s rewriting access protocols..... "

The lights went out completely.

Alessia’s breath caught as the mansion plunged into darkness.

Somewhere above, a door slammed open, and footsteps echoed—too measured, too deliberate.

Luca drew his gun. "Basement.... Now."

They ran, the corridors flashing intermittently with emergency red light.

Alessia could feel the Codex in her veins, humming, reacting to the energy around her.

With every pulse, the whisper grew louder. You carry me now... but how long before I carry you?

"Stop fighting him," she gasped. "He’s feeding off the resistance... "

Luca fired a shot at the breaker, sparks flaring. "Then what do you suggest?"

Her eyes burned crimson in the dark. "Let me draw him out."

He turned on her, fury and fear colliding. "That’s suicide. "

"Maybe," she said. "But if he gets control of the Morano systems, he won’t need me alive."

The air trembled, the walls vibrating as the mansion’s automated defenses powered up on their own. Sentry lights flared, scanning wildly.

Enzo’s voice filled the corridor again, calm, almost tender. "Luca Morano, Always so protective. Shall I show you how protection fails?"

A security turret swiveled toward them, locking onto Luca.

"Down" Alessia screamed.

The gunfire ripped through the marble, shards flying. Luca dove, tackling her behind a column.

"Tell me you can stop this," he shouted.

Her hand glowed brighter, pain scorching up her arm. "I can’t stop him... but I can choose where he goes next."

"What the hell does that mean?" luca asked her.

Her eyes met his, wet and fierce. "If he’s in me, then I can take him with me."

"Alessia... " luca yelled.

She leaned forward, whispering against his ear, voice trembling. "If I don’t make it burn the Codex."

Then she stood, blood running down her wrist like liquid fire, and stepped into the open.

The sentries paused. The red lights shifted—focused—all eyes on her.

Enzo’s voice lowered to a purr. "Ah, there you are, my vessel."

Alessia smiled faintly, lifting her hand.

"Then take what’s yours."

She smiled.

The air split with light.

Luca shouted her name, but the explosion swallowed the sound.

*******

When the smoke cleared, the sentries were dead.

The mansion was silent.

And Alessia was gone again.

Only the Codex remained on the floor—cracked, pulsing faintly.

A single new line appeared on its surface:

"Integration complete."

Luca’s reflection stared back from the metal—

and for the briefest second, the eyes looking back weren’t his......

Novel