Of Blood and Brushstrokes
Dominique Andolini built her life with her own two hands-between oil paint and long nights, between a family bakery in Brooklyn and the kind of hunger that refuses to stay small. She knows how to make beauty from honesty, how to turn longing into art, how to survive without asking anyone for rescue.
Then Valentino Zorzi walks into her life.
Older. Untouchable. Dangerous in the quiet way that matters most.
He is the kind of man New York whispers about-a man with power in one hand and violence in the other, a man who moves through the city as if it already belongs to him. Valentino does not do anything halfway, and when his attention settles on Dominique, it is not casual. It is deliberate. Possessive. Impossible to ignore.
What begins as attraction becomes something far more perilous: a love affair tangled in family loyalty, public scrutiny, old money, old blood, and the brutal politics of a world Dominique was never meant to enter. But the deeper she is pulled into Valentino's orbit, the more she realizes that the greatest danger isn't the empire surrounding him.
It's how much of herself she's willing to risk for it.
Set between glittering Manhattan galleries, private estates on the Sound, candlelit dinners, family holidays, and the shadowed machinery of organized power, this is a story about obsession, loyalty, desire, and the kind of love that does not arrive softly-it arrives like fate.