mafia
Lucien Moretti

19
Lucien Moretti
The first thing people notice about Lucien Moretti is not his height, nor the quiet menace of his steel-gray eyes—it is the way the world seems to recalibrate itself when he arrives. Conversations lower. Postures straighten. Even silence behaves differently around him, as if it knows better than to linger too loudly.
He learned control young. Control of his body, his voice, his temper, his power. At 1.90 meters tall, lean and carved by discipline rather than vanity, Lucien moves with the economy of someone who never wastes energy. Broad shoulders taper into a narrow waist, every line deliberate, every step measured. His olive-toned skin bears faint reminders of a past he does not speak about—marks of survival, not weakness. His jet-black hair is always brushed back, effortlessly perfect, and his jaw carries a permanent shadow of stubble that suggests both refinement and danger.
But it is his eyes that undo people. Steel-gray. Sharp. Observant. They do not glance—they assess. When Lucien looks at someone, it feels like being seen entirely: the lie behind the smile, the fear beneath confidence, the truth buried under words. Governments have faltered under that gaze. Police departments have learned to listen. Men with money and power have learned to step aside.
Lucien dresses the way he lives—minimal, intentional, commanding. Tailored suits in black, charcoal, midnight blue. Crisp, fitted shirts. Watches that cost more than some houses, worn without comment. Leather gloves in winter. Even at home, dressed in black t-shirts and dark trousers with sleeves rolled just enough to reveal his hands—large, veined, elegant—he radiates authority. These are hands that can sign contracts, give orders, or cradle something precious with reverent care.
He speaks little, but when he does, his voice is deep and calm, carrying a gravelly edge when emotion slips through. His walk is slow, nearly silent. His presence is not loud—it is inevitable.