“You don’t have to go through with this if you don’t want to, Lilliana,” Dante reassured me, standing in his tuxedo, looking far too delicious to be saying that on my wedding day. “But everything is settled,” I said, trying not to smear too much of my makeup as I cried uncontrollably. “Why doesn’t he love me, Dante?” A sob tore through me. “Come with me,” he said, his voice low and dark—practically a command. “What?” I asked, looking up at the stoic, dangerous man in front of me. “Come with me,” he repeated, holding out his hand. “I’ll make sure everything goes away, fiorellino.” I looked down at his hand, at the tattoos swirling around his fingers. And even though a hand like Dante Gallo’s should have scared me, nothing had ever felt so safe. So I stepped forward, took his hand in mine, and looked up at him. “Take me away.” ** Two ruthless men. One stolen bride. A love too wild to be contained. Lillian thought she had finally secured the life she always dreamed of — until her perfect engagement crumbles in one night of shocking betrayal. Whisked away from the wreckage of her wedding by the dangerous and devastating Dante Gallo, she finds herself caught between two powerful forces: Dante, the mafia king who has loved her from afar, and Damien Volkov, the lethal enemy who refuses to let her slip through his fingers. Torn between loyalty, passion, and a fierce desire for freedom, Lillian faces a choice that could break all three of them. But what if she refuses to choose at all? In a world of power, obsession, and forbidden love, some hearts aren't meant to be divided — they're meant to be shared.
View More“This is an important lesson, figlio mio,” Father said, his heavy hand resting firmly on my shoulder. “That is why I wanted you to come.”
“Yes, padre,” I answered, nodding my head with conviction as I fell into step beside him, keeping my posture straight and my movements deliberate, just like he had taught me.
My father was a powerful man, one nobody dared to mess with, one whose mere name made people lower their eyes and cross the street. Everyone feared him—and by extension, they feared me too. It was a strange kind of power to wield at such a young age, and it made it harder and harder for me to do anything else but stand loyally at his side. There was no room for mistakes. No room for softness.
This was one of my very first missions. Father had started bringing me along for more and more business dealings, each one a little heavier, a little more serious than the last. And I loved it. I craved the responsibility, the respect that came with it. I had overheard him once, speaking in low, proud tones to Peter, his right-hand man, saying that I was finally turning into a man. And a man, he said, needed to know how to conduct business properly, with strength, precision, and discipline.
“The family that lives here,” he said, pointing to the almost-fallen-down townhouse in front of us, “has a lot of debt to us.”
I nodded immediately, signaling that I understood what he was telling me. I knew better than to ask pointless questions. Father despised stupidity. He hated when anyone spoke out of turn or wasted his time. If I didn’t have anything vital to say, it was better to stay silent. That was one of the first lessons he had ever taught me. People got nervous and filled the air with meaningless chatter, but if you could master the art of silence, they would end up telling you things they never meant to reveal. And information—information was everything in our world.
“The man in here, Greg Caraway," Father continued, his voice low and steady as we stood on the cracked, trash-strewn pathway leading up to the sagging porch, "has been to our casino many, many times." His mouth curled slightly in disgust. "He owes money for his gambling losses. But not just that—he's also been drinking our liquor, enjoying our hospitality, and he hasn’t paid a single dime."
Our family owned many businesses, something I had been lectured about since I was merely six years old, back when most kids were still learning to tie their shoes. We had the restaurant chain A Taste of Italian, a booming success with seven locations within a fifty-mile radius alone. We had casinos scattered across America, our family branching out, establishing footholds in almost every state capital.
And then there were the less public enterprises.
Father sold guns discreetly to those who knew how to ask, and he provided manpower—bodyguards, enforcers—to the clubs and private venues around town, making sure that his business associates were protected at all times. But there were strict, unbreakable rules: we never touched drugs, never sold anything that would poison the soul, and above all else, we never, ever laid a hand on a woman without her consent.
My uncle, Fillip, had raped an underage girl one time he had been out. My father immediately drove him down to the police station, telling him he could either confess his crime, take his penalty, and, once he was done with that, maybe rejoin the family—or my father would kill him right then and there. My uncle was gone for a few years, but eventually, he returned to the family, never touching a woman ever again.
“And what do we do when people don’t pay us back, figlio mio?” Father asked, his voice low and commanding, making me instinctively straighten my shoulders.
“We take collateral,” I answered, my voice firm and unwavering, the words drilled into me through years of quiet lessons and silent expectations.
“Magnifico, figlio mio,” he said, his thumb rubbing slowly over my shoulder in a rare display of approval. “Greg Caraway is an old, rundown man. We cannot use him for anything. However,” he continued, as we started to make our way up the broken-down porch, the wood creaking and groaning under our polished shoes, “he has a young son—one we can use, one we can train. That will be your responsibility.”
I nodded my head tightly, clenching my jaw as I fought to keep the mixture of nerves and determination from showing. It was a humongous responsibility, one my own father had shouldered when he turned fifteen. That was how he met Peter, how Peter became his confidant, the one man he could always count on no matter what storms the world threw their way. I had expected this moment to come eventually. I had always known that I would have to step into his footsteps, to carry on the legacy. But I was only thirteen—barely a teenager—and already, I was being given the responsibility of keeping another person alive, shaping them into something useful for our family.
Father’s fist clenched once before he hammered on the door with a force that rattled the frame, the noise echoing into the street. I remained firmly by his side, not flinching, barely breathing. I could feel the gazes burning into our backs—the silent presence of my father's entourage, men who had been trusted to protect us, to witness what was about to unfold without ever speaking a word of it outside these walls.
“I’m coming!” a man’s voice bellowed from inside, practically screaming in frustration. It was rough, impatient, and slurred with irritation, sounding just as reckless as my father’s knocking had demanded. “Fucking dipshits, coming in the middle of the game,” he muttered under his breath, the words careless, as if we couldn't hear him crystal clear through the thin, rotting door.
The door finally creaked open, and there he stood—a sorry excuse for a man. Every instinct in me wanted to wrinkle my nose, to step back from the stench of cheap liquor and stale sweat that immediately assaulted my senses. My mouth wanted to curl in disgust, my hands itched to wipe the filth off my clothes just from standing near him. But I stood still, just like I had been taught. Stoic. Impassive. A statue carved in my father's image, not a muscle twitching, not even a narrowing of my eyes.
The man’s hair was greasy, slicked back in clumps that glistened under the weak porch light. His clothes were stained and wrinkled, looking like they hadn't seen a washing machine in months. His skin was blotchy, and the smell clinging to him was enough to make my eyes water. Still, despite his deplorable condition, recognition flashed in his eyes the moment they landed on my father, and his head immediately bowed in a pathetic show of submission.
"Mr. Gallo," he stammered, his voice trembling. "I-I-I don't have your money, sir. I'm so sorry, but money’s been tight, sir."
"I am not here for your money, Mr. Caraway," Father replied, his voice devoid of emotion, as stoic as the expression he always wore in these moments. His hand, still resting heavily on my shoulder, flexed slightly, a silent reminder for me to pay close attention. "I am simply here to execute the consequences of your actions."
Greg Caraway’s face drained of what little color he had. He looked like he might collapse right there, overcome by the reality of his situation. His mouth flapped uselessly for a moment, panic filling his bloodshot eyes. "But—but sir, I have nothing of value here."
"That’s not true, Mr. Caraway," Father said, his hand tightening ever so slightly on my shoulder, his disgust for the man practically vibrating through his fingertips. "Step aside and let me and my son inside."
"Of course, sir. Of course," the man muttered, stepping aside hurriedly, bowing his head low again as if that would somehow absolve him.
"This," Father murmured, low enough for only me to hear, "is your lesson. When we get out, you will tell me what you see."
I stepped into the house behind him, my eyes quickly scanning the surroundings. The interior was no better than the exterior. Some woman had clearly tried to make the place feel like a home—small lace doilies were carefully placed on tables that looked ready to collapse, and cheap, chipped picture frames clung desperately to the dirty walls. The floor was surprisingly clean, suggesting that someone had at least attempted to keep the squalor at bay.
I reminded myself of what Father would expect from me—confidence, composure, authority. So I strode into the living room with slow, steady steps, my back straight, my face impassive, the picture of controlled indifference.
On a battered couch sat a woman, thin and pale, her hands busy stitching a faded t-shirt that had clearly lived through better days. She worked with care, sewing yet another patch onto the worn fabric as if it might still be saved. Beside her, a boy sat quietly, his blue eyes focused on his mother’s work. He looked about my age, maybe a little younger, with the same sun-bleached hair and fragile frame that screamed of neglect.
But it wasn’t him that captured my attention.
Sitting on the floor, barefoot and cross-legged in front of the flickering TV, was an angel. A little girl, no older than seven, her long blonde hair neatly braided, wearing a simple plaid dress of blue, green, and purple. She smiled brightly at the colorful commercials dancing across the screen, her innocence standing out like a single clean spot in a room full of grime.
And somehow, without a single word, I knew: this was a world where angels had no place.
"Who are you?" My gaze fell back on the woman, who was now looking up at my father, who had entered the living room with slow, measured steps. His very presence seemed to change the air in the room, making it heavier, harder to breathe.
"This is Mr. Gallo, Sophie," Greg Caraway answered, his voice low, his eyes dropping immediately to the stained carpet at his feet, unable to meet anyone’s gaze.
The woman gaped at him, her eyes wide and disbelieving, her mouth hanging open in silent horror. Hurt radiated from her expression, pure and raw, more painful to look at than the filth covering the rest of the house. "No," she whispered, the word almost silent, barely carried across the room. "You promised, Greg, you promised me!"
"What do you want me to do?!" Greg immediately bellowed, his voice raw and desperate, his hands thrown out uselessly to his sides. His shout seemed to shake the walls themselves, and that was when everything shifted.
The little angel stood up from where she had been sitting on the floor by the TV. Her movements were small, but her presence was striking. Her wide, curious eyes immediately sought out the boy on the couch. Without a word, they moved toward each other, a silent communication passing between them. He shifted to stand protectively in front of her, his thin frame tense but determined, shielding her from the chaotic scene unfolding.
Her bright blue eyes, filled with worry and confusion, peered over his shoulder—and for a second, just a second, they locked with mine.
That was the moment I knew.
At thirteen years old, standing rigid in someone else's crumbling living room, I knew who would be mine. I knew who would one day stand at my side, who would share my burdens and my crown, who would help me rule an empire. My whole future, my whole life plan, seemed to crystallize in that single gaze.
“There’s nothing I can do now, Sophie!” Greg roared again, snapping me out of my trance and dragging my attention back to the escalating argument.
"There is, actually," Father said, stepping forward, his voice cutting through the tension like a blade. Both of them turned to look at him, their faces pale and stricken.
"You see, Mrs. Caraway," he began, his tone deceptively calm, almost conversational, "your husband owes me fifty thousand dollars." His words landed like gunshots, and Sophie gasped, clapping her hands to her mouth in horror.
"There is an easy way for him to pay me back," Father continued, each word deliberate, each syllable carefully measured. "One that would help you out as well. Wouldn’t you like to have some more income, Mrs. Caraway? Enough to pay for some renovations around here? Maybe even a new couch?"
Sophie Caraway turned her gaze slowly towards her husband, her eyes filled with pure, undiluted contempt. "And how can you make that happen, Mr. Gallo?" she asked, her voice trembling with rage and confusion.
"I'll take the boy off your hands," Father said smoothly, his face utterly impassive. "He'll come with us now. He’ll work for me and my son, pay off your husband's debt. He'll earn a fair wage. I'll take half for the debt, and the other half will be sent directly back to you. I will ensure he still goes to school, that he is fed properly, and that he has decent clothing."
Sophie and Greg were speechless, standing frozen, too horrified even to protest. Their mouths opened and closed soundlessly like fish stranded on dry land.
And then, something unexpected happened.
The boy straightened his back, his face tightening with resolve. He took a step forward. "I'll do it," he said, his voice fragile but clear, filled with a fierce bravery that made even my father’s eyes sharpen with interest. "On one condition," he added, lifting a trembling finger.
Father’s mouth curled slightly into something resembling approval. "And what is that, boy?" he asked.
"That you make sure nothing happens to my sister," the boy said, his gaze flickering between me and my father, daring us to say otherwise.
"What is her name?" I asked, stepping forward, feeling my father's calculating gaze land on me.
"My name is Lillian," she said herself, her small voice steady and clear. Her blue eyes shone with defiance as she looked straight at me, her tiny brows furrowed in a fierce scowl.
"Lillian," I repeated softly, tasting the name like it was a promise. My eyes darted back to the boy, and I gave him a single, firm nod. "Pledge your loyalty to me, and I’ll make sure nothing happens to Lillian."
He did.
And I never let anyone put a hand on Lillian ever again.
When I woke back up, I was alone in the bed. The earlier warmth from Dante had faded, leaving the sheets cool and empty beside me. The absence of his body, of his touch, felt almost like a loss. The bed that had once felt like a sanctuary just hours ago now felt too vast, too lonely, like something was missing. Sadness crept into my chest, slowly and steadily, and though I tried to suppress it, it lingered. I knew it was irrational. Of course, he couldn’t be here all the time. He had a life outside this bed, outside of me. He had responsibilities, a world to run. But that didn’t stop the part of me that wanted him always near, the part that longed for every second to be shared with him.I shifted beneath the soft comforter, my eyes eventually flickering to the bedside table. A simple glass of water sat next to a few neatly arranged pieces of fruit—grapes, peeled clementines, and a sliced apple. My gaze fell on the piece of paper folded delicately in front of them, a few hastily scribb
I woke up feeling warm and toasty, like I was wrapped in the safest cocoon in the world. There was a stillness around me, a serenity that made me want to stay in that exact position forever. Slowly, my senses kicked in, and I realized why I felt so incredibly secure—Dante’s arms were wrapped tightly around me, holding my back against his chest. He was flush against me, his body heat melting into mine like it belonged there, like he was built to shelter me from everything outside these walls.A soft smile curled on my lips before I even opened my eyes. I couldn’t help but snuggle in closer to him, pressing into his chest, and I felt rather than heard the soft hum he released. A moment later, his nose buried itself gently into my hair, and he exhaled slowly, his breath warm against my scalp. One of his arms was tucked beneath my head, curling around my shoulder and cradling me tightly, while the other was wrapped around my waist, keeping me entirely secured to him. There was no escape f
When Lillian finally seemed to drift off into a deep, dreamless sleep, her breathing soft and even, I carefully eased myself out of the bed. I moved with practiced precision, making sure not to jostle her, not even slightly. She needed rest more than anything, and I needed to make sure she got it. My presence beside her brought her comfort, yes—but I had other matters to attend to. There were phone calls waiting, warnings to be issued, and lines that needed to be drawn in the sand—permanent, unmovable.I turned back once more to look at her. She looked like something out of a dream, lying there in my bed, surrounded by the soft, expensive sheets that she somehow made look more beautiful simply by existing in them. My t-shirt barely covered her, but it clung to her curves in a way that made my chest tighten. Her golden hair fanned across the pillows like liquid sunlight, and her face, so serene and peaceful in that moment, took my breath away. Her lashes rested delicately on her cheeks
I drained yet another glass, the sharp burn of the vodka sliding down my throat. It scorched a path through my chest, but the fire was welcome—almost comforting. It grounded me, gave me something tangible to focus on amidst the storm raging inside. The burn dulled the edges of the dread coiling in my gut, made the impending doom feel a little less heavy, a little more manageable. Strange how pain could be soothing when it was familiar.My eyes flicked up to the ornate clock hanging on the wall, the ticking hand a cruel reminder of what was happening. At any moment now, Lillian would be walking down the aisle, radiant and fragile, ready to bind herself to another man. Ready to seal her fate. With every passing second, she moved further away from me, tethering herself to a future I couldn’t be a part of. A life where I was just a shadow in the background, a closed door never to be opened again.I had tried—God, I had tried. I’d done the best I could with the cards I had been dealt, with
I slumped against him completely, every muscle in my body spent, every nerve ending still tingling from the aftershocks that trembled through me. My skin was flushed, oversensitive, and yet Dante didn’t stop. He kept moving my hips, slow and steady, dragging out every lingering sensation, making me tremble again and again as my clit brushed against the length of him.It was overwhelming—in the most perfect way imaginable. My very first orgasm, my first taste of what pleasure was truly supposed to feel like, and it had been brought to life by none other than Dante Gallo. The same man people whispered about, feared, warned others to stay far away from. He was dangerous, powerful—possibly the most feared man in the entire city, if not the country. Yet right now, he was my anchor, the one person making me feel like I was untouchable and treasured all at once.I had enjoyed every single second of it. Every brush of his fingertips, every breathless whisper, every moment of pure vulnerability
Saying yes to her request had been the easiest decision of my life. Promising Lillian that she would be the only woman for me was easier than breathing, easier than blinking, easier than existing without her. It felt like a vow I had already made in my heart years ago—long before the words ever left my lips. The truth was, I had never been romantically involved with anyone else in any meaningful way. The only reason I wasn’t a virgin myself was because I had once convinced myself that I would never get to have her. I thought she would always be just out of reach, a fantasy I’d carry with me forever, a dream that would never materialize into something real. I believed I would never get to touch her, never get to taste her, never get to see her standing right in front of me—naked, stunning, unguarded, and mine.Lillian whimpered softly against my mouth, her delicate hands sliding up my chest, her touch igniting my skin like a spark on dry kindling. Her lips moved against mine with carefu
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