It was all her fault. My life could have been simple—40-hour shifts at KFC, sneaking extra chicken crumbs, and binge-watching reality shows. But no. Instead, here I was, standing at the altar, saying I do to a man whose idea of “casual” involved drugs, women, and murder on speed dial. Thanks, Mom. Not only did she ruin my life, but she also sold it—traded me off to the deadliest Mafia boss alive, Mario Santiago, as if I were some secondhand couch on clearance. Mario Santiago. Yeah, that Mario Santiago. The Human Terminator. The guy whose enemies mysteriously vanish like my paycheck two days after payday. And now, I was his wife. He glanced at me with a slow, wolfish smile that practically screamed trouble. That was when I knew two things: 1. I was completely doomed. 2. This man was going to wreck my heart (and probably my life). But hey, it could be worse, right? At least I’d get a killer wardrobe out of it. *** Are you looking for romance and humor? Stuck with Mario Santiago is a hilarious, Mafia billionaire romance filled with danger, betrayal, drama, and a love story you won’t forget. Dive in—you won’t regret it (but the characters might).
View More“What if I don’t want to do this? What if I don't want to sell my body like you—”
The slap came faster than I could process, the sting spreading across my cheek as my head snapped to the side. “Don’t you dare question me,” my mother hissed, her voice venomous. “Do you think I wanted to do the things I did? Sleeping with men, lowering myself for you? I sacrificed everything to keep you fed and clothed. You owe me this, Sylvia.” Did every mother say that to their daughter? I held my burning cheek, staring at her in disbelief. Her face was twisted in anger, and the lies dripped from her mouth. She never sacrificed anything for me—not willingly. My father’s death had stripped away the thin veil of decency she once pretended to wear. I took a step back, swallowing the lump rising in my throat. “You didn’t do it for me,” I said quietly. My voice trembling despite my best effort to sound strong. “You did it for the money, for the heels and the dresses, for the nights you could pretend to be someone important and get fucked by rich young men.” Her eyes flashed dangerously, and I braced myself for another slap. Instead, she sneered, her lips curling like a snake ready to strike. “You think you’re better than me?” she spat. “You think you’re above doing what it takes to survive? You think working at KFC will pay your bills?” I didn’t answer. “Fine,” she snapped. “If you won’t do this, then get out of my house. You can rot on the streets for all I care.” The words hit harder than the slap. She meant it—she’d throw me out without a second thought. And as much as I hated her, I hated the idea of being homeless more. Behind her, my stepbrother leaned against the wall, arms crossed, a twisted smirk on his face. He enjoyed this. He enjoyed watching me squirm, watching me fall. His gaze lingered too long, like a predator sizing up his prey, and I felt bile rising in my throat. “You’re wasting time,” he said lazily, pushing off the wall. “Just send her out already. Let’s see how far she’s willing to go to save her sorry ass.” I flinched as he brushed past me, his hand grazing my bum deliberately. I wanted to scream, to claw his eyes out, but instead, I clenched my fists and kept my mouth shut. This wasn’t the time to fight. My mother crossed her arms, her gaze cold and unyielding. “You’re going, Sylvia. You’re going to have a one night stand with Mario Santiago, get him the sign the papers, then kill him. You’re going to fix this family's mess.” Family. As if the people in this house had ever been that to me. I turned away, my eyes burning with unshed tears. I didn’t want to give them the satisfaction of seeing me cry. But as I was shoved toward the door, toward the car waiting to deliver me to the man everyone whispered about in hushed tones, the tears came anyway. I’d heard the stories about Mario Santiago. The leader of the Santiago cartel. The deadliest man alive. People disappeared in his world. People died in his world. And now, thanks to my mother, I was being delivered to him like some sacrificial lamb. As the car sped through the city, my heart pounded in my chest. Fear coursed through me, hot and suffocating, but somewhere beneath it, a new emotion stirred. Anger. This wasn’t going to be the end for me. I wasn’t going to let them ruin my life and throw me to the wolves. If I was going to survive Mario Santiago, I needed a plan. The car ride was silent, and my throat felt like sandpaper no matter how many times I swallowed, and my stomach was doing Olympic-level flips. I hated this. Hated the dress, the heels pinching my toes, the way my palms kept sweating. But what choice did I have? It was either this or the streets, and I wasn’t exactly cut out for living under a bridge. I tugged at the hem of my gown for the fiftieth time, silently praying it wouldn’t ride up any higher. God, I know I haven’t exactly been your star child, but if you’re out there, maybe… don’t let me die tonight? Inside the building, it was worse. Dim corridors stretched endlessly, guards and bouncers stationed at every turn, looking like they chewed on nails for fun. Guns peeked out from holsters like casual accessories. The air smelled of expensive cologne and polished leather, a mix that screamed money and danger. What kind of man needs this many guards? I thought. Then I remembered the answer and felt a little sick. “I can’t go any farther than this,” my stepbrother said behind me, his voice low. I felt his breath—hot and gross—right against my ear. “Remember everything I taught you. Don’t screw this up, little sister.” His hand brushed against my back, lingering too long, and I tensed. Then he pressed himself against me, his hardness unmistakable. I wanted to spin around and smack his face, but instead, I stared straight ahead, my nails digging into my palms. My stomach churned, and for a second, I considered throwing up on his shoes. But I didn’t want to get hit. Again. Instead, I swallowed the bile creeping up my throat, plastered on a mask of indifference, and stepped forward. My heels clicked against the marble floor, each step carrying me closer to the door on my right. Just like I’d been told a million times. The door loomed ahead, larger than life, and for a moment, I hesitated. My legs felt like lead. Then I raised a fist and knocked—once, twice. It swung open on silent hinges, the heavy wood clicking shut behind me as I stepped inside. The room was dimly lit, and the air was thick with the scent of cigars and leather. My nerves spiked as I looked around. It was eerily quiet—too quiet—and my heartbeat thundered in my ears. No one was here. I shuffled from one foot to the other, my fingers twitching against the sides of my gown. Do I sit? Stand? Lie on the floor and pretend I’m dead? Then a voice, low and raspy, cut through the silence like a knife. “You’re smaller than I expected.” I froze, every hair on my body standing on end. My eyes snapped toward the sound, and my breath hitched. There he was. The devil himself. Mario Santiago. The deadliest Mafia Lord to ever grace the United States. In flesh and blood. And judging by the way his dark eyes raked over me, I’d already made one hell of a first impression. I cleared my throat. "My mother sent me..." but I didn’t get to finish. "How old are you, Piccola?" His voice was flat, like he was talking to a pet. "Go back to your mother. Tell her I don’t do kids. I wouldn't want to hurt her for this sick mistake." His Italian accent was thick, but there was no warmth in it. Did he seriously just call me a kid? Was this some kind of joke to him? I couldn't decide if I should feel stupid, relieved that he had a boundary, or just downright pissed that he was treating me like I was some naive little girl. Honestly, I felt a mess of everything. "I'm not a child!" I snapped, my voice a little too loud, but screw it, I was done playing nice. "I’m 22." He scoffed, like I was a bad joke. "Did you come with a birth certificate I can run through?" He chuckled, and I swear my face could’ve caught fire from the heat. This had to be some kind of sick game to him. "I wouldn’t lie about my age," I shot back, I was starting to feel more and more like I was the one being played. He didn’t even blink. He just stood up, that air of indifference making me feel like an annoying fly. "Leave. Tell your mother not to make this mistake again." What. The. Hell. This wasn’t how it was supposed to go! I was supposed to sleep with him, get him to sign some papers, kill him while he was asleep, get the hell out, and pray they didn't find his body till I was far enough. But now? Now, I was stuck with this psycho who wouldn't even look at my chest. I could leave, but where would I go? My mother would throw me out, and my brother? God. I couldn’t back out now. I pulled the knife from the hidden fold of my dress, the cold steel biting into my palm. He had his back to me, oblivious. This was it. No more thinking, no more second-guessing. It was now or never. I raised the knife. My heart pounding in my chest like it was trying to escape. I didn’t think. I just did. I plunged the knife down.Mario's POVWhat the hell was the mayor of San Diego doing in one of Kosta’s warehouse?That question wouldn’t stop screaming in my head. I sat there, slouched deep into the plane seat, arms crossed, eyes wide open but not really seeing anything. My brain was running miles I couldn’t catch up with.Of all people… A whole Mayor?It made sense now, though. Or at least it explained something. The way Kosta always seemed untouchable. How his name would come up in case files and then vanish. Witnesses gone. Footage lost. Charges dropped like leaves in fall. The system didn’t just fail, someone was helping it look away.And if the damn mayor was involved?No wonder.The mayor of San Diego had always rubbed me the wrong way. Flashy guy. Always in a crisp suit that screamed, I care about my image more than my people. He talked too fast, smiled too wide, and never gave a straight answer. The kind of man that could shake your hand and stab you in the back all in the same breath, then blame it
Mario’s POVI held her close, careful not to jostle her too much as I carried her to the bedroom on the plane. When I finally put her down on the bed, I grabbed some wipes and gently cleaned the dirt and sweat off her skin. She barely moved, just too tired to care. I slipped one of my shirts over her, something loose and soft, and tucked her in.After that, I didn’t linger. I stepped out and closed the door quietly behind me, not wanting to wake her.Back in my seat, I started picking up the clothes scattered around the floor. The mess was everywhere, reminders of how crazy our love making was. I folded them as best I could, trying to make some order out of the chaos. Then I pulled out my phone and laptop, fingers moving fast as I sent a message to Darren.I might be heading back to New York, but this wasn’t over. Not by a long shot. Kosta still needed to pay for what he did to Sylvia. And I had to find a way out of this mafia ring I was in.Darren and I had been able to plant chips i
SYLVIA'S POV It had been an hour and 30 minutes.Mario still wasn’t out.“Are you sure they’re going to release him?” I asked the lawyer as we sat in the waiting area of the San Diego Central police station. My fingers trembled slightly, clutching the cold leather strap of my Birkin.“They have no legal ground to hold him anymore,” he shrugged casually. “Especially not after that media storm.”Just then, the doors creaked open. Detective Harris emerged, flanked by two uniformed officers. His face was pale, tense.“He’s being processed for release,” Harris muttered, not quite meeting my eyes.I stood immediately, heart pounding as footsteps echoed down the corridor. And then...There he was.Bruised. Pale. But upright. My Mario.I didn’t care who was watching, I ran to him, wrapped my arms around his waist, and buried my face in his chest. He exhaled shakily, arms curling around me.Reporters screamed questions, calling out to Mario as we walked outside the police station, my arm nest
SYLVIA'S POVTears burned in my eyes as I crouched in front of Mario. He looked nothing like himself. His shoulders were slumped, eyes dull, like the fire in him had been crushed. My chest ached just looking at him.“What did they do to you…” I choked, barely managing the words.I stood up slowly, turning to face Detective Lane and Harris. Lane stood there like a statue, stone-faced, like he hadn’t just torn my world apart. Harris couldn’t even meet my eyes.“You have till 5 p.m. to release my husband,” I said, voice shaking, but loud enough for it to echo down the hall. “Or you’ll be hearing what the general public thinks of this inhuman, illegal kidnapping you just pulled.”My lip curled in disgust. “I fucking trusted you.”I let out a sharp breath through my teeth, looked back at Mario one last time, and whispered, “I love you,” before I turned on my heel and stormed off.“Sylvia... wait!” Harris called after me.I didn’t stop.“Sylvia, please... just listen—”His footsteps picked
Mario's POV The flickering light above me buzzed faintly, a low static sound that had become a part of the silence I lived in now. It has been 3 days, but now, I’d stopped keeping track after they took my watch. No phone, no clock. Just cold concrete, stale air, and their goddamn smug faces.I sat on the hard bench, hands resting on my knees. They hadn’t cuffed me today, probably wanted me to feel like I had some control. I didn’t.The steel door groaned open and in walked Detective Harris, the older one with a permanent smirk on his face, followed closely by the younger prick, Lane, the one who acted like he had something to prove.“Rise and shine, Romeo,” Harris said with a chuckle, tossing a paper cup of what they called coffee onto the table. “You get to hear the news today.”I didn’t move. “I’ve asked for my lawyer. Every day for the past three days.”Lane grinned. “He’s working on it. But you know how the system is… slow.”Harris pulled out a chair and sat opposite me, cracking
SYLVIA'S POV The moment I stepped outside the hospital with Darren’s arm still loosely around my shoulders, I realized how quiet the city felt. Almost too quiet. Like something big had already happened and the world was holding its breath.We walked toward a black unmarked sedan parked by the curb. Darren opened the door for me with a gentleman’s flair that felt out of place, but I climbed in, silently praying I wasn’t stepping into another trap. He rounded the car and got into the driver’s seat, the engine purring to life smoothly.The silence between us stretched.“So…” I started cautiously. “Mario really sent you?”He didn’t look at me right away, just focused on the road as he pulled into traffic. “Yes. He’s worried about you, but things are a little complicated right now. He couldn’t come himself.”That should’ve comforted me. But it didn’t.“Complicated?” I echoed, folding my arms. “You mean like how I nearly drowned and he didn’t show up at the hospital? Or how the police trie
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