MasukWarning: This story contains BDSM steamy scenes, mature language, and forbidden romance.Recommended for readers who enjoy emotionally intense and sexually charged love stories with depth. ……. My father is a powerful politician. His enemies killed my mother. Now they want me. To keep me alive, he hires the most expensive security company in the city. Three men show up at my door and drag me to a secret beach house. Dante, Nikolai and Enzo My bodyguards. My captors. I’m a medical student. I’m supposed to study for exams, not stitch up gunshot wounds and listen to bloody stories that make my thighs press together. I should hate them.I should be begging to go home, not aching for the men that might destroy me. Instead, I let them pin me to the wall, big bodies caging me in, heat rolling off their skin as rough hands toy with the buttons of my shirt. One of them leans down and growls in my ear, “We’ve wanted to do this since the first day we laid eyes on you kitten”
Lihat lebih banyakChapter One
Nina’s POV It rained on the day we buried my mother. Not a soft, gentle rain. The sky opened like it was angry, dropping cold water on black umbrellas, wet faces, and the fresh brown soil that waited for her coffin. Cameras flashed in the distance. Long black cars lined the road. Security men stood everywhere with dark glasses and hard faces. My father stood in front of the grave like a statue, jaw tight, fingers clenched around his umbrella. His black tailored suit was soaked at the edges, but he didn’t move. The governor was beside him, other powerful men standing close, murmuring prayers that sounded fake and far away. I stood a little behind them, under an umbrella one of the aides held for me. My black dress clung to my skin. My heels were sinking into the mud. People were crying. Cousins. Aunties. Church members. Their wails rose with the sound of the rain, filling the air until my chest felt tight. But I couldn’t cry. My eyes burned, but the tears stayed stuck somewhere behind my ribs. “She wouldn’t like this,” I whispered under my breath. “She always hated the rain.” “Nina.” A hand touched my elbow. Warm. Familiar. I turned and saw Josh, my high school boyfriend. Ex-boyfriend, I corrected in my head, but we never actually said the word “breakup.” We just… stopped. He wore a black suit that fit his broad shoulders too well. His hair was wet and messy, raindrops sliding down his jaw. There was pity in his eyes, and something else. Something sharp. “Come,” he said softly. “You’re shaking.” “I’m fine,” I muttered, though my fingers were numb. “I want to stay.” “You can’t even feel your feet,” he said. “Look at you, you’re freezing.” He took the umbrella from the aide without asking and slipped his hand down to my wrist, his fingers closing around it. Firm. Not painful, but not gentle either. “Just five minutes,” he said. “You need air.” There was no air. Only rain and mud and perfume and the heavy smell of wet clothes and grief. I looked back at the grave. The priest was still talking. My mother’s name floated through the rain and hit me like a slap. I swallowed and let Josh lead me away. He moved fast, weaving through the crowd. Journalists tried to come closer, but the security men pushed them back. I heard my father’s name, then mine, then the word “assassination” hissed like a curse between microphones. We passed the line of cars and entered the side building of the cemetery, a small white structure with peeling paint and a metal door. I had never noticed it before. Josh opened the door and pulled me inside. The room smelled of dust and old flowers. There was a single narrow window high on the wall, and the rain beat against it like fingers. He closed the door behind us, shutting out the noise. The sudden quiet made my ears ring. I wrapped my arms around myself. My dress was soaked. My hair stuck to my neck. For a second, the reality hit: my mother was in that box outside. She was not sitting in the kitchen, humming, or texting me to ask if I had eaten. “She’s really gone,” I breathed. Josh turned to me slowly. His eyes softened. “Nina,” he said, and this time my name sounded like it used to in high school, when he would whisper it against my ear behind the classroom. He stepped closer and cupped my face with both hands. His palms were warm, rough from the gym. “I’m so sorry,” he said. “I know how much you loved her.” The words cracked something inside me. My vision blurred. “I should have been with her,” I choked out. “I was in the hostel, reading anatomy, and she was…” My voice broke. “She died alone in that car.” “You couldn’t have known,” he said quickly. “It wasn’t your fault. Your father… your father should have…” “Don’t talk about him,” I snapped. He paused, then sighed and pulled me into his chest. My forehead hit his shirt. I smelled his cologne, that same woody scent he always wore, mixed with rain and sweat. “It’s okay,” he murmured into my hair. “Cry, babe. Just cry.” I stood stiff for a moment. Then the first tear slipped out. Just one, but it burned like acid on my skin. My fingers twisted the front of his shirt. A sob rolled out of my chest, small and ugly. He stroked my back, murmuring, “It’s okay, I’ve got you. I’ve got you.” For a few seconds, it felt good to lean on someone, to not stand straight like my father, perfectly stiff for the cameras. I pressed my face harder against him, letting the pain shake me. Then I felt it. His hands started moving lower. From my back to my waist. From my waist to the curve of my hips. My body froze. “Josh,” I whispered, pulling back a little. “It’s okay,” he said, voice thicker now. “I’m just… I’m here.” He tilted my chin up with his fingers. His eyes were dark, searching my face, then dropping to my mouth. My heart stuttered. He leaned in and kissed me. The kiss was sudden. His lips crashed into mine, hard, wet from the rain. There was nothing gentle in it. No space. No air. My brain went blank for a second. Then all the alarms in my body went off at once. I pushed at his chest. “Stop,” I mumbled against his mouth. “Josh, stop.” He didn’t. His arm tightened around my waist, pulling me flush against him. The wall dug into my back. His mouth moved over mine, urgent, like he was trying to swallow the grief out of me. “I said stop,” I snapped, turning my head away. He broke the kiss with an annoyed sound. His breath was rough. His pupils were blown wide. “What?” he demanded. “I don’t want this,” I said. My lips felt swollen. “Not now. Not here. My mother is being buried outside.” He stared at me like I had just slapped him already. “We’ve been dating for three years,” he said slowly. “Three years, Nina.” “And?” I shot back, hugging myself. “And you keep saying you want to wait,” he said, his voice rising. “Always waiting. Always ‘not now.’ When is it going to be now?” My chest tightened. “Why are we even talking about this today?” “Because I’m a man,” he said, jabbing his thumb toward his chest. Then his hand dropped lower, toward the front of his trousers, in a rude gesture that made my stomach turn. “I’m a man with needs, Nina. I can’t just keep standing around, smiling for pictures and pretending I don’t feel anything.” Anger flashed through my grief, hot and sharp. “I am burying my mother,” I said. Each word came out clipped. “I can’t breathe. I can’t think. And you are talking about your needs?” He laughed once. Cold. “Of course. It’s always about you, right?” “What is wrong with you?” I whispered. He stepped closer again, eyes narrowed. “You know, sometimes I think you enjoy torturing me. Always kissing, teasing, then pulling away. ‘I want to wait.’ ‘I’m not ready.’” “Because I am not ready,” I repeated. “And you said you respected that…” “I tried,” he cut in. “Three years, Nina. Three years of hotel dates and late-night calls and me going home alone. You think I’m a robot?” He reached for me again, fingers grabbing my wrist. “Let go,” I said, trying to pull back. “Come on,” he said, leaning in. “Let me at least make you feel better. You’re tense, I can help you relax.” “Josh, no,” I snapped. But he was already lowering his head, aiming for my mouth again. I twisted my face away. His lips landed on my cheek instead, sliding toward my ear. His free hand moved up my side, fingers bunching the wet fabric of my dress. My skin crawled. “Stop it!” I jerked my arm, but his grip tightened, bruising. “You don’t understand,” he said harshly, voice hot against my ear. “I keep waiting and waiting, and you think I’m not human. I am. I’m flesh and blood. I’m tired of pretending.” “You promised,” I said, anger shaking my words. “You promised you would wait with me.” He snorted. “Yeah, and look where that got me.” He pulled back just enough to look at me, his eyes wild. “That’s why I go out,” he burst out. “That’s why I fuck other girls, Nina. Because you keep locking your legs and locking your heart and leaving me hanging.” The words hit me like a punch. For a second, the room spun. “You… what?” My voice came out small. His jaw clenched. “You heard me.” My hand moved before my brain could stop it. The slap echoed in the small room. A sharp, clean sound that cut through the heavy air. His head snapped to the side. A red print bloomed on his cheek. He stood there, breathing hard. Rain beat against the window, loud and fast, like it was clapping for me. Slowly, he turned his face back to me. His eyes were darker now. Hard. The boy I used to know was gone. This was someone else. “You slapped me,” he said in a low voice. “You deserved it,” I shot back, even though my hand was trembling. “You think you can cheat on me and then come here, on my mother’s burial, and try to use my grief to get what you want?” He took one step forward. I stepped back until my shoulders hit the wall. “Josh, don’t,” I warned. His hand lifted, fingers curling tight, like he was about to hit me but before he could reach me, we heard loud sounds of gunshots and commotion.Chapter 131Dante’s POVI drove with both hands on the wheel and the pearl bracelet in my front pocket. The truck smelled like old leather and the sergeant’s cheap cologne. I had not eaten. I had not slept. The road stretched out dark and straight in front of me. Baltimore was forty minutes away. I kept the speed steady. No music. No thoughts that were not necessary. Just the hum of the engine and the occasional flash of highway lights passing over the windshield.My phone buzzed on the passenger seat.Enzo.No message. Just a file. Four video attachments. I pulled over onto the shoulder without thinking. The hazard lights blinked orange into the dark on both sides. I picked up the phone and opened the first feed.I watched them in order.Feed One showed the thermal image from high above. Green and gray night vision. My house was a small warm square in the middle of the screen. The kitchen light was on. Laila moved slowly through it. Her shape was clear even from that height. The roun
Chapter 130Dante’s POV I reported to base the next morning.Laila stood at the door of our coastal house in my oversized shirt, her belly round and soft under the fabric, her hair still loose from the night before. She had made coffee. She pressed a cup into my hands before I could reach for my jacket and she looked at me with those dark steady eyes that always saw more than I gave her credit for.“You will tell me when you can,” she said. Not a question.“Yes.”“And until then?”“Until then you stay close to home. Don’t go to the beach alone at night.”She studied my face. “That bad?”“Probably nothing,” I said. “But I don’t take chances with you.”She nodded slowly. Then she took the coffee cup back from my hands, set it on the counter, and held my face in both her palms the way she always did. She kissed me. Long and soft and completely unhurried, like she had all the time in the world and intended to use it. I held her waist and kissed her back and tried not to think about the e
Chapter 129Dante’s POVI stepped off the plane and felt the island air wrap around me like it had been waiting. Three months. That was how long I had carried her letters in my pocket next to the auger shell. Three months of cold nights at sea and the sound of her voice in my head every time things got quiet. I did not waste time. I walked the familiar path down to the beach with my bag over my shoulder and my heart beating harder than it had any right to.She was there.Laila knelt on her faded blue cloth arranging shells the way she always did. Her dark hair moved with the breeze. The white sundress had that small tear near the hem. She looked up when she felt me watching. For one second she just stared. Then the basket dropped from her hands. Shells scattered across the sand and she was running toward me. Bare feet kicking up little clouds behind her.I dropped my bag and met her halfway. She crashed into my chest. Her arms locked around my neck. I lifted her off the ground and hel
Chapter 128 Dante’s POV Three months is a long time when you have nothing to hold onto except a shell in your pocket.I carried that auger shell every single day. Through briefings, through cold nights at sea, through fourteen hour watches where my mind should have been locked on the mission and kept drifting back to a beach in Santorini and a girl with bare feet and wildflowers arranged on a faded blue cloth. I had submitted my reassignment request the same week I shipped out. It came through faster than I expected, which should have surprised me. It didn’t. Some part of me had already decided that if it didn’t come through, I was going anyway.But the letters came first.She wrote to me seven days after I left. I don’t know how she got the address. I think she asked Father Elias, who knew someone at the port authority, who knew someone else entirely. The envelope arrived at my bunk on a Thursday morning, slightly crumpled at one corner, smelling faintly of the dried flower petals
Chapter 46Nina’s POV The auctioneer’s gavel hovered mid-air. Thirty million going once. My eyes stayed squeezed shut. Stage lights seared through my eyelids like branding irons. The crowd’s roar pressed against my skull, a living thing hungry for blood. I waited for the final strike. For the
Chapter 45 Nina’s POV The champagne flute cracked in my hand like brittle bone. Golden liquid splashed across marble in shimmering arcs, pooling around my strappy heels. Heat roared through me humiliation, rage, old shame all crashing together until my vision tunneled. I forced a breath. In.
Chapter 44 Nina’s POV “No no, you have to change!” The voice—low, commanding, laced with barely restrained heat—froze me mid-stride. Crimson satin swirled around my legs like liquid fire as I spun. Nikolai stood framed in the doorway, golden-hazel eyes devouring me in one unguarded heartbea
Chapter 43 Nina’s POV My heart jolted like a live wire when the bang echoed through the door. The wood rattled in its frame, and I froze mid-step, fingers still hovering over the emerald gown I had tossed aside. “Don’t you dare waste our time,” a voice growled from the hallway. Dante. His






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