LOGIN
~CAKE~
I’ve always been a fighter. From my childhood, when I answered the bullies with my fists. I’ve always loved violence, craved it, and went out of my way to make sure I punch someone. It’s no wonder that I’m currently in the business of beating people up for money. It’s no wonder that I’m damn good at it too. “Name?” A fat, bald man sneers through heavy smoke from his cigar. “Belva,” I say, adjusting my bag, clinking all my things together. He puts down my name in his books, raises his gaze, and slowly trails them along my form. He scoffs. “Anything the matter?” “Are you sure you wanna fight, little girl?” His Mexican accent is thick and mocking. If it weren’t for the fact that I’ve learnt to let insults about my size slide, this fat bastard would be eating my fists. But as it stands, I like to let my work speak for me. “Do you get paid to talk?” He wheezes a laugh. “You’re going up against Iron Fists. I hope you’ve picked out your casket. It’s going to be your funeral.” “I’m fucking terrified.” I step away from the table just as he picks up a mic and shouts into it. “Tonight’s match, we have the ruthless and dearly beloved Iron Fists!” From the other corner of the ring, a hefty woman steps out in black colours and tight braids. She commands the crowd with her fists, and they go wild, their thirst for blood rising high into the ceilings. She doesn’t even glance at me as she steps into the ring, her muscles rippling under the spotlights. “And challenging our champion, from the streets of…I don’t fucking know. Give it up for Belva!” The crowd falls silent, and someone coughs. “Is this a joke?” I hear a voice behind me in the stands. “She’s too fucking tiny,” another person says. “Iron Fists will eat her alive.” “PLACE YOUR BETS, PEOPLE!” I drop my bag beside the ring. Taking off my hoodie and tucking loose strands of hair into my ponytail, I adjust the mask that always covers my face and slip on my boxing gloves. “I don’t have all fucking night, princess.” Iron Fists leans on the ropes, her smirk mocking. “Good thing I don’t need all fucking night,” I retort and roll into the ring. “Little girl with a big mouth, I see. I can’t wait to break it.” The bell rings. Iron Fists wastes no time going on the offense. She hits and kicks, and her blows miss me as I dodge. From her wild swings, she has terrible accuracy, but with her meaty hands, I don’t think she needs it. One hit can flatten my skull. So I keep away from her, light on my feet, all the tight lean muscles of my body humming with adrenaline. As Luca would say, “Study your opponent first, Cake. Don’t rush into a fight blind.” “Stop dancing and fight!” Iron Fists growls, missing my eye by an inch. The crowd around us has gone feral, calling for my blood, shouting for the champion to break my neck. I dodge several more deadly hits, finally satisfied with what I know of my opponent. I take a breath, plant my feet down, and swing through an opening. She’s fast, but her feet drags, she lacks aim but has power, and she leaves her left side too fucking open. My fist connects to the flesh under her jaw with a sickening crack that seems to vibrate through the whole ring. Iron Fists’s head snaps back, her eyes roll inward, and she falls like a giant boulder. The silence is immediate and deafening. People leave their seats, and beyond the lights, I see the fat bastard’s face, white as a sheet. He underestimated me. Rookie mistake. With a wide triumphant grin, I give a mocking bow to the audience and jump off the top rope onto the ground. Remembering himself, the bastard grabs the mic. “That’s the last fight of the night, folks. What an unbelievable twist tonight.” The air suddenly breaks with outrage, but that’s none of my fucking concern. Now to get my money and get out. I shove my things in my bag while they carry an unconscious Iron Fists out. All it took was one punch. Literally. What a fucking pathetic champion. I saunter to the table where the fat man is busy counting money and sharing it to the winners—a janitor and a fucking drunk. I wait till he’s done before putting my palm out. And the bastard has the audacity to look at me like he’s never seen me before. “Don’t play with me,” I warn. He shrugs. “The fight ended too early. You have no share.” “I beat your champion,” I seethe. “I’m entitled to half.” “You didn’t tell me you can fight. You won under false pretenses. Get lost, Belinda.” False pretenses? My anger lights up quickly like a match. The fucking bastard. “It’s Belva.” I clench my fists. Before I can lunge for him, two shadows appear beside me. Solid hands lock around my elbows and lift me off my feet. “Motherfucker!” I yell, my feet dangling helplessly in the air. “You better count your fucking days!” I’m hurled out like a rag, and the door slammed in my face. I pick myself up without fuss. Growing up fighting in the streets has taught me a thing or two. So I know how best to handle thieves. I wait. Ten minutes. Twenty. Long enough for them to think I’ve gone, then I pick the lock and walk back inside, making sure my mask is still in place over my face. I spotted the back office on my way in and headed to it quickly. The locks give way easily, and in a minute, I’ve taken my share from their locker and nothing more. They don’t deserve my decency, but I’m no thief. Stepping out, I’m about to close the door when another guy hurries past me and goes inside. He pays me no mind, and I can’t be bothered. With their track record, I figure they probably owe him, too. I shrug, continuing on my way. I’m almost to the exit, when the air explodes with gunshots. I turn sharply and run headfirst into a hard wall of heat and muscle. Our bags fall with a thud and we both dive for them. Coming up again to stare warily at each other. He’s wearing a black mask, his eyes are just as shifty as mine, dark and sharp, assessing me in a heartbeat. I stand my ground, ready to strike if he breathes on me wrong. But he doesn’t, as if not registering me as a threat, he looks away, turning toward the hushed voices and gunshots coming down the narrow corridor. His eyes narrow, and without a word, he hurries the other way, and as much as I hate strangers, I follow. He stole from them. I can bet all my winnings he’s not about to let himself get caught. After a few minutes of weaving in and out of shadows, we emerge through a service door. The man wastes no time in dashing to the barbed wire fence and starts climbing. I join him as the door behind us opens. “There they are!” Someone shouts, and these fucking bitches start shooting at us. Bullets whizz past my head as I follow the thief to the top of the fence. But when I see the long drop into darkness, I halt my fucking horses. The thought of getting splattered on asphalt roots me in place. As if it isn’t bad enough that my only options are to get carved by bullets or become roadkill, the stranger is already preparing to let go on the other side. When he notices I’ve stopped, he looks at me with eyes as flat and dark as the night sky behind him. And for a split second, I think he’ll push me to the wolves. Instead, his voice rumbles out surprisingly deep. “Trust me.” Words like that have fucked over so many people. I’ll be stupid to even try it. But then he stretches out a hand, like we’re friends. Another bullet whizzes past my head, and I sigh. It’s not a nice night to be roadkill. But I’m willing to take my chances. I clasp his gloved hand, letting his firm grip pull me over to the other side. “Let go,” he says. In utter disbelief at myself for putting my life into a stranger's hands, I let go of the fence. And I don’t fucking die. I sink into an inflatable bed and bounce to my feet. “Holy shit.” On the other side, the men are swearing and cursing, their dogs barking angrily. But they don’t come after us. I glance at the stranger who just saved my life, my heart still pounding in my ears, and give him a nod of thanks. He responds by raising his palm, and I slap it in a weird high-five. His gaze lingers for a long second before he steps back. I give him a two-finger salute, adjust my bag, and break into a run. Over the sound of my footsteps, I hear his boots pounding in the other direction.EPILOGUE~CAKE~ I woke up before the sun. Our son, Arlo Enzo Vescari, was still sleeping soundly in the crib beside our bed, tiny fists curled near his face.Naming him had been one of the easiest decisions Nico and I had ever made. Enzo had spent the past year carrying this family on his back. Naming our son after him felt right.He had pretended not to care when we told him.The man had stared at the birth certificate for almost a full minute before looking away and muttering something about us being dramatic. Later that night, I caught him sitting beside Arlo’s crib alone, holding one of the baby’s tiny socks in his hand.Nico swore he had never seen Enzo that close to tears.I had.And somehow, that made me love the name even more.I had been ovulating for two days straight. Nico stirred when I climbed on top of him, his hands finding my hips like they belonged there. He was hard before he even opened his eyes.“Morning,” he murmured, voice rough with sleep.I didn’t answer with
~NICO~The meeting had been going for almost two hours. I sat at the head of the table and listened as the new council members discussed the expanded shipment routes through the eastern ports. Two years passed and I already rebuilt what was lost. I had chosen every person sitting around this table myself. Only those who had stood by me when everything fell apart earned a seat. Russell was one of them. His loyalty had been absolute. I gave him the position without hesitation.The routes looked solid. Profits were climbing steadily. The families who had wavered during Tomaso’s betrayal had either fallen in line or been removed. The clan was stable again. Not the same as it had been under my father, but better in some ways. I had learned the cost of trust the hard way.My mind drifted to Cake.Two years had changed us. The contract that brought her into my life was long gone. I destroyed it myself and signed new marriage certificates instead.Somewhere between the fights, the grief, and
~CAKE~I sat on the terrace of the villa with a glass of orange juice in my hand, scrolling through my phone for the third time in ten minutes.France was nice.For the first week, I thought I would enjoy it. By the second week, I was ready to start arguments with strangers for entertainment.Almost two months had passed since the war.Two months since Tomaso died.Two months since the Vescari mansion burned to the ground.Most days, Nico slept longer than he used to. Gustavo said that was normal. Apparently almost bleeding to death came with side effects.Personally, I thought he was being dramatic.I took a slow sip of my juice and let my thoughts wander back.Not to the worst parts. I tried not to think about those too often. Whenever I did, I usually ended up staring at a wall for the rest of the day.Just the shape of it all. Everything that happened after that night.Tomaso was dead. Nico killed him in the old courtyard of the Vescari mansion.I only saw part of the fight.By th
~CAKE~Elianna stood beside the black SUV with her arms folded tightly across her chest while Javier loaded the last bags into the trunk. The engine was already running, a low rumble that matched the tension in the air. She looked at me like she was waiting for me to change my mind.“You can still come with us.”I looked away, staring at the dark lawn instead. “No.”“Cake.”“No.”Javier wisely kept his mouth shut and continued securing the bags. He moved with the efficiency of someone who had done this kind of thing many times before. I appreciated that he didn’t try to convince me. At least one person understood that pushing me right now was pointless.Elianna blew out a frustrated breath. “You are being impossible.”I snorted. “You only noticed that now?”She wasn’t amused. Neither was I, if I was being honest. The difference was that sarcasm was cheaper than therapy, and right now I needed every cheap defense I could get. My stomach still ached from the surgery, and I wasn’t about
~NICO~The explosion ripped through the side of the mansion before any of us could react. I saw Enzo shout something and dive for cover, but the blast hit too fast. The force slammed into me like a wall, throwing me backward. My ears rang with a high-pitched whine that drowned out everything else. Muffled screams and gunshots filtered through the haze, distant and warped, like I was underwater.Someone grabbed me under the arms and dragged me behind a half-collapsed wall. Hands slapped my cheeks urgently. “Nico! Nico!”The voice sounded far away at first. Then it sharpened. Enzo. He kept calling my name, slapping me again until my vision cleared. I blinked hard, tasting blood in my mouth. Raffaele crouched beside us, rifle ready, eyes scanning the smoke-filled corridor.“What happened?” Raffaele asked.Enzo helped me sit up straighter. “He hit his head. It’s taking a while for him to come around.”I pushed myself up, ignoring the dizziness. “Bianca? Any sign of her?”“No,” Raffaele sa
~NICO~Tomaso had finally made his move.Russell’s living room was packed wall to wall with men. Some sat on couches cleaning weapons. Others stood in small groups talking through routes, exits, and contingencies. Valentino’s men occupied one side of the room while Russell’s people mixed with my own. The noise never rose above conversation, but there was enough of it to remind me that every person here understood exactly what tonight could cost.My eyes moved across the room automatically, taking stock of who was present and who wasn’t.Adriano should have been here.If he hadn’t switched sides, he would have been standing beside me right now, arguing with Enzo about something stupid or trying to prove he was smarter than everyone else in the room.Instead, he was dead.Russell had been against burying a traitor anywhere on his property. Enzo had wanted to dump the body into the sea and let the fish deal with him.Raffaele disagreed.So this morning, the three of us dug a grave deep i
~NICO~The hospital corridor was quiet. Only a few lights were on above the waiting area. The rest of the wing was dim, the chairs along the wall were empty except for the three of us.Sienna sat between me and Enzo, her hands twisted together in her lap.I had not moved much since storming out of
~CAKE~Lunch had seemed like a brilliant idea at the time.The restaurant was on a quiet street not far from the studio, all glass windows and soft music and the kind of menu that used words like artisan and seasonal next to everything. Normally Elianna and I were the annoying customers who interro
~NICO~Rome at night had a particular rhythm to it. The city never really slept; it only slowed down slightly, like a man loosening his tie after a long day but refusing to leave the office.From the back seat of the car, I watched the streets glide past through the tinted window while Enzo sat bes
~NICO~Three days away from the club felt like three weeks.The place was alive the moment Enzo and I walked back in tonight. Normally that sound meant business was good. Tonight it only reminded me how much had happened in seventy-two hours.Raffaele had nearly died twice.The first time was when







