LOGIN“Boss, they’ve arrived.”
The voice of Erza Slain Velleoti’s right-hand man was low, cautious, as if uttering those words too loudly might summon something dangerous. Ezra took a slow drag from his cigarette, the ember at the tip burning bright in the dimly lit room. He exhaled a plume of smoke, watching it curl lazily toward the ceiling before dissipating. He didn't even acknowledge the announcement with a nod or a glance. His men were used to this. Ezra never wasted words unless necessary. Before him, on a lavishly designed stage, women danced in near-nothing attire, their bodies moving in sensual waves under the flashing neon lights. Their gazes, hopeful yet hollow, sought the attention of the wealthy and powerful men scattered throughout the club. Ezra was among them, but unlike the others, he remained detached, unaffected. These women were nothing more than background noise to him. Their attempts to seduce him and capture his interest were wasted efforts. They could bare their souls along with their bodies, and it wouldn’t make a difference. Ezra was a man who indulged only when he desired, and tonight, his mind was elsewhere. At thirty-five years old, Ezra held a power most men could only dream of—power that wasn’t inherited but built, sharpened like a blade over the years. He had the ability to destroy anyone, anytime, without consequence. But he wasn’t reckless. He never acted without reason. He never touched someone unless they crossed a line. And for those who did? He never spared even a strand of their hair. He finally shifted his gaze, steel-like and piercing, toward the direction his subordinate indicated. His expression remained unreadable, but there was a flicker of interest—just a flicker. “Did they bring anything with them?” His voice was quiet, yet it carried a weight that sent a chill down his right-hand man’s spine. It was the kind of tone that signaled danger, like the calm before a deadly storm. “No, Boss,” the man replied, his own voice betraying a hint of unease. “Only their terrified expressions.” Ezra scoffed. Typical. He crushed the cigarette into the glass ashtray beside him, reaching instead for his whiskey. The amber liquid burned down his throat, but he welcomed the sensation. It kept him grounded and kept his patience intact—what little he had left. With a subtle hand gesture, he ordered his men to retrieve what needed to be retrieved from the other side of the room. The music swelled, drowning the tension for a moment. Laughter, drunken chatter, the clinking of glasses—this place was a sanctuary for those seeking temporary pleasure, for men who thought power was measured by how much money they could throw. Ezra despised it. The mixture of alcohol, sweat, and desperation clung to the air, an unbearable stench that made his stomach turn. But he endured it. Business came first. Even as women continued to flaunt themselves in his direction, their glances growing more desperate, Ezra remained unmoved. They meant nothing. They were just another distraction in a world full of meaningless things. His eyes flicked to the side as one of his men returned, moving quickly through the crowd. Ezra immediately caught the look on his face. Nervous. Hesitant. That alone was enough to sour his already thinning patience. “B-Boss,” the man stammered, stopping just before him. “They... they’re asking for another month to pay their debt.” For a moment, there was silence. Then, a loud crash. Ezra slammed his glass onto the table with such force that it shattered, sending shards of crystal flying. The club fell deathly quiet. The music stopped. The dancers froze mid-motion. Even those seated at the nearby tables held their breath, their faces paling as an unsettling aura filled the space. All eyes turned to him, yet no one dared to move. Ezra’s gaze darkened, and when he finally spoke, his voice was ice-cold, slicing through the silence like a blade. “You will either pay... or you will die. Choose!” No one spoke. No one even breathed. The men at the table across from him—the ones who owed him a hundred million—sat frozen. Their leader, in particular, seemed to shrink under Ezra’s gaze. The hesitation only made Ezra’s blood boil. With a flick of his wrist, he grabbed his empty glass and hurled it straight at the man's head. The bastard barely dodged in time, the glass shattering against the back of his chair. Had he been even a second slower, his face would’ve been sliced open. “F*cking coward,” Ezra growled, his patience now razor-thin. The man flinched, swallowing thickly. Sweat dripped down his forehead, his entire body trembling. “P-Please, Mr. Velleoti,” he stammered, barely able to form words. “Just... just one more month.” Ezra let out a sharp exhale through his nose, leaning back in his seat as if contemplating. Then, he laughed. It was a hollow, humorless sound. “I have been hearing that for six months.” His voice, though calm, carried a venom that made the air feel suffocating. The man continued to plead, his words a mess of desperation and excuses. Ezra had had enough. With one swift motion, he pulled out his gun. The metallic click echoed through the club, followed by a deafening bang. A body dropped. Blood splattered across the floor, the scent of gunpowder mixing with the already foul air. The victim—a bodyguard—didn’t even have time to react. He was dead before he hit the ground. A chorus of horrified gasps and screams erupted around them. The dancers fled the stage, some customers scrambling to escape, but Ezra’s men swiftly blocked the exits. “No one leaves,” one of them barked. “Call the police!” someone yelled. Ezra rolled his eyes. Pathetic. He turned back to the shaking man before him, raising his gun once more. The leader of the debtors was now on his knees, hands clasped together in a pitiful attempt at begging. “Please, I swear I’ll—” Bang. The man took a bullet straight to the forehead. The man collapsed lifelessly onto the floor, his plea unfinished. Blood pooled beneath him, soaking the expensive carpets. The screams only grew louder. Ezra’s men looked on without reaction. They had seen this before—many times. There was nothing new about it. The remaining men—those who had accompanied the now-dead leader—were paralyzed with fear. None of them dared to move, afraid that the next bullet would be theirs. Ezra, unfazed, stepped over the fresh corpse and scanned the room, his gaze sharp, predatory. “You think you can borrow from me and run?” He scoffed, shaking his head. “You should’ve known better.” One of the remaining men instinctively took a step back. Ezra smirked. “Try to move again... and you’ll be next.” The man stopped dead in his tracks, his breath hitching. Ezra knew he had already won. He had made his point clear. But just to be sure, he turned back to the corpse of the debtor and, without hesitation, emptied the rest of his bullets into the lifeless body. The horror in the room was palpable. Some people closed their eyes, others sobbed into their hands, praying this nightmare would end. Ezra finally turned to the remaining men, his face an eerie mix of calm and sadistic amusement. “Listen closely.” His voice was low, yet it demanded absolute attention. “If anyone—anyone—breathes a word of this to the cops, you’ll all be dead before the next sunrise.” His smile widened, but there was no warmth behind it. Only death. “Now... clean this sh*t up.” And just like that, the beast had spoken and left.By evening, the house was too quiet. Not peaceful. Not calm. Quiet in the way a room became quiet after someone said something unforgivable and nobody knew yet whether forgiveness was even on the table. The estate still functioned. Maids moved through corridors with trays and lowered eyes. Guards rotated with harsher precision than usual. Doors opened and closed softly. Orders were obeyed faster than necessary. Children’s things were put back where they belonged. Lights came on at their usual hour. Dinner was prepared exactly on time. From the outside, nothing was wrong. From the inside, the whole house had teeth clenched. Louelita stood at the tall window in the family sitting room and watched dusk settle over the gardens. The fountains beyond the glass were lit in warm gold. The hedges were trimmed too perfectly. The pathway lamps came alive one by one, neat and elegant and expensive—another Velleoti evening in a place designed to look invincible. She pressed one hand over the o
Nobody in the strategy room spoke for several seconds after Louelita mentioned Selene’s fever. Ezra stood absolutely still. That was always the first warning. He did not explode right away. He did not raise his voice. He did not reach for the nearest object to break. He simply became motionless in a way that made every other living thing around him suddenly aware of its own heartbeat. Omar knew better than to interrupt that silence. Louelita did too. She had seen Ezra furious before. She had seen him cold, lethal, and terrifying enough to make armed men forget how to breathe. But this was not only anger. It was the kind of dangerous stillness born from a thought too dark to say aloud yet. Three weeks ago. The week Elene had a fever. The week their daughter had slept in Louelita’s arms for two nights straight because she had cried every time anybody tried to carry her away. The week Ezra had canceled meetings, delayed shipments, and snapped at half the house because the little gir
Omar had served Ezra Slain Velleoti long enough to understand that not all silence meant the same thing. There was the silence of discipline, the one that settled over men when Ezra entered a room and everyone remembered at once who owned the air in it. There was the silence of calculation, colder and narrower, when a business decision was being weighed and somebody else’s future was already ending in Ezra’s mind. There was the silence that came before violence, when the boss became too still and the unlucky fool across from him mistook that stillness for mercy. And then there was this kind. The worst kind. The silence Ezra carried when his fear had nowhere respectable to go. Omar knew it because he was hearing it now through walls, corridors, and a house that had learned how to brace itself whenever the Queen was troubled. He stepped out of the strategy room with the recovered packet isolated on three separate systems and the internal network sealed under his personal authority.
No one moved for a full second after Ezra spoke. That kind of silence never meant peace around him. It meant the room had just been given a direction, and everyone inside it understood that something irreversible had begun. Louelita remained seated, her eyes still fixed on the monitor. The sentence on the screen felt alive now. Not because it was moving, not because it was changing, but because it had succeeded. It had reached her, and whoever sent it knew that. Ezra turned away from the screen first. “Primo, Elio, stay on internal lockdown. No one enters this room without my permission. No one talks about this outside my walls.” Both brothers nodded at once. “Yes, Boss.” “Omar,” Ezra continued, “trace every surviving government pathway tied to her former case. I do not care how old, how buried, or how dead they seem. If it still twitches, I want to know who touched it.” Omar inclined his head. “Understood.” Louelita stood. The movement was small, but Ezra noticed immediately. H
No one in the room spoke for several seconds. The words on the screen did not move. They did not need to. They sat there with the quiet confidence of something that knew exactly where it had landed. ARE YOU READY TO REMEMBER, KHIONE? Louelita could hear her own pulse. She stared at the screen as if staring longer would change the sentence into something less deliberate, less intimate, less cruel. But the line remained exactly what it was: not a threat, not a warning, not even a direct attack. A summons. Something cold uncoiled in her stomach. Ezra turned his head just enough to look at her profile. “Vita Mia.” She did not answer. Her eyes were fixed on the monitor, but she was no longer seeing only the room. She was seeing server rooms that smelled like metal and stale air. Terminal windows filled with fragmented code. Government folders marked confidential. Her own hands, younger and colder, typing through the night while believing that information alone could save people. She
The room lost its softness in a single breath. Louelita felt it first in Ezra’s hand. A moment ago, his touch had been warm, lazy, and possessive in the harmless way it only became when he was with her and the children. Now his fingers tightened around hers with quiet control, and the shift in him was so immediate that even Eiji noticed. Louie was silent. The little boy looked between his parents and then at Omar. “Did something bad happen?” Ezra did not answer right away. That alone was answer enough. Elene, still sitting close to Louelita, turned her small face toward Omar with unnerving calm. She did not speak, but she watched him the way she watched storms through glass. Omar lowered his eyes. “Nothing that requires panic,” he said carefully. “But it is not something to ignore.” Ezra’s mouth hardened. “That is a poor choice of words before breakfast,” he said. “I know, Boss.” Louelita nervously gulped. Dead channels. The phrase kept ringing in the back of her head like an
Louelita felt like she was floating on air as they arrived at Ezra’s house. She couldn’t stop smiling, even in the presence of other people. It was as if nothing else mattered in that moment, as if the world had faded into the background.Ezra had confessed his feelings for her.She sat in the gard
“Get out of my way!”Ezra’s furious voice boomed through the hall, his sharp, commanding tone slicing through the chaos like a blade. He was charging forward, his long strides fueled by urgency, his pulse hammering against his skin. His heart clenched at the sight of the carnage left behind. Bodies
“Is that how you greet your mother after twenty-five long years?” The woman’s voice dripped with sarcasm, her lips curling into a taunting smile. The statement made Ezra’s jaw clench tightly, his grip on Louelita's hand growing rigid. His entire body radiated fury, muscles coiled like a predator re
The harassment from her parents has happened multiple times now. Again and again, they kept showing up, beseeching, pleading, and trying to manipulate her into giving in. Louelita was exhausted. She was so tired of facing them, tired of hearing their desperate excuses, especially now that they were







