LOGINEzra Velleoti had always sought solace in the sea. It was the only place that gave him a sense of peace, a refuge from the suffocating demands of his work.
As the leader of the Velleoti Mafia, his life was a relentless cycle of violence, deception, and power plays. But out here, away from the chaos of the city and the bloodstained dealings of the underworld, he could breathe. The sound of the waves, whether calm or raging, was a melody to him. The endless horizon stretching before him reminded him of freedom—something he rarely experienced. Sitting on the deck of his yacht, he sipped his vodka, allowing the alcohol to burn his throat as he gazed at the vast expanse of blue. The sun was high in the sky, its golden rays bathing his skin in warmth. His black sunglasses shielded his eyes, and he leaned back, letting the tranquility of the moment seep into his bones. He enjoyed these brief escapes, venturing out to sea for three to five days at a time. No one knew of his private beach house except for Omar, his right-hand man—the only person he trusted with his life. At thirty-four, Ezra no longer sought fleeting pleasures. He wasn’t interested in one-night stands or meaningless affairs. If he was going to let a woman into his life, she had to be someone who could shake him to his core. Someone who would make him rethink everything he had built, someone who could match his fire and his cold indifference at the same time. But so far, no woman has managed to stir anything in him. He sighed, rolling his neck to release some tension. His father had raised him alone after his mother—a Filipina—had abandoned them to chase after other men. He never held any hatred for her; he simply didn’t care. His father, now retired, lived peacefully in a secluded part of Italy, and they only met a few times a year. Their conversations were brief, but there was mutual respect. His father had taught him everything about their family's legacy—how to run their business, how to kill without hesitation, and most importantly, how to survive in a world where betrayal lurked in every shadow. Ezra lit a cigarette, taking a slow drag as he stared at the horizon. His thoughts drifted to the corruption that plagued the Philippines. He had long since accepted that this country was a breeding ground for filth—crooked politicians, criminals disguised as public servants, and the weak who allowed themselves to be exploited. “That's bullshit!” He muttered under his breath. “A swarm of idiots and fools.” As much as he despised the system, he had no intention of leaving. He had built his empire here, and despite the rot in its foundation, the Philippines was still home. He had his peace here, even in the midst of the dirt. And besides, he thrived in this environment. His mind wandered back to the last man who had dared to cross him. A poor fool who thought he could borrow money from the Mafia and walk away without paying his debts. Ezra had been merciful compared to others in his position—he had given the man a chance. But debts were debts, and in the end, the man had to learn his lesson. A smirk played on his lips as he exhaled a cloud of smoke. Some people never learned. Stretching his arms, he stood and moved toward the yacht’s controls. It was time to move. The sun was still glaring overhead, even though it was past two in the afternoon. He adjusted his watch, shaking his head. Climate change was a bitch. Just as he was about to steer his yacht toward a shaded cove where he planned to grill some fish, something caught his eye—a dark shape floating in the water. His brows furrowed as he squinted against the sunlight. At first, he thought it was debris, but as he focused, he realized with a jolt that it was a body. “Motherfucker!” Ezra cursed, his grip tightening on the wheel. His instincts screamed at him to act fast. Without hesitation, he sped up the yacht, drawing closer to the drifting figure. As the boat neared, his heart pounded. It was a woman. His jaw tightened. Who the hell would throw a body into these waters? The sea was supposed to be his sanctuary, yet even here, he couldn’t escape the ugliness of the world. Ezra didn’t hesitate. He killed the engine and dove into the water. The sudden coldness enveloped him, but he pushed forward, swimming toward the lifeless form. As he reached her, his heart clenched. She was small, delicate—her body battered, her clothes stained with blood. Long strands of dark hair floated around her like a ghostly veil. “Shit,” he muttered, wrapping his arms around her. He kicked hard, hauling her back toward the yacht. With a grunt, he lifted her onto the deck, his muscles straining. Breathing heavily, he ran a hand through his wet hair. “F*ck! Why do I have to do this again?” he groaned, irritated with himself. He could have ignored her, let her drift away into nothingness, but something inside him—something uncharacteristically human—refused to let him turn away. Then, he saw her face. His breath caught in his throat. She was... breathtaking. Even with bruises marring her skin, even with her lips pale from near-drowning, she was the most beautiful woman he had ever seen. Innocent. Fragile. Yet, there was something about her—something that sent a strange pulse through his veins. Ezra shook himself. Now wasn’t the time to be mesmerized. He checked her pulse, pressing his fingers against her neck. It was weak, but it was there. Without thinking, he tilted her head back and began mouth-to-mouth resuscitation. His lips pressed against hers, and an unexpected jolt shot through him, like a shock to his system. The sensation unsettled him. His body reacted in a way he didn’t anticipate. What the hell was this? “Damn it, don’t die on me,” he growled, pressing his hands against her chest and pumping hard. He repeated the motion, his pulse matching the urgency of his actions. Seconds stretched into eternity. Then— She coughed. Ezra’s eyes widened as water spilled from her lips. He quickly turned her onto her side, letting her expel the liquid from her lungs. She gasped, her body convulsing as life returned to her. But her eyes remained shut. “Bloody hell,” he muttered, running a hand down his face. His relief was quickly overshadowed by his growing concern. He wasn’t a doctor, but he knew she was in bad shape. Lifting her easily, he carried her inside his yacht’s cabin and laid her on his bed. As he peeled off her wet clothes, his jaw tightened at the sight of the blood seeping from a bullet wound near her ribs. His eyes darkened. “Who the hell did this to you?” he muttered, his voice dangerously low. Whoever had tried to kill her had left her to die at sea, but she had somehow survived. That meant she was either incredibly lucky—or incredibly strong. His instincts told him she was the latter. Grabbing his phone, he dialed Omar. His voice was sharp and commanding. “Omar! Get my doctor to the mansion. Now. And send a goddamn helicopter!” “Yes, boss.” Ezra ended the call, his gaze returning to the unconscious woman. He clenched his fists. Whoever had done this to her had made a grave mistake. Because now, she belonged to him. And Ezra Velleoti never let go of what was his.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’s screams echoed through the car, raw with desperation as she fought against the iron grip of the man trying to drag her out. His rough hands yanked at her mercilessly, his breath reeking of smoke and sweat as he snarled in frustration.“You’re really making this difficult for me, huh?!” h
"Why the hell do I have to get involved in this mess?" Louelita muttered under her breath, frustration lacing every word as she hurriedly gathered supplies in the supermarket. She had tried to put off going outside for as long as possible, but her food stock had finally run out. She had even consi
“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, wa
Khione Louelita Silay. That was the name given to her by one of the nuns at the orphanage where she grew up. It was a name that carried no ties to a family, no connection to a past she could return to—only the identity of a girl who had learned to survive on her own. Now, seated in her small yet





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