Mag-log in“The Blackwood Academy—a place where Elites connect to Elites and the rich get richer.”
“That was a crazy move, Ethan. You don’t know these people. They’re not a pure family with wealth from legitimate sources. They don’t care about you or me. When they want something, they go the extra mile. You need to understand that,” Dre said as Ethan typed.
“I’ll see the President if it calms everyone, but that doesn’t excuse them showing up at my space and expecting compliance. Things don’t work like that,” Ethan muttered.
“I understand, and I’ll always support you. But for now, we follow Salvador’s plan. Vincent emailed—he wants us to attend a party this weekend with the Enforcer as his sons,” Dre revealed.
“I think they’re playing a mind game, Dre. Why are we here? What does the Enforcer gain from our presence? Have you thought about that?” Ethan asked. Dre nodded.
“True, man. Enough to feel suspicious,” he agreed.
“We’ll figure it out. There’s more to this mission than meets the eye,” Ethan said. Dre asked playfully, “And Marlene?”
“She’s loud, thinks the world is hers because she’s a Blackwood. Something about her provokes me—it’s rich-girl privilege,” Ethan snapped. Dre raised his eyebrows.
“I’ve never seen you despise someone, especially a woman. I thought you’d bend her over,” Dre teased, making thrusting gestures.
“Some of us think with our brains, not our… private parts,” Ethan replied. Dre’s jaw literally dropped as Ethan typed.
“Guy, you literally spit on my face with that! It’s unfair,” Dre whined.
“C’mon, we have studying to do. I may need to see Thane later this afternoon,” Ethan said. Dre frowned.
“I hate studying!” he whined.
“Since we’re here, we might as well aim for A’s. Leave school with a notable degree, not a pass,” Ethan said. Dre chuckled.
“I love you, Ethan. What would I do without my brother?” he asked.
“Probably bending someone over, in your words,” Ethan teased. They laughed.
Later, heading to night class, Dre stopped. Ethan sensed danger.
“We know you’re out there. Come out and talk peacefully,” Ethan announced. They emerged from the dark, uniforms on, deadly weapons in hand.
“Fvck—they’re trying to kill us!” Dre cursed.
“We know you’re not rich kids. Blackwood Academy is for rich kids. Our parents didn’t attend school to let street urchins join. We sniffed you out,” one man said, his drug addiction evident.
“We don’t want to get our hands soiled. Dre and I have repented. We just want to be good,” Ethan said calmly.
The attackers didn’t listen. A bloody fight ensued. Dre was stabbed; Ethan bled heavily. One assailant lay lifeless. School security emerged, arresting Ethan and Dre while letting the rich kids go.
“What’s going on? Explain why my boys are arrested? They were on their way to class!” Jax shouted.
“It doesn’t change the fact that a kid died. It’s barely been a week since they enrolled,” a cop said.
“Well, if it had happened to Dre or Ethan, we wouldn’t be talking because they aren’t influential. Don’t threaten them—they belong to Salvador La Rosa,” Royalty said calmly, her words icy.
“La Rosa, huh? Salvador knows how to raise street kids. Where did he get these…?” the cop trailed off when Ethan’s eyes met his.
“They’ll get bail. Once sorted, the case may move to the station,” he said. Royalty rubbed her forehead. No one outside the Academy would know about the death—the school kept a pristine image.
Thane stared at a report from the criminology department, cursing under his breath. The new boy had been involved in murder. This was why he wanted to see Ethan La Rosa. Marlene’s scandal with him confirmed he was trouble.
When Ethan said he would honor the invitation later, it proved the boy had a mind of his own. But in Blackwood Academy, nothing was as it seemed.
Thane entered the prison cell.
“Welcome, Mr. President,” the boys greeted.
“Where are they?” he asked, eyes moving to the dark cell where Ethan and Dre sat stoically.
“Let me in,” he commanded. Guards hesitated, then complied.
“You must be Ethan and Dre,” he said calmly.
“And you must be the President,” Ethan replied, unshaken.
“Yes. I heard you refused my invitation, Ethan. Where I come from, that’s crazy, especially for a subject,” Thane said.
“I come from a different place, sir. Respect is earned. I will respect you when given reason,” Ethan replied. Their eyes locked—Thane realized Ethan was a force to be reckoned with.
Three Years Later ♠️CASPIAN♠️ The city looks different from the top now. I stand on the balcony of the penthouse that used to be my father’s, now mine. The Blackwood name still opens doors, but the empire runs darker these days. Legitimate on paper. Underground in truth. They call me Don now. The Bloodhounds, once just whispers in boardrooms, became reality after the old man’s conviction. Someone had to hold the leash. Someone had to keep them fed. I took it. No hesitation. Power doesn’t ask permission. It waits for the one ruthless enough to claim it. I lit a cigarette and watched the smoke curl into the night sky. Three years. Three years since everything burned. Since Ruby walked away with my child growing inside her, and I stood there, frozen, numb, too proud to beg. I told myself it was mercy. Letting her go. She deserved clean air. Sunlight. A life without my shadows. But every day since, I’ve regretted it. Every single day. I see her in dreams, laughing, angry, cryi
♠️ ETHAN♠️Time doesn’t heal, it just moves. Months passed in a haze of grief and quiet rebuilding. Graduation came and went like a dream I watched from the sidelines.Blackwood Academy’s ceremony was scaled down, no grand Alkaled-level spectacle after everything that happened. Just caps, gowns, and a stage under the California sun.I sat in the audience with Marlene, Dre, Lilian, and Georgia. Reina’s empty seat beside us felt louder than any applause. She was supposed to be here, cheering while her brother graduated college.When my name was called, I walked across that stage feeling nothing and everything at once. Degree in hand, but the victory tasted hollow without Reina cheering in the front row.Marlene’s hand squeezed mine the whole time. She graduated too—summa cum laude, of course. The crowd cheered loudest for her, the Blackwood princess who’d survived the fire.Ruby graduated the same day. We’d kept her secret. No one told Caspian. She walked the stage glowing, barely showi
♠️ ETHAN♠️The day of Reina’s funeral was gray, low clouds, soft rain, like the sky itself was mourning.The cemetery was small, private. Just us. No press. No crowds.Reina’s casket was white, covered in pink roses, her favorite. Photos of her lined the front: laughing at birthday parties, dancing in a tutu Marlene had bought her, asleep on my shoulder as a baby.I stood numb through the service, Marlene’s hand in mine the only thing keeping me upright.When it was over, everyone drifted toward the cars, quiet hugs, and whispered condolences.But Lilian lingered by the grave. She looked broken, hair limp, eyes swollen, black dress hanging loose on a frame that had lost too much weight too fast.I knew I couldn’t leave without this. I walked back to her. I had stopped seeing her as my mom and just Lilian since our fallout.She looked up, startled, like she hadn’t expected me to come near her ever again.“Ethan…” Her voice cracked.We stood in silence for a long moment, rain misting ou
♠️ ETHAN ♠️The night air felt lighter as we drove away from the warehouse.Freedom.After all the blood, the secrets, the chains, we were finally free. Salvador’s word was ironclad; I knew it in my gut. No more debts hanging over me and Dre. No more looking over our shoulders.Dre sat in the passenger seat, quiet for once, staring out the window.“We did it, man,” he said finally, voice low. “It’s really over.”I nodded, a small smile pulling at my lips despite everything. “Yeah. We can breathe now.”Marlene was waiting at home with Ruby. Georgia was safe with her sons. Reina… Reina would get the best care money could buy, no strings attached.For the first time, I let myself imagine a future, real, quiet, happy. With my woman and the peace we’ve always craved. Then my phone rang.Hospital number. My heart dropped at the sight.“Hello?”“Mr. Pierce… it’s about Reina. You need to come now. It’s… it’s time.”The world tilted.I don’t remember the drive. Just tires screeching, red light
♠️ ETHAN♠️The warehouse district was a ghost town at night, rusted metal and broken windows, the perfect place for secrets.We moved in silence: Caspian’s team in black tactical gear, Dre and I flanking them.Thermal drones had pinpointed heat signatures inside the old cannery building.We breached hard, flashbangs popping, doors kicked in. Shouts echoed as Caspian’s men flooded the space.Brandon had Georgia pinned against a wall, knife to her throat, eyes manic. Jamila and Francesca stood nearby, guns drawn, duffels at their feet, ready to bolt.“Back off!” Brandon screamed. “Or she dies!”Caspian didn’t hesitate.He raised his weapon. But the Blackwood brothers moved faster.Thane and Miguel tackled Brandon from the sides, pure rage fueling them. He dropped the knife, but it was too late for mercy.Fists flew. Boots connected. Bones cracked. Brandon fought like a cornered animal, clawing, biting, screaming about betrayal and love, but there were five of them and one of him.Caspia
Georgia’s penthouse had finally started feeling like a sanctuary, no more Blackwood drama, no more threats. She was in the kitchen, pouring evening tea, when the doorbell rang.She checked the intercom camera.Brandon.Battered, scarred, eyes wild, but alive.Her blood ran cold. She’d seen the reports: escaped convict, dangerous.“Don’t open it,” her assistant whispered from the hallway.But Georgia, always too trusting, too composed, pressed the buzzer. “What do you want?”“Just to talk,” he called up, voice ragged. “Five minutes. About Francesca.”Against every instinct, she cracked the door, chain still on.That was all he needed.He slammed his shoulder into it, the chain snapping. Georgia stumbled back as he barreled in, knife flashing in his hand.“Quiet,” he snarled, grabbing her arm hard enough to bruise. “We’re going for a ride.”She fought, clawed, screamed, but he was bigger, desperate. A cloth over her mouth, chloroform stench, and the world went black.By the time her ass
The new penthouse was quiet except for the distant hum of city traffic far below. Georgia stood at the floor-to-ceiling windows, arms wrapped around herself, watching the afternoon sun glint off downtown. She had finally started to feel like this place was hers—peaceful, safe—when the intercom buzz
♠️ ETHAN ♠️Marlene stood under the rainfall shower, water tracing every curve of her body, eyes closed as she tilted her head back. I couldn’t stay away. I stripped and stepped in behind her, arms sliding around her waist, careful of the fading bruises on her ribs.She sighed, leaning into me. “Th
♠️ ETHAN ♠️We stood in the warehouse parking lot. Caspian lit a cigarette, the flame briefly illuminating the hard lines of his face. He inhaled deeply, then exhaled slowly.“We have the phone,” he said, voice low. “Texts, recordings—everything. Jamila’s fingerprints all over this.”I nodded, rage
♠️ ETHAN ♠️The hospital smelled like antiseptic and bad coffee. Ever since we came in, I’d been pacing the private waiting room for hours. Dre kept me company until he got a call and stepped out. Every time the door opened, my heart stopped—waiting for news, any news.When the nurse finally came,







