LOGINLiora Voss
I woke to the constant sound of dripping water. Ploc. Ploc. Ploc. A slow, relentless rhythm echoing off the damp concrete walls, marking time like a macabre clock. The heavy smell of mold and wet earth filled my nostrils, mixed with something metallic I preferred not to identify. The darkness was almost complete, broken only by a weak, yellowish bulb swinging from the ceiling, casting long, distorted shadows.
I tried to move, but my hands were tied above my head, bound with rough ropes to a rusty pipe. The skin on my wrists burned with every breath. My shoulders throbbed. The cold, damp floor stuck to the soles of my bare feet. I was dirty, exhausted, and completely powerless.
A pit of despair.
I didn’t know how many hours—or days—had passed since the alley. The last clear image in my mind was the Capo staring at me as the sweet-smelling cloth was pressed over my face. After that… nothing.
I pulled on the restraints again, but the rope only bit deeper into my skin. A low groan escaped my dry throat. The fear was still there, cold and sharp, but something else was beginning to mix with it. A strange restlessness. A dangerous curiosity I was trying to bury.
What do they want from me?
The silence was shattered by the metallic groan of the door. The heavy metal door swung open with a bang, and light from the hallway sliced into the basement. An imposing silhouette filled the doorway.
Heros Green.
He entered slowly, with that natural confidence of a man who knows the world bends to his will. Dark hair with silver threads at the temples, neatly trimmed beard, clear and piercing eyes. Even in the dim light, his presence dominated the entire space. He was the Capo di tutti capi. And he knew it.
His eyes swept the basement before locking onto me. A shiver ran down my spine. It wasn’t just fear. There was something more—something hot and shameful stirring low in my belly.
He stopped a few steps away and crouched down, bringing himself almost to my level. His scent — dark wood, leather, and a faint citrus note — clashed brutally with the stench of mold.
“Look who finally woke up,” he murmured, his voice deep and controlled, carrying a slight Italian accent that made every word feel dangerous. “Sleep well, Liora?”
I swallowed hard. My heart hammered unevenly.
“What do you want from me?” I asked, trying to keep my voice steady even though it came out hoarse.
Heros tilted his head, studying me as if I were an interesting puzzle.
“Answers, to start with. Who are you really? What were you doing in that alley?”
“I already told you. I was coming home from school. My mother forgot me again, so I took a shortcut. That’s all.”
He reached out and gripped my chin firmly, but without hurting me. His light eyes seemed capable of seeing straight through me.
“You’re an eighteen-year-old girl walking alone at night in Moscow. In an alley where we carried out an ambush. Bad luck… or something more?”
“Bad luck,” I answered, holding his gaze. “Just bad luck.”
A slow, dangerous smile curved his lips.
“You’re beautiful. More than beautiful. And there’s fire in your eyes. That intrigues me.” He slid his thumb across my lower lip in an almost intimate touch. “But intrigue can also be dangerous.”
I felt heat rise to my face. I hated the way my body reacted to his nearness. I hated even more that I couldn’t ignore it.
“If I were Bratva, do you think I’d be tied up here like an idiot?” I shot back.
Heros let out a low, husky laugh.
“Fair point. But I still don’t trust you.” He stood up and walked slowly around me. “You saw things you shouldn’t have seen, Liora. Men died in that alley. Blood was spilled. And you were there.”
He stopped behind me. I felt his presence like heat against my back.
“We can’t just let you go. That would be too big a risk for my family.”
“So what are you going to do with me?” I asked, my voice lower.
Heros came back to the front and crouched again. This time, his hand slid down my neck, not squeezing—just feeling my racing pulse.
“There are two options. The first: you fight us. You suffer. And in the end, you might not survive. The second…” He leaned in until our faces were only inches apart. “You accept what we’re offering. Protection. Luxury. Pleasure. A life beside five men who can give you the world… or destroy it.”
My heart pounded against my ribs. His scent, the intensity of his gaze, the firm hand on my neck—everything left me dizzy.
“You’re all insane,” I whispered.
“Maybe. But we’re the kind of insane that survives.” He released my neck and stood up. “Think about it, Liora. Tomorrow we’ll get you out of this hole. Give yourself a bath, clean clothes, and decent food. Then we’ll talk seriously about your future.”
Before leaving, he paused at the door and looked back one last time. His eyes slowly traveled down my body, lingering where the torn blouse barely covered my breasts.
“Oh, and Liora… stop squeezing your thighs together like that. I can smell you from here.”
The door slammed shut.
I was alone in the dim light again, breathing hard, my traitorous body throbbing in places I didn’t want to acknowledge.
The fear was still there — an icy knot in my stomach, terror at his presence and what he could do, the weight of my vulnerability crushing me.
But for the first time, it wasn’t the only thing.
There was a cold, growing anger, a dark determination to survive, to not become just another passive victim. And, even more dangerously, there was the spark of a dark curiosity—a disturbing glimpse of the power he held and the effect it had on me.
It was a thought that terrified me more than the dark basement, because it meant that, in some terrible way, he had already begun to change me.
Faina GreenThe days following my conversation with Darya and the boys were marked by a silent tension that only I seemed to feel.The house routine continued, apparently normal. In the mornings, the quintuplets invaded the kitchen like a tiny hungry army. In the afternoons, training is in the basement. At night, long dinners with Pyotr telling old Bratva stories and my five husbands exchanging discreet glances every time Michael entered the room.I observed everything.Darya kept her promise… at first.During training, she kept her distance. She only spoke when necessary and only corrected his posture when Zedekiah or Heros asked. But I noticed the small details she thought no one saw: the way she smiled when Michael hit a difficult target, the slight blush on her cheeks when he praised her throw, the quick glances they exchanged when t
Faina GreenThe weeks following Michael’s arrival felt like walking on thin ice: beautiful on the surface, but dangerous with every step.I tried to keep the house routine as normal as possible. The triplets trained every afternoon in the basement, the quintuplets ran through the mansion like a pack of little wolves, and Pyotr stayed with us more than usual—as if he, too, sensed that something was about to change.It was a cold March afternoon when everything became sharper.I was in the second-floor library reviewing Bratva reports my father had sent when I heard laughter coming from the winter garden. I stood up and went to the window.Darya and Michael were there.She was showing him how to spin a training knife correctly. Michael watched attentively, but it wasn’t just the knife he was looking at. His
Luther GreenThe training basement always smelled of leather, metal, and effort. Today, the scent was mixed with childish laughter and the faint aroma of residual gunpowder from previous sessions. I observed everything from the back wall, arms crossed, analyzing every movement the way I did with any operation.Faina stood on the elevated platform, cup of tea in her hands, but I knew her mind wasn’t there. Her eyes kept returning to the corner where Michael Holloway watched everything in silence.I was watching the boy too.Fourteen years old. Hungry eyes. The posture of someone who had learned to survive on the streets. Good potential. But the way he looked at Darya… that bothered me deeply.Zedekiah opened the dark wooden box.
Faina GreenThe morning after Christmas dawned cold and gray, as if the sky knew something heavy was about to enter our home.I could still feel my body deliciously sore from the night before. Every step down the main staircase reminded me of Heros’s hands gripping my hips, Luther’s cock stretching my ass while Noah fucked me slowly, and Zedekiah’s hungry gaze as he came in my mouth. I smiled to myself, adjusting the thick wool sweater that hid the purple marks on my neck.In the kitchen, the smell of fresh coffee, pancakes, and bacon filled the air. The quintuplets were already a mess—Yelena and Alicia fighting over a strawberry, Finnian trying to climb onto the counter, Alexander laughing, and Damon watching everything with that premature seriousness that worried me.
Faina GreenThe golden morning light streamed through the high windows of the living room, warming the Persian rug where my children sat. I watched the triplets — Darya, Yakov, and Vasily, full of their twelve-year-old energy — while explaining the system I had created years ago. But my mind, as always in these quiet moments, traveled six years into the past.I remembered the day after the birth of the five.The delivery was chaotic.Five babies. Five miracles crying at the same time in the operating room. Yelena and Alicia came first — the identical twins, dark hair and blue eyes. Then Finnian and Alexander, brown-haired like Luther, one with amber eyes like their father and the other with green eyes. Last came Damon, the quietest, his eyes already attentive t
Faina GreenSix years later.Snow fell gently over New York, turning the streets into a bright white postcard. It was Christmas Eve, and we had finally arrived at my parents’ house, just three blocks from our mansion. They had moved to the city permanently, unable to stay far from their grandchildren for long.The moment the car stopped, Darya was the first to jump out, her blonde curls bouncing as she ran through the snow.“Grandpa!” she shouted, throwing herself into my father’s arms. He was waiting on the snow-covered lawn.“Darya, careful! What did I say about running, especially in the snow?” Luther warned, but she was already in her grandfather’s arms, apologizing with a radiant smile.My children were now five and a half years old, and time really flew. I still remembered clearly the day I first held them—tiny, crying, and perfect.“Oh, let it go. It’s just snow. If she falls, it’s not the end of the world, right?
Heros GreenEmotions were running high when we finally reached the building where my brothers were. But before we could do anything, I spotted them. My heart raced at the sight of Luther and Lohan being carried by several men, unconscious, and loaded into a car. Adrenaline surged through
Faina PetrovFuck. The weight of the situation crushed me like an invisible hand around my throat. I didn’t want to have to shoot my father’s men. Goddamn it. If it weren’t for Luther's and Lohan’s endless questions, we could have already slipped out the back without
Luther Green I had to wait a month and a half. A month and a half of pure agony, sleepless nights, imagining a thousand scenarios where Liora was hurt, trapped, or — worse — laughing at us. And now here we are again, going after her. Exactly as the message Heros received ordered. Z
Heros GreenMoscow, Ulitsa Arbat (Arbat Street)The cold wind cut through the air like invisible blades while Noah, Zedekiah, and I positioned ourselves in an abandoned building a few blocks from the warehouse where Luther and Lohan had infiltrated.



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