LOGINZedekiah Green
The weak light from the bulb swung from the ceiling like a broken pendulum, casting long, distorted shadows that seemed alive on the damp walls of the basement. The air was thick, heavy with the smell of mold and rust and the subtle scent of fear I had learned to recognize so well.
And at the center of it all, tied to an old pipe, was Liora Voss.
Even after days locked up, dirty, her school uniform torn, and her body marked by exhaustion, she still kept her chin high. Her gray-green eyes shone with a determination that bordered on stubbornness. It wasn’t the look of someone about to beg. It was the look of someone still fighting.
And that fascinated me like few things could.
After Noah’s visit, we had expected the fear to finally break her. We thought she would confess to being a Bratva spy or collapse into tears and pleas. Instead, her resistance only seemed to grow stronger, like steel being tempered in fire. I loved it. The more she resisted, the more I wanted to find her exact limit… and then push her beyond it.
I had spent hours in the office watching the camera feeds. Observing every irregular breath, every useless attempt to ease the pressure of the ropes on her wrists, every time she bit her lip to hold back a groan of pain or discomfort. The more she fought, the hotter my blood ran.
“Do you really think she knows nothing?” Lohan asked, standing behind me.
“Everything she’s said so far seems true,” I replied, without taking my eyes off the screen. “But truth and limits are two different things. I want to see how far she can go before she cracks.”
Noah entered the office with a heavy expression.
“She ate. Not much, but she ate. Still… she doesn’t trust us. And I can’t blame her.”
I smiled slowly, feeling that familiar wave of sadistic excitement run down my spine. Trust was a naïve concept. I preferred fear. Fear was honest.
Once my brothers left, I sheathed the thin knife and went downstairs.
The basement door creaked loudly as it opened, echoing like a warning. The cold, damp air wrapped around me like an old friend. Liora lifted her gaze immediately. Her eyes met mine without hesitation.
“Come to finish what the others started?” she asked, her voice hoarse but surprisingly steady.
I walked slowly to the center of the room, letting each step echo. I stopped a few feet away from her and twirled the knife between my fingers with slow, deliberate movements, letting the blade catch what little light there was.
“You can call me Zedekiah,” I said with a calm smile. “And no, I’m not the obsessed brother.” I tilted my head, studying every detail of her dirty face, the strands of hair stuck to her forehead, and the way her breathing quickened despite her attempt at control. “Not yet.”
She didn’t answer right away. Her eyes dropped to the knife. I saw genuine fear flash across her gaze for a second, but she swallowed it with impressive speed.
“What do you want?” she asked. “I already told the Capo everything. I don’t know anything about the Bratva. I’m just a girl who took the wrong shortcut.”
“Maybe that’s true,” I murmured, moving closer. “But I like absolute certainty. I like to test. I like to see how far people can go before they break.”
I stopped right in front of her and crouched, bringing myself almost to eye level. I slowly ran the flat side of the blade along her arm, not cutting, just letting the cold metal touch her skin. Liora visibly shivered.
“You’re interesting, Liora Voss,” I continued, my voice low and controlled. “Most girls in your position would already be crying, begging, offering anything to get out of here. But you… you still look at me like you could challenge me.”
I slid the blade slowly up to her neck. I pressed just enough for her to feel the threat. A shallow cut, almost a caress. A thin line of blood welled up on her pale skin. Liora held her breath but didn’t scream. She didn’t beg.
Impressive.
“You know what I like most?” I asked, leaning closer, breathing in her scent. “It’s not the blood. It’s the exact moment when the person realizes they no longer have control. When their pride starts to crack. When the body betrays the mind.”
I let the blade slide slowly down the center of her chest, slicing through the torn fabric of her blouse with surgical precision, but without touching her skin. The material fell open like a curtain, revealing the curve of her breasts. I didn’t touch her. I just watched.
“Look at you…” I murmured, almost in awe. “Still trying to be strong. Still trying to stare me down as if you weren’t tied up in my basement.”
Liora was breathing fast, her chest rising and falling. Her nipples hardened from the cold and fear, but I didn’t touch them. I simply let the blade hover nearby, threatening.
“I hate you,” she whispered, her voice trembling with rage.
“I know,” I replied, smiling. “And that amuses me. Hate makes the breaking so much more satisfying. Because when you finally give in… it will be complete. It will be beautiful.”
I moved behind her slowly. I grabbed a handful of her hair and pulled her head back firmly, exposing the neck marked by the shallow cut. I brought my lips close to her ear without touching her skin.
“Imagine it, Liora… days and days down here. Me coming down. Testing new limits. Showing you exactly how much your body can take before you beg. And I’m patient. I can make this last for weeks.”
I felt the shiver that ran through her body. I smiled against her hair.
“Tomorrow you leave this basement,” I continued. “You’ll get clean clothes, a real room, decent food. But know this: I will be watching you. I will provoke you. I will take you to the edge over and over… and deny you. Until the day you ask me to continue.”
I released her hair and circled back, crouching in front of her again. The blade hovered between us like a promise.
“You can resist as much as you want. You can curse me. You can hate me. You can even try to fight. But in the end… I always win. And when you finally surrender, it will be because you wanted to. Because you could no longer resist what I awaken in you.”
I sheathed the knife and stood up. I looked down at her, tied up, marked by the thin cut, breathing hard, her eyes blazing with hatred and something far more dangerous.
“Sleep well, Liora Voss. Dream of me. Dream of the moment when your resistance finally cracks.”
I turned and walked to the door. Before leaving, I stopped and looked back one last time.
“Oh, and Liora… next time I come down, I want to hear you say my name. Even if it’s with hatred.”
The door closed with a heavy click.
As I climbed the stairs, I was smiling in the dark.
She was strong.
But I was cruel.
And I had all the time in the world to take her apart piece by piece.
Faina GreenThe following months passed in a blur of silent tension that only I seemed to feel with clarity.Darya was fifteen now. Fifteen years old, with a woman’s body beginning to take shape and the mind of a girl who still thought she could hide everything from me. I saw the small but impossible-to-ignore changes: the way she took longer to come down from her room after training, the phone she now kept face-down at all times, the smile that appeared on her face only when Michael entered the room.And the worst part: the way she was starting to lie.“It was just extra training, Mom,” she would say, her green eyes avoiding mine as she holstered her knife.And the lie was always the same — a phrase already memorized, one
Faina GreenTwo years had passed since Michael Holloway first walked through the door of our home, and the mansion had found a strange, fragile rhythm. The chaos of the quintuplets — now eight years old and twice as loud — still filled every hallway, but Darya had changed. At fourteen, my daughter was no longer the little girl who ran to me with scraped knees and endless questions. She had grown tall and graceful, with my curly blonde hair and Heros’s sharp green eyes. Her movements carried a quiet confidence that squeezed my chest with both pride and fear at the same time.It was on a cold autumn afternoon that I first noticed.I was in the winter garden, reviewing the latest reports Pyotr had sent from Moscow, when laughter drifted through the open doors. Darya and Michael were training again. They had been doing it m
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.
Noah GreenHeros gathered us in the office and told us everything. Luther’s growing obsession with Liora. How he saw in her a chance for redemption, a living shadow of Alicia. After many questions, we finally understood the real reason behind the Brotherhood Law—the rule our eldest brother created
Liora VossI 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 dar
Heros GreenNew York, Todt Hill — 3 days laterThe air inside the office was dense, almost palpable. The scent of aged whiskey mingled with the aged leather of the furniture and the residual smoke of Cuban cigars that still lingered in the environment. I found myself seated behind the imposing dark
Liora VossMoscow, Ulitsa Arbat — Arbat StreetI waited outside the school gates for more than two hours. My phone had gone warm in my hand from calling Mackenzie—my mother—over and over again.Twenty-three times.Every call went to voicemail.Dusk bled across the city in shades of tarnished gold,







