LOGINJax
“Stay close,” my father murmured. “Keep your head high.”
I nodded, fingers brushing the smooth fabric of my red dress. It was a V-neck type, elegant and sexy.
It was my first choice for this gathering… a dress that announces me without having to say a word.
From the moment we stepped inside, I knew I was in something deep. The air was different, every decor had a sharp precision like it were glorifying him.
The gold chandeliers, crystal glasses, silk gowns swirling around the room… all of it felt polished but beneath the elegance, I could feel the weight of hidden knives, whispered betrayals, and power plays happening behind every champagne toast.
This wasn’t a party.
For them, this was a celebration. For me, it was a funeral.
I have just given myself willingly to the Devil Incarnate.
My dress suddenly became suffocating. Layers of imported lace clung to my skin, delicate yet constricting, like the golden cage I had been forced into.
I walked in beside my father, Martinez DeLuca, his grip firm on my arm. His presence alone commanded respect, forcing the crowd to part as we entered the main hall.
I kept my head high, my expression neutral, but I was careful—watching and listening.
But then, the crowd shifted. And there he was.
My first reaction was to blurt ‘Wow’
Charles Wade was the exact opposite of the description online.
The blogs described him as a grey-haired man in his sixties who dines with the devil. Three things I picked from the descriptions are grey hair, scars, and slender.
None of it was true.
Firstly, this man cannot be over thirty-five. His shoulders are broad enough to form a platform to lie on. Not just any, but sharp to precision.
His eyes are sharp as ice, and untouchable. Everything about this man speaks a type of appeal I have only seen in the movies.
My stomach tightened with butterflies but I swallowed it back.
I can't let it show that I’m gobsmacked; it's only going to make everyone think I know nothing.
Suddenly, father and I stopped in front of him.
Father never bows to anyone, but his head moved in a respectful bow to Charles.
Who the hell does this man think he is?
His gaze locked onto me like a predator spotting prey. His expression, unreadable.
I clenched my jaw. He doesn't expect me to bow, does he?
“Is she the one?” Charles asked and father nodded. “Jaxen DeLuca.”
“Leave us.”
Leave us?
“No. My Father will be right here to hear whatever it is you want to say. Right, Father?”
“Jax.” My father’s voice came out in such a whisper that it was difficult to understand what was really happening.
He took the nearest exit, leaving Charles and me in the corner.
“Look, I don't know what's going on with you but you need to stop acting like you're God.”
His jaw clenched and I watched the way his jaw sharpened. “I am not God, little girl. Call me the Devil.”
A man who wholeheartedly accepts the title of a devil?
His presence, his voice—everything about him was surprising to me. I grew up hearing his name whispered like a curse. Ruthless. Arrogant and Unpredictable.
“Do you know why you're here?” he asked, with a stern voice.
“Yes, to take my sister's place but if you don't mind, I'd like to have a rethink.”
He laughed.
“Did I say something funny?”
“You're funny, little girl.”
“Don’t call me that,” I said in disgust. “Did anyone tell you they'd be bringing a little girl here? I'm twenty-two.”
“Makes it even worse.”
He stepped closer, his cologne—dark spice and danger curling around me. “I don't like people who talk too much. They make me want to dispose of them.”
What is that supposed to mean?
“You're now mine,” he finished. “And not even God can save you from me.”
He walked away, leaving me behind. What the fuck is going on here?
I found my way back to the hall, my eyes darting around the buzzing room. There was tension, but there was also confusion.
The old men in the crowd nodded approvingly, eager to see something I had no idea of.
The moment I spotted Father, I walked towards him as fast as I could. There should have been a better explanation of what this is.
“Is this what you call a dinner!?” I asked him. “Father, we need to leave.”
His jaw clenched but he didn't say a word.
“Why are you looking at me that way?”
“I’m sorry, Jax. It's what I needed to do.”
“Well, I take it back. I'm not going to marry that arrogant bastard,” I said in a whisper. “We can try to raise the money and pay him off. We have several businesses.”
“Why are you not saying anything???” I asked him but I noticed Father’s line of vision was set on someone or rather, somewhere.
With my pulse pounding in my ears, I turned but my eyes only met Charles shaking a group of men.
His piercing blue eyes raked over me, assessing me before turning back to the person he was sharing a handshake with.
“Father, he's not someone I can marry.”
“He doesn't care about marrying you either.”
The words hit me.
I looked at him, at the crowd, and then at Charles.
This was an auction.
“Father?" My voice trembled, but not with fear. With betrayal. “You sold me to him!”
He lit a cigar, his movements were slow, he was thinking.. He exhaled a thick cloud of smoke before finally looking at me. Unmoved. Unbothered.
“I made the best decision for this family.”
I took a step closer, fists clenched. "For the family? What about me? Do I mean nothing to you?"
His gaze didn’t flicker. "You mean as much as you were meant to mean."
Before I could say another word, my vision blurred. There was something over my head.
“What—what is that?!” I gasped, thrashing as the fabric clung to my face.
Panic shot through my chest like electricity. “Get it off me! Take it off me!”
JaxenWalking into the restaurant almost felt unreal. For the first time in what seemed like forever, I wasn't surrounded by armed guards, abandoned warehouses, secret hideouts, or people speaking in riddles about my past. Instead, there was soft music playing through hidden speakers, the smell of fresh coffee mixed with baked bread, and ordinary people having ordinary conversations. I had forgotten what normal looked like. It felt strange... almost foreign. I stood by the entrance for a second, scanning the room until I spotted Hazel waving both hands at me from a table near the window. The moment our eyes met, the huge grin on her face made me smile despite everything weighing on my shoulders.The second I reached the table, Hazel stood up and wrapped both arms around me so tightly I almost lost my balance. She made it look like I had previously been declared brain dead, and only just made a miraculous recovery. She held onto me for several seconds before finally pulling away, thoug
Charles Everything's just unraveling at the wrong time!The club was louder than I remembered. Music pounded through the walls, colorful lights flashed across the room, and people danced as though they didn't have a single problem waiting for them outside. Laughter rose from every corner while waiters moved between tables carrying expensive bottles and overflowing glasses.Brad and I sat inside one of the private booths overlooking the dance floor, but unlike everyone else in the building, neither of us looked interested in having fun. A glass of whiskey sat untouched in front of me as my thoughts wandered from Jax to Viktor, then to Jackson and every secret that seemed determined to destroy whatever peace I had left.Brad noticed before I even spoke. Ever since surviving the shooting, he insisted he was back to normal, even though his movements occasionally reminded me otherwise. Still, he carried himself with the same confidence as always, leaning comfortably against the leather se
Jax The room became painfully quiet after Viktor's last words, and for the first time in what felt like forever, I couldn't think of a sarcastic response. My mind kept circling the same questions without finding a single answer. Siblings? Biological parents? More secrets Charles didn't know? It all sounded too ridiculous to believe, yet something about the confidence in Viktor's voice made it difficult to dismiss everything as another manipulation.I folded my arms tightly across my chest and began pacing the room again, hoping the movement would somehow untangle the mess inside my head. Instead, it only made the silence louder, and Viktor didn't interrupt me once. He simply watched, almost as though he understood that I was fighting with myself more than I was fighting with him.Just as I was about to demand that he either prove everything he had said or stop wasting my time, the heavy warehouse door opened. A man dressed in a black suit walked inside carrying a weathered brown pack
JaxenI marched straight toward the exit without looking back, my heartbeat pounding louder with every step I took. I had heard enough for one day, and if one more person claimed to know something about my life that I didn't, I was going to lose whatever little sanity I still had left. My hand reached for the metal handle, but the moment I pulled it, the door refused to move. I frowned and pulled harder, convinced it had only gotten stuck. It still didn't budge. Letting out an irritated breath, I rattled it a few more times before finally noticing the large guard standing a few feet away, watching me with an expression that was neither hostile nor welcoming."Excuse me," I called, forcing a polite smile that I definitely didn't feel. "Can you open the door?"The man straightened slightly before shaking his head. "I'm afraid I can't."I blinked. "You... can't?""No, ma'am."I pointed at the door. "There's a lock.""Yes.""You have the key.""Yes.""So open it."The guard folded his han
Jax I was still glaring at Viktor as though my eyes alone could set him on fire when Damiano stepped between us and rubbed the back of his neck awkwardly. He looked like a man trying to diffuse a bomb, which was funny considering he had personally driven me to the bomb in the first place."Don't look at me like that," he said, letting out a small breath as he shoved his hands into his pockets. "You make it seem like I kidnapped you.""You practically did," I replied immediately, folding my arms tightly across my chest. "I asked you to take me home, Damiano. Home. Not to some dusty warehouse where a billionaire suddenly develops feelings and starts confessing them like he's in a romantic comedy."Damiano snorted and briefly looked away. "To be fair, I didn't know he'd say that.""Really?""Really.""You expect me to believe that?""No.""Good."The corner of his mouth twitched upward, but his expression softened moments later as he glanced toward Viktor and then looked back at me."Ju
Charles By the time I got back home, I was already running on irritation, exhaustion and whatever emotion sat somewhere between panic and anger. The drive back had done absolutely nothing to calm me down because every passing minute only reminded me that Jax was still nowhere to be found.She had asked for space, and I had given it to her. She had wanted time, and I had stepped back even though every instinct in me screamed against it. Yet somehow, despite trying to do the right thing for once, she had still disappeared, and the worst part was that I couldn't even convince myself she was safe. Jax had an incredible talent for walking directly into dangerous situations while believing she was making smart decisions, and knowing her, she probably thought disappearing without telling anyone was some grand act of independence.I pushed open the front door harder than I intended, causing it to hit the stopper with a loud thud, and immediately spotted Emily and Martha in the living room. E
Charles Heat built in my core, rushing straight to my already aching cock.I slid my hand down to her pussy, feeling the wetness. Her jaw remained clenched and her breathing hard. I’m not sure what she wants to say but what I wasn’t expecting was for her mouth to curve into, “Fuck youI pressed m
CharlesThe car came to stop beneath a flickering streetlight. I got out, the gravel, broken glass, and grime of the warehouse district crunching under my shoes.It’s a depressing place, but it’s also quiet—perfect for my meetings and for all the violence. We’re parked in front of two small, dark
CharlesIvan looked at me impassively. “This isn’t you, and it’s reckless.”“I told him the same thing,” Brad added. Damn it.I clenched my jaw and turned away. My younger brother and I are at Brad’s penthouse. We're supposed to be meeting here to talk about business but somehow, Ivan, who I'm tw
JaxI can't remember the last time I had a meal like this. Like an actual traditional breakfast. “Good morning,” Martha said with a small smile, placing a tray on the table. “I didn't know if you'd like to eat outside your room so I brought breakfast here.”An omelet with vegetables and cheese, a







