MasukOCEAN'S POV
I sit in my car outside Ethan's house, engine idling, hands still gripped on the steering wheel. I should leave. The meeting is over. I have three more appointments today, two territory disputes to settle, and a shipment coming in tonight that needs my personal oversight. But I don't put the car in drive, I can't. Because I can't stop seeing her face. Lola. My son's wife. Twenty-three years old with eyes that look like they've seen a thousand lifetimes of pain. And that bruise. She'd tried to hide it. Done a decent job, actually. The makeup was expertly applied, blended carefully at the edges. Most people wouldn't have noticed anything wrong. But I didn't build an empire by missing details. I've spent thirty years reading people, cataloging threats, spotting weaknesses and lies. It's kept me alive in a world where one wrong move means death. So yeah, I noticed. The way she held herself too carefully, like her body hurt. The way she flinched when Ethan's voice got sharp. The slight tremble in her hands when she poured the coffee. The heavy makeup that was just a fraction too thick on her left cheekbone. And her eyes. God, her eyes. Empty. Haunted. Like she'd given up on everything. I've seen that look before. On women in this life. Women married to violent men who think their wives are property to do with as they please. I have never touched a woman in anger. Never raised my hand to anyone weaker than me unless they posed a direct threat. It's one of my rules, one of the few lines he won't cross no matter what. But I'm not naive, I know what happens in other households. Knows that some men in this organization think beating their wives is their right. I just never thought my own son would be one of them. I finally release the steering wheel and lean back in my seat, closing my eyes. Ethan. My son. My only child. The boy I raised after Ethan's mother died when he was eight. I know I wasn't a good father. I was too busy building my empire, consolidating power, eliminating threats. I left Ethan with nannies and tutors and threw money at the problem instead of giving the boy what he actually needed. Attention. Guidance. Love. By the time I realized my mistake, it was too late. Ethan had grown into a cruel, entitled young man who resented his father and everything he represented. He joined the organization not out of loyalty or ambition, but out of spite. Wanted to prove he could be just as powerful, just as feared. Except he can't. Ethan doesn't have the intelligence, the strategic mind, the sheer force of will it takes to command respect in this world. He's a wannabe playing at being a gangster, and everyone knows it. But I never thought... never imagined that Ethan would take his frustrations out on his wife. I open my eyes and stare at the house. It's a nice place. Not as grand as my mansion in Belgravia, but impressive. Ethan bought it with family money, of course. The boy has never earned anything in his life. Inside that house is a young woman who looks like she's being destroyed piece by piece. And I dismissed it as not my business. The thought sits like acid in my stomach. I should go back in there. Should confront Ethan directly. Demand to know what's happening. Make it clear that if my son is laying hands on that girl, there will be consequences. But what proof do I have? A bruise I glimpsed under makeup? Her nervous demeanor? That's not enough. Not in this world. Marriages are private matters. Wives belong to their husbands. Even thinking it makes me feel sick. I pull out my phone and call Daniel, my most trusted advisor. "Boss?" "I need you to look into something for me. Discreetly." "Of course. What do you need?" "Ethan's wife. Lola. I want to know everything about her. Background, family, how the marriage came about. And I want to know if there have been any... incidents. Hospital visits. Police calls to the residence. Anything unusual." There's a pause on the other end, but Daniel is smart enough not to ask why. "I'll have something for you by tomorrow." "Good. And Daniel? Keep this between us." "Understood." I hang up and sit there for another moment, staring at nothing. I keep remembering the way Lola looked at me when she opened the door. Startled, nervous, but also... something else. Something I couldn't quite read. And then when I thanked her for the coffee, the way her eyes widened like she couldn't believe I'd shown her basic courtesy. What kind of life is she living where a simple "thank you" surprises her? My phone buzzes. A text from Michael about the shipment tonight. Right. I have work to do. An empire to run. I put the car in drive and pulls away from Ethan's house. But I can't shake the image of those haunted eyes. The rest of my day passes in a blur of meetings and decisions. I settle a dispute between two of my captains over territory in East London. Reviews financial statements for my legitimate businesses, the real estate holdings and tech investments that provide cover for my less legal operations. I take a call from Vincent Romano about a potential alliance. Through it all, my mind kept drifting back to Lola. By evening, I'm at the docklands warehouse overseeing the shipment arrival. It's a routine operation, weapons from Eastern Europe that will be distributed to my various crews. Michael is there, efficient as always, checking inventory and making sure everything is accounted for. "Everything looks good, boss," Michael says, clipboard in hand. "No issues with customs. The route through Rotterdam worked perfectly." "Good." I watch my men unload crates. "Double-check the counts. I don't trust our suppliers not to skim." "Already on it." This is why Michael has been my second-in-command for twenty years. The man is thorough, loyal, trustworthy. I've built my empire on the backs of men like Michael. But even surrounded by my organization, my mind is elsewhere. "Boss? You alright?" I glance at Michael. "Fine. Just thinking." "About?" "Nothing important." I'm not ready to voice my suspicions. Not until I have more information. "Make sure the distribution happens by tomorrow night. I want these weapons in the right hands before the weekend." "Consider it done." I leave the warehouse and head home.My mansion in Belgravia is very busy when I arrive. But it's too lonely.. He's lived alone for years now, apart from his guards and men ever since his last relationship ended badly. Since Willow. I pour myself a whiskey and sits in my study, the room dark except for the desk lamp. Stares at the amber liquid in my glass. Willow left me fifteen years ago. Said she couldn't handle the violence, the constant danger, the blood on my hands. She wanted a normal life with a normal man. It broke something in me when she walked away. Made me realize that this life, the life I'd chosen, meant being alone. Meant not having soft things. Meant building walls so high that nobody could reach me. And I'd been fine with that. Or at least, I'd convinced myself I was fine with it. Until today. Until I saw a young woman being slowly destroyed by my own son, and recognized something in her eyes that called to something in me. I down the whiskey and pour another. I'm being ridiculous. She's Ethan's wife. She's young enough to be my daughter. And even if Ethan is hurting her, what am I supposed to do about it? Confront my son? Demand he treat his wife better? That will only make things worse for her. In this world, you don't interfere in another man's marriage. Even if that man is your own son. But the thought of walking away, of doing nothing while that girl suffers... My phone rings. Daniel. "Talk to me." "I have some preliminary information on Lola Moretti. Born Lola Brown. Twenty-three years old. Orphan, grew up in the foster system in London. No living relatives. Met Ethan four years ago through a connection at one of the family's legitimate businesses. They courted for three months before marrying." I listens, my jaw tightening. "Go on." "There's no record of hospital visits or police calls to the residence. But boss..." Daniel pauses. "I talked to a few people who've been to the house for business. Ethan's driver. A couple of the lower-level guys who've done security there. They all say the same thing. She's always covered up. Long sleeves, high necks, heavy makeup. Keeps to herself. Barely speaks." "What else?" "Ethan has a reputation. Nothing concrete, but there are rumors. About how he treats her. About his temper. One of the housekeepers quit six months ago, wouldn't say why but she was shaken up about something." My grip on my phone tightens. "Find that housekeeper. I want to talk to her." "I'll track her down. Boss, if Ethan is doing what I think he's doing..." "Then we'll deal with it. But I need proof first. Real proof, not just rumors and suspicions." "Understood. I'll keep digging." I hang up and stare at my glass. An orphan. No family. No one to protect her or speak up for her. Ethan probably chose her specifically for that reason. Picked someone vulnerable, someone with nowhere to go and no one to turn to. And I let it happen. I approved the marriage without really looking into it, without caring who my son was marrying or why. I'm complicit in this. The thought makes me want to put my fist through the wall. Instead, I drain my whiskey and stands. Walk to the window and looks out at the London night, the city lights spreading out before me like a constellation. I've built an empire on fear and blood and ruthless calculation. I've killed men who crossed me. Destroyed families who threatened my power. I have more blood on my hands than I can count. But I've never hurt someone innocent. Never raised my hand to someone who couldn't fight back. And I won't let my son do it either. Tomorrow, I'll get the rest of the information I need. I'll find out exactly what's happening in that house. And then I'll figure out what to do about it. Because one thing is certain: I can't walk away from this. Can't unsee what I saw today. Those haunted eyes. That careful way she moved. The bruise hidden under expensive makeup. Lola. My son's wife. A girl being destroyed in silence, with no one to help her. I have spent life being cold, calculating, keeping my distance from anything that might make me weak. But something shifted today when I looked into her eyes and saw all that pain. And I have the uncomfortable realization that maybe, just maybe, I'm not as cold as I thought I was. I finish my drink and head upstairs. Tomorrow, I'll know more. Tomorrow, I'll have answers. And then I'll decide what to do with them.Sophia I fell head over heels for Storm Moretti on a Wednesday afternoon in March. Not the polite, fake kind of love adults do when they’re supposed to find a baby cute. The real deal. The sudden, goofy, can’t-help-it kind that hits you out of nowhere. He was four months old the first time I properly held him. Lola brought him over to the Romano estate for lunch. Just the two of them, like the old days when she used to stay with us. But everything felt different now. She carried herself differently. Walked through rooms like she owned the ground under her feet. That old wariness she used to have was gone, replaced by this calm confidence of a woman who finally knows where she stands. She put Storm in my arms. He looked at me real serious, like he was sizing me up. Then he made this little sound. I glanced at Lola. “What does that mean?” “Approval, I think,” she said. “Probably.” “He’s got a whole bunch of sounds. I’m still learning what they all mean.” I looked back at Stor
CHAPTER ONE HUNDRED AND FORTY-SEVEN Various POVs Ocean Storm laughs for the first time on a Tuesday morning in February. Not a full laugh. Not yet. It’s the preliminary version... that bright burst of air and delight babies make before they’ve developed the full machinery of laughter. It lasts maybe two seconds and then disappears, like he’s still figuring out what this sound is for. I’m the one who causes it. I don’t even know how. I’m sitting on the floor of the sitting room with him lying on his back on the play mat Sophia brought last month. I’m making some ridiculous face, the kind I would never make in any professional setting anywhere on earth, and he looks up at me and makes that sound. I freeze. He does it again. I make the face again. He makes the sound again. We go back and forth like this for a solid four minutes. Same ridiculous face from me. Same delighted burst from him. Like we’ve stumbled onto a private frequency only the two of us can hear. Lola appears i
Third Person Willow Hart is arrested on a Thursday morning in November. Not dramatically. There are no kicked-in doors, no shouting, no theatrical display of authority. Just two men from Vincent Caruso’s organization arriving at her flat in Kensington at nine o’clock and knocking politely. When she opens the door, they tell her quietly that her presence is required. She stands there in a silk robe with a coffee cup in her hand and looks at them for a long moment. Then she steps back and lets them in. She knew this was coming. She’s known since the morning the recording surfaced and Michael Santos’s name tore through the organization like lightning. She understood immediately what it would mean for her. When Michael’s conspiracy began to unravel, every thread connected to it would be pulled. Every person who had played any part, no matter how they had justified it to themselves. She had spent three weeks waiting. The first week she drank. The second week she stopped drinking a
Lola's POV He doesn’t look away. That surprises me. The Ethan I knew always looked away from things he couldn’t control. He looked away from consequences, from discomfort, from anything that required him to sit inside his own mess rather than throw it onto someone smaller. This Ethan looks at the gun, then at my face, and holds my gaze. Maybe weeks sitting alone in a room in South London does something to a person. Strips the avoidance away until what’s left is just the bare fact of who you are and what you’ve done. I look at him for a long moment. I let myself really look. Four years of this face. This face leaning over me in the dark. This face cycling through charm, cruelty, indifference, and rage. This face that was the first thing I saw every morning and the last thing I saw every night for four years of my life that I can never get back. I look at it now. I’m not afraid. I said that to myself in the bedroom before we left the house this morning. Standing in front of th
Lola's POV The room is waiting on me. I can feel it in the air...the weight of every single eye at that long table. Vincent at the head, his face carved with exhaustion. Dmitri composed and watchful, probably still trying to rewrite his own role in all of this. The neutral parties who have now sat through two tribunals, seeing more of this family’s ugly truth than most outsiders ever do. Daniel beside Ocean. Caruso standing with his hands folded, having just handed me something no one in my life has ever handed me before. A real choice. Real authority over what happens next. I look down at Storm. He’s asleep against my chest, completely indifferent to the gravity pressing down on everyone else in the room. His small fist is curled near his cheek the way it always curls when he’s deep in that committed newborn sleep. Four weeks old. He has no idea that the man at the far end of this table once told me, four years ago, that he hoped I’d die alone and unloved because no one decent
Third Person The tribunal convened on a Tuesday in the same Mayfair room that had hosted every significant judgment in this organization’s recent history. This time the room was fuller than it had been in months. Faces filled the seats around the long table and lined the walls...more eyes than usual watching, more weight in the air. Vincent Caruso sat at the head where tradition placed the family bringing the grievance, though this time the grievance belonged squarely to Ocean himself. Dmitri Volkov was present, composed and careful as always, no doubt spending the past two months trying to make people forget how closely he had once aligned himself with Michael Santos. The neutral parties had turned out in full...four families represented... their attendance no longer a mere formality but a clear sign of active interest in seeing this matter resolved correctly after the mistakes of the last tribunal. Caruso stood at the position he had occupied for fifteen years. He looked tired i
LOLA'S POVThe bruise on my left cheekbone is turning purple, and I don't have enough concealer for this. I lean closer to the bathroom mirror, my breath fogging the glass. It's not as bad as last time. Last time, my eye swelled shut and I had to lie to the housekeeper about walking into a door. S
Ocean's POV Storm wakes at six. I’m already awake, I’ve been awake since five, just lying there watching the light change through the curtains. That particular grey of a November morning creeping in slowly, turning everything soft and muted. Lola is still asleep against my shoulder, and I haven’t
THIRD PERSON POV The call came in the dead of night, the kind of hour when most men were either asleep or pretending the world outside their walls didn’t exist. Daniel’s voice on the line was clipped, professional, but Ocean could hear the undercurrent of finality in it. “We have him.” Ocean
Vincent's POV I drive to Guildford myself. No driver, and no captains. I considered bringing Sophia and decided against it. This is something I need to do alone...man to man, in the way certain things in this world still require, even now, even after everything that’s happened. The house is exac







