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Ace’s POV
I thought I was just dropping off papers for my professor.
One wrong door.
One second too long.
And suddenly I’m staring at America’s most dangerous Bratva twins — the Volkov brothers — mid-kill.
Nikolai, the older one, lets his voice hit my ear like a cold blade:
“You’re not going anywhere.”
My heart stops. These two don’t forgive. They don’t forget.
They destroy.
I’m already mentally saying goodbye…
Until Nikolai slams his knee between my legs, grinding hard against me through my pants — slow, filthy, owning every inch.
My body betrays me instantly.
Behind me, his twisted younger brother Ivan bites my earlobe and laughs low:
“Bro… he’s rock fucking hard for us.”
Now I’m tied to a chair.
Wrists burning.
Heart pounding.
One brother is ice-cold violence wrapped in total control.
The other is pure chaos hiding behind a dangerous smile.
They’re not done with me.
Not even close.
What the hell are these two monsters going to do to me tonight?
*******
Six minutes earlier.
I sprinted down the streets of Vanguard, Chicago, my heart pounding in tandem with my quick, panicked footfalls.
My back and hands ached. In fact, my entire body and even my dignity hurt. Eight hours behind the counter of a bar in East Vanguard would do that to a person. With the cheap beer, sticky counters and entitled students with privilege dripping off their tongues, my entire shift felt like a punishment I didn’t remember earning.
Cars honked, streetlights flickered like they were dying— everything in Vanguard flickered, including hope— and by the time I reached Wellspring University, I was drenched in sweat.
Stupid, stupid me.
I still had no idea how I’d first read the deadline as 12pm, plenty of time for me to finish my shift at eleven and leisurely walk the twenty minutes to turn it in.
I’d just taken a bathroom break and picked up my phone to cross-check his instructions when I saw it.
—10pm sharp. Anything later will be graded as an automatic F.
10pm.
I clutched the assignment tighter as I took the stairs two at a time. It was already crumpled as I’d rewritten three times because Mr. Williams graded like he was paid to hate happiness.
This paper was my lifeline.
If I didn’t turn it in, I wouldn’t graduate next semester. And if I didn’t graduate as soon as possible, my student loans would consume my soul like a starving demon.
I reached Mr. Williams’ office door and pushed it. It opened soundlessly into darkness.
Weird that the lights were off. He couldn’t have left just yet.
“Professor?” I whispered my heart beating. God. I’d do anything; his laundry, his grocery shopping, him even if he wanted me to for God's sake.
I stepped in, and it swung shut behind me.
Only then did I notice the faint glow from the back of the room— a desk lamp tipped sideways, its light casting dim, shaky shadows.
Then I heard it.
A choked breath interrupted by a wet cough.
My stomach dropped. Kneeling near the desk was Mr. Williams, a gun pointed at his head.
Mr Williams wasn’t like other professors. He never raised his voice, never smiled, never joked. His silence was louder than most people’s shouting, and when he looked at you, it felt like he could see every mistake you’d ever made.
He was broody, sharp-edged, and entirely unreadable. He was like a man trained to hide the truth. Like someone used to power that came from more than just academia.
A masked man dressed in black held him by the collar, one gloved hand fisted in his shirt.
Mr. Williams’ voice cracked, as he shook in the man's hold. “Please— I did what you asked— I told you everything— please…”
Everything in me froze, and the world tilted.
The man holding him spoke, voice low and even, and he sounded like a professor correcting a bad answer. “This isn’t about what you told me. It’s about what you were planning to do.”
What the fuck is going on right now?
Before I could process any of it, Mr. Williams’ gaze drifted past his killer’s shoulder… straight to me.
Our eyes met. Oh no.
His widened with panic and something resembling hope. Mine were probably wide with just terror because the man noticed and turned.
The killer didn’t shout, didn't panic, when he saw me standing there, knees knocking together, still holding the assignment that had been so, so important a minute ago.
He just… sighed. As if this was simply an inconvenience, a book out of place on a shelf.
Then, calm as anything, he pulled a gun from inside his jacket.
I inhaled sharply.
That was enough.
I didn’t wait to see if he was aiming for Mr. Williams or me, when he pulled the trigger.
I ran.
I bolted out of the classroom, shoes slipping, lungs burning. Down the hallway, down the stairs, nearly crashing into a bulletin board, sprinting blindly for the exit.
I burst outside into the cold Vanguard air, stumbled to the sidewalk, bent over, and gasped for breath.
My hands shook. My pulse thrashed. My brain refused to settle.
“What…” I swallowed hard. “What the hell just happened?”
Behind me, not as far away as I’d like, a door slammed open. My entire body reacted as if it was thrown into a freezing lake.
He’s coming for me.
Ace's PovShe stood in the doorway. My mind did the thing it had been doing for hours. It pulled toward her against everything I actually wanted. The drug's voice underneath my own thoughts said listen and obey and come forward.I stood in the room. I fought it.Nikolai was bleeding. I could see it from where I stood. Ivan held him up in the corridor. Nikolai's hand pressed against his side. The sight of it cut through the drug's pull with something sharper than clarity.Not clarity. Rage."You stabbed him.""He was in the way. He is not mortally injured. The wound is manageable if treated within the hour.""He was in the way.""Yes." She stepped into the room. "Come with me now. I will ensure he receives treatment immediately. Refuse. The hour starts becoming relevant."I felt the directive surge upward at her words. The pull was stronger now that she was in the same room. I stood in it the way I had stood in everything difficult for the past year. I found the thing underneath the pu
Ivan's PovThe convoy reached the perimeter before we finished moving Ace to the interior room. The first breach happened at the north access point exactly where Rem had predicted it would.Fifteen personnel confirmed. Possibly more behind the lead vehicles. We had Rem, myself, Nikolai, and two senior Syndicate operatives who had stayed loyal through the transfer. The math was not comfortable."Interior positions." Nikolai was already moving. His voice was the flat operational version that meant everything personal had been compressed somewhere deep. Only the problem in front of him existed. "Rem on the east corridor. Milo and Serra on the west. Ivan with me on the main approach.""Ace.""Interior room. Locked. Rem has the override if the directive activates again."I looked at Ace. He sat against the wall in the position we had placed him. His eyes were half-focused. The clarity from before still held but visibly thinned at every edge."Stay in that room. No matter what you hear.""I
Ace's PovThe clarity was already thinning when I spoke. The edges of my own thoughts started to blur the way the walls had blurred hours ago. I knew with absolute certainty that whatever window I had left was closing faster than any of us could fight it."Listen to me. Both of you, right now, while I can still say this clearly.""We are listening." Nikolai knelt in front of me. His throat was still bruised from where my own hands had nearly ended him."I do not know how long I can hold this back. If I lose it again, I might not stop next time. I might actually kill one of you. Both of you. I will not even know I did it until whatever is left of me wakes up inside a body that has already done something unforgivable.""We will restrain you." Ivan's voice was firm. "We will find a way to hold you until this passes.""It is not passing. Rem said it
Nikolai's PovI had fought Ivan once, years ago, in a sparring session that had gone too far between two brothers testing exactly how much each could take. I had never imagined I would one day be fighting Ace with the same controlled brutality.His fists drove at me with a precision that had none of his usual instinct in it. Only mechanical execution of something programmed beneath his skin."Ace. Stop."He did not stop. His eyes were flat. Distant. The person I loved was trapped somewhere behind a face that kept moving toward me with lethal intent."Ivan, get back. I have him.""You do not have him." Ivan circled wide. His jaw was already swollen from the first hit. "Nobody has him right now."Ace came at me again, faster than before. I caught his wrist before the strike landed. I twisted hard enough that anyone else
Ivan's PovThe screen went dark. Ace's body seemed to lock in place. Caught between whatever instruction had been embedded and the will fighting against it from somewhere underneath."Ace." Nikolai's voice was quiet. "Look at me. Just me."Ace's eyes found Nikolai's face. For a long moment it seemed like the worst of it had passed. His shoulders dropped slightly. His breathing slowed.Then his expression went flat again. All at once. Like a switch had been thrown somewhere deep inside him."Ace."He turned toward me. The punch landed before I had time to brace for it. His fist connected with my jaw hard enough to send me backward into the wall. The impact drove the breath from my lungs, the room tilted. I forced myself back upright."Ace, stop." Nikolai moved to intercept him.Ace turned on
Ace's PovThe walls had started breathing somewhere around the third hour. A slow expansion and contraction. I knew it was not real, i could not stop watching anyway."Nikolai. The walls.""I see them too." His voice came from somewhere close. His hand was steady against my arm. Steady felt like the wrong word for something that kept dissolving at the edges every time I tried to focus on it."You do not see them. You are lying to make me feel less insane.""I am not lying." Ivan spoke from my other side. "I am telling you they are not breathing. Your eyes are telling you something, your brain has decided to believe it."Rem had arrived forty minutes ago. His equipment was spread across the small table in whatever room we had retreated to. His face carried the specific tightness of someone working against a clock he did not fully understand.
Ace's PovThe don's message was still on the screen when we reached the safe house. I read it four more times on the drive and by the time we were inside I had the full shape of the problem in front of me.Nikolai did not know about the mess
Nikolai's PovThe bullet had gone into his side and the surgeon said it had missed everything critical by a margin that made me understand for the first time in my life what the word margin actually meant.I had been in the chair beside his
Ivan's PovNikolai handed the phone to me without a word. I read it and put it down on the table and stood there and thought about what I was going to do with the feeling currently moving through my body.The Moretti boss was offering Ace a formal arrangement. A marriage into the Moretti family. Pr
Ace's PovI had been quiet for most of the evening and both of them had noticed and neither of them had said anything about it yet and that patience was starting to feel worse than if they had just asked.We were in the main ro







