LOGINHe wasn’t what she expected.
Serena stood in front of the mirror, her fingers resting lightly against the edge of the vanity. Her reflection stared back at her, calm, composed, untouched. Anyone looking at her would think she was perfectly fine, perfectly in control. But beneath that still surface, her thoughts were restless, circling back to him again and again.
Though she might not show it, she was scared. She may appear calm and collected outside, but deep in her soul, she just wanted to run away and never be found. The girl was stressed for her life.
He was worse than she had imagined. Not louder, not cruel in obvious ways, not reckless like the men she had always been warned about. Victor Volkov was controlled in a way that felt unnatural, almost unsettling. And men like him… didn’t break easily.
The boutique lingered in her mind long after she returned home. Every glance he gave her, every silence he held, every word he chose not to say all replayed with quiet precision. She could still feel the weight of his presence, not overpowering, not suffocating, but constant. Like something that refused to be ignored.
She hadn’t wanted to go today. This dress selection was all her father's plan. She hadn’t wanted to stand in front of Victor again so soon, to be observed, measured, and judged without a single unnecessary word. But refusing had never been an option. Not anymore.
Her father had made sure of that.
“You will marry him.”
His voice had been cold when he said it, controlled in a way that mirrored Victor more than she liked. Serena had stood in front of him, her hands clenched at her sides, forcing herself to stay steady.
“I don’t want this,” she had said, her voice firm, refusing to break.
Her father hadn’t raised his voice. He never needed to. He had simply looked at her, his gaze sharp and knowing, as if he could see straight through her resistance.
“You don’t have the luxury of wanting,” he replied, his voice so sharp and cold that it made her eyes misty.
Silence had followed, heavy enough to press against her chest. She had swallowed hard, steadying herself before speaking again.
“You’re asking me to marry a man I don’t know,” she said, her chin lifting slightly.
“I’m telling you,” he corrected, his tone leaving no room for misunderstanding.
There had been a pause after that, one that stretched just long enough to make her uneasy. Then his voice lowered, quieter, colder.
“And you will do it… unless you want me to reconsider certain arrangements.”
That was the moment her breath had caught.
Just for a second, but he had seen it; he always did.
That was the real problem. Not Victor. Not the marriage. It was what her father held over her, something fragile, something precious, something she couldn’t risk losing. And because of that, she had no choice but to stand there and accept it. And deep in her heart, she knew her father was cruel. She was a pawn, and if she objected, he would simply eliminate her without remorse.
Serena blinked, pulling herself back to the present as a soft knock sounded on her door.
“Miss Moretti?”
“I’m fine,” she replied quickly, her voice steady despite everything swirling inside her.
The footsteps retreated, leaving her alone once again. She let out a slow breath and turned back to the mirror, studying herself carefully. There was no fear on her face, no hesitation, nothing that could be used against her. That was how it had to be. She had learned to mask her fear from a young age, ever since she realised how the monsters thrive in your fear.
Victor’s face surfaced in her thoughts again, uninvited but persistent. Those sharp blue eyes, observant and unyielding, seemed to miss nothing. He hadn’t looked at her the way other men did. There had been no softness, no admiration, no obvious hunger.
Just a calculation and disinterest.
And somehow, that unsettled her more.
Her fingers tightened slightly as she thought about the moment in the boutique. The zipper. She hadn’t needed help, not really. She could have called someone else, could have waited, could have handled it on her own.
But she hadn’t.
She had called him.
“Victor.”
Even now, his name felt deliberate in her mind, heavy with meaning. He hadn’t come immediately, which hadn’t surprised her. A man like him didn’t respond to commands. But eventually, he had stepped in.
And for a brief moment, she had wondered what he would do. She was scared, her heart was beating so fast she thought he might hear it, but she masked her fear.
Just for that test, she put herself in a sacrificed position. What if he did try to touch her inappropriately? What then? She shouldn't have taken such a risk, but she wanted to prepare herself for what she was stepping into.
Would he touch her carelessly? Would he take advantage of the situation? Would he lose control, even slightly? Men like him usually did.
Eventually.
But he hadn’t.
He hadn’t even looked at her properly. His movements had been precise, controlled, almost detached as he fixed the zipper. Then he had stepped back, creating distance instantly, as if the moment had meant nothing to him.
Serena frowned slightly at her reflection. That wasn’t normal. Not for someone like him.
He was dangerous. That much she knew without question.
But he wasn’t careless. And that made him far more dangerous than she had anticipated.
But deep in her heart, she felt a slight peace knowing he wasn't lusting after her. She was sure he wouldn't touch her even after the wedding, and she was at peace about it.
She moved toward the window, her gaze drifting over the city below. Lights flickered endlessly, people moving through their lives without hesitation, without fear. It looked free.
She didn’t feel free.
Her thoughts shifted again, pulling her back to the moment outside the boutique. The fall had happened so quickly that she hadn’t even had time to react. One second she had been walking, the next she had lost her balance completely.
And then...
He was there.
His arm had wrapped around her waist instantly, steady and unyielding, stopping her fall before it even happened. Serena stilled at the memory, her fingers pressing lightly against the cool glass of the window. His body was too warm. Too close...
He hadn’t hesitated. He hadn’t paused to think. He had simply acted.
Like it was instinct.
She remembered the way his hand had felt, firm and certain, not rough but not gentle either. Just present. Grounding in a way she hadn’t expected.
For a brief second, she hadn’t been afraid of falling. But then she had looked up. And everything had changed.
He had been too close, too still, his presence overwhelming in a way that made her chest tighten. The fear had returned instantly, sharper than before, more real.
She had pulled away without thinking, needing distance, needing space. Because that was the truth she couldn’t ignore.
Victor Volkov was not someone she could trust. Not someone she could rely on. Not someone she could allow herself to feel anything around. And yet, he hadn’t held her longer than necessary. He hadn’t tightened his grip or used the moment to his advantage. He had simply let go.
That was what stayed with her.
Serena turned back to the mirror, her expression unchanged, but her thoughts far from steady. He wasn’t what she had expected, and that made him unpredictable. And unpredictable men were dangerous.
But controlled men?
They were lethal.
Her fingers lifted slowly, brushing against her collarbone, then higher, resting lightly at the side of her neck. She paused there, her breath slowing as her thoughts settled into something quieter, something sharper.
He thought he was in control. That much was obvious in the way he carried himself, in the way he spoke, in the way he observed everything around him.
And maybe he was.
For now.
But Serena wasn’t weak. She wasn’t careless, and she wasn’t blind to the way he operated. She saw the control, the restraint, the precision in every movement he made. And that meant one thing.
He could be tested.
Carefully.
Slowly.
Not broken.
But understood.
Her lips pressed together as her gaze hardened just slightly. She wasn’t doing this because she wanted to. She was doing it because she had to survive in his den. Because fighting him directly wasn’t an option she could afford. And surviving this meant adapting.
Choosing her moments.
Choosing her battles.
Victor was not someone she could overpower, not someone she could outmatch in strength or authority. But understanding him… that was something else entirely. And understanding him could change everything. She'd stay low and out of his radar and hope that he'd forget that she existed in his life.
Serena exhaled slowly, her fingers still resting against her neck, lingering there without thought. The place where his hand had almost been. The place where his presence still felt too close.
Her heartbeat picked up slightly, but she ignored it.
This marriage would happen. There was no escaping it, no way out, no alternative waiting for her. There was only one path forward.
Endure.
Survive.
Adapt.
Her gaze locked onto her reflection once more, steady and unwavering. This marriage would destroy her freedom, her life, her future, but it wasn't like she had anything different now.
But if he tried to make her life hell, she would destroy him first.
The heavy, armored SUV rolled smoothly through the private gates of the secluded estate, the tires crunching over the pristine gravel. Serena’s hands were tightly clenched in her lap, her knuckles turning white from sheer anticipation. Her heart was beating a frantic rhythm against her ribs. For months, she was away from her sister. They do get to call and talk, but that was it. She wanted to visit her sooner, but things happened. But today, the heavy fog of anxiety was finally lifting.Sitting right beside her in the dim, tinted cabin was Victor. His massive frame leaned back against the leather seat, his icy blue eyes fixed on the window, his expression a mask of cold, unreadable stone. He looked every bit the brutal Pakhan who ruled the city with an iron fist, yet he was the one who had made this moment possible.The SUV came to a halt in front of a sprawling, elegant mansion nestled deep within the highly secured Moretti territory. The doors clicked open, and the moment Serena ste
The golden morning sun cut sharply through the sheer perimeter of the balcony curtains, slicing across the dark expanses of Victor’s master suite. Serena opened her eyes slowly, her mind hazy, heavy, and completely disoriented. The first thing she felt was the smooth, cool slip of silk against her bare thighs, the oversized black button-down shirt that belonged to her husband. The second thing she felt was a crushing, unyielding weight anchored heavily across her waist.A massive, calloused hand was splayed flat over her stomach, trapping her securely against a wall of solid, radiating muscle.The immediate spike of panic hit her, a hard, instinctual jolt that made her breath catch in her throat. She was in his bed. She was trapped in the lion’s den, surrounded by the heavy masculine scent of sandalwood, leather, and winter rain. Her heart started to hammer against her ribs, but as she stared at his muscular arm wrapped around her, the panic morphed into something entirely different.
The silence inside the master suite of the Volkov estate was absolute, broken only by the rhythmic, delicate rise and fall of the breath against his chest. Outside, a heavy summer rain beat a steady, muted rhythm against the reinforced glass windows, blurring the lights of the sprawling estate into distant, watery smudges. But inside the dark bedroom, the world had shrunk down to the heavy mattress, the scent of expensive sandalwood mixed with sweet vanilla, and the fragile girl curled securely against his side.Victor lay wide awake, his icy blue eyes fixed on the shadowed ceiling plaster above. He didn't move. He barely even breathed, hyper-aware of the small, warm weight of Serena pressed flat against his rigid torso.They had spent an hour in a brutal, breathtaking collision. He had kissed her until her resistance broke, until her stubborn defenses crumbled into liquid heat, and her soft, full lips were completely swollen and flushed a deep, bruised crimson. By the time the storm
The weight of Victor’s words hung in the damp air of the master bedroom, heavy, absolute, and terrifyingly logical. Serena stayed frozen against the cold wall, her wrists still pinned high above her head by his single, massive hand. Her chest heaved against his, the soaking wet silk of her nightgown translucent and cold against her skin, yet she was burning from the inside out.The realization that Victor hadn’t ordered the attack didn’t break her heart over Roberto’s betrayal. It couldn't. Her father and his men had never been kind to her; they had always been cruel, treating her like an object rather than a daughter. Roberto lying to her wasn't a shocking tragedy; it was just typical Moretti behavior. It simply means her father didn't want her to be civil with Victor. He didn't want peace. He wanted total, destructive chaos, and he had happily weaponized her trauma just to twist her mind against the Russians.And she thought maybe... just maybe because she was their blood, they won'
The heat in the indoor pool room had reached a boiling point. The water around them felt warm, but the raw, unadulterated desire burning between their bodies was completely scorching. Serena couldn’t move. She couldn’t think. Her small hands were still locked tightly around Victor’s neck, her fingers digging into his wet skin out of pure survival instinct. She could feel the rapid thudding of his heart against her ribs, matching the wild, frantic rhythm of her own.Victor didn't stop at that. The dark, possessive beast inside him had broken its chains completely, and he was done playing the role of the patient husband. With a low, ragged growl, he gripped her waist tightly and pushed her back against the smooth, tiled ledge of the pool. Before she could even gasp, Victor lifted her completely out of the water, setting her down on the cold edge.The contrast was immediate and shocking. The cool night air hit her wet silk nightgown, sending a violent shiver straight down her spine, whil
The water around them felt warm, but the heat burning between their bodies was completely scorching.Serena couldn’t move. She couldn’t think. Her small hands were still locked tightly around Victor’s neck, her fingers digging into his wet skin. His massive frame completely trapped her; her legs wrapped around his waist out of pure survival instinct. The soaking wet silk of her nightgown was practically invisible now, sticking to her like a second skin, leaving absolutely nothing to the imagination.Every single line of her soft curves was crushed against the hard, rigid muscle of his bare chest. She could feel the rapid thudding of his heart against her ribs, matching the wild, erratic rhythm of her own.Victor stared down at her, his breathing heavy and ragged. The water kept them floating, but his grip on her waist was so tight it felt like he was afraid she'd disappear. His blue eyes were no longer ice; they had turned into a dark, stormy sea of pure, unadulterated hunger. The bea
The roar of the SUV engines fading into the distance left a silence so heavy it felt like it was pressing against Serena’s lungs. She stood in the center of the dimly lit study, the ghost of Victor’s pulse still thrumming against the pads of her fingers.She looked down at the desk. The discarded t
Get used to it?She glared at his back. Who was he to tell her to get used to things that she didn't want in her life? So cocky of him.And just because he married her, he didn't get the right to impose things on her as if he owned her. And the marriage wasn't a proper marriage to begin with. It was
Her brows furrowed, and she glitched for a second. "Excuse me?" She said curtly."Excused." He said calmly, quietly eating his steak as if nothing had happened.Her lips parted at his audacity, and she glared at him."You're good at what precisely? And what's the provoking part?" She asked, her eye
The silence of the Volkov estate was shattered by the screech of tires against gravel as Alexei brought the armored SUV to a violent halt. Victor didn’t wait for the door to be opened. He lunged out of the vehicle, Serena’s limp body cradled against his chest like a broken porcelain doll.Her head l







