The Last Wolfe

The Last Wolfe

last updateTerakhir Diperbarui : 2026-06-13
Oleh:  INKDIVA Baru saja diperbarui
Bahasa: English
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The Last Wolfe is a dark mafia romance about two enemies who fall in love without knowing they are enemies. Raven Wolfe is the last survivor of her family. Eight years ago, the Vlad family murdered her parents, her brothers, her uncles, her cousins. She survived because she was not home that night. Now she hunts the men who destroyed her life. She has no names. No faces. She has been chasing shadows for eight years. Fenris Vlad is the son of Dante Vlad, the man who ordered the massacre. He has spent years searching for the last heir of the Wolfe family. He does not know what she looks like. He only knows she exists. They meet by chance at a charity gala. She is there because her boss told her to network. He is there because his father ordered him to attend. Their eyes meet across the room. Something sparks between them. He pursues her. She lets him. Partly for the mission. Partly because she cannot help herself. She learns about his past slowly. His mother's death. His father's cruelty. The guilt he carries. He learns about her even slower. She has been lying for eight years. She is careful. But the truth has a way of slipping out. When Raven discovers that Fenris was present during her family's massacre, her world shatters. She walks away. He hunts for her. He finds her. The truth comes out. Dante Vlad orders her death. Fenris chooses her over his father. He kills Dante to save her. The story ends with Fenris walking away from the empire. They leave the city together. They start a new life. No contracts. No threats. Just love. The Last Wolfe is approximately 105,000 words. Dark romance. Mafia. Enemies to lovers. Adult content.

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Bab 1

Chapter 1 : The Inheritance

The graveyard sat on a hill overlooking the city, a stretch of green caged behind rusted iron gates that had not been painted in decades. Wind slipped through the bare branches of the ancient oaks, carrying the scent of wet earth and decay, something older and heavier, like stone soaked in centuries of rain. The sky was low and gray, pressed flat against the horizon, and a thin mist clung to the ground, curling around the headstones like fingers reaching for something they could not hold.

Raven Wolfe knelt in front of two granite graves. Her knees pressed into the damp soil, and the cold seeped through the fabric of her black trousers, but she did not move. She never did. An hour, sometimes more, sometimes until the sun disappeared behind the trees and the mist swallowed everything whole. This was her ritual. Her penance. Her way of reminding herself why she was still alive while the rest of her family turned to ash.

The headstones were simple. Gray granite. Polished smooth. No angels, no crosses, no sentimental engravings. Just names and dates. Marcus Wolfe, her father. Elara Wolfe, her mother. Beside them, smaller stones marked the graves of her brothers, her uncles, her cousins. Twelve stones in total. Twelve members of the Wolfe family, wiped out in a single night.

Raven traced her father's name with her fingertips. The granite was cold beneath her touch, rougher than it looked, worn smooth by years of rain and wind and the grief of a woman who refused to forget. She had been coming here for eight years. Every month. Sometimes more often. She had missed birthdays and anniversaries and holidays, but she had never missed a visit to this hill.

She was twenty five years old, though the shadows beneath her eyes made her look older. Her hair was dark, almost black, pulled into a tight knot at the nape of her neck. A few strands had escaped, curling against her cheeks in the damp air. Her face was sharp, all angles and hollows, carved by grief and anger and the relentless passage of time. She had her father's jaw, strong and stubborn, and her mother's eyes, gray and watchful and full of things she would never say.

"Marcus Wolfe," she said softly. "Beloved husband, father, and son. Taken too soon."

The words felt hollow. She had not chosen them. A cousin she barely knew had picked the inscription, a woman who had shown up to the funeral in expensive shoes and left before the graveside service was over. Raven had been too young to argue, too numb to care. Now the words mocked her. Taken too soon. As if there had ever been a right time to burn a man alive.

Beside her father lay her mother, Elara Wolfe. Smaller stone. Fewer words. Like her life could be summarized and buried just as easily. Elara had been beautiful, Raven remembered. Soft where her father was hard, warm where he was cold. She had laughed easily, loved fiercely, and died screaming. Raven had not been there to hear it, but she had imagined it a thousand times. She imagined it every night.

"I found something," she murmured. The wind did not answer. It never did.

She had been hunting for eight years. Eight years of sleepless nights and dead ends and the slow, grinding work of pulling on threads that always seemed to unravel in her hands. She had started with nothing. No names. No faces. No motive. Just the memory of fire and the knowledge that she had been spared because she had chosen to study for an exam instead of coming home.

She was seventeen when it happened. Seventeen and angry at her mother for being overprotective, for calling her phone every hour, for worrying too much about things that did not matter. She had stayed at her friend's house later than she should have. She had turned off her phone when it kept buzzing. She had fallen asleep on the couch and woken to the sound of sirens.

By the time she reached her street, the house was ash. The fire had burned hot and fast, consuming everything in less than an hour. The police said it was an accident. A gas leak. Faulty wiring. But Raven had seen the bodies. She had seen the way they had been positioned, the way the fire had been set, the way her father's safe had been left open and empty.

There was nothing accidental about the way they died.

She stood slowly, her joints protesting after an hour of kneeling. Her legs were stiff, her knees aching, but she ignored the discomfort. She brushed the dirt from her coat and adjusted the silver ring on her right hand, a gift from her father on her sixteenth birthday. It was the only thing she had left of him.

"I do not know who you are," she said to the empty air. "But I will find you."

She turned and walked to her car.

Her apartment was in the northern part of the city, in a neighborhood that had once been respectable, before the factories closed and the jobs left and the people who could afford to move did exactly that. The building was brick, four stories tall, with fire escapes zigzagging down the front like old scars. A cracked sidewalk led to a heavy wooden door that stuck in the summer and froze in the winter.

Raven climbed the stairs to the third floor. Her footsteps echoed in the stairwell, too loud in the silence. The hallway smelled of bleach and old cooking oil and the faint, cloying sweetness of air freshener. A baby cried somewhere behind a closed door. A television blared static from another. She unlocked her apartment and stepped inside.

The apartment was small. A single room with a kitchenette along one wall, a bathroom in the back, and a Murphy bed folded into the wall to save space. The floors were hardwood, scratched and worn, covered in places by a faded rug she had bought at a thrift store years ago. The windows faced the street, letting in a thin gray light that made everything look tired.

But it was clean. Raven was meticulous about cleanliness. It was the only thing she could control, the only order she could impose on a world that had been chaos for eight years.

Her desk was an old oak thing that she had found at an estate sale, heavy and solid, with a surface covered in papers and photographs and handwritten notes. A map of the city was pinned to the wall above it, marked with red pushpins at locations she had already investigated. A list of names, crossed out one by one, was taped to the corner.

She had nothing. No names. No faces. No proof.

She sat down and stared at the wall.

Three days later, her phone rang.

She was at her desk, pretending to work on a report for a client she did not care about, when the screen lit up with her boss's name. Margot Pierce. Senior Vice President at Sterling Investments. Raven had been working at Sterling for three years, ever since she graduated college. It was not her dream job, but it paid the bills. It gave her health insurance and a reason to get out of bed in the morning.

"Raven, good morning."

"Good morning, Ms. Pierce."

"I have news. The partners have reviewed your performance, and we are offering you a promotion. Senior Analyst. Effective immediately."

Raven's heart skipped. "Thank you. I do not know what to say."

"Say yes. And then say you will attend the Vlad Foundation charity gala with me next week."

Raven blinked. "The Vlad Foundation?"

"One of our largest clients. Very exclusive. Very private. The gala is their annual event, and the partners expect to see you there." Margot's voice was warm, polished, the voice of a woman who had been climbing corporate ladders for decades. "This is a networking opportunity, Raven. You will meet important people. Clients. Investors. People who could help you grow your career. People who could help the firm grow its business. You need to make connections. You need to be seen."

Raven leaned back in her chair. "I do not usually attend galas."

"You will attend this one. Consider it part of your promotion." A pause. "Do you have a gown?"

"I can find one."

"Good. I will email you the details. Black tie. Formal. Do not embarrass the firm."

The line went dead. Raven set the phone down and stared at the wall.

The Vlad Foundation. She had never heard of them. They meant nothing to her. Just another wealthy client. Another corporate event. Another obligation.

She pulled up the website on her laptop. A bland, corporate page. Mission statements. Board members. Photos of charity events and smiling executives. Nothing unusual. Nothing suspicious.

She closed the laptop and went back to her report.

She did not know that she was about to walk into the lion's den. She did not know that her whole life was about to change.

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