LOGINLeila Johnson thought surviving poverty was the hardest battle she'd ever fight. She was wrong. One night, a routine appointment ends in kidnapping, murder, and a dangerous offer from Chicago's most feared billionaire mafia kingpin, Zane Rogers. All she has to do is help him recover a stolen chip. One mission. One payment. One chance to change her life forever. But the deeper Leila falls into Zane's deadly world, the more she discovers that nobody can be trusted. Not the charming friend who always makes her laugh. Not the beautiful woman who suddenly appears. Not even the powerful man whose touch is becoming harder to resist. As betrayal after betrayal tears their world apart, Leila and Zane find themselves caught between love, revenge, and a conspiracy capable of destroying everything. And when the final enemy falls, they learn the most dangerous secret of all: Some betrayals don't die. They wait. Years later, just when Leila believes the nightmare is over, a single package arrives at her door. Inside is a black chess piece. A note. And proof that someone has been watching her all along. The last page turns with one terrifying question: Who is waiting inside the black car?
View MoreSir Leonardo was seconds away from having her when a sharp knock came. Three hits against the hotel room door that sliced straight through the thick silence of room 214.
He stopped. Pulled back. His jaw tightened with irritation.
"Ignore it." His voice was flat, entitled. The voice of a man who paid for uninterrupted evenings. "Customer service. They'll go."
Leila lay still beneath him, staring at the ceiling, her mind already somewhere far from her body , that was how she did this, how she endured it, she sent herself somewhere else and left the shell behind. A university bill and her whole life to support. This was the price of survival in a city that charged for everything.
The knock came again. Harder. Not a request this time.
Leila moved. Slid out from under him, grabbed the blue towel from the edge of the mattress and wrapped it around herself in one motion.
"Where are you going?" Sir Leonardo’s voice sharpened.
"Could be important." “Just two seconds “she said, She was already crossing the room, bare feet cold against the tile.
She didn't check the peephole. Her hand found the handle and she pulled the door open.
The hallway came in fast.
A pair of arms grabbed her before she could process what she was seeing, before her brain could form the word danger they yanked her forward out of the doorway with a force that lifted her feet off the ground. Something dark came down over her eyes.
A blindfold.
She inhaled instinctively and the smell hit her. Sweet. Dense. Chemical. Wrong in a way her body understood before her mind did.
Chloroform.
She fought. Twisted hard, threw her weight sideways, clawed at the arms locked around her. Her nails found skin and she dragged them and heard a short, sharp sound but the grip didn't break, it tightened, and she was already moving, already being carried through the corridor at a pace that told her these men had done this before and she wasn't the first.
Then the gunshot came from behind her.
One shot. Clean. Final.
Sir Leonardo didn't make a sound after it.
Leila's whole body seized. She stopped fighting for exactly one second — the second it took her to understand what that sound meant, what it meant for the man still in that room — and in that one second the chloroform rushed in and her legs started to go.
She fought that too. turned her face, tried to hold her breath. But her lungs were already burning and her knees were already numb and the men just kept moving her, through a door and into cold night air that hit her bare legs like a slap.
"Camera feed's handled." A voice beside her. Calm and professional, like a man checking something off a list. "All four floors. We're clean."
A door opened. She was lowered into a leather cold seat.
Then the car engine,
Low and growling, vibrating through the seat and up through her spine. She tried to hold her breath but that thickened in her chest and her thoughts began to dissolve one by one.
Her towel. She was still in her towel.
The last coherent thing she felt, before the dark swallowed everything, was the certainty that had been building since the moment that door flew open.
Her life had just changed.
She didn't know what it had changed into.
But she knew, deep in whatever part of her that was still conscious, that nothing about what came next was going to be ordinary.
The car pulled away at speed, and the dark Chicago streets swallowed them.
On the forty-second floor of a glass-walled building that overlooked the city like a throne, a man named Hank was running out of time.
He was already on his knees. Had been for the past hour. His shirt was torn open, soaked dark with blood, one sleeve hanging off his shoulder. His face was barely recognisable — both eyes swollen, bottom lip burst, a deep gash across his brow that had long since stopped bleeding and started crusting. Zane's men had been efficient about it, the way they were efficient about everything.
Zane himself sat in a chair directly across from him.
Without pacing, just sitting, with one leg crossed over the other, watching Hank with the patient, cold attention of a man who had all the time in the world and had already made his decision inside it.
This was Zane Roger.
Controller of the four Mafia zones. The man they answered to. The man whose name opened doors that money couldn't and closed doors that power couldn't. He had not inherited this — he had built it, year by year, decision by decision, with a discipline that other men in his world mistook for coldness and never understood was something far more dangerous than that.
He looked at Hank now and felt the weight of what he was looking at.
For three years this man had worked inside his operation. Three years sitting in rooms where things were said that could dismantle everything. Trusted. Relied upon. Given access that was earned, not assigned.
And he had taken it straight to that parasite Thomas Veil.
"Please." Hank's voice was barely a voice anymore ragged, wet, stripped raw. "Please, Lord Rogers. My children. Thomas took my children. He said he'd kill my wife if I didn't comply." He was shaking. Every word cost him something physical. "I swear to God I didn't take a single dime from him. Not a cent. I had no choice. He had my babies,
Zane just watched him.
Didn't move. Didn't blink.
"I would never, you have to know I would never willingly " Hank's voice broke. Something cracked open in the middle of it and what fell out was raw and ugly. Real fear. Real desperation. The kind that wasn't performed. "Please. Please, I'm begging you. I will fix this. Whatever you need me to do, whatever it costs me, I'll spend the rest of my life"
Zane stood up.
He reached into his jacket. Slow. Unhurried. His fingers closed around the gun and he drew it out and checked it — three bullets left in the chamber — and something crossed his face then, just briefly, something that wasn't quite anger and wasn't quite grief and was entirely private.
Three bullets.
One for every man Thomas had taken from him using what Hank handed over.
Hank saw the gun. His words dissolved. The begging stopped — replaced by something worse than begging, a silence that was pure animal, pure terror, the silence of a man who had finally understood that the conversation was over.
"Zane Roger I beg you!"
He was emptying all three bullets into the man, when the main door flew open
The sound filled the room and then disappeared. Hank dropped. The silence that followed was immediate and absolute, that specific, heavy silence of a room where something irreversible had just happened.
Zane lowered the gun.
Leila was already half awake
She heard the sound before she saw anything.
The blindfold was swiped off her face immediately she entered the room, the light hit Leila's eyes like a fist and she gasped, blinking, her whole body lurching forward as awareness crashed back in all at once.
She saw the brutally murdered man on the floor first.
The room smelled of strong liquor and around the dead man was a pool of blood gushing out of his very visible skull,
Then she saw the man sitting across from him.
Dark suit. Gun in his hand. A face that gave her absolutely nothing, no panic, no remorse, no performance of any kind. Just a man standing in a room where he had just shot someone three times, looking as composed as if he had simply closed a window.
Something left Leila's body all at once.
Her legs went. She opened her mouth and what came out was a scream — she didn't decide to scream, it came out of her without permission, loud and broken and raw, her knees hit the floor and the blue towel slipped from her body entirely and she couldn't catch it, her hands wouldn't work, she was on the floor in this deadly room at the middle of nowhere. There was a dead man three feet from her face and the man who put him there was turning around.
Turning to look at her.
Zane Rogers turned at the sound.
He saw her — on the floor, bare to look at, shaking so violently her teeth were clicking together, her eyes wide and locked on the body and her chest heaving with sounds she couldn't stop making.
He looked at her for one long time and let out a
loud scoff
And said “ welcome Miss Leila”.
The knock came again. Sharp. Impatient. "Leila." Zane. Her heart tightened. She immediately grabbed the phone. Locked the screen. Shoved it beneath the pillow. Then took a deep breath. Another. And another. By the time she reached the door, her expression was almost normal. Almost. She opened it. Zane stood outside. His arm was wrapped in bandages. His face showed no sign of the chaos that had happened less than twenty-four hours ago. For one second, Leila thought he knew. That he knew about the message. That he knew she was hiding something. Then he walked inside. The door closed behind him. And suddenly, the room felt smaller. --- Zane knew immediately something was wrong. The moment she opened the door. The moment their eyes met. Something had changed. Leila was angry most of the time. Annoyed almost all the time. But this wasn't either of those. For a split second, her gaze moved toward the bed. Toward the pillow. Then back to him. Too fast. To
The room finally emptied. The doctor packed his equipment. The bodyguards returned to their positions. And Carlos remained exactly where he was. Grinning. Zane looked up from the couch. "You can leave." Carlos sat down instead. "You got shot." "Yeah." Carlos shook his head. "No. What amazes me is that somebody actually managed to shoot you." Zane's expression remained flat. Carlos laughed harder. "This is my favorite day of the year." "Get out." "You sound emotional." "Fuck off my face." Carlos pointed dramatically. "Proof." The doctor failed to hide a smile. Zane looked at him. The smile vanished immediately. Smart doctor. Carlos leaned back comfortably. "So." Zane already knew that tone. He hated that tone. "So what?" Carlos pointed toward the door Leila had disappeared through. "Her." "No." "I didn't even ask a question." "No." Carlos laughed again. "You brought a woman into your house." "For a mission." "She's living in your mansion." "Tempor
Leila didn't know how long the drive lasted. Ten minutes. Thirty. An hour. She stopped checking. The black SUV kept moving through Chicago while her thoughts refused to settle. The attack. The shattered glass. The gunshot. Zane's arm jerks backward. His cold voice afterward. Find the shooter. As if getting shot was a minor inconvenience. Leila rubbed both hands over her face. This was insane. Completely insane. She should have left when she had the chance. The problem was that she wasn't sure she had ever been given one. The SUV finally slowed. Leila looked outside. Tall iron gates. Security cameras. Armed guards. The gates began to open. Slowly. Her stomach sank. The vehicle rolled inside. And for the first time since being dragged into this mess, Leila understood just how rich Zane Rogers really was. The mansion looked less like a home and more like something stolen from a billionaire's fantasy. The building stretched across acres of land. Fountains.
Tech Mall was insane. Not crowded. Not noisy. Insane. The entire VIP floor had been cleared before they arrived. Security guards stood at every entrance. Employees moved around carrying tablets and communication devices . And somehow, everyone looked nervous. Leila stepped out of the elevator and looked around. She almost commented on it. Almost . Then she remembered the car ride incident. The silence afterward. She pressed her lips together and said nothing. Some humiliations needed time before she could be loud again. This morning, she had used up every last reserve she had. So she followed. Quietly. They entered a private showroom. Rows of colorful, elegant dresses stretched across the room. Every single one looked expensive enough to pay her tuition for three years. A woman in a black suit approached immediately. "Miss Leila." She smiled politely. "We'll begin now." Leila nodded and followed her. She kept her eyes forward. Away from him. She had spen






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