LOGINEight years ago, Sara Delgado vanished without a trace, leaving Salvatore Ricci—heir to their mother's underworld and the most loyal to his brother Matteo is broken, furious, and convinced she chose a life without him. What he never knew was that Sara wasn’t running from him… she was running to save him. Now a single mother struggling to care for her sick grandmother, Sara Vega now takes a second job at a Kansas City strip club, never realizing it belongs to the one man she swore she’d never see again. When Salvatore walks in and finds her behind his bar, the past detonates between them. But their reunion is more than heartbreak and unfinished love. Sara is in danger. Her stepbrother Juan, now head of the Marquez crime family, has been hunting her for months. And when Salvatore learns the truth about Hector Marquez, the stepfather who murdered Sara’s mother and planned something far worse, the pieces fall into place. Juan isn’t after Sara. He’s after her son. Their son. With the Ricci empire at his back and a second chance burning in his chest, Salvatore vows to protect Sara and the child he never knew existed. But the Marquez family won’t stop until they get what they want and Sara’s secret may be the key to a war neither side is ready for. In this explosive final installment, love and loyalty collide with blood and vengeance. The Ricci family will rise or fall together… and Salvatore will burn the world down before he loses his family again.
View MoreSix Months after the Wedding
Kansas City didn’t have the charm of Jasper, Missouri. No rolling fields. No clubhouse full of bikers who treated you like blood. No family dancing under string lights while Matteo married the woman who saved him.
KC was concrete, neon, and rain‑slicked streets. And it was mine. Six months ago, I stood in the LOV clubhouse watching my twin say his vows. Six months ago, I toasted to Matteo and Ciara’s future, hugged Mama, and promised I’d be see them soon.
I didn’t. Because the minute I stepped into the SUV to drive back home , the call came in.
Juan. The bastard never waited long. He’d been circling the Bruno territory like a vulture, testing fences, whispering to the wrong people, offering my girls at the club “better money” and “glamour.” But I knew the truth behind his promises.
He wasn’t running a strip club He was running a brothel. And he wanted my girls for leverage, not opportunity.
So I stayed. I worked. I fought. I kept the Bruno territory locked down with iron fists and sleepless nights.
I ran all three of my mother’s clubs, the legacy she left behind, and used the strip club as my base of operations. Cameras, guards, cash flow, intel. Everything ran through me.
Matteo trusted me with this territory. I wasn’t about to let Juan take a single inch. But the truth? Juan wasn’t the only thing keeping me up at night. Something else had been pulling at me. Someone. A ghost from my past. A woman I’d never stopped loving. A mistake I’d never forgiven myself for. And lately… she’d been everywhere. In my thoughts. In my dreams. In the way I hesitated before answering Matteo’s calls. In the way I kept my phone face‑down on my desk.
I told myself it was nothing. I told myself I’d buried that part of my life years ago.But the lie was getting harder to swallow. Especially now. Because Juan wasn’t just stirring trouble. He was digging. Looking for weaknesses. Looking for secrets. And I had one. A big one. One that could burn everything down if he ever found it.
The bass from the main stage thumped through the walls like a heartbeat, steady and familiar. The strip club was loud out front, but back here, in the hallway behind the dressing rooms, it was quiet.
Too quiet. My men dragged the two idiots in, both of them bruised, bleeding, and still running their mouths. They’d been caught trying to corner two of the newer girls by the back exit, whispering promises of “better money” and “real glamour.” Juan’s lines. Juan’s lies.
I stepped into the room, shutting the door behind me. The music faded to a dull throb. “Put them down,” I said. My men dropped the two goons to their knees. One spit blood onto the concrete. The other glared up at me like he thought he had a chance. He didn’t. I crouched in front of them, elbows on my knees, calm as ever. “You come into my club,” I said, “and try to take what’s mine?”
The first one sneered. “They ain’t yours.”
“They work for me,” I corrected. “Which makes them under my protection.”
He laughed. “Protection? You think you can protect them from Juan?”
I smiled. “I don’t think. I know.”
I nodded once, and one of my men slammed the guy’s face into the floor. He groaned, blood pooling beneath him.
The second one chuckled. Actually chuckled.
“This is just the beginning,” he said, voice thick with arrogance. “The girls here ain’t the only ones Juan is after.”
I tilted my head. “Oh? He’s expanding his taste?”
The man grinned, teeth red. “He’s looking for his step-sister.”
I barked a laugh. “Isolde? She’s dead. Juan knows that.”
He shook his head slowly. “Not her.”
My smile faded. “Then who?” I asked.
The man’s grin widened. “Name’s Sara.”
My heart stopped. Just for a second. Just long enough for something cold to slide down my spine. I forced my expression to stay neutral. “Sara’s a common name.”
“Not this one,” he said. “Juan’s obsessed. Says she’s the key to everything.”
I stood slowly. “Finish them, send their bodies back to their boss.” I told my men.
They dragged the goons out, their screams echoing down the hallway. I didn’t watch. I didn’t need to. They’d be alive enough to crawl back to Juan with a message:
Stay out of my territory.
Stay away from my girls.
Stay away from my family.
But as the door shut and silence settled, I leaned against the wall, breathing hard. Sara. It couldn’t be her. It had been years. She was gone. Moved on. Safe.
And yet…I couldn’t shake the way the goon said her name. Like it mattered. Like Juan wanted her for a reason. I rubbed a hand over my face. “Get it together,” I muttered. But I couldn’t. Because for the first time in years, the ghost I’d been trying to bury wasn’t staying buried. And the worst part? A part of me, deep, stupid, hopeful, wanted it to be her.
Five years. Five years since Marco walked into my life with that ridiculous smile and those loud opinions and the way he made everything feel lighter. Five years since he told me he wouldn’t be anyone’s “dirty little secret.” Five years since he made me brave enough to stop hiding.And today… we were getting married. Sara planned everything, of course she did, and she somehow managed to make it look effortless. A small spring wedding in her backyard, flowers everywhere, soft colors, candles tucked into corners. It looked like something out of a dream. Marco had been a complete groomzilla for months. Not even in a bad way, just in a Marco way.“This ribbon is the wrong shade.” “The cake needs more height.” “Roc, your suit needs to be steamed again.” “Why is the seating chart not alphabetized?”I didn’t mind. It was his day too. And honestly… seeing him so excited made me love him even more. My grandparents flew in from Russia two days ago. My grandmother cried the moment she saw me in
I thought I knew what it would feel like. I thought I was prepared. But the moment I heard their cries, first Maria, loud and furious, then Rosa, softer and curious, something inside me cracked open in a way I didn’t expect. A part of me I didn’t even know was locked finally let go. Two daughters. Two perfect little girls. Named after the two women who shaped our family. Maria, after Abuela. Rosa, after Nonna. Legacies in tiny blankets. Sara reached for my hand, her voice soft. “Mi cielo… breathe.”I didn’t realize I’d been holding my breath until she said it. I let it out slowly, staring at the two little faces, their fists curled, their eyes blinking up at the world like they already owned it. The nurse handed Maria to me. She grabbed my finger immediately, strong grip for someone so small. Rosa rested against Sara’s chest, calm, watching everything with wide dark eyes. My girls. My daughters. My future.The room filled fast. Nonna cried the moment she saw Rosa. Abuela cried the mom
Gabe’s birthday was always loud, but this year it felt bigger, brighter, like the whole world was celebrating with him. And maybe it was. The Fourth of July always brought fireworks, music, and half the neighborhood outside, but today it was all for him too. The backyard was packed. Kids splashing in the pool. Adults gathered around the grill. Music drifting through the warm summer air. Fireworks waiting in neat boxes for later tonight. It felt good. It felt peaceful. It felt like life finally settled into something soft again.The family had flown back from Italy a few days ago, just in time for the party. They’d been gone for weeks, giving us space to breathe, to settle, to heal. Now they were back, loud, loving, and exactly what Gabe needed. He ran across the yard with Koda chasing him, both of them dripping water everywhere. Even though Koda was four years younger, they talked every afternoon. FaceTime, voice messages, silly videos. Gabe said it helped him &ld
The compound was quiet in the mornings. Too quiet. Matteo and I walked side‑by‑side down the long concrete hallway toward the cells, the hum of the fluorescent lights buzzing overhead. I’d gotten used to the sound over the last week, the same way you get used to pain when it’s constant.Juan had been dragging things out. Talking in circles. Playing games. Trying to stay alive one more day. But today felt different. I could feel it in my bones. Matteo must’ve felt it too, because he didn’t say a word until we reached the metal door leading into the holding wing. He stopped, hand on the handle, waiting. I looked at him. “It’s time,” I said. He didn’t ask what I meant. He already knew. “We can deal with Kansas City now,” I continued. “We don’t need anything else from him. Not anymore.”Matteo exhaled slowly, nodding. “Ciara told me the same thing last night.”I raised an eyebrow. “She did?”He smirked. “She said, and I quote, ‘End it. I want to go home for a few weeks before we come back
My hands were still shaking when I walked back toward the bar. Not because of Salvatore. Never because of him. But because of the look in his eyes. Shock. Hurt. Something I didn’t have a name for.And underneath all of it…the fear that once he found out about Gabe, he’d never forgive me.He deserve
Her voice hit me harder than any punch I’d ever taken. Soft. Careful. Scared.And that was what gutted me most, the fear. Because for a split second, I thought she was scared of me. I stepped back, giving her space I didn’t want to give.“Go,” I said quietly. “Finish your shift.”She hesitated, eye
I hadn’t slept in three days. Wolf and I had been running all over the damn state, putting out fires Juan kept lighting just to piss me off. Meetings, threats, cleanup, more threats. By the time I finally crossed back into Kansas City, all I wanted was my bed, a shower, and maybe a bottle of whiske
The club looked different at night. Louder. Brighter. Sharper around the edges. The neon sign buzzed overhead as I walked toward the back entrance, clutching my bag like it was armor. My stomach twisted, but I forced myself to breathe. I needed this job. I needed the tips. I needed to keep the ligh
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