LOGIN"She came for the $10,000 paycheck. She didn't expect to bargain for her life." Serenia Buenavista is having the absolute worst day of her life. She just got evicted from her apartment, her bank account is down to five dollars, and she just caught her boyfriend cheating on her—while his new girl is wearing Serenia's favorite hoodie. Desperate for quick cash, Serenia applies for a suspiciously high-paying anonymous job online: a nanny position for a "high-stress environment" paying $10,000 a month. But when she arrives at the heavily guarded mansion, she doesn't find a normal family. She finds Matteo Alcantara—a cold, ruthless, and terrifying underground boss who is currently losing a war against his orphaned four-year-old nephew. While other professional nannies run out of the house crying, Serenia sits on the floor and negotiates with the toddler like a tiny criminal, promising to teach him how to picklock doors if he eats his broccoli. Matteo is speechless. He needs her. But just as Serenia signs the deadly contract, gunshots shatter the mansion's windows. Now, locked in a world of danger, secrets, and a very grumpy, dangerously handsome boss, Serenia realizes she didn't just sign up for childcare... She signed up for the mafia.
View MoreSERENIA POV
"You have exactly ten minutes to pack your things, Serenia. This is a respectable building, not a zoo." My landlord, Mr. Henderson, stood in the doorway of my tiny studio apartment. His arms were crossed tightly over his chest, his face practically purple with rage. Behind him, three tiny kittens peeked out from underneath my worn-out sofa, their eyes wide with innocence. They didn’t know they were currently committing a lease violation. "Mr. Henderson, please," I said, holding my hands up in a pleading gesture. "They’re just strays. The shelter was full, and it’s raining outside. I was just going to keep them until tomorrow." "You said that last week. Ten minutes, Serenia. Or I’m throwing your boxes onto the sidewalk myself." He slammed the door shut, the force of it shaking the cheap frame. I sighed, rubbing my temples. My head was throbbing. I looked down at my phone, hoping for a shred of good news, but the screen remained stubbornly dark. No messages from my boyfriend, Todd. No emails from the jobs I had applied for. Just a notification that my bank account balance was currently sitting at a grand total of five dollars. "Great," I muttered to the kittens. "Just great." I grabbed a cardboard box from the corner and started shoving my life into it. It didn’t take long. When you’re twenty-three and broke, you don’t own a lot of property. I threw in my books, my notebooks, and my sparse collection of clothes. The only thing missing was my favorite oversized grey hoodie. "I probably left it at Todd’s place," I murmured, checking my watch. Todd’s apartment was only two blocks away. If I hurried, I could grab my hoodie, apologize for dropping by unannounced, and maybe—just maybe—ask if I could crash on his couch for a night or two until I figured out where to go. The thought of swallowing my pride tasted bitter, but survival was a powerful motivator. I packed the kittens into a small ventilated laundry basket, hoisted my heaviest box into my arms, and kicked the door open. The walk to Todd's building was a test of endurance. The rain was coming down in sheets, soaking through my cheap canvas shoes within seconds. By the time I reached his floor and stood outside his door, I looked like a drowned rat. My arms were shaking from carrying the heavy box, and the kittens were mewing unhappily in their basket. I didn’t bother knocking. I had a spare key. I slipped it into the lock, turned it quietly, and stepped inside, expecting to find him playing video games or sleeping. Instead, I found a pair of bright red high heels sitting by the entryway. They definitely weren’t mine. A strange laugh echoed from the bedroom, followed by Todd’s familiar, low chuckle. My heart did a sudden, violent drop into my stomach. The box in my arms suddenly felt ten times heavier. I walked down the short hallway, my wet shoes squeaking loudly against the hardwood floor, but the two people in the bedroom were too distracted to notice. I stood at the open doorway. There was Todd, sitting on the edge of his bed. And there was a girl I had never seen before, sitting on his lap. She was wearing my favorite grey hoodie. "Todd?" My voice didn’t shake. It was surprisingly flat, hollowed out by the sheer absurdity of the moment. Todd froze. His head snapped toward me, his eyes widening in pure terror. He pushed the girl off his lap so fast she almost tripped over the rug. "Serenia!" Todd stammered, standing up and throwing his hands out. "Wait, it’s not what it looks like. Let me explain." "You're right," I said, looking at the girl, then back to him. "It looks like you're a cheating jerk who doesn't even have the decency to buy his side-piece her own clothes. But maybe I'm misinterpreting the situation." "Serenia, babe, come on. We were just talking," Todd said, taking a step toward me. He reached out to touch my arm, but I stepped back, my eyes narrowing. "Don't touch me," I said. My voice was calm, but inside, a toxic mix of anger and humiliation was boiling over. I looked at the girl, who was currently trying to hide behind Todd's shoulder. "Take off the hoodie." "What?" the girl blinked, looking confused. "The hoodie. It's mine. Take it off right now, or I will rip it off you." The girl scrambled out of the sleeves, practically tossing the fabric at my face. I caught it with one hand, balled it up, and shoved it into my cardboard box on top of my books. "Serenia, let’s talk about this rationally," Todd pleaded, his face pale. "You can't just leave in the middle of a storm." "Watch me." I turned on my heel and walked out, slamming his front door behind me so hard the hallway walls vibrated. Ten minutes later, I was sitting on a plastic bench inside a twenty-four-hour laundromat down the street. The fluorescent lights buzzed overhead, casting a harsh, depressing glow over the empty washing machines. The smell of cheap detergent and damp air filled my lungs. I put the box on the floor and placed the kitten basket beside it. I pulled the damp grey hoodie over my head, shivering as the air conditioning blew directly down on me. I pulled out my phone. Five dollars in my bank account. No apartment. No boyfriend. Just me, a box of random belongings, and three stray cats. "Well, Serenia," I whispered to myself, staring at the cracked screen. "You officially hit rock bottom. Congratulations." I opened a job-seeking app on my phone, desperately scrolling through the listings. Waitress? Required three years of experience. Retail associate? The hiring process took two weeks. I didn't have two weeks. I needed money by tomorrow morning if I wanted to eat and find a cheap motel. I scrolled down further, my thumb freezing when a newly posted ad caught my eye. URGENT: Nanny needed immediately. Must survive high-stress environments. Short-tempered child. $10,000/month. Cash paid weekly. I blinked, staring at the number. Ten thousand dollars a month? Cash? That had to be a typo. Or a scam. Or a joke. But then I looked down at my wet shoes, thought about Todd’s cheating face, and remembered Mr. Henderson throwing me out into the rain. At this point, even if the job was a front for something illegal, I didn’t care. Ten thousand dollars could buy me a new life. I clicked the 'Apply' button. A text box popped up, asking for a brief introduction or a summary of my qualifications. I didn't have a resume saved on my phone. I didn't have a list of references. All I had was a massive amount of adrenaline and absolutely nothing left to lose. I typed out a single sentence: I can survive anything. Try me. I pressed send.SERENIA POV By dinner time, the house had settled into a quiet, heavy rhythm. Leo had completely passed out on the living room rug, his cheek pressed right against the orange plush dinosaur’s belly, with Nacho the tabby curled into a tight ball at his feet. I sat on the edge of the sofa, nursing a warm mug of chamomile tea. My mind kept drifting back to earlier this afternoon—specifically to that moment in the foyer when Matteo tossed me the plastic toy cat. He was looking at me differently, I thought, staring at the steam rising from my mug. Not like a problem he had to manage or a nanny he had to pay off. It was almost like he was trying to see right through me. It was a weird, intense look that made my stomach do a strange little flip, and honestly, it annoyed me how much it stayed with me. He was still the terrifying guy from the shooting, but seeing him pat Leo’s hair with those scarred hands... it messed with how I wanted to view him. The click of the heavy front doors broke
MATTEO POV The tinted glass of the rear window rolled down exactly three inches. I stood under the shadow of the concrete portico, my hands buried in my pockets as the black SUV idled near the main steps. Julian was a few paces behind me, his hand resting casually but firmly on the butt of his hidden firearm. After the breakfast conversation about pancakes and the brief, strange moment of quiet on the lawn, the weight of the city came rushing right back the second that vehicle cleared the iron gates. "Matteo," a voice spoke from the darkness inside the car. It was old, dry, and entirely devoid of warmth. Marcus Corvo didn't get out of his vehicle for anyone under the age of sixty. "I hear your house has a ventilation problem. Too many holes in the walls." "The holes have been patched, Marcus," I said, my voice flat and even. "And the men who made them are currently at the bottom of the river. Why are you here?" Corvo let out a dry, rattling cough that sounded like stones scr
SERENIA POV By two in the afternoon, the sun had finally broken through the heavy gray clouds, baking the damp stone of the courtyard until thin trails of steam rose from the ground. True to his word, Matteo had cleared the area. I stood by the large glass patio doors, watching three guards in dark suits walk the perimeter of the high stone wall. They weren't hiding their weapons anymore; heavy rifles were slung over their shoulders, their eyes constantly scanning the tree line just beyond the iron gates. "Shoes, Leo," I called out over my shoulder. "No shoes, no backyard." Leo came skidding out of the hallway, wearing a pair of bright red sneakers that looked slightly too big for him. He had the giant orange dinosaur from Clara tucked firmly under his left arm, its tail dragging along the floor. "I have shoes!" he announced, stamping his feet loudly against the marble to prove his point. "Alright, let's go," I said, sliding the heavy glass door open. The air outside was thick
SERENIA POV The sudden change in Julian’s posture made the hair on my arms stand up. I moved instinctively, stepping between the kitchen island and Leo, who was still entirely focused on shoving a oversized piece of pancake into his mouth. The three cats, sensing the sudden shift in gravity, bolted under the nearest low cabinet. "Stay here," Julian said, his voice dropping into a flat, professional whisper. He didn't draw his gun, but his hand stayed resting heavily against his belt as he slipped out into the main hallway. The heavy double doors of the foyer groaned open a moment later, followed by the low, indistinct murmur of male voices. I didn't stay behind the island. I grabbed a napkin, wiped a smear of chocolate syrup from Leo’s chin, and told him to keep eating before I slowly crept toward the edge of the kitchen doorway, peering out into the hall. Matteo was already there. He had emerged from his office down the hall, his black t-shirt tight across his shoulders, his arm
SERENIA POV The flour was exactly where Matteo said it would be, sitting in a huge, spotless glass jar behind a row of expensive, organic cooking oils. I dragged it out onto the marble island, along with a carton of eggs and a bottle of milk I found in the massive, double-doored refrigerator. Leo
MATTEO POV The wood of the study door didn't just split; it exploded inward, showering the marble floor with jagged splinters. My arm tightened instinctively around Serenia, pressing her down into the narrow, cramped space behind my desk. Leo was sandwiched between us, his small face buried so de
SERENIA POVMatteo flipped open the black leather folder, sliding a crisp, multi-page document across the smooth surface of the desk. A heavy, silver fountain pen followed right after it, rolling to a stop right by my coffee cup."That is your employment contract," Matteo said, his voice dropping i
SERENIA POVA maid arrived a few minutes later, quietly leaving a tray with a steaming porcelain pot of coffee and a fluffy white towel. She glanced at me with a look that was equal parts pity and curiosity before slipping out of the study as fast as her legs could carry her.I took the towel and b












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