Follow
Chapters
Share
Bound by the Mafia Lord's Gilded Chains Novel Cover

Bound by the Mafia Lord's Gilded Chains

One look was all it took for the Golden Wolf to mark his prey. ​To the glittering elite of Milan, Dante Moretti is a god among men, a billionaire mogul whose Midas touch turns every gold future into an empire. But beneath the bespoke Italian suits and the cold, amber eyes lies a monster. Sworn in as the new Capo of the Moretti Syndicate over his father's open casket, Dante is a man who rules with an iron grip and a heart of stone. He doesn't ask for what he wants. He takes it. ​Then he saw Bianca. ​Bianca Rossi is a creature of light, an innocent art student who finds beauty in the shadows of Milan's back alleys. She lives for her canvas and her dreams, unaware that a chance encounter in a midnight storm has placed her in the sights of the city's most dangerous predator. ​Dante doesn't just want her. He is obsessed. ​Using his billions like a silken web, Dante orchestrates a "gilded cage" for Bianca. From anonymous scholarships to lavish "chance" encounters, he draws her into a world of blood-stained gold and lethal power plays. But Bianca is no porcelain doll. Behind her soft beauty lies a fierce, indomitable spirit that refuses to be bought-or broken. ​As a brutal war with the Ricci family threatens to burn Milan to the ground, Bianca must choose: flee the man who stalks her dreams, or stand beside the Wolf and become his Queen. ​In a world where loyalty is paid in blood and love is a lethal weakness, will Dante's possessiveness be their salvation... or their ultimate destruction?
Chapters
Share

Chapter 2

The morning following the funeral, Milan was a city of ghosts and glass. The rain had slowed to a persistent, melancholic drizzle that clung to the cobblestones of the Brera District. Inside the Accademia di Belle Arti, the air smelled of turpentine, ancient dust, and the desperate ambition of youth.

Bianca Rossi stood before her canvas, her hand trembling slightly as she held her charcoal stick. She hadn't slept. Every time she closed her eyes, she saw the terrifying silhouette of a black machine—a predator made of carbon fiber—screeching to a halt inches from her knees. And then, there was the man.

He had looked like a fallen god in the rain, his amber eyes burning with a terrifying intensity that had stripped her bare. She had been bold in the moment, fueled by adrenaline and the sheer audacity of his rage, but in the cold light of day, the memory made her skin prickle.

"You're overworking the jawline, Bee," a voice chirped beside her.

Bianca blinked, coming back to the present. Her best friend, Isabella 'Bella' Romano, was leaning against a nearby stool, sipping a lukewarm espresso. Bella was all sharp energy and bright colors, a stark contrast to Bianca’s quiet, focused grace.

"I’m just... distracted," Bianca murmured, trying to smudge a harsh line on the sketch of a male torso.

"Distracted by the guy who almost turned you into a hood ornament?" Bella lowered her voice, her eyes widening. "You said he looked like he owned the city. In this neighborhood, that usually means he’s either a movie star or someone who disposes of them."

"He was just a man with a fast car and a bad temper," Bianca lied, though her heart gave a traitorous thud at the lie. "He’s gone now. I'll probably never see him again."

Across the city, in a glass-walled office that hovered over Milan like an eagle’s nest, Dante Moretti was proving her wrong.

He sat behind a desk carved from a single slab of black obsidian. To any outsider, he looked like the quintessential billionaire mogul, reviewing the morning’s gold market fluctuations on three separate monitors. But the fourth monitor—the one directly in his line of sight—displayed a grainy, high-resolution still from his car’s dashcam.

It was her. The girl from the rain.

"Her name is Bianca Rossi," Enzo Ferraro said, stepping into the office with the silent grace of a ghost. He placed a thin manila folder on the obsidian surface. "Twenty-one. Final year student at the Accademia. Top of her class in restoration and conservation. No criminal record. No powerful family. She lives in a small apartment three blocks from the school with a roommate."

Dante didn't look up from the screen. He traced the curve of her jawline on the monitor with his thumb. "And her parents?"

"Father was a clockmaker in Turin. Deceased. Mother is in a care facility near Lake Garda. Alzheimer’s," Enzo replied, his tone clinical. "The girl works three jobs to keep up with the tuition and the medical bills. She’s a ghost in the system, Dante. Clean. Uncomplicated."

"Nothing is uncomplicated, Enzo," Dante whispered, finally closing the laptop. The amber in his eyes seemed to glow in the dim office light. "She spoke to me as if I were a common thief."

"Perhaps she didn't recognize the Wolf," Enzo suggested, a small, knowing smile playing on his lips. "Or perhaps she simply didn't care."

Dante stood, buttoning his charcoal-gray suit jacket. The Moretti ring caught the light, a drop of blood-red ruby against his tan skin. "I want the car ready. And find out which gallery she’s working at this afternoon."

Enzo paused, his brow furrowing. "The Ricci family is already moving on the northern docks. We have a sit-down with the union leaders in an hour. You shouldn't be chasing a student through Brera."

Dante turned, the sheer weight of his presence filling the room. It was the look of a man who had just buried his father and inherited a war, yet was focused entirely on a single point of light.

"The union can wait," Dante said, his voice a low, dangerous rumble. "The Wolf doesn't negotiate when he’s hungry."

The Galleria d'Ombra was a small, prestigious space tucked away in a quiet courtyard. It specialized in Baroque restorations, and Bianca loved the silence of it. Today, she was positioned in the back room, painstakingly cleaning a small, soot-stained oil painting of a Madonna.

The bell above the door chimed. It wasn't the usual light tinkle; it was followed by a heavy, deliberate silence.

Bianca didn't look up at first. "I’ll be with you in a moment," she called out, her voice echoing in the high-ceilinged room.

No one answered. Instead, she heard the slow, rhythmic click of expensive leather shoes on the marble floor. The sound sent a jolt of recognition up her spine. The air in the gallery suddenly felt charged, the atmospheric pressure dropping as if a storm had just moved indoors.

She slowly set down her cotton swab and turned around.

He was standing in the center of the gallery, surrounded by images of saints and martyrs. Dante Moretti looked entirely too large for the space, his broad shoulders and dark elegance making the priceless art look like cheap trinkets. He wasn't looking at the paintings. He was looking at her.

"You," Bianca breathed, her hand going to the pulse point at her throat.

"You forgot your umbrella last night," Dante said. His voice was smoother than she remembered, a rich baritone that seemed to vibrate in the very air between them.

"I don't own an umbrella," she countered, her inner strength rallying. She wiped her hands on her apron and stepped out from behind the restoration table. "And how did you find me? This is private property."

Dante took a step forward. He didn't rush. He moved with a terrifying, predatory grace that forced her to stay rooted to the spot. "Milan is my property, Bianca. Finding you was the easiest thing I’ve done all day."

The way he said her name—biting off the syllables with a slight Italian lilt—made it sound like a vow.

"Is this where you apologize for almost killing me?" she asked, crossing her arms. "Or are you here to complain about the dent my hip didn't make in your car?"

A ghost of a smirk touched Dante’s lips. It wasn't a kind expression; it was the look of a man who had found a puzzle he intended to solve. He walked toward a painting on the wall—a dark, moody landscape—and pretended to examine it.

"I don't apologize for things I intended to do," he said.

"You intended to hit me?"

"I intended to stop," he clarified, turning back to her. "And I did. Most people would have fallen to their knees in gratitude. You, however, decided to lecture me."

"I don't bow to men who drive like they’re escaping the gates of hell," Bianca said, her eyes flashing green. "I don't care how much your suit cost or who you think you are."

Dante moved then, closing the distance between them so quickly she didn't have time to flinch. He stopped inches away, his scent—sandalwood, rain, and expensive tobacco—enveloping her. He was a wall of heat and power. He reached out, his hand hovering near her face before he tucked a stray, dark curl behind her ear. His touch was light, but it felt like a brand.

"I am the man who is going to change your life," he whispered.

The tension in the room was a living thing, an electric current that pulled them toward each other. Bianca felt a dizzying mix of fear and an attraction so primal it frightened her. She wanted to push him away, but her body felt heavy, her feet anchored to the floor.

"I like my life exactly as it is," she whispered back, though her voice lacked conviction.

Dante’s eyes darkened, the amber turning to molten gold. He leaned in, his lips inches from her ear. "Then you have a very limited imagination, piccola. This gallery, your school, your struggle... it’s all just charcoal sketches. I deal in the finished masterpiece."

He pulled back, his expression returning to a mask of cold, professional detachment. He reached into his pocket and pulled out a small, heavy gold coin. He placed it on the table beside her restoration tools.

"Keep it," he said. "A reminder that the next time we meet, the conversation won't be so polite."

Before she could protest, before she could throw the coin back at him, he turned and walked out. The bell chimed once, and the heavy silence returned to the gallery.

Bianca stood alone among the saints, her heart hammering against her ribs like a trapped bird. She looked down at the coin. It bore the image of a wolf, its jaws open in a silent roar.

Her fingers trembled as she picked it up. It was warm from his skin.

You may also like

FILTHY LITTLE ASSISTANT  Novel Cover
7.3
Jolene flies to Italy broke and desperate for a PA job. She walks into the wrong room and finds a man naked in the shower. She can't stop staring. He notices. The interview is brutal. Two men, Marco and Enzo, tear her apart, humiliate her, and dismiss her. She thinks she failed. Then Enzo gets in the car. It was all a test. They wanted to see if she'd break. She didn't. The job is hers. But they don't want a normal assistant. They want control. They touch her when they want, stand too close, give orders that cross every line. On her first night, Marco tells her to take off her blouse. Jolene has to choose: obey or walk away with nothing. The problem? Part of her doesn't want to leave.
HIGH VOLTAGE SEDUCTION  Novel Cover
8.9
WARNING: FOR MATURE READERS ONLY!!! This erotica collection is raw, hot, intense, and packed with deliciously filthy fucktwists that will leave you breathless.  Each story is steamy, gripping, and driven by compelling plots that pull you deep into forbidden desire. You will find A strict 59-year-old professor bends his tempting student over his desk and growls that she's been a very bad girl. A college student wakes up sore and dripping in her biggest rival's bed, with no memory of how many times he fucked her senseless. Her hot stepdad has a secret camera aimed at her bed. When she catches him watching, she doesn't rage - she spreads her legs and gives him the show of his life. A seductive woman is the only weakness of a ruthless mafia king, and he finally claims her body as his own. She knows her sister is cheating, so she seduces her husband right in front of her - and her sister can't say a single word. Piper's rent is overdue. Instead of paying up, she drops to her knees for the landlord while her boyfriend watches. A spoiled, arrogant rich brat demands a private striptease. The dancer doesn't walk away - she dances for him until he completely loses control. An assistant's boyfriend has a huge cock, but "Daddy" knows exactly how to ruin her with his tongue. She chooses Daddy. Best friends make a wicked bet: seduce my dad. She takes the bet... and loses all control the moment he bends her over. Chloe has been secretly masturbating to her stepbrother's photos, moaning his name as she comes. She can't hide it much longer. A married gym coach can't stop staring at the sexy teacher. She goes all the way and lets him take her between her thighs. Her doctor tells her she needs rest... but she's determined to prove she's strong enough to be fucked senseless on his examination table. Every twisted fantasy and every scorching answer waits inside these pages. Flip the pages, spread your legs... and get ready to throb.
His Brother's Obsession, Her Mafia Throne Novel Cover
7.2
Elena stood flawless in her bridal gown. Five years of molding herself for Dante Moretti and a powerful mafia treaty culminated now. This dress was her only solace. Then her phone buzzed. A text from Dante: "Wedding canceled." Two cold words, no explanation. Her world shattered, heart a sledgehammer blow. Dante answered her call from a hospital, commanding her to leave, no apology. Her father and 500 mafia guests outside whispered of "humiliation." Marco then cleared Dante's things, revealing he was moving his long-comatose 'white swan,' Sofia, into their intended home. Her father's ultimatum: win Dante back in thirty days, or be married to a sadistic Russian boss. Discarded, betrayed, and trapped, Elena felt absolute humiliation. She despised five years wasted, facing a fate worse than death. But as tears blurred her vision, a dangerous thought ignited: Dante wasn't the only Moretti. She wouldn't cry or beg. Instead, she'd choose the most terrifying Moretti of all, and make Dante pay for his arrogance.
Mafia Princess: Escaping His Deadly Lie Novel Cover
9.4
For three years, a rare liver disease has been killing me. Through it all, my husband Julian has been my rock. Our last hope was a black-market liver, secured through a life-debt owed to my family, the Volkov Bratva. But from my hospital bed, I overheard him promise that very liver to another woman. It was for his mistress's mother. I soon discovered he had a four-year-old daughter with her. Their family was established; I was just the placeholder. On a hidden security feed, I watched him in my dead parents' penthouse—a sacred place he forbade me from visiting—bouncing their child on his knee. Then he fastened the diamond necklace he'd bought for my birthday around his mistress's neck. The final blow came when I heard her whisper, "Just a little longer... the fever will do the rest." He wasn't just leaving me. He was actively trying to kill me. The love I had for him didn't just die; it turned to a cold, hard stone in my chest. The man whose devotion I never questioned now made my skin crawl with revulsion. The next morning, I signed myself out of the hospital against medical advice. I left my wedding ring and the signed divorce papers on the entryway table, blocked his number, and walked out of our house without looking back.
One Night, Now He Wants Me. Novel Cover
8.5
"You are getting married, huh?" A shrill voice asked me from behind. "You don't look happy.' "It's a complicated situati..." He cut me off. "I can make you happy." My eyes darted between his lips and eyes, he noticed my indecision and locked his lips with mine. While battling with betrayal, Iris melts into a mafia's touch without knowing who he is. Now she must bear all the consequences that follow.
Regret Is Useless: The Mafia Queen Rises Novel Cover
9.8
I was a Mafia Princess, and he was the gutter rat I tried to make a King. On our wedding day, with five hundred guests watching, Luca Moretti didn't say his vows. Instead, after receiving a photo of a secret child, he looked at me with panic and backed away from the altar. "I can't do this," he announced to the silent church. "She's here. She'll ruin the kid." He chose a waitress and their illegitimate daughter over me. He walked out, leaving me humiliated in a dress that cost more than most people's lives. Forty-eight hours later, he married her. He gave the waitress my ring, my future, and his name, all to protect a child he had hidden from me. When I confronted him weeks later, he looked at me with cold eyes and told me he did it for honor. He destroyed me to save them, convinced I would fade away into the background. He thought he could break a Vitiello and not pay the price. Five years later, I returned to Chicago. The gala went silent as I walked in, wearing blood-red silk. Luca approached me, eyes full of regret, begging for a second chance, claiming his marriage to the waitress was a mistake. He thought he could win me back. Until a little girl ran into the room—my daughter. And behind her walked my husband. Not a soldier, but the Reaper himself, Dante Cavallaro. Luca’s face turned pale as he realized the truth. He had left me at the altar to play father, but I had married the Devil to become a Queen.