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Bound to the Beast Mafia Boss

Bound to the Beast Mafia Boss

I make my living binding monsters to their promises. But Silas Malphas is the one monster I never should have touched. As a Thread-Binder, I can see the glowing, invisible strings of loyalty, debt, and lies connecting everyone in the city's supernatural underworld. It makes me the ultimate contract lawyer-and the perfect infiltrator. My mission is simple: secure a job in the inner circle of the House of Malphas, the city's most ruthless monster syndicate, and steal the Primal Ledger from their lethal heir. Silas Malphas commands the shadows themselves. He is arrogant, dominant, and terrifyingly elegant. But the most dangerous thing about him isn't his power-it's that when I look at him, I see *nothing*. He is a void in the magical spectrum. No debts. No loyalties. He is completely unreadable. I was supposed to betray him. But as I am dragged deeper into his golden cage of high-stakes negotiations and blood-soaked boardroom politics, the lines between my mission and my dark attraction to the Beast begin to blur. When a rival faction launches a deadly coup and my cover is blown, I am left with a terrifying choice. To survive the night, I must forge a blood-oath contract with the very monster I was sent to destroy. I'm no longer just his lawyer. I'm bound to the Beast.
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Chapter 1

"Sign the paper, or the next silver bullet goes through your eye." The threat hung in the damp air of the alley. Rain lashed against the rusted metal of the dumpsters, washing away the grime of the city but doing nothing to cleanse the stench of violence. I stood in the dead center of the narrow space. The pavement beneath my boots was slick with motor oil and fresh blood. To my left stood the Red Moon pack. Four massive men in soaked leather jackets. They smelled like wet earth, raw meat, and suppressed fury. Their alpha, a hulking brute named Kael, gripped a silver plated pistol. His hands shook with the effort of holding back his shift. To my right loomed the Nightfall coven. Three vampires in bespoke suits ruined by the downpour. They did not shiver. They did not breathe. They smelled like old copper and the sharp, metallic tang of static electricity. Their leader, a pale aristocrat named Julian, sneered at the gun. "You wolves are so delightfully primitive," Julian murmured. His voice was smooth velvet over broken glass. "Enough," I said. My voice was not loud, but it carried a strange, heavy resonance that made both sides flinch. I did not have claws. I did not have fangs. I was merely human. But in this city, I was the most dangerous person in the alley. I am a Thread Binder. When I look at the world, I do not just see flesh and bone. I see the intricate, glowing web of magic that connects every living creature. I see the hidden truths of the universe. Right now, glowing golden strings of fierce loyalty tied Kael to his pack members. The light pulsed with their synchronized heartbeats. Julian, however, was a different story. Thick, tar black ropes of deceit twisted around his pale throat, extending outward into the shadows. He was lying. He had been lying since the negotiation began. "Julian," I said, stepping closer to the hood of the wrecked sedan between them. I slapped a piece of heavy parchment onto the wet metal. "You claimed your coven had nothing to do with the missing shipments on the east docks. You swore on your bloodline." Julian offered a mocking smile. "And I meant every word, Sienna." The black threads around his neck thickened, throbbing with sick magic. "You are lying," I stated plainly. Kael snarled. His eyes flashed a luminous, predatory yellow. The golden threads connecting him to his men tightened like piano wire. They were ready to attack. Julian dropped his smile. His fangs descended, stark white in the gloom. "Careful, little human. You are a neutral mediator. Do not overstep." "I am neutral," I replied, pulling a silver pen from my coat pocket. "Which is why I require the truth for the binding contract. You stole the weapons. Admit it, pay the restitution to the pack, and we seal the agreement tonight. Otherwise, I leave, and you can tear each other apart in the rain." I let the threat hang. If I walked away, the peace treaty was void. The vampire coven was outnumbered. Julian knew it. He glared at me, his dark eyes burning with ancient malice. "Fine," Julian hissed. "We took the weapons. Deduct the value from our territory tribute." "Generous," Kael spat, lowering his gun a fraction of an inch. "Sign it," I ordered. I clicked the pen. As Julian stepped forward to sign the parchment, I reached into the air with my free hand. I grabbed the unseen magical energy pulsing around us. I visualized a glowing golden thread pulling from my own pulse. I slammed my hand down onto the paper just as Julian finished his signature. Kael signed next. The magic flared. A blinding flash of gold illuminated the dark alley. The physical ink melted into the parchment, glowing hot before settling into deep, permanent crimson. The contract was sealed. It was magically unbreakable. If either side violated the terms, the binding magic would stop their hearts. "Pleasure doing business," I said. I folded the heavy parchment and slid it into my waterproof satchel. Neither monster said a word to me. They turned and vanished into the shadows of their respective territories. I was left alone in the rain. I exhaled a long, shaky breath. The magic always drained my energy. My hands trembled slightly as I walked out of the alley and onto the neon lit streets of the supernatural district. The city was a sprawling nightmare of gothic skyscrapers and dark secrets. The human population had no idea that their politicians, their bankers, and their landlords were apex predators. The monster syndicates ran everything. They treated the city like a giant chessboard, and humans were barely even pawns. I was an exception. My unique magic made me valuable. I was a legal contractor for the underworld. But being valuable only meant I was a target. Every day I spent in this city was a gamble. I needed one massive payout. One job big enough to buy me a new identity and a ticket to a place where monsters did not exist. I walked three blocks to my office. It sat above a defunct apothecary on a forgotten street. The stairwell smelled of dust, dried sage, and cheap coffee. I climbed the creaking steps, my wet boots heavy on the wood. I reached my door. I paused. The protective wards I painted on the doorframe were dormant. They had been bypassed. My heart hammered against my ribs. I did not reach for my keys. I reached into my coat pocket and gripped the cold handle of my silver dagger. It was a pathetic weapon against a high level monster, but it was all I had. I pushed the door open. It swung silently on its hinges. The temperature inside my small office was freezing. The air tasted wrong. It tasted like battery acid and old, dried blood. The shadows in the corner of the room seemed to move, detached from the faint street light bleeding through the window blinds. A man sat in my worn leather desk chair. He wore a tailored charcoal suit that looked expensive enough to buy my entire building. His face was obscured by the dim lighting, but his presence was suffocating. He did not emit a specific scent of wolf or vampire. He smelled of raw, untamed power. I stepped inside, leaving the door open for a quick escape. I kept my hand on the dagger. "You bypassed my wards," I said, forcing my voice to remain steady. "Your wards are designed for street thugs," the man replied. His voice was a low rumble that vibrated through the floorboards. "They are insulting." "Who are you?" "A benefactor," he said. He leaned forward, resting his gloved hands on my scratched wooden desk. "I have a job for you, Sienna. A contract that requires your specific talents." I narrowed my eyes. I activated my Thread Binding sight, hoping to read his loyalties. Nothing. He was surrounded by a haze of gray magic, thick enough to obscure any strings of truth or deceit. He was shielding himself. That took immense power. "I am fully booked," I lied smoothly. "You can leave the way you came." "You are broke," the shadow client corrected. He reached down and placed a heavy metal briefcase on the desk. He flicked the latches. The case popped open. Even in the dim light, the gold bars gleamed. It was more wealth than I had seen in my life. It was enough to get me out of the city ten times over. It was freedom. I stared at the gold. I forced myself to look up at his shadowed face. "What is the job?" "You are going to infiltrate the House of Malphas," he said. The name hit me like a physical blow. The House of Malphas was the supreme monster syndicate in the territory. They were the apex of the apex. They owned the banks, the courts, and the shadows. To cross them was to invite a slow, agonizing death. "You are out of your mind," I whispered. "No one infiltrates Malphas. Their security is flawless. They smell a lie before it leaves your tongue." "They are hiring a new legal contractor for their corporate headquarters," the man continued, ignoring my panic. "You have the credentials. You have the neutral reputation. You will interview. You will get the position. And once inside, you will locate the Primal Ledger." The Primal Ledger. It was a myth. A rumored book made of living skin that contained the supernatural debts of every major power player in the world. Whoever held the Ledger controlled the city. "If I get caught looking for that, Silas Malphas will skin me alive," I stated. Silas Malphas. The Beast. He was the heir to the syndicate. Stories about him terrified even the oldest vampires. He was known for his cold, calculated brutality. He manipulated darkness like it was clay. He never left witnesses. "You will not get caught," the shadow client said. "You are a Thread Binder. You can see the traps before they are sprung. You can read the loyalties of the guards." "I refuse," I said, stepping back toward the open door. "Keep your gold. I want to live." The man stood up. The shadows in the room stretched and warped around him. The temperature plummeted further. "It was not a request, Sienna," he said softly. The threat was undeniable. "You accept the contract, or you do not leave this room alive. The gold is your compensation. Your survival is your motivation." I looked at the briefcase. I looked at the man. He was powerful enough to kill me right now without breaking a sweat. I had to think quickly. If I said no, I died tonight. If I said yes, I walked into the deadliest syndicate in the world. But inside the House of Malphas, I might find a way to outsmart both of them. I was a survivor. I always found a loophole in the contract. I walked over to the desk. I did not look at the gold. I looked directly into the shadow of his face. "I want half the gold transferred to an offshore, untraceable account by midnight," I demanded, keeping my voice hard. "And I need a flawless cover story for the interview." The man chuckled. It was a dry, hollow sound. "Done." He reached into his jacket and pulled out a sleek black folder, dropping it next to the briefcase. "Your new credentials. Your interview is tomorrow at noon. Do not be late." He walked past me. The air grew heavy, pressing down on my lungs. He paused at the doorframe. "Do not underestimate Silas Malphas," the shadow client whispered. "He is a monster in every sense of the word. If he catches you, pray he kills you quickly." The man stepped into the hallway and vanished into the gloom. The unnatural cold slowly began to dissipate. I stood alone in my office, staring at the black folder on my desk. My hands were shaking again, harder this time. I had just agreed to walk into the den of the Beast. I opened the folder. The first page was a photograph of Silas Malphas. His jaw was sharp, his eyes a piercing, predatory gold. Even in a photograph, he radiated lethal authority. The background of the picture showed the blurred aftermath of violence. There was shattered glass and dark stains on a marble floor. Yet, Silas stood in the center, adjusting the cuff of his immaculate black suit, looking bored by the carnage. He had just ruined a dozen lives, and he only cared about the crease in his sleeve. I traced the edge of the paper with my thumb. My mission was to steal his most prized possession and destroy his empire from the inside. It was a suicide mission. But as I stared into the cold, flat eyes of the Beast, I made a silent vow. I was going to beat him at his own game. I just had to survive the interview first. Author's Note Welcome to the dark and dangerous world of the supernatural syndicate! Did Sienna make the right choice taking this deadly contract? Silas Malphas is waiting for her in the next chapter, and trust me, he is not your average boss. Let me know your thoughts in the comments, and please like and share if you enjoyed the hook!

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