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Bound to the Beast Mafia Boss  Novel Cover

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 2

The Malphas Syndicate corporate headquarters did not look like a mob den. It looked like a monument to modern greed.

The skyscraper pierced the gray morning clouds like a jagged blade of obsidian glass. Rain sheeted down its slick sides. Standing on the wet pavement across the street, I could feel the raw, suffocating hum of monster magic radiating from the foundation. The vibration traveled up through the soles of my boots and settled deep in my teeth. It was a warning. A physical manifestation of power meant to keep ordinary humans far away.

I tightened my grip on the handle of my leather briefcase. Inside sat the forged credentials provided by my shadow client. They were flawless. They had to be. If the security team inside found a single flaw in the watermark, I would not survive the elevator ride.

I crossed the street, the scent of wet asphalt and exhaust fumes heavy in the air.

Walking through the towering revolving glass doors was like stepping into another dimension. The chaotic noise of the city vanished instantly, replaced by a thick, oppressive silence. The lobby was a cathedral of cold black marble and vaulted ceilings. Massive stained glass windows lined the far wall, depicting abstract scenes of ancient battles. The air in here tasted like copper and ozone, a sure sign of heavy wards.

The security guards pacing the perimeter were not human. They wore tailored black suits, but their shoulders were too broad, their jaws too square. Shifters. I kept my gaze lowered just enough to show respect, but high enough to show I was not prey.

I approached the front desk. The receptionist was a stunning woman with porcelain skin and eyes that shimmered with an unnatural violet hue. A siren.

"Sienna Vance," I said, keeping my voice steady. "I have a noon appointment for the legal contractor position."

The siren did not blink. She typed something into a sleek terminal. The silence stretched, thick with tension. My heart hammered against my ribs, loud enough that I was sure the shifter guards could hear it.

"Floor eighty eight," the siren finally said. Her voice was a melodic purr that made the hairs on my arms stand up. "They are expecting you."

She handed me a smooth black keycard. I took it, careful not to let our skin touch.

The elevator ride was agonizing. The silver box shot upward with stomach turning speed. The pressure in my ears built, but the magical pressure was far worse. The higher I went, the thicker the magical residue became. It smelled like dark roasted coffee and crushed mint, masking an undercurrent of something metallic and dangerous.

The doors chimed and slid open.

Floor eighty eight was a sprawling expanse of glass walls and dark wood. The gothic corporate aesthetic was terrifyingly elegant. There were no busy interns running around with coffee. There were only quiet, lethal looking individuals murmuring in hushed tones behind soundproof glass.

A tall man in a gray suit met me at the elevator bank. He gestured for me to follow him down a long corridor. We stopped outside a set of heavy oak doors.

"He is waiting inside," the man said. He did not open the door for me. He simply turned and walked away.

I took a deep breath, mentally reinforcing my own internal shields. I reached out and pushed the heavy oak doors open.

The office was massive. Floor to ceiling windows offered a dizzying view of the sprawling city below. But the view was not what caught my attention. The room was a chaotic mix of luxury and violence. Stacks of pristine legal briefs sat next to a collection of antique daggers on the sprawling mahogany desk.

Sitting behind the desk, leaning back in a leather chair with his boots propped up on the wood, was Leo Malphas.

He looked young, maybe twenty two, but his energy was pure, unadulterated chaos. He had tousled dark hair and a sharp, cruel smile. He was tossing a heavy silver lighter in the air and catching it with terrifying precision.

"Sienna Vance," Leo said. He let the lighter snap shut in his palm. The metallic click echoed in the large room. "You are five minutes early."

"Punctuality is the foundation of a solid contract," I replied, stepping further into the room. I let the heavy doors click shut behind me.

Leo laughed. It was a bright, harsh sound that held zero warmth. He swung his legs off the desk and leaned forward, resting his elbows on the scattered paperwork. He studied me like a wolf studies a trapped rabbit.

"My brother usually handles the boring corporate hires," Leo said, his dark eyes trailing over my simple gray blazer and skirt. "But Silas is busy ruining someone's life this morning. So, you get me. I am Leo. And I hate lawyers."

"It is a good thing I am a contractor, then," I said calmly. I remained standing. Taking a seat without being offered one was a sign of disrespect in syndicate culture.

Leo smirked. He picked up one of the antique daggers from his desk and began tracing the sharp edge with his thumb. "Let us skip the resume. I do not care what law school you went to. I care about how you handle a mess. Tell me how you would solve a problem."

"I am listening."

"Let us say a local ghoul faction owes us a debt," Leo began, his eyes locked on mine. "A big debt. They miss a payment. The traditional human law says we take them to court, seize their assets, freeze their accounts. What does syndicate law say?"

It was a test. A lethal one. If I answered like a human lawyer, I would be thrown out of the window. I had to show him I understood their dark world.

"Syndicate law does not recognize human courts," I answered, my voice even. "Taking them to court shows weakness. Freezing accounts gives them time to hide. If a ghoul faction misses a tribute payment, you do not send a summons. You send an enforcer to repossess their territory. You draft a blood writ, claiming their underground tunnels as collateral, and you execute the faction leader to establish the new boundary line."

Leo stopped tracing the blade. His smile faded, replaced by a look of sharp, predatory interest.

"A blood writ," Leo mused. "You know our terminology. You know we do not play by the rules."

"I know you write your own rules," I corrected. "My job is to make sure those rules are legally binding within the supernatural community, so the Supreme Council does not have grounds to intervene."

I decided to take a risk. I focused my vision, tapping into my Thread Binding magic. The world shifted. The colors in the room drained away, replaced by the glowing, invisible strings of connection.

Around Leo, the threads were a chaotic mess. Thick, violent red strings pulsed with his aggressive nature. But beneath the red, I saw massive, unbreakable cables of pure gold tethering him to the room around him. The golden threads of loyalty. They were anchored deeply into the floorboards, connecting him to his family name, to his brother, to the syndicate itself. He was impulsive, but his loyalty to the House of Malphas was absolute.

I blinked, dropping the sight before the magical strain could give me a headache.

"You are interesting, Sienna," Leo said. He tossed the dagger back onto the desk. It landed with a heavy thud. "Most humans walk in here trembling. They smell like fear. You just smell like rain and cold determination."

Before I could respond, the temperature in the massive office plummeted.

It was not a subtle drop. It was an instant, bone chilling freeze that made my breath hitch. The heavy oak doors behind me swung open without a single sound. The hair on the back of my neck stood up straight. Every survival instinct I possessed screamed at me to run.

"Leo," a voice said.

The voice was smooth, dark, and colder than the air in the room. It held no anger, no raised volume, but the sheer authority in that single word made Leo snap to attention. The younger Malphas sat up straight, the chaotic energy instantly draining from his posture.

I slowly turned around.

Silas Malphas stood in the doorway.

The photograph in the file had not done him justice. He was a towering figure wrapped in an immaculate, tailor made black suit. His tie was perfectly knotted. A dark silk pocket square rested in his jacket. His jaw was a harsh slash of sharp angles, and his dark hair was perfectly styled. But it was his eyes that stole the breath from my lungs. They were a mesmerizing, terrifying shade of predatory gold.

He did not look like a mob boss. He looked like a dark god who had dressed up in corporate attire for amusement.

He stepped into the room. His footsteps made zero sound on the hardwood floor. He radiated a dangerous, elegant stillness. He smelled like winter night air, cold iron, and the faint, unmistakable metallic tang of fresh blood.

He ruined a man's life this morning, Leo had said. Silas adjusted his pristine left cuff link as he walked, confirming the statement without a word.

"I was handling the interview, Silas," Leo said. There was a defensive edge to his voice, a younger brother trying to prove his worth.

"You were playing with your knives, Leo," Silas replied. He did not look at his brother. His golden eyes were locked onto me. The weight of his stare was a physical pressure, heavy and suffocating.

Silas walked around me, moving with the fluid grace of an apex predator. He stopped behind the large mahogany desk, standing next to Leo's chair. He looked me up and down. It was not a look of desire. It was an assessment. He was calculating my worth, my threat level, and my breaking point in a fraction of a second.

"Sienna Vance," Silas murmured. The way my name rolled off his tongue sent a dangerous shiver down my spine. "Neutral mediator. Specialist in supernatural binding contracts. Flawless record."

"That is correct," I managed to say. I forced myself to maintain eye contact. Looking away would be a fatal admission of submission.

"My security team ran a deep background check on you," Silas continued, his voice dangerously low. "You have no family. No known syndicate affiliations. You exist in the gray areas of the city. You are a ghost."

"Ghosts are impartial," I countered. "Which makes me the best person to handle your sensitive legal documents."

Silas tilted his head slightly. The golden eyes narrowed. He was looking for a crack in my armor. He was looking for a lie.

I needed to know what I was dealing with. I needed to see his weaknesses, his loyalties, his debts. If I was going to steal the Primal Ledger from this man, I needed to understand the web of magic that controlled him.

I took a slow breath. I focused my mind, pushing past the terror, and activated my Thread Binding sight.

The room shifted. The vibrant colors of the office faded into the familiar gray wash of my magical vision. I looked at Leo first, seeing his chaotic red and loyal gold threads pulsing brightly.

Then, I shifted my gaze to Silas.

I stopped breathing.

My heart slammed against my ribs so hard it bruised. A cold sweat broke out across my skin.

There was nothing.

Every living creature, human or monster, had threads. They had ties of love, strings of debt, thick ropes of deceit, or bright lines of loyalty. It was the fundamental law of the universe. We are all connected by our choices and our bonds.

But Silas Malphas had nothing.

He was a void. A terrifying, empty black hole in the magical spectrum. There was no gold. There was no red. There was no black. He possessed no loyalties, no debts, and no emotional tethers to anything or anyone in the world. He was a creature of absolute, chilling isolation.

To my magical sight, he was not just unreadable. He was an anomaly. A monster that defied the laws of nature.

The shock must have shown on my face. I could not hide the sudden intake of breath, the slight widening of my eyes as I stared into the endless, terrifying void of his existence.

Silas watched my reaction. A slow, dark smirk touched the corner of his mouth. It was a terrifying expression.

He leaned forward, planting both of his large hands on the desk. He held my gaze, his golden eyes flashing with a predatory knowing.

"What do you see, Sienna?" Silas whispered.

He knew. The Beast knew exactly what I was doing.

And I was trapped in his cage.

Author's Note

Well, Sienna has officially stepped into the lion's den! What do you think about Leo's chaotic energy versus Silas's terrifying stillness? And what does it mean that Silas has no threads at all? Is it powerful magic, or is he truly a void? Let me know your theories in the comments! Please like and share if you are enjoying the story so far. See you in the next chapter!

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