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Escaping The Cheater For My Hitman Stepbrother Novel Cover

Escaping The Cheater For My Hitman Stepbrother

A beer bottle to the head wakes Kira Thorne up from her pathetic past life, where she died paying off her fiancé’s gambling debts. Seeing Julian Mercer fake amnesia on the bar floor, Kira refuses to be his victim again. She throws away his cheap ring and adopts the silent, scarred mechanic, Dante Russo, to help run her late father’s auto shop. She thought Dante was just a brooding stray, until he tears apart Julian's hired thugs with a bloody wrench. Dante hides a lethal secret—he is the underworld’s most feared hitman. As Julian plots to sell Kira to the mafia with Chloe Ashford's help, Dante locks Kira in his bloody embrace, ready to burn the entire city to ashes just to keep her safe.
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Chapter 2

The shop had a second floor nobody talked about. A narrow hallway with three doors — my bedroom, a bathroom with a toilet that ran all night, and a storage closet packed with blown gaskets and mouse droppings.

I gave Dante the closet.

He didn't complain. He walked in, kicked a box of spark plugs against the wall, and tossed his canvas bag onto the bare mattress Eddie had dragged up from the basement. The bag was army surplus, faded olive green, held together with duct tape at one strap. It landed with a heavy thud — heavier than clothes would account for.

I didn't ask.

He didn't offer.

That was Sunday night. By Monday afternoon, Julian showed up.

I heard him before I saw him — boots on the metal staircase, that particular rhythm he had, two quick steps then a pause, like he was rehearsing his entrance. I was sitting on my bed with the shop's ledger open across my knees, circling numbers in red ink that made my stomach hurt.

The knock came soft. Gentle. The knock of a man who'd practiced being gentle the way other people practiced card tricks.

"Kira? Baby, open up. I brought you something."

I closed the ledger.

"Go away, Julian."

"Come on. Just let me explain. Five minutes."

Through the gap under the door, I could see his shadow shifting weight from foot to foot. And something else — a smear of yellow. Flowers.

I opened the door three inches, chain still on.

Julian stood in the hallway holding a bunch of daisies wrapped in gas station cellophane. Half the petals were brown at the edges. The discount sticker was still on the plastic.

He smiled. That smile — wide, boyish, the one that used to make me forget he'd come home at 4 a.m. smelling like someone else's perfume.

"See? Daisies. Your favorite."

"My favorite is peonies."

The smile didn't crack. "Right. Peonies. I knew that. These reminded me of you, though. Bright and —"

"Dying?"

"Kira." He pressed his palm flat against the door. "I messed up. I know I messed up. But you and me, we've got something real. You know that."

I looked at the flowers. At his hand on my door. At the faint scratch marks on his knuckles that hadn't been there yesterday.

"Who'd you hit, Julian?"

"What?"

"Your knuckles."

He pulled his hand back and shoved it in his jacket pocket. "That's nothing. I scraped it on my car door."

Behind him, at the far end of the hallway, a shadow filled the closet doorway.

Dante leaned against the frame, arms folded. He didn't speak. He didn't need to. His forearms were bare — roped with muscle, crossed with pale scars that looked like they'd been earned, not given. He watched Julian the way a dog watches a rat near its food bowl.

Julian noticed. His head turned, and his whole body stiffened.

"Who the fuck is that?"

"New shop hand," I said.

"Since when do shop hands live upstairs?"

"Since I said so."

Julian's eyes bounced between me and Dante. Something ugly moved behind his expression — not jealousy, exactly. Possession. The difference mattered.

"Kira, we need to talk. Alone."

"We're done talking."

He pushed the door. The chain caught, and the frame groaned. I grabbed the first heavy thing within reach — the old tire I kept as a doorstop, twenty pounds of bald rubber — and shoved it through the gap.

It landed square on his foot.

Julian yelped and stumbled backward, the daisies scattering across the hallway floor. He grabbed his foot, hopping, face twisted.

"What the — are you insane?"

"You pushed my door, Julian."

"I barely touched it!"

Dante unfolded his arms. He didn't step forward. He just shifted his weight, and suddenly his shoulders filled the width of the hallway. Julian would have to go through him to get back to my door.

Julian straightened up, wincing. He looked at Dante. Dante looked back. Neither blinked.

"This is between me and her," Julian said.

Dante said nothing. His arm rose slowly and braced against the doorframe of the closet — a wall of scarred skin and quiet threat that sealed the corridor like a gate.

Julian's jaw worked. He glanced at me through the gap in my door.

"Fine. Keep your guard dog. But this isn't over."

I bent down, picked up the wilted daisies from the floor, and held them where he could see. Then I walked to the corner of my room where the trash bin sat — the one I used for oil-soaked rags, black and slick at the bottom.

I dropped the flowers in. They sank into the dark grease without a sound.

Julian's face went white, then red.

"You know what, Kira? You always —"

"One more thing." I kept my voice flat. "That place on Ridgeback and Fourth. The one below the noodle shop. You still go there on Thursdays?"

His mouth stopped moving. His right eye twitched — a sharp, involuntary spasm at the outer corner.

I knew that address from a life he didn't remember. The underground card room where he'd lost six thousand dollars in a single night and come home with a broken rib he blamed on a mugging. In this life, I shouldn't have known about it. He knew that.

"How did you —"

"Goodnight, Julian."

I shut the door. The chain rattled into place.

His breathing was loud on the other side. Then his footsteps — fast, uneven, favoring the bruised foot — retreating down the stairs.

I pressed my forehead against the door and closed my eyes.

The hallway went quiet. After a moment, I heard Dante's door creak shut.

---

Midnight again. The shop below was silent. The space heater still didn't work, and I lay under two blankets with the electric stun baton on the mattress beside my hip. Old habit. New life, old habit.

Sleep wouldn't come. The ledger numbers kept circling behind my eyelids — rent due in nine days, parts supplier threatening to cut us off, Eddie's paycheck already two weeks late.

Then I heard it.

A thin metallic scraping. Faint. Coming from just outside my door.

Not footsteps. Not knocking. A slow, grinding whisper of metal on stone.

My hand found the stun baton. I counted to three, then ripped the door open and thrust the baton forward, thumb on the trigger.

Dante sat on the hallway floor, his back against the wall beside my door. His legs stretched across the narrow corridor. In his lap, he held a whetstone. In his right hand, a black military knife — short blade, no shine, the kind designed to be used and not displayed.

He didn't flinch at the baton in his face. He just tilted the blade, and the edge caught the light from the stairwell below.

In that thin ribbon of reflection, I saw movement. A figure at the bottom of the stairs — hunched, retreating fast, one foot dragging. Julian's silhouette disappeared through the shop's side door, and the night swallowed him.

My pulse hammered. I lowered the baton.

"How long have you been sitting here?"

Dante drew the stone along the blade one more time. The sound cut through the silence like a whispered warning.

"Long enough," he said.

He didn't look up. His thumb tested the edge, and a bead of blood welled on the pad without him reacting.

I stared at the empty stairwell. At the dark where Julian had been.

"He had a key," Dante said. "Tried the lock. Didn't make it past the landing."

The air in the hallway felt thin. I gripped the doorframe.

"You stopped him?"

Dante folded the knife and set it on his knee. For the first time since he'd arrived, something shifted in his expression — not softness, not warmth, but a crack in the stone. A recognition.

"Go back to sleep, Kira."

He picked up the whetstone and resumed sharpening, his shoulders settling against the wall like he planned to stay there until morning.

I stepped back into my room and closed the door.

But I didn't lock it.

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