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Inked by the Mafia King Novel Cover

Inked by the Mafia King

Sloane Avery built her life on control — a rising tattoo artist in Austin, a stable boyfriend, a five-year plan pinned to her apartment wall. Then she catches her boyfriend cheating at their anniversary dinner, and the night spirals into the orbit of Rhett Caraveo — inked, magnetic, and the heir to a cartel empire she didn't know existed. Rhett doesn't ask permission. He doesn't negotiate. When he decides Sloane belongs in his world, he simply rearranges reality until she has nowhere else to go. But Sloane isn't the kind of woman who breaks — she's the kind who bends the cage until it fits her shape. As her ex-boyfriend becomes dangerously desperate to win her back and a rival family threatens everything Rhett has built, Sloane discovers that the most dangerous man in Texas has one weakness: her. The question isn't whether she'll survive his world. It's whether she'll want to leave it.
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Chapter 1

The two mezcal cocktails felt heavier than they should have as I made my way through the crowded VIP section of Neon, Austin's newest rooftop bar. The bass from the DJ booth below vibrated through the glass floor panels, and the city lights stretched out like scattered diamonds beyond the floor-to-ceiling windows. Three years together. Derek had insisted on celebrating here, said it was 'our place' now, even though we'd only been here once before.

I'd spent forty minutes getting ready—the black slip dress he'd bought me for my birthday, the one that made my tattoos look like deliberate art instead of rebellious mistakes. My hair fell in loose waves past my shoulders, and I'd even worn the delicate gold necklace his mother had given me last Christmas. Anniversary effort.

The narrow hallway leading to the private booths was dimly lit, purple neon strips casting everything in an otherworldly glow. I could hear Derek's laugh echoing from around the corner—that easy, confident sound that had first drawn me to him at a gallery opening two years ago. He was probably charming the waitress again, or showing off his new promotion to whoever would listen.

I rounded the corner, cocktails balanced carefully in my hands, ready to surprise him with his favorite drink and the news that I'd finally gotten the call about the gallery space downtown. The words were already forming on my lips when I saw them.

Derek's hand was sliding up a woman's thigh. Her dress—neon pink, barely there, the kind that screamed 'look at me'—had ridden up as she pressed against him in the booth. His mouth was on her neck, and she was making soft sounds that cut through the music like broken glass.

That's my boyfriend's hand. And that's not my body.

The thought came with startling clarity, clinical and detached. I should have been screaming. Should have thrown the drinks. Should have done something dramatic and satisfying that would make a good story later.

Instead, I felt something inside me go perfectly, crystalline still. Like water turning to ice in an instant, everything sharp and clear and cold.

I set the cocktails down on a small table against the wall with deliberate care, the glasses making soft clinks against the marble surface. The sound seemed impossibly loud in my ears. My hands weren't shaking. That surprised me.

I turned to leave, my heels clicking against the polished concrete floor, each step measured and precise. Get out. Get to the elevator. Process this somewhere private, somewhere I could fall apart without an audience.

I made it exactly three steps before I collided with a wall of black silk and warm skin.

My palms hit his chest as I stumbled backward, and I found myself looking up into dark eyes that seemed to catch and hold the neon light. He was tall—taller than Derek—with black hair that looked like he'd run his fingers through it and sharp features that belonged in old paintings of dangerous men. His shirt was unbuttoned just enough to reveal the edge of intricate tattoos crawling up from his chest to his throat, black ink that seemed to move in the shifting light.

Sandalwood and something darker—leather, maybe smoke—surrounded me like a physical presence.

"Leaving so soon?" His voice was low, with just a hint of an accent that made the words sound like a challenge rather than a question. He wasn't looking at me with sympathy or concern. He was looking at me like I was a puzzle he was already three moves ahead of solving.

I tried to step around him, but he didn't move. The hallway was narrow, barely wide enough for two people, and he seemed to take up all the available space without even trying. His presence was overwhelming—not aggressive, exactly, but absolutely immovable.

"Excuse me," I said, my voice steadier than I felt.

His lips curved into something that wasn't quite a smile. "No."

The simple refusal hit me like a slap. I opened my mouth to argue, to demand he move, when Derek's voice cut through the tension.

"Babe! Sloane, wait—"

I turned to see him stumbling out of the booth, his shirt half-unbuttoned, hair messed up, lipstick—not my shade—smeared across his collar. The woman was trying to smooth down her dress, her face flushed with embarrassment and something that might have been guilt.

"It's not what it looks like," Derek said, the words tumbling out in a rush. "She was just—we were just talking, and she spilled her drink, and I was helping her—"

The explanation was so pathetically cliché that I almost laughed. Almost.

But before I could say anything, the man behind me spoke.

"This one yours?" He still wasn't looking at Derek. His eyes stayed fixed on mine, dark and unreadable, like he was asking me a question that had nothing to do with Derek at all.

"Not anymore," I heard myself say. The words came out steady and final, surprising us both.

Something shifted in the stranger's expression—approval, maybe, or recognition. He finally turned to look at Derek, and his almost-smile disappeared entirely.

"Then you should leave. Now."

It wasn't a suggestion. Derek started to puff up, probably about to launch into his usual routine about respect and boundaries, when two men in dark suits appeared behind the stranger. They didn't say anything, didn't move threateningly, but something about their stillness made the air feel dangerous.

Derek's face went pale. He looked between the stranger and his backup, then at me, then back again. Whatever he saw there made him take a step backward.

"Sloane, we need to talk about this," he said, but his voice had lost all its earlier confidence. "This isn't—I mean, we can work this out."

"No," I said, borrowing the stranger's simple finality. "We really can't."

Derek looked like he wanted to argue, but another glance at the men behind us changed his mind. He grabbed his jacket from the booth and left without another word, the woman in pink trailing behind him like a guilty afterthought.

The hallway fell silent except for the distant thrum of music and my own heartbeat, which seemed unreasonably loud.

"I don't need a savior," I said to the stranger, because I needed to say something, and that seemed important to establish.

He stepped closer, close enough that I had to tilt my head back to meet his eyes. Close enough that his sandalwood scent wrapped around me like smoke.

"Good," he said, his voice dropping to something just above a whisper. "Because I'm not offering to save you, bella. I'm offering something much worse."

He reached into his jacket and pulled out a black card, matte finish, expensive-looking. No logo, no name, just a phone number in simple silver text. He pressed it into my palm, his fingers warm against mine for just a moment.

Then he was gone, walking back toward the VIP section with his silent companions, leaving me standing alone in the purple-lit hallway with a business card that felt like a loaded gun and the lingering scent of sandalwood that made my pulse race in ways I didn't want to examine.

I looked down at the card, then back toward where he'd disappeared. The smart thing would be to throw it away. Walk out of here, go home, eat ice cream, and start the process of rebuilding my life without Derek.

Instead, I slipped the card into my purse and headed for the elevator, my heart beating out a rhythm that sounded suspiciously like trouble.

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