
Nightfall - A Mafia Romance
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A mafia billionaire single dad romance.
I just discovered the don's darkest secret. Wait 'til he finds out mine...
The Bratva don and I made a deal:
Spare my father. Take me instead.
But Dmitry Tsezar wasn't satisfied with my body.
He wanted everything else, too.
My obedience. My submission.
My heart. My soul.
And when that still wasn't enough, he came to take my life.
But then I found something.
Something twisted. Something wrong.
Something hidden in a locked room of his mansion, in a wing he warned me never, ever to wander near.
When I opened the door and discovered Dmitry's secret...
Everything changed forever.
Nightfall - A Mafia Romance Chapter 1
DMITRY
T
he footage is grainy. Dots and whirls of gray and white flutter around the screen as though I'm seeing the scene through a snowstorm.
Still, it isn't enough to disguise his face.
"It's Sevastian," someone says.
I don't respond. I already know. Plus, I don't want to look as surprised as I feel.
Sevastian Nikitin has been one of my closest friends since I was a kid. We practically grew up together. The Bratva is a family, but within that family, I considered Sevastian a brother.
And now, I'm watching him spill his guts to the FBI.
"Who knows what he told them," someone whispers. "We could all be fucked."
I glance down at the stack of papers on my desk-pictures, dates, and locations. All of it proof of Sevastian's meetings with federal agents.
When I first got word that he might be a rat, I didn't want to believe it. So, I had him tailed. For weeks, he was monitored and followed, and I hoped it would turn out to be nothing more than a Bratva rumor. Maybe even a case of jealousy. Another member wishing they had Sevastian's close connection to the boss.
But now I know the truth.
"We can't let this stand."
I look over my shoulder and see Rurik Zaytsev standing behind me. He's leaning back against the wall, arms crossed over his chest. His face is half hidden in shadow, but he stands tall when he sees me looking.
Next to Sevastian, Rurik is my second most trusted lieutenant. Though, with Sevastian's betrayal still fresh, I wonder whether I can truly trust anyone.
"Obviously," I say, sharp enough that the rest of the men in the room straighten their spines. "Do I strike any of you as a forgiving man?"
The question is rhetorical, but a few men shake their heads.
"A good leader is merciless to those who betray him and his family. You're my family and Sevastian has betrayed us all. So, he must die."
There's no room for emotions in the Bratva, especially for the leader. There are relationships, but they're founded on trust. When that trust is broken, the relationship breaks with it. If I want my men to respect me, I have no choice but to kill Sevastian.
I can't give him an opportunity to defend himself-because there is no defense. There is nothing he could say that would excuse the fact that he met with federal agents on numerous occasions without once telling me.
My father before me, and my grandfather before him, led the Tsezar Bratva with an iron fist. Ruthless. Unforgiving. They had no time for regret or disappointment. There was only anger and a sense of satisfaction when justice was dealt.
I intend to lead in the same way.
I pause the video, my office plunging into silence except for the nervous breathing of my men.
I point to Rurik. "Send for Sevastian."
Rurik answers with a sharp nod. "Should I tell him to meet you at headquarters?"
I think on it for a moment and shake my head. "My house."
I don't often conduct business from my home, especially when it will require a cleanup, but Sevastian will be nervous if I tell him to meet me at my office. He may guess I know something and dive into the rat's nest prepared for him by the FBI. I have to make him believe things are just as they should be. As they always have been.
"Actually," I say as Rurik is leaving. "Take two men with you and pick him up. If he asks any questions, tell him I told you it's an emergency. I don't want to give him the chance to run."
Rurik grabs two other lieutenants and the rest of the room follows them out, leaving me behind with the paused video showing Sevastian taking an envelope from the undercover agent he met at the restaurant.
I study the screen for another moment, assuring myself that the blurry man there is really Sevastian. The camera work is sloppy, but I see the tattoo peeking out from the collar of his sweater as he reaches across the table. It's the brown bear he had tattooed on his back the day he turned eighteen. A symbol of his love and loyalty for our family. Our organization. Our purpose.
A symbol that, in the end, meant nothing to him at all.
I turn off the television and leave. I have to be at the house when Sevastian arrives, so there is no time to linger.
SEVASTIAN HAS ALWAYS HAD pitch-black hair. As a child, even into his teen years, his face peeked out from under the mop like a friendly ghost, smiling and laughing.
While I followed the example set for me by my father and grandfather, greeting people with a stoic nod and burying my laughter behind a clenched jaw, Sevastian was jovial. He pulled pranks on maids, told dirty jokes loud enough for my grandmother to hear, and followed me blindly through every bad decision I ever made.
When I see Sevastian walking up my stone driveway, flanked on either side by lieutenants, it's that pale, smiling boy I see. Not a traitor-my friend.
Weakness. That's what my father would call this emotion.
Sevastian turned his back on our family. He considered himself stronger alone, better without the Bratva at his side. So now, he has to know exactly what it would feel like to be on his own.
There can be no mercy, no holding back.
Starting now, Sevastian is not my friend or my brother. He is my enemy, and I would do well to remember that.
By the time the front door opens, I'm sitting down in an armchair in the den, one leg crossed over the other, hands folded in my lap. I'm at ease. Visibly, at least.
Sevastian appears in the doorway first. "Dmitry."
The lieutenants fall away beside him, hanging back, and I see Sevastian glance around. His brow furrows, and I know he is suspicious. As he should be. Sevastian has always been a smart man, and I have no intention of fooling him tonight. Surely, he has to suspect what is coming for him.
"Sevastian," I say warmly, beckoning him into the sitting room. "Come, sit."
He hesitates. "I was told there's some kind of emergency?"
"Did they say that?" I ask, eyebrow raised, looking around him to where my lieutenants are lurking in the shadows of the entryway. They won't interrupt the proceedings unless they have to. Unless Sevastian puts up more of a fight than I expect. "Very dramatic. It's hardly an emergency."
"Okay," he says, his tone somewhere between a statement and a question. "So, what's up?"
I gesture for him to sit on the sofa next to me. "You missed our meeting tonight."
Sevastian's forehead wrinkles as he sits. "I didn't know there was a meeting."
"I sent a message to everyone in the Bratva. Did you not get one?"
He pulls out his phone and scrolls through it. "No. Strange. This piece of shit phone is always acting up on me."
He scrolls to the top and then looks through his messages a second time. I wonder if he's worried about any messages he may have missed from the FBI. Though, if he's smart, he'll have a second phone to communicate with them. He won't use the same phone he uses for Bratva work. It's too big of a risk.
"It wasn't anything too important," I say, waving my hand. "I just wanted to call you in here and make sure you were still alive. It's been a long time since we've hung out the way we used to."
"It has," he agrees. Sevastian runs a hand through his spiked black hair, the gelled strands returning to their previous spikiness the moment his hand moves past them. "I've let myself get a little busy."
"I'm not giving you too much work, am I?" I ask, leaning in.
Sevastian swallows. "No, no. Anything for the Bratva, you know that."
He smiles, but his eyes are wide and alert. Everything about his body language tells me he's uncomfortable. Probably because I'm being kind to him. Sevastian knows me well enough to know that, if I'm being kind, there is an ulterior motive.
He plants his palms on his knees and sits forward on the couch. "So, you just brought me here to check up on me? I'm flattered to hear you care so much about me."
"I care about those who care about me," I say, reaching out and clapping a hand on his shoulder. "And I'm loyal to those who are loyal to me."
I see him process the words, and his smile slips. Sevastian goes pale, and he swallows a lump in his throat before taking a deep breath. "Why am I here, Dmitry?"
"Because I sent for you," I say simply.
Continue Reading
Nightfall - A Mafia Romance of Contents
Chapter 1 Ch. 1Chapter 2 Ch. 2Chapter 3 Ch. 3Chapter 4 Ch. 4Chapter 5 Ch. 5Chapter 6 Ch. 6
Chapter 7 Ch. 7
Chapter 8 Ch. 8
Chapter 9 Ch. 9
Chapter 10 Ch. 10
Chapter 11 Ch. 11
All Chapters all
New Release Novels

8.2
Ten years as childhood friends and three as husband and wife ended in her husband's betrayal, and her brothers' indifference. Diagnosed with mid-stage stomach cancer, Roselyn saw the truth of her life.
She walked away from everything, rising from an overlooked office worker to a leading figure in the tech world.
She outplayed her husband into signing divorce papers. When they met again, he begged, "I was wrong... take me back. I'd give you my stomach if I could."
Her once arrogant brothers pleaded too, but she felt nothing. After all, love that arrived too late meant nothing to her now-she simply didn't care anymore.
As they stood desperate, a man stepped forward and wrapped her in his arms. "Why waste time on them? Look at me instead."

8.1
Elinor's frail daughter, Cece, died in a sterile hospital room while waiting for her father to take her to Disney World.
But her billionaire husband, Derick, never showed up. At the exact moment Cece's heart monitor flatlined, the hospital TV broadcasted Derick affectionately holding the hand of his mistress and he has booked a clearance of the entire Disneyland to celebrate mistress's daughter's birthday!.
When Elinor confronted Derick with their daughter's ashes, he sneered and accused her of hiding the child just to get his attention. Elinor's heart was torn to shreds. How could a father be so blind and ruthless? Did Kamryn use his power to steal the very kidney that belonged to Cece? Why did her innocent baby have to die for their sick affair?
The suffocating grief inside Elinor finally crystallized into a sharp blade. She wiped the blood from her lips, canceled the simple divorce, and began her ruthless revenge.

9.1
Waking up with a cold, scaly hand wrapped around my throat wasn't the worst part.
The worst part was realizing I'd transmigrated into the body of Terra Mason—the most despised woman in the entire Enclave. She drugged high-level beast-men and forced them into life-binding bio-contracts. She locked an aquatic warrior in a dry basement until his organs failed. She treated the most lethal males in the city like broken toys.
Zev, the Level 6 serpent who's currently choking me, would rather blow up his own heart than spend another day as my slave. His affection metric? Negative ninety. His trust? Zero.
Then my system activates: the Kore AI. It gives me exactly 500 credits, a medical nano-gel, and a recipe for neutralizing the radioactive poison in mutant meat. Real food. In this world, that's worth more than gold.
I save Rhys, the dying aquatic male everyone left for dead. I season a slab of purple mutant steak until Sam, a battle-scarred grizzly shifter, groans at the taste—and his trust points finally tick above zero. When my backstabbing ex-best friend tries to steal my males and destroy me, I don't scream or throw a tantrum like the old Terra. I dismantle her with the truth.
But earning their trust means more than grilling meat. A scorpion swarm ambushes us at midnight. Sam throws himself between me and a stinger the size of my arm. As he stands over the corpse, fur receding from his claws, he stares at me and whispers, "You were testing me."
Yes. I was. Because in this world, the weak don't survive. And I refuse to be weak again.
Four beast-men. Four contracts. One system. And a whole lot of steak. Let this dystopian wasteland know—I'm not the monster they remember. I'm worse. I'm the one who's going to feed them until they'd kill for me.

9.1
He postponed putting my name on the deed 18 times.
Each time, his mentee Ciera had an “emergency.” Each time, he ran to her.
I watched him give her his prized Montblanc pen—the one he wouldn’t even let me borrow. I saw her post their late nights on Instagram. I ate anniversary dinners alone while he “mentored” her.
Then he bought me a necklace—identical to the one she just flaunted online.
That was when I stopped feeling anything.
I didn’t cry. I didn’t fight. I simply packed two suitcases, resigned from our firm, and booked a one-way ticket to London.
He thinks I’m coming back in a week.
He has no idea I’m gone for good.
Nineteen broken promises. One silent goodbye. And a new life waiting across the ocean.

7.2
Stepping out of the women's correctional center, Karli took her first breath of freedom in three years.
But the luxury SUV waiting for her didn't bring her home. Instead, her adoptive parents tossed a prenuptial agreement onto her lap.
They demanded she marry a violently unhinged, disfigured man so their company could secure a massive commercial deal.
When she refused, her adoptive mother slapped her hard across the face.
The blow brought back the suffocating nightmare from three years ago—how they had drugged her, framed her for a crime she didn't commit, and sent her to prison just so her stepsister could steal her fiancé.
Now, to break her again, her adoptive father ordered his bodyguards to drag her into the estate's freezing, pitch-black basement.
"You can rot in the dark without food or water until you sign that paper!"
Sitting on the damp cement, bleeding and shivering, a white-hot fury burned away Karli's panic.
They had stolen her youth, her reputation, and her grandfather's inheritance. She would rather die than be their sacrificial lamb again.
She smashed the basement window with a hammer, dragged her bleeding body through the shattered glass, and sprinted blindly into the stormy night.
Under the flickering neon sign of a convenience store, she grabbed the sleeve of a terrifyingly cold stranger.
"Are you single? Marry me right now."
She just needed a legal marriage to escape her family, entirely unaware she had just proposed to the most ruthless billionaire in Chicago.

7.9
Cora Foster was a brilliant archaeologist, but a jagged burn scar across her face made the world treat her like a contagious monster.
During an elite excavation of a Gilded Age crypt, touching an ancient artifact triggered a terrifying memory. She remembered being Seraphina Beaumont, a socialite brutally buried alive by her vain, cruel sister, Isolde.
When the team pried open the crypt's pristine mahogany casket, they cheered, believing the mummified corpse inside was Seraphina. But Cora recognized the onyx hairpin and the angular jawline. It was Isolde. The sister who had stolen her life, mocked her agony, and left her to suffocate in the dark. Her colleagues scoffed at her forensic proof, dismissing her as a scarred, delusional liability.
Worse, the ruthless billionaire funding the expedition, Julian Montgomery, was the spitting image of Alistair—the man Seraphina had deeply loved. Why was Julian staring at her ruined face with such intense, inexplicable recognition? And why did Isolde take Seraphina's most precious silver ring to the grave?
Driven by a century of agonizing grief, Cora secretly pried the tarnished ring from the mummy's stiff, dead fingers and dropped it into her pocket.
"What are you looking at, Foster?"
Julian's deep voice vibrated inches from her ear, his cold, predatory eyes locked directly onto her half-open pocket.








![[Dubbed Version]Hiss Beyond the Door](https://v.melolo.com/b1265344voduse1318177724/f17ae2d85145403706104654381/8bQOzW0BhLYA.webp!15491.webp!15491.webp)


