Follow
Chapters
Share
Obsessed (Forbidden Desire) Novel Cover

Obsessed (Forbidden Desire)

After her father's death, art restorer Elena Russo discovers his massive gambling debts to a dangerous crime family. Unable to pay, she's forced into an underground auction where she's purchased by none other than Dante Valenti, now Chicago's most feared mafia boss, and the boy she loved twelve years ago, before suddenly being torn away from him.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 1

Elena Russo's black dress felt like a suit of armor as she stood alone in her childhood home, surrounded by empty glasses and half-eaten appetizers, evidence of mourners who had already departed. The silence pressed against her eardrums, almost painful after hours of murmured condolences and stories about her father that painted a man she barely recognized.

The crystal tumbler in her hand caught the afternoon light, sending prisms dancing across the worn hardwood floor as she swirled the amber liquid. Her father's favorite whiskey. She'd never acquired the taste, but today seemed like the perfect time to try.

"To you, Papa," she whispered, lifting the glass toward the mantle where his photograph stood beside the urn containing his ashes.

The burn of alcohol down her throat matched the sting behind her eyes. For the hundredth time that day, Elena wondered how her strong, vibrant father had deteriorated so quickly. Cancer was a thief, stealing him piece by piece until nothing remained but a hollow shell, and now, not even that.

The doorbell's chime shattered her moment of grief.

Probably Mrs. Gianelli from next door, bringing another casserole she wouldn't eat. Elena set down the tumbler and smoothed her dress, mentally preparing another gracious smile for another well-meaning neighbor.

The men at her door were not neighbors.

Three of them, dressed in tailored black suits that couldn't quite disguise the bulges of shoulder holsters. The one in front, salt-and-pepper hair, a face lined by experience rather than age, smiled without warmth.

"Miss Russo?" His voice was courteous, his eyes anything but. "My name is Anthony. I worked with your father."

Elena's hand tightened on the doorknob. Her father had been an accountant for a restaurant supply company, a boring, stable job that had supported them modestly but comfortably since her mother left. These men looked nothing like the colleagues who had attended the funeral earlier.

"My father's funeral was this morning," she said. "Whatever business you had with him."

"That's precisely why we're here." The man's smile never wavered. "May we come in? This conversation is better had in private."

Every instinct told Elena to close the door, but the look in Anthony's eyes suggested that wasn't an option. She stepped back, allowing them into the modest foyer.

The three men swept through her home with the confidence of those accustomed to taking up space. They didn't sit when they reached the living room, instead positioning themselves strategically, one near the window, one by the door, and Anthony directly in front of her.

"Your father had debts, Miss Russo." Anthony didn't waste time with platitudes. "Substantial ones."

Elena crossed her arms. "That's impossible. My father was careful with money. Conservative, even."

Anthony produced a thin leather portfolio from inside his jacket. "Your father had a weakness for games of chance. He was quite skilled, actually, until his luck turned."

The folder opened to reveal photographs that stole Elena's breath: her father at poker tables, roulette wheels, surrounded by men with hard eyes and expensive watches. The timestamps showed dates throughout the last three years since his diagnosis.

"That's not," she began, but the denial died on her lips as Anthony revealed handwritten IOUs bearing her father's distinctive signature.

"He borrowed from my employer, Mr. Castellano." Anthony's voice remained pleasant, as if discussing the weather rather than turning her world upside down. "Victor Castellano is a businessman who believes in collecting returns on his investments."

The name Castellano sent a chill down Elena's spine. Even with her limited knowledge of Chicago's underworld, that name carried weight, the kind that broke kneecaps and sank bodies into Lake Michigan.

"How much?" The question emerged as barely a whisper.

"Three hundred and eighty-seven thousand dollars."

Elena sank onto the sofa, her legs suddenly unable to support her. The amount was astronomical, more than she would earn in five years at the museum.

"There must be some mistake. My father didn't have access to that kind of money."

"He used this house as collateral. And when that wasn't enough..." Anthony's pause held significance. "He offered future considerations."

"What does that mean?" Elena's voice hardened, fear crystallizing into anger.

"It means, Miss Russo, that your father's debt transfers to you. Mr. Castellano was very understanding during your father's illness, out of respect. But now that respect has been paid..." His gesture encompassed the post-funeral disarray.

"You expect me to pay nearly four hundred thousand dollars? That's insane!"

Anthony's expression didn't change, but the temperature in the room seemed to drop. "Mr. Castellano offers options to those in your position."

The man by the window shifted, his jacket opening just enough to reveal the gun holstered beneath. Not a threat, not yet, but a reminder.

"What kind of options?" Elena asked, hating how her voice trembled.

"You have one month to arrange payment. Or you can work off the debt through services rendered to associates of Mr. Castellano."

The implication hung in the air like poison gas. Elena's hands curled into fists.

"And if I go to the police?"

Anthony's smile returned, almost pitying now. "We are the police, Miss Russo. Detective Anthony Ricci." He flashed a badge too quickly for her to verify. "Your father's debts are tied to certain activities that would posthumously damage his reputation. And possibly implicate you as an accessory."

Lies. She knew they were lies, yet the confidence with which he delivered them suggested enough truth to be dangerous. Her father was gone, unable to defend himself or explain what had driven him to such desperate measures.

"One month," Anthony repeated, placing a business card on the coffee table. "We'll be in touch to discuss arrangements."

The three men moved toward the door with the synchronicity of predators who had hunted together for years. At the threshold, Anthony paused.

"Your father spoke of you often, Miss Russo. He was very proud of your work at the museum. It would be a shame if your expertise with valuable artifacts became unavailable to the world."

After they left, Elena stood frozen in her entryway for long minutes, the click of the door latch echoing in her mind. When she finally moved, it was to lunge for the bathroom, emptying the contents of her stomach until nothing remained but bitter acid and fear.

Later, curled on her father's worn leather recliner with his whiskey bottle now significantly emptier, she examined the photographs again. The man in them was her father, yet a version she had never known, animated, reckless, alive in a way she couldn't reconcile with the cautious parent who had raised her.

Her phone buzzed with a text from Lucia, her colleague at the museum, checking if she needed company. Elena ignored it, unable to explain this new reality to someone whose biggest concern was whether their grant proposal would be approved.

Instead, she opened her laptop and typed "Victor Castellano Chicago" into the search bar.

The results painted a picture that turned her blood to ice. Behind the veneer of legitimate businesses, construction companies, waste management, and import-export lie whispers of something darker. News articles referenced investigations that mysteriously disappeared, witnesses who recanted testimonies, and competitors who suffered "accidents."

By midnight, Elena had established three facts:

First, the debt was real, and if anything, Anthony had understated Castellano's reputation for collecting.

Second, there was no legal way she could generate nearly four hundred thousand dollars in thirty days.

And third, her father, a man who had taught her honesty and integrity, had been living a double life that would eventually consume her own.

She fell asleep in the chair, surrounded by the ghosts of her father's choices, dreaming of shadowy auction blocks where men with faceless features bid on her future.

In a penthouse across the city, another glass of whiskey caught the light as Dante Valenti studied a surveillance photo of Elena Russo, her black dress stark against the gray day as she stood by her father's grave. His finger traced the outline of her face on the glossy paper, a gesture both tender and possessive.

"Are we certain Castellano approached her today?" he asked the man standing by the window.

Marco nodded. "Right after the funeral, just as you predicted. They've given her a month."

Dante's smile was cold, predatory, and patient. Twelve years of waiting were about to end.

"Make the arrangements," he said, not looking away from Elena's photograph. "I'll handle the auction myself."

You may also like

Betrayed By Love, Erased From Memory Novel Cover
7.1
I was the Architect who built the digital fortress for the most feared Don in New York. To the world, I was Brendan Wiggins’s silent, elegant Queen. But then my burner phone buzzed under the dinner table. It was a photo from his mistress: a positive pregnancy test. "Your husband is celebrating right now," the caption read. "You are just the furniture." I looked across the table at Brendan. He smiled and held my hand, lying to my face without blinking. He thought he owned me because he saved my life ten years ago. He told her I was just "functional." That I was a barren asset he kept around to look respectable, while she carried his legacy. He thought I would accept the disrespect because I had nowhere else to go. He was wrong. I didn't want to divorce him—you don't divorce a Don. And I didn't want to kill him. That was too easy. I wanted to erase him. I liquidated fifty million dollars from the offshore accounts only I could access. I destroyed the servers I had built. Then, I contacted a black-market chemist for a procedure called "Tabula Rasa." It doesn't kill the body. It wipes the mind clean. A total hard reset of the soul. On his birthday, while he was out celebrating his bastard son, I drank the vial. When he finally came home to find the empty house and the melted wedding ring, he realized the truth. He could burn the world down looking for me, but he would never find his wife. Because the woman who loved him no longer existed.
BROKEN VOWS:- FALLING FOR MY MARRIAGE COUNSELOR  Novel Cover
9.6
"This is wrong. You're supposed to help me fix my marriage" "And yet here you are, squirming under my hands like you're begging me to break it" "You're too close... I can't think straight when you're this close" "Then stop thinking. Just feel." He leans in, his breath brushing against my lips. "Tell me to stop Lillian-and I will. But if you don't, I'm going to kiss and claim your body like I've imagined a thousand times on that chair" *~*~*~*~*~*~*~* When Lillian Calloway walks into marriage counseling, she's desperate-not just to save her crumbling relationship with her emotionally distant husband, but to hold together the image of a perfect life. Then she meets Dr Ronan Carter. Calm, devastatingly handsome and far too familiar for her comfort. Each session unravels more than just the crack in her marriage-it exposes desires she's locked away for years. Ronan makes her feel alive. And when the professional lines begin to blur, Lillian finds herself stepping on the edge of something forbidden. He's her counselor. She's his client. Falling for each other will cost them everything. But what if the biggest lie was the marriage they were trying to save?
Captured By The Obsessive Billionaire King Novel Cover
7.8
Helen was finally brought back to the luxurious Gallagher estate as their long-lost blood relative. But her new family didn't welcome her; they looked at her with undisguised disgust. The matriarch mocked her stench of poverty, while her step-sister Candice treated her like a feral animal. The patriarch, Fredy—who had built his empire by betraying Helen's mother—tried to break her spirit. He blackmailed Helen into attending a high-society gala by threatening to cut off her grandmother's medical funds. At the gala, Candice squeezed into a diamond-encrusted gown, desperate to seduce the guest of honor, Damian Montgomery. Damian was the most powerful man in New York, and he was currently tearing the city apart looking for a mysterious woman named Jane. Overhearing this, a sick, greedy smile spread across Candice's face. She planned to impersonate Jane to claim Damian's wealth and completely crush Helen under her heel. "Hide in the corner tonight. Don't you dare try to speak to anyone important!" They all thought Helen was just a helpless, uncultured country girl they could easily manipulate and step on to secure their stolen legacy. What they didn't know was that Helen was the real Jane. She was the lethal shadow who had saved Damian in the woods, shattered his grip, and robbed his highly guarded vault just the night before. Helen calmly adjusted her simple black dress and stepped into the ballroom, ready to tear their stolen world apart.
Discarded Wife: The Shadow Strategist Returns Novel Cover
9.5
I stood in the center of the ballroom, watching my husband accept credit for the massacre I had meticulously planned. To the underworld, Craig Snyder was the King, a strategic genius who had crippled the Russian mafia. To me, he was the man who had just re-gifted my anniversary present—a Patek Philippe watch—to match the diamond bracelet dangling from his mistress’s wrist. The Senator’s daughter, Chanel, laughed at a joke only he could hear, wearing a red dress and a look of naive adoration that used to be mine. When I confronted him, expecting an apology, Craig didn't just dismiss me. He slapped me across the face in front of the city's elite, the sound echoing like a gunshot. He yanked the wedding ring off my finger, drawing blood, and placed it into Chanel’s palm, calling me a hysterical, barren relic. Later, I found the forged documents. He had signed my name to transfer every asset we built together into his sole possession, leaving me with nothing but a hush-money check. He thought I was just a scorned wife. He forgot that I was the architect of his empire. So, I drove my car off a bridge. I let the world believe I was dead. I let him mourn the woman he destroyed while I watched from the shadows, erasing his existence from my accounts. Six months later, at the Global Crime Summit, Craig stood up with a diamond ring, ready to beg my memory for forgiveness. But the doors opened, and I didn't walk in alone. I walked onto the stage holding the hand of his deadliest rival, Felix Tyson. I wasn't there to take him back. I was there to take his kingdom.
Fated to the don Novel Cover
7.9
Alicia needed money. Three days before eviction, she walked into an underground auction believing she would walk out free. Instead, she was sold to the most powerful man in the city. Dmitri Hunt is a mafia don feared by humans and an Alpha feared by wolves. He claims her, controls her, and hides secrets that could destroy her life. Alicia must choose between running from her fate or standing beside the man who may have planned everything from the start...
His Mafia Queen, My Substitute Heart Novel Cover
7.1
My perfect marriage to Don Dante Moretti, the most powerful man in the New York mob, ended the moment my father died. I was twenty-four, pregnant with his heir, and I believed I was his queen. But for two days, while I planned a funeral alone, my husband was unreachable. Then a friend sent me a photo. Dante in London, his hand tangled in the hair of the woman beside him. It was my cousin, Valentina. He came home with lies about a dead phone and a difficult summit. That night, I found his private journal, and my world disintegrated. He had married me because I had "Valentina’s eyes." I was a substitute. Our unborn child wasn't a product of love. It was a project. A girl he planned to name Elena, after Valentina, calling her a "perfect, tiny piece of the woman I can never truly possess." I wasn't his wife. I was a stand-in. The love I felt for him didn't just die. It was murdered. The next morning, I slid a folder across the kitchen island. "Donation forms," I said. He didn't even look before scrawling his signature on what were actually our finalized divorce papers. His arrogance was my weapon. As he slept beside me that night, smelling of lies and my cousin, I made an appointment at a private clinic. He wanted a legacy? I would give him nothing.