
Protected By The Enforcer: My Ex-Husband's Regret
The rejection letter from the private security school arrived on a Tuesday. It stated clearly that the single slot allocated to my son, Danny, had been filled by another boy.
My husband, a high-ranking Capo, had signed away our son’s protection to make room for his mistress’s bastard.
He sneered at me, calling Danny "soft," and sent him to an unguarded cabin in the north to toughen up.
Three days later, the Russians took him.
When the courier arrived, there was no ransom demand. Just a package containing a shred of blue cotton with a green T-Rex, soaked in black, stiff blood.
Tom didn't shed a tear. He poured a scotch, stepped over me as I wept on the floor, and blamed me for coddling the boy.
Overwhelmed by the silence of a house that would never hear my son's laughter again, I swallowed a bottle of sleeping pills to escape the pain.
But the darkness didn't last.
I woke up gasping, my heart hammering against my ribs. Sunlight hit my face.
"Mommy?"
Danny stood in the doorway, wearing his dinosaur pajamas, whole and alive.
I looked at the calendar. It was May 15th. The day the letter arrived.
The grief in my chest calcified into cold rage.
I knew about the skimming. I knew about the fake widow status. I knew exactly how to bury my husband.
I picked up the phone and dialed the one number no wife was ever supposed to call directly—the Enforcer.
"I have evidence of treason," I said. "And I'm bringing the proof."
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Chapter 5
The drive to the Estate took forty minutes.
Forty minutes of suffocating silence.
Forty minutes of rehearsing the precise sequence of words that would either save our lives or get us executed before sunset.
The Estate wasn't just a home; it was a fortress. High stone walls loomed over the road, fortified by iron gates and men with assault rifles who blended into the shadows like predators.
I eased my battered sedan up to the main checkpoint.
A guard stepped out, his face a mask of granite behind dark sunglasses.
He rapped his knuckles against my window.
I rolled it down, the glass sliding into the door with a grind.
"Turn around," he commanded, his tone flat. "Private property."
"My name is Sarah Miller," I stated, forcing my hands to remain visible and steady on the steering wheel. "I am here to see Consigliere Ramirez."
"Do you have an appointment?"
"I have a crime to report," I said, my voice cutting through the humid air. "A violation of the Code."
The guard paused.
He looked past me to Danny in the back seat, then returned his gaze to mine, searching for a crack in my resolve.
"Wait here."
He retreated to the guard booth and snatched up a phone.
Minutes ticked by, agonizingly slow.
My palms grew slick against the worn leather of the wheel.
If Tom had gotten to them first—if he had already spun a narrative about his unstable, hysterical wife—they wouldn't open the gate. They would drag me out of the car and deliver me back to him like a runaway pet.
Then, the gears ground to life. The gate began to open.
The guard stepped aside and waved me through.
I drove up the long, winding driveway, flanked by manicured hedges that likely cost more to maintain than my entire life was worth.
I brought the car to a halt in front of the main house.
Two men in dark suits were waiting at the entrance.
One of them I recognized immediately.
Ramirez.
He was older than Tom, distinguished by silver hair and eyes that looked like they had witnessed the apocalypse and found it tedious.
He made no move to open my door.
I stepped out, smoothing my clothes, then opened the back door for Danny.
I gripped Danny’s hand tightly, anchoring us both.
"Mrs. Barnes," Ramirez greeted. His voice was dry, like rustling parchment.
"Miller," I corrected sharply. "I am reclaiming my name."
Ramirez raised a single, skeptical eyebrow. "You said on the phone you had evidence of treason."
"I do."
"This is a serious accusation. If you are wasting my time..."
"Tom is skimming from the construction unions," I interrupted, refusing to let him intimidate me. "He is using the money to support a woman named Crystal Spencer, who has been claiming benefits from the Widow’s Fund for six years. Her husband didn't die in service. He died of an overdose in a motel in Jersey."
Ramirez went unnaturally still.
The soldiers behind him shifted their weight.
Stealing from the Boss was a crime.
But stealing from the Widow’s Fund? That was a sin. It was a violation of the sacred trust that kept the soldiers loyal to the hierarchy.
"And," I continued, pulling my phone from my pocket. "He allowed his illegitimate son to torture an animal and assault my son—the legitimate heir—inside my own home."
I pressed play and turned the screen toward him.
The sound of Danny crying echoed against the stone facade of the grand driveway.
Ramirez watched the screen, unblinking.
He saw the cat.
He saw the shove.
He shifted his gaze to Danny, who was cowering behind my leg, a fresh, dark bruise blooming on his shoulder.
Ramirez looked up at me.
The indifference was gone.
In its place was a cold, terrifying clarity.
"Come inside," Ramirez said.
He gestured to the soldiers with a sharp flick of his hand.
"Get Alex Harrison," he ordered, his voice dropping an octave. "Tell him we have a situation that requires... cleaning."
I let out a breath I hadn't realized I was holding.
Alex Harrison.
The Enforcer. The Underboss. The Monster.
I walked up the stone steps, the click of my heels echoing like gunshots.
I wasn't walking into a trap.
I was walking into a war room.
And for the first time in two lifetimes, I was the one holding the detonator.
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8.3
" let that wetness drip. I want to see what I do to you without even touching You "
He stared at her trembling fragile figure who stood naked in front of him with wetness dripping down her thighs making her cheeks burn in shame and embarrassment and he just sat there, staring at her.
" Please ...... daddy "
----------
He was my father's best friend and a very close family friend. I had been in love with him since I was fifteen. He was the man of my dreams but Also a man I could never have. A man who could make me feel tingles.
One night and It changed everything.
I was in bed, letting my hand satisfy the needs and desires of my dark fantasies when he had just walked in, catching me disheveled and messed up. That night he had helped me and that was the first time I had gotten off.
I thought it was a step closer to our relationship but He made it clear, he wanted to be a father figure to me. But his body opposed his words. I knew Luciano Morelli wanted me just as much as I did or maybe more.

7.4
I thought my life was over when my sister died, leaving me to raise her two babies in a world that wanted to swallow us whole. Then I made the mistake of a lifetime: I left a bold, humiliating voicemail for the one man I should have feared most.
Anton Oryolov.
The ruthless king of the Oryolov Bratva. A billionaire monster who rules the city with ice in his veins and blood on his hands.
I expected him to fire me. I expected him to destroy me. Instead, he gave me a choice that felt like a death sentence: sign a contract and become his.
The rules were simple. I belong to him. I live in his shadows. In exchange, he protects the children. But as the doors of his mansion locked behind me, I realized the "forced proximity" wasn't just a business arrangement. It was a cage.
He thinks he can use me as a pawn in his dark mafia games. He thinks the children are just leverage to keep me in line. But he's starting to look at me with a hunger that isn't in the contract, and I'm seeing a man beneath the monster that I never expected to find.
In the Cruel Paradise of the Bratva, loyalty is a lie and love is a weakness. Our deal is signed in ink, but it's going to end in blood.
He owns my signature. He owns my safety. Now, he wants my soul.

7.6
I was arranging white lilies on the cold marble of my husband's grave when I saw a ghost.
Walking through the cemetery gates was a man who looked exactly like my dead husband, Dante.
Logic said it was his twin brother, Matteo. But a wife knows the slope of a man's shoulders. She knows the arrogant tilt of his chin.
My husband hadn't been blown up in a car bomb three years ago.
He had faked his death to steal his brother's rank, his fortune, and his mistress.
For three years, I had forced our son, Leo, to kiss a photograph goodnight. We lived in a damp, peeling apartment, surviving on the "charity" of the Family.
Meanwhile, Dante was living in a mansion, driving cars that cost more than my life, playing house with another woman.
When he came to our cramped apartment to drop off the monthly "pension" money, pretending to be Uncle Matteo, he didn't look at me with love. He looked at his watch.
When Leo ran to hug him, shouting "Papa," Dante peeled the boy's small arms off his expensive suit like he was removing a piece of lint.
"Don't call me that," he snapped. "I am your Uncle."
My grief turned into ice. He chose another woman's comfort over his own son's hunger.
I grabbed Leo's hand and walked out the door.
"You walk away, and you get nothing!" Dante shouted after me. "You'll be on the street!"
I didn't stop. I walked straight to the black SUV idling at the curb.
The window rolled down, revealing Salvatore Vitiello. The Don. The most lethal man in the city.
"Get in, Elena," he commanded.
I opened the door and slid onto the leather seat next to the devil himself.
As we drove away, leaving my husband in the dust, I realized I had just traded a liar for a killer.
And I didn't regret it for a second.

8.4
I was exactly three thousand words away from eviction when the heir to the New York underworld smashed my laptop and offered me a job instead of an apology.
Dante Vitiello wanted me to write a memoir that would paint him as a saint.
I moved into his penthouse, thinking I could keep things professional. But when his arranged fiancée, the daughter of the Chicago Outfit, arrived, she didn't see an employee. She saw a threat.
She didn't just humiliate me; she leaked fake evidence to the press, branding me as a federal informant.
I woke up in a hospital bed with the word "RAT" plastered across every gossip site.
Sofia’s guards were stationed outside my door, blocking even the nurses. I was a liability. A stain on the Vitiello name.
I knew how these stories ended. The Prince always chooses the Family. The Alliance is more important than the girl.
I was packing my bag, shaking with fear, ready to disappear into the night to save him from ruin.
But Dante didn't come to fire me. He walked into the boardroom where his father and the Chicago Boss were waiting for him to beg for forgiveness.
He looked at the crown that was his birthright, then he looked at the gun on the table.
He didn't kneel. He didn't apologize.
He slammed his weapon down, shattering a hundred-year alliance and forfeiting his empire with a single sentence.
"Keep the crown. I take the girl."

8.1
My fiancé, the ruthless Mafia Underboss, tore my dead mother's necklace from my throat and fastened it around another woman's neck.
"Diana needs it," Arthur said, his eyes cold. "My blood remembers loving her. It calms her anxiety."
He was referring to the bone marrow transplant that saved his life. Diana was connected to the donor, and Arthur believed his new blood made him belong to her.
I became a ghost in my own home, forced to watch him crown a usurper.
When Diana faked a fall at a gala, accusing me of pushing her, Arthur didn't hesitate. He decided to "discipline" me publicly to teach me respect.
He raised the whip.
"Arthur, please, I'm pregnant!" I screamed, shielding my stomach.
"Don't lie to me," he spat, and the lash came down.
I lost our baby on that cold marble floor in a pool of blood. He didn't believe me. He stepped over my body to take Diana to dinner.
He didn't stop there. He let my grandmother die in the ER to tend to Diana's bruised nose. He even dug up my grandmother's grave because Diana wanted the view for a garden.
I finally fled, vanishing into the night.
It wasn't until months later, when he found the autopsy report of our unborn child and the toxicology results proving Diana had been drugging him, that the fog lifted.
He tracked me down to a small town, where I was finally healing with a good man.
The feared Underboss fell to his knees in the pouring rain, holding the whip he had used on me, shaking violently.
"Beat me, Ella," he begged, tears mixing with the mud. "Hurt me. Make us even."
I looked at the monster I used to love and dropped his ring into the dirt.
"You can't bring back the dead, Arthur," I whispered. "And you are dead to me."

8.5
went to sleep a nobody. I woke up a Queen.
One night I was just a broke, exhausted college girl. The next, I opened my eyes in silk sheets, with strangers bowing and calling me Luna Queen. The face in the mirror is mine. The body is mine. But the life isn't. The bruises on my wrists tell a story I don't remember, and the King I'm bound to doesn't love me-he loathes me.
They whisper that his mistress rules the palace. They say the Queen was weak. Silent. Broken. But that was before me.
Now I must survive a palace that wants me dead, a King whose touch burns as much as it scars, and a kingdom waiting for me to fail. The old Luna Queen bowed to cruelty.
I am not her.
And if this King thinks I'll kneel, he's about to learn what a true Queen is made of.