The Enforcer's Revenge BrideShort Dramas

The Enforcer's Revenge Bride

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He bought her life to pay for her lover's betrayal... but he was not supposed to become obsessed with her. Ivy is dragged into the underground compound of the Devil's Saints motorcycle club to face their most brutal enforcer. Cole is ordered to break her and find the stolen millions. But Ivy does not scream, and she does not beg. She watches him with a heavy, calculating silence that gets under his skin and makes him question the club he swore to protect. He was supposed to ruin her. So why is he the only one standing between her and a loaded gun? He was ordered to ruin her for a betrayal she did not commit. Locked in the underground vault of a violent motorcycle club, Ivy is forced into the custody of their most lethal enforcer. Cole is a man built on cold punishment and ruthless loyalty, tasked with breaking her to find their stolen millions. But instead of begging, her heavy, unyielding silence sparks a dark, forbidden obsession the enforcer cannot fight. He was supposed to be her executioner. He was never meant to become the man willing to burn his own brotherhood to the ground just to claim her.

The Enforcer's Revenge Bride Chapter 1

The first sign of betrayal was the smell of stale, burnt coffee. Ivy woke to a cold apartment. The heavy rain lashing against the bedroom window muffled the usual sounds of the city, but it could not mask the wrong kind of silence breathing inside the room. She reached out across the mattress. The sheets were cold. Leo was gone. Usually, her boyfriend's mornings were a chaotic symphony of dropped keys, rushed footsteps, and the sharp scent of his expensive cologne. Today, there was only the hum of the refrigerator leaking from the kitchen and the sterile smell of rain seeping through the window frame. Ivy pushed the blankets aside. Her bare feet hit the hardwood floor, sending a shiver up her legs. She did not call his name. Her instincts, sharpened by years of observing people and anticipating their worst moves, told her not to speak. She walked to the closet. The sliding door was already pushed back. The left side, usually crammed with Leo's designer jackets and tailored shirts, was bare. Empty wire hangers swayed gently, knocking against each other like wind chimes in a ghost town. His duffel bag was missing from the top shelf. His passport box was gone from the bottom drawer. He had packed in a hurry, but he had packed well. Ivy felt a strange, detached calm wash over her. Panic was a useless emotion. It clouded judgment. It made people clumsy. She breathed in slowly, forcing her heart rate to remain steady. She left the bedroom and moved down the narrow hallway toward Leo's home office. The door was ajar. Inside, the picture of his treason became clear. The heavy steel safe hidden behind the bookshelf hung wide open. The digital keypad was dark. The inside shelves, which had held stacks of banded cash just yesterday, were stripped bare. He took the money. He took the millions that did not belong to him. Ivy leaned against the doorframe, her mind working with the cold precision of the pre-law student she was. She analyzed the scene like a crime site, separating facts from assumptions. Fact one: Leo had stolen from the Devil's Saints motorcycle club. Fact two: Leo had fled the city. Fact three: He had left her behind in their shared apartment. She walked into the kitchen. The coffee pot was switched off, but a dark puddle of burnt liquid stained the heating pad. Leo had needed caffeine before he ran. He had stood right here, drinking coffee, knowing the men he stole from would come for the person sleeping in the next room. Then she saw it. Resting perfectly in the center of the granite kitchen island was a single, unspent bullet. The brass casing gleamed under the dim, gray light filtering through the kitchen blinds. It was a nine-millimeter round. It was not left behind by accident. It was a message placed deliberately for whoever came looking for him. Or worse, it was a warning left for her. A heavy, suffocating pressure dropped over the room. Ivy felt it settle into her bones. It was the same crushing weight a whale might feel diving into the lightless, freezing depths of the ocean. The pressure was immense enough to snap steel, but the only way to survive it was to stop fighting the current and go perfectly still. She picked up the cold metal bullet. It felt heavy in her palm. Most women would run. They would grab their bags, drain their bank accounts, and try to catch the first bus out of the state. But Ivy knew the law, and more importantly, she knew the ruthless rules that governed the underground of this city. The Devil's Saints owned the highways. They owned the ports. They owned half the local precinct. If she ran, she would look guilty. She would become a fleeing accessory. Running meant dying tired in a ditch before she ever crossed the state line. She was the scapegoat. Leo had used their shared address to build a buffer of time. He knew the club would raid this apartment first. They would spend crucial hours interrogating her while he slipped across the border. He had bought his freedom with her life. Ivy set the bullet back on the granite counter. She did not shed a tear. Crying was for people who still had hope that someone was coming to save them. No one was coming to save her. She had to think her way out of the grave Leo had just dug for her. She walked into the living room. The rain outside was turning into a violent storm, rattling the glass panes. She did not turn on the lights. She did not lock the front door. A deadbolt would not stop the men who were coming, and a locked door would only make them angrier when they finally broke it down. Ivy sat on the center cushion of the dark leather sofa. She crossed her legs, rested her hands in her lap, and focused on her breathing. In, out. Slow and measured. She mentally cataloged everything she knew about the Devil's Saints. They were a violent syndicate hiding behind the facade of a motorcycle club. They handled illegal weapons imports. They were highly organized. They operated on a strict code of internal loyalty. And they punished thieves with public, agonizing executions. She needed to prove she was an asset, not an accomplice. She needed to find the flaw in Leo's plan and offer it to the club before they put a bullet in her head. The grandfather clock in the hallway ticked loudly. Ten minutes passed. Then twenty. The sky outside darkened to the color of bruised iron. She waited in the shadows. She conserved her energy. Then, the storm outside was overpowered by a new sound. The deep, guttural roar of motorcycle engines vibrating through the asphalt of her street. The sound multiplied, echoing off the brick buildings. It was not just one rider. It was a pack. The engines cut out in unison. Heavy boots hit the wet pavement outside her building. The sound of their approach was deliberate. They were not sneaking in. They wanted her to hear them coming. They wanted the fear to rot her from the inside out before they ever laid hands on her. Ivy kept her eyes fixed on the front door. Her pulse remained a steady, rhythmic drumbeat in her chest. Footsteps thundered up the wooden stairs of her apartment complex. There was no knock. There was no warning. The solid wood of her front door splintered with a deafening crack. The frame shattered inward, sending shards of wood and twisted metal locks flying across the entryway rug. Cold wind and the sharp smell of rain poured into the apartment, followed instantly by the heavy scent of motor oil, damp leather, and raw violence. A massive silhouette filled the broken doorway. He stepped over the wreckage of the door without looking down. His black combat boots crushed the splintered wood into the floorboards. He was dangerously tall, his broad shoulders blocking out the dim hallway light. A leather cut hugged his chest, adorned with patches that signaled authority and bloodshed. This was not a foot soldier. This was the Reaper himself. Cole. The Enforcer of the Devil's Saints. He moved into the living room with the fluid, silent grace of a predator that had already cornered its prey. He did not shout. He did not tear the room apart. His dark eyes scanned the shadows and locked onto her immediately. Ivy did not flinch. She did not scramble back against the sofa cushions. She sat perfectly still in the dark, her chin raised, holding his lethal gaze. Cole stopped a few feet away from her. The air in the room grew suffocating. He reached to his waist, the harsh metallic click of a weapon being drawn echoing over the sound of the rain. He raised a heavy black handgun and pointed the barrel directly at the center of her forehead. "Get on your knees," his voice was a low, rough scrape of gravel, devoid of any human warmth. "Or die sitting down." Author's Note: The storm has officially arrived at Ivy's doorstep, and Leo left her to take the fall. Ivy is choosing to face the Enforcer head-on instead of running. What do you think Cole will do when he realizes she isn't terrified of his gun? Let me know your thoughts in the comments below, and please like and share if you enjoyed this opening chapter. See you in the next update.
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The Enforcer's Revenge Bride of Contents

Ch. 1 Ch. 2 Ch. 3 Ch. 4 Ch. 5 Ch. 6
Ch. 7
Ch. 8
Ch. 9
Ch. 10
Ch. 11
all

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