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The Moon Shines on My Return Novel Cover

The Moon Shines on My Return

As the underworld boss's wife, I served as a human shield for the woman Ian Sutherland truly loved. After being kidnapped for the eighth time, I watched Ian abandon me mid-rescue to answer his lover's trivial call. Left to bleed out from a fatal wound, I realized his men viewed my life as a disposable expense. My secret mission to protect the boss has officially failed, and now the system is prepared to erase my existence. Ian will never see me again.
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Chapter 4

The End of the Line

I shook my head. "I don't know."

Ian's voice dropped, tight with fury. "You'd better really be clueless, Hazel, or I swear I won't let you off!"

At that, he stormed out, making call after call until he finally learned where Rose was being held. "Get a few men. Bring her with us!"

They tied my legs together and threw me into the backseat of Ian's car. He drove himself, slamming the accelerator down. In all three years of marriage, it was the first time I'd ever seen him so out of control.

When we reached the coast, Rose was hanging by her wrists from a boat mast, crying so hard her voice broke. "Ian! You're finally here! I'm scared—save me!"

"Rosie!" Ian's voice trembled with panic as he called her name. Then, his expression hardened when he looked up at his enemies on the deck. "Let her go. I'll trade you my wife—plus two territories and ten properties."

A slow grin spread across the thug's scarred face. "Deal."

As they hoisted me upward, Ian held Rose tightly, whispering soft words to calm her down. By the time I reached the top, he had already turned away, still clutching the woman he loved. That familiar back—how many times had I seen it before? Only this time, he wasn't alone.

The enemy lit a cigarette and gave a lazy glance in my direction. "Do it."

The red-hot iron pressed into my skin. I couldn't hold back the scream that tore out of me. "Just kill me already!" I gasped.

He shook his head slowly. "That'd be too easy. My brother died because of Ian. If I kill you fast, it's not fair. Better to take it slow—and show everyone the great Ian Sutherland isn't invincible after all."

I thrashed, but the branding iron kept finding my skin—each burn more precise than the last. The pain was so sharp I couldn't even form words. I didn't know how many times they burned me before my body finally gave out. When they untied me, I barely felt anything at all.

But before I could take a full breath, a new pain seared my wrist. The man had sliced it open—and then shoved my arm into the sea.

Blood poured into the water, turning it crimson in seconds. I couldn't move. Someone forced my head sideways so I had no choice but to watch it happen—watch the life drain out of me, drop by drop. And somehow, I laughed.

'Ian… if I die here, will you find another woman to be the shield for your precious girl? Or will you finally marry her instead? Either way, it won't matter to me anymore.'

My vision dimmed, the world slipping away, until I faintly heard footsteps—his men, arriving too late as always.

There were voices, a rough exchange, and then I was lifted onto a stretcher. Inside the ambulance, they played cards and laughed like nothing had happened.

Somewhere in the blur, one of them said, "Boss really loves Ms. Wells. He wasn't even going to retaliate, but when he saw her wrist scratched, he lost it—killed the whole crew himself."

Another man chuckled. "You hear the news? Boss is retiring. Hanging it up for good—all for Ms. Wells."

When I woke in the hospital, the system's voice echoed faintly, "Six hours remaining."

I suddenly remembered what they said in the ambulance. Ian was giving up everything because Rose had a scratch on her wrist.

I looked down at my own wrist, wrapped in layers of gauze, and at the countless burns and cuts all over my body. A bitter smile pulled at my lips. Three years I'd spent trying to save him—three years failing—and in the end, someone else did it with a single wound.

And the one who completed the mission… wasn't me.

With four hours left, I ignored the doctors' protests and dragged my battered body back to the villa. I only wanted to see that medical report one last time before I disappeared. But when I arrived, the yard was a mess and the house completely empty. The guest room was torn apart, and the drawers were ransacked—everything gone.

I called Ian. He answered impatiently. "I'm planning to retire for good. To do that, I have to sell everything and start clean. Find somewhere else to stay. Once Rosie's recovered, we'll get a divorce."

I opened my mouth weakly. "But the things in my bedroom drawer—"

"Hazel Tanner, don't push your luck!" His voice rose, sharp and angry. "Rosie got hurt because of you. I already showed mercy by sending people to save you. What, you expect me to buy you your own house too? Just so you can keep your jewelry?"