
Yakuza Bride for the Italian Don
9.8 / 10.0
Share
Hana is living a quiet life as an art teacher, a peaceful façade for the most dangerous truth of all she is Kurai-Hime, the exiled legendary assassin of a mighty Japanese Yakuza clan. Her past shatters her present when she is forced to honor a blood pact: replace her dead sister in a marriage alliance with Luca Conti, the formidable heir to an Italian mafia empire.
Luca, a devastatingly handsome and ruthless "Smiling Tiger," expects a meek, political bride. He is charmed by Hana's ethereal beauty and delicate demeanor, vowing to protect his innocent "dove" from the brutal realities of his world. Hana plays her part perfectly, all while using her brilliant, tactical mind to analyze every weakness in his fortress and his organization.
The fragile masquerade explodes when Luca is ambushed. Cornered and wounded, he expects a tragic end only to watch his seemingly fragile fiancée unleash a storm of elegant violence, wielding a katana to cut down his attackers. In that bloody moment, his shock transforms into awe, and a shocking, undeniable truth: he is falling in love with the ruthless warrior, not the gentle illusion.
Now, their marriage of convenience becomes a dangerous game of hidden blades and raw revelation. As Hana's true identity begins to surface, she must navigate the venomous politics of Luca's family, the simmering rage of his rivals, and the lethal pull of her own past. To survive, this Yakuza weapon and her Italian Don must learn to fight not as protector and protected, but as equal partners. But when a final, devastating threat targets them both, they face an impossible choice will they sacrifice each other for the dynasties that created them, or become the most feared power couple the underworld has ever seen?
Yakuza Bride for the Italian Don Chapter 1
The rain in Osaka that night fell not in drops, but in sheets, a silver curtain that turned the world into a charcoal wash. It battered the tiled roof of the secluded ryokan, drowned the sound of the creek below, and slicked the ancient stones of the garden into black mirrors.
It was the only mercy that night the rain would wash much away.
Inside the main hall, the air was thick with the smells of cedar, sake, and the sharp, metallic scent of tension. Twenty-seven men of the Matsuda-rengo sat on zabuton cushions, their backs straight, their eyes hard.
They were celebrating, believing they had forced the mighty Kuroda-gumi into a corner. At the head of the room, their Oyabun, a bull-necked man with a spider tattoo climbing his throat, smiled with a gold-capped tooth. The negotiations had been a farce.
The trap was set.
They had only underestimated one thing the weapon their enemy had sent into their midst.
She had been presented as a concession, a decorative piece.
Hana.
The Kuroda daughter.
She knelt at the low table beside her clan's aged negotiator, a vision of obedient femininity. She wore a simple, dove-grey kimono of raw silk, its sleeves cut slightly shorter than fashion dictated, its obi tied in a flat, practical knot. On her feet were geta sandals, the wooden platforms high and solid. Her only adornment was the way the damp air had loosened a few strands of her blue-black hair from its knot, clinging to her neck.
And the katana.
It lay on the tatami beside her, a slender line of darkness in its plain black lacquer scabbard. A "symbol of her family's honorable intent," the negotiator had said. The Matsuda men had laughed inwardly.
A girl and her souvenir.
The signal to attack was a dropped sake cup. It hit the floor with a crack.
The room erupted. Men surged to their feet, chairs scattering. The negotiator, following the script, cowered.
Hana did not.
In one fluid motion, as if rising to pour tea, she stood. Her geta were anchors, granting her height and stability on the slippery tatami.
The first man to reach her, a brute with hands like shovels, saw only a beautiful, pale face. He never saw her hands move. The long, steel kozuka dagger hidden in her obi was in her grip, then in his throat. A short, wet gasp. He fell, his blood a sudden, shocking bloom on the grey silk of her sleeve.
What followed was not a brawl. It was a harvest.
The katana was in her hand now. It was not a ceremonial blade. It was Shinpu, her uncle's final gift, its steel folded with a strand of impossible, modern alloy. It sang as it left the scabbard. She did not scream, did not utter a single word. She was a silence moving through chaos.
The kimono, far from hindering her, became part of the dance. Its wide sleeves caught the air as she pivoted, disguising the angle of her next cut. The tough silk resisted grasping hands. The geta stomped down on a fallen wrist, bone snapping like kindling.
She moved through the crowded room like water finding cracks. The katana was an extension of her will a horizontal slice that opened a man from hip to rib, a vertical drop that cleaved through collarbone, a swift, upward flick that parted a jaw from a skull.
She used their numbers against them, herding panicking men into each other, using one as a shield against another's wild swing.
The Oyabun with the spider tattoo watched, his smile gone, his face leaching of color. He shouted orders that were lost in the din of screams and the terrible, wet sounds of impact.
He saw her eyes as she dispatched his lieutenant. They were not the eyes of a frenzied killer. They were calm, focused, almost serene. She was solving a problem. And they were the equation.
Then he remembered the rumors he has heard of the Koruda-gumi Oyabun raising a monster.
When the last of his guards fell, she turned to him. She was splattered, her kimono a canvas of violent calligraphy. She held Shinpu loosely, the tip of the blade tracing a small, red circle on the tatami. The rain hammered the roof. The only other sound was his ragged breathing.
"You... you are not human," he whispered.
She tilted her head, considering. "You threatened my family's garden," she said, her voice quiet almost polite, the first word spoken since she entered the building."You were a weed. A gardener removes weeds."
She ended him. Then she walked through the silent ryokan, room by room.
Guards in the hall. A cook who had picked up a cleaver. A young apprentice trying to flee out a back window. She showed no quarter. The message had to be absolute. A silence so profound it would echo.
When she stepped back out into the cleansing rain, dawn was a faint bruise on the horizon. Forty men. No survivors. She stood for a moment, letting the downpour sluice the blood from her hands, her face, her katana. Then she sheathed the blade, the click final in the weeping morning.
That was the day Kurai-Hime, the Dark Princess became a legend. And the day she was exiled for being too effective, too terrifying, too much of a weapon for even her own clan to hold.
Five Years Later. Maplewood, Canada.
The sun through the art room windows was gentle, dappling the scuffed linoleum with pools of gold. The air smelled of tempera paint, glue, and the bright, clean scent of lemon-scented cleaner. A world away from the smell of blood and rain.
Hana Kuroda stood before a class of third graders, a smudge of cerulean blue on her cheek. She wore soft, paint-stained jeans and a faded sweater. Her hands, which had once wielded Shinpu with lethal precision, now carefully guided a small boy's fingers around a lump of clay.
"See, Leo? Gentle. You're having a conversation with the clay, not a fight."
Her voice was a melody, warm and patient. To the children, she was Ms. Kuroda, who could fix any broken crayon drawing, who knew stories about magical forest spirits, and whose smile made you feel like you'd done something wonderful. They saw the kindness in her dark eyes. They did not see the depth, the stillness that came from having viewed the absolute worst of the world and deliberately chosen to create instead of destroy.
Her life here was a carefully tended garden. Her small cottage, her bonsai trees, the quiet rituals of tea and sketching. It was a penance and a peace, built day by fragile day.
When the final bell rang and the last child skipped out, the familiar silence of the empty classroom settled around her. It was a good silence, filled with the ghosts of childish laughter.
Then, from the bottom drawer of her desk, came the vibration. Not the cheerful chirp of her everyday phone. This was a low, persistent hum, felt in the bones. The black satellite phone. The contact was a single, stark symbol ⚫.
The world of rain and blood rushed back in, drowning out the scent of paint.
She answered. "Oyabun." But no respect in her voice.
The voice on the other end was a dry rustle, devoid of warmth. "The silken promise is torn. Your sister lacked the fortitude. The mountain road was... unforgiving."
Emi. Dead. Hana's breath didn't hitch.
Hana closed her eyes. Emi. The fragile one. The precious one. The one groomed for alliance, not war. She pictured her not as a bride, but as a girl, trying to run in a too-large kimono.
Had she driven off the cliff herself?
Had someone helped her?
The result was the same. The pawn was off the board.
"An empty chair at the table is an insult," her father continued, his voice devoid of grief, full of geopolitical calculus. "The Italians will see it as a renunciation of the pact. It will mean war. A war we are not currently positioned to win without catastrophic loss."
Hana said nothing. She watched a single dust mote spiral in a sunbeam.
Her face, reflected in the dark classroom window, showed nothing. Inside, a cold, familiar engine turned over.
"The gallery in Italy expects its painting," the voice continued, all geopolitical calculus. "An empty frame is an insult. It is war. You will fill it."
She looked at the vibrant, child-made art on the walls. The phoenix Maya had painted. The lopsided clay dog. She saw the life she had built, the peace she had carved out with her own two hands.
"I am exiled," she stated, her voice flat. "By your decree."
"Your exile," the voice hissed, "is a luxury I revoke. You will go to Milan. You will marry Luca Conti. You will be the anchor of this alliance and our eyes within his house. This is your final duty."
Final duty. The words were both a sentence and a key.
Hana closed her eyes. In the darkness behind her lids, she saw not the ryokan, but the faces of her students. She saw the path refusal meant they would come here, would shatter this fragile sanctuary.
Acceptance meant walking back into the darkness, but with a chance to sever the chain forever.
When she spoke again, her voice had changed. The teacher's melody was gone. In its place was the cool, resonant tone of the woman in the grey kimono, the one who had ended twenty-seven lives without raising her voice. It was the voice of Kurai-Hime.
"This is the last thread," she said, each word a blade being sharpened. "You will send me everything. I will stand in that frame. But the moment I do, the canvas is mine. The Kuroda-gumi and I are tekizen.
If you or any of your shadows ever cross my path again, I will not consider it family business. I will consider it an act of war from a rival clan. And I will burn your world to the ground. Do you understand the portrait I am painting?"
The silence from Tokyo was profound, stunned. He was not speaking to a disobedient daughter. He was receiving terms from a sovereign power.
"It is understood," the old man finally conceded, the power dynamic irrevocably shifted.
The call ended. Hana placed the phone back in its drawer. She walked to the sink and washed the blue paint from her hands with methodical care.
She crossed the quiet classroom, her footsteps silent on the floor. At the window, she looked out at the playground, empty now under the soft afternoon sun. The gentle art teacher was already receding, packed away like a beloved costume.
She had traded a katana for a paintbrush, blood for clay, silence for children's laughter. Now, the brush was down. The clay was hardening.
The gardener was being called back to a garden of stone. And this time, she would not just remove the weeds.
She would own the soil.
Continue Reading
Yakuza Bride for the Italian Don 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

8.6
I was the youngest Paladin in history, the absolute pride of the Azure Blade.
But after a disastrous mission in the snow, I was falsely accused of slaughtering my own squad.
Grand Master Bernardo Rowe didn't just exile me; he surgically severed my connection to the magic Aether, turning me into a crippled mortal.
Desperate to survive, I tried to climb the Holy Stairs to reclaim my legendary sword, "Rebellion."
Instead of answering my call, my own blade shrieked in absolute rejection and blasted me down the thousand stone steps.
My bones snapped like dry twigs, and I was left in a pool of my own blood.
The pilgrims laughed at me. The guards declared me a lost cause and left me to rot in the dirt.
I should have died there, betrayed by the Order and the holy magic I once served.
But a silent, massive laborer named Cato Sims dragged my mangled body into the shadows.
He healed my shattered skeleton in mere days with impossible skill, yet he allowed lowly servants to spit on him and beat him just to keep my presence hidden.
I didn't understand why my holy sword had abandoned me, and I understood even less why this stranger was protecting a condemned criminal.
When I finally snapped and demanded to know his price for saving my life, he didn't ask for money or my body.
"The mountain does not forget its debts. I am reclaiming what was taken from it."
Staring into his unyielding eyes, I realized my exile wasn't the end, but the beginning of a terrifying truth.

7.6
When the Pollard family kicked Alyssa out into the freezing rain, Walter threw a ten-thousand-dollar check into a dirty puddle.
"Take it and get out. Don't ever come back," he sneered.
Her adoptive mother and stepsister stood on the mansion's porch, mocking her as a worthless country girl who tarnished their wealthy name. They laughed, claiming she wouldn't even be able to afford community college and would be begging on the streets in a week.
They looked at her cheap clothes and worn backpack with absolute disgust.
They were completely unaware that for the past five years, Alyssa was the secret mastermind who had built their failing gallery into a multi-million-dollar investment empire.
Every key investment, every fortune they made, came from the anonymous notes she had slipped into their unread books. They genuinely believed they were business geniuses, while treating the true architect of their wealth like a stray dog.
Looking at their smug, arrogant faces, Alyssa didn't feel a shred of sadness, only a cold, sharp irony.
They actually believed they had raised her.
She stepped close, whispered the master code to Walter's most secret offshore account, and watched the blood completely drain from his face.
"I raised you," she said, turning her back on the mansion without hesitation.
Walking into the storm, she pulled out a heavily encrypted phone and gave a single, cold order.
"Initiate a full hostile takeover of the Pollard Group."
It was time to end this little game and step into her true life—as the world's most elusive medical genius, and the long-lost billionaire heiress of the Summers dynasty.

9.0
I am the undisputed ice queen of the ER, a doctor whose life is built on absolute control. A month ago, I impulsively married a stranger to create a legal shield against my ex-mentor's betrayal.
Our prenup had one strict rule: a fake marriage with zero interference in each other's lives. But tonight, my "husband on paper" was wheeled into my ER, unconscious, reeking of cheap whiskey, and suffering from a bleeding ulcer.
To authorize his emergency surgery, I had to sign the consent form as his wife, detonating a gossip bomb among my colleagues. Worse, his overbearing family found out he was hospitalized. To stop his terrifying mother from flying in and exposing our sham marriage, I had to lean over his hospital bed and take a fake, loving couple's selfie.
I didn't understand why this disciplined math professor was suddenly drinking himself to death, nor why my chest tightened when he looked at me with exhausted eyes and begged for homemade soup. My perfectly ordered, untouchable life was crumbling into a chaotic mess, and I was losing my grip on the narrative.
"We should probably spend some time together beforehand. We could be roommates."
To prepare for an unavoidable family dinner and a wedding, my stranger husband just asked me to move into his apartment. The ultimate uncontrolled variable has just crossed the line, and our fake marriage is about to become dangerously real.

7.4
Evelina Barrett was the legitimate daughter, yet she was framed for a disgusting sex scandal, expelled from the Ivy League, and locked out of her late mother's massive trust fund.
While she was thrown out to rot on the streets with a jagged, hideous red scar covering half her face, her father and step-family were throwing a lavish charity gala to celebrate her total ruin.
They laughed as they officially published her disownment notice in the Times to cut her off forever.
"Without the school halo, that ugly freak will be begging on the streets by tomorrow," her sister Aspen sneered.
Her stepmother Annabella toasted to taking out the trash, perfectly happy to steal Evelina's inheritance while ignoring the fact that Evelina knew exactly how they had murdered her mother.
For years, Evelina had been locked in a dark basement, abused by bodyguards, and treated worse than a stray dog.
Why should she, the true heir, suffer in the gutter while the leeches who destroyed her life enjoyed the wealth that rightfully belonged to her?
She refused to be their victim anymore.
Washing away her fake scar to reveal her true, breathtaking face, Evelina blackmailed New York's most lethal billionaire into marriage to secure the ultimate shield.
Then, she put on a black mourning dress, ordered a dark web ghost crew, and climbed into a heavy semi-truck.
At exactly 6:00 PM, she smashed through the iron gates of her family's elegant gala, delivering three pure black coffins directly to the lawn.

7.6
To pay for her father's life support, Haleigh sold herself into a marriage with Fabian Blackburn, a ruthless billionaire in a deep coma.
But on her wedding day, she caught her boyfriend cheating with her stepsister, laughing about how they would steal the inheritance the second Fabian stopped breathing. Cornered and desperate, Haleigh secretly underwent IVF using her comatose husband's frozen sperm to secure the family trust.
Weeks later, a miracle happened. Fabian woke up.
But instead of gratitude, he treated her like trash. He threw annulment papers at her face, completely disgusted by the arranged marriage.
"If you try any dirty tricks to get pregnant, I will personally drag you to a clinic and have that bastard scraped out of you."
Terrified, Haleigh hid her positive pregnancy test and desperately tried to hack her way to enough cash to escape. But while using his computer, she accidentally opened a highly classified folder.
Inside was a medical file and a photo of a severely disabled girl who looked exactly like Fabian.
Before she could process it, Fabian walked in. Seeing the screen, his cold mask shattered into pure, unhinged madness. He lunged across the room, lifting her off the floor by her throat, completely ignoring her desperate gasps for air.
"Lock her in the basement," he roared to his guards. "No food. No water."
Curled on the freezing concrete, clutching her newly pregnant belly, Haleigh didn't understand what she had just seen that turned him into a murderous monster.
But she knew one thing: if she didn't escape this terrifying estate, both she and his unborn heir would die in the dark.

9.1
I drowned in freezing pool water, the mocking laughter of the elite Savage family echoing in my ears.
When I opened my eyes, I was an eight-year-old orphan again, right on the day those monsters came to adopt me.
Terrified of repeating my hellish past, I ran down the hallway and desperately grabbed the shirt of a random, dumpy IT guy, begging him to take me instead.
I thought I had chosen a weak, boring suburban dad to hide behind.
But I was completely wrong.
My new mom greeted me with a ceramic tactical knife hidden in her apron.
My clumsy dad sliced dinner ribs with the terrifying precision of a seasoned hitman.
My ten-year-old brother was a dead-eyed sociopath who immediately calculated my bone density.
They were a family of lethal underworld monsters, yet they frantically pretended to be a normal, pathetic household just for me.









![[Dubbed Version]Her Hands in His](https://v.melolo.com/b1265344voduse1318177724/07a33e045145403705285258582/OZNwGpVIuQUA.webp!15491.webp!15491.webp)

