Deadly rivalry:His greatest weakness

Deadly rivalry:His greatest weakness

last updateLast Updated : 2026-07-01
By:  Ellis HawkeOngoing
Language: English
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Dimitri Volkov is the Ice Prince of the Bratva—cold, calculating, and utterly untouchable. Nikolai Petrov is the Demon of the Syndicate—volatile, unpredictable, and obsessed with one thing: destroying Dimitri. For three years, their war has painted the city red. When a fragile truce is called, they meet on neutral ground at the Colosseum, an underground theater built for blood. But the meeting is a trap, and they're ambushed by a rival gang looking to take them both out. Forced to fight back-to-back to survive, they escape—barely. In the aftermath, something dark and dangerous begins to grow between them. The hatred is still there, but now it's laced with obsession, with desire, with a need that neither of them understands. When the tension finally breaks and they collide, it's explosive. But just as everything is about to happen, they realize the problem: they're both tops. Now they have to decide—do they walk away from the fire between them? Or do they rewrite the rules of the game and discover that surrender isn't weakness, but the most powerful move of all?

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Chapter 1

THE ICE PRINCE

CHAPTER 1: The Ice Prince

They say the devil knows your name even before you're born, and Dimitri Volkov knew Nikolai Petrov's before he could walk. Because this one man had been a thorn in his side for as long as he could remember, a constant shadow that refused to fade away no matter how much blood Dimitri spilled or how many of Nikolai's operations he dismantled.

Dimitri watched the warehouse burn, the flames licking at the night sky like hungry tongues as they devoured two million dollars worth of Petrov Syndicate merchandise, and he felt nothing. Nothing but a cold, quiet satisfaction that settled deep in his bones like ice water on a winter morning.

His men stood behind him in silent formation, their breath misting in the December air, and they knew better than to speak because Dimitri didn't tolerate noise unless it served him. And right now the only sound that mattered was the crackling of the fire and the distant wail of sirens that would arrive too late to save anything of value.

His phone buzzed in his pocket, and he didn't need to look at it to know who it was because Nikolai had a talent for impeccable timing, always calling at the exact moment when Dimitri was savoring his victory, as if he could feel it through the miles of city that separated them.

He let it ring once, twice, three times, and then on the fourth buzz he finally picked up because he wanted Nikolai to know that he wasn't waiting, that he never waited for anyone.

"Dimitri." The voice on the other end sounded like silk wrapped around a blade, calm and almost amused. Like the voice of a man who had just lost two million dollars and found it funny rather than infuriating. "I’m impressed. I have to hand it to you, that was elegant."

"Thank you," Dimitri replied, his own voice flat and empty, like the voice of a man who had killed more people than he could remember and felt nothing about it because feeling was a luxury he couldn't afford in this life. "It’s safe to say I pride myself on elegance."

"You burned two million dollars of my product," Nikolai said, still calm, still amused, and Dimitri could picture him perfectly—lounging in his penthouse with a glass of whiskey in hand, that infuriating smile playing on his lips like he knew something Dimitri didn't. "It’s no longer about elegant. That’s downright expensive."

"It was two million dollars of your product," Dimitri corrected, and he allowed himself a small, cold smile because he knew Nikolai could hear it in his voice. "Now we both know that’s nothing, so just consider it a message from me to you."

"A message?" Nikolai laughed, and it was a dark, dangerous sound that would have made lesser men reach for their guns, but Dimitri didn't flinch. Because he knew that laugh intimately, had heard it in his nightmares for three years now, had memorized every inflection and nuance until he could predict it in his sleep. "What message could that be, Dimitri? A message about you being angry because I intercepted a shipment last week? The one that was supposed to be yours?"

Dimitri's jaw tightened at the reminder, and he could still feel the sting of that loss, five million in cash bound for his offshore accounts that Nikolai had taken with surgical precision, clean and embarrassing and utterly devastating to his operations. "I'm not angry," he said carefully. "On the contrary, I’m very patient."

"Very patient huh?" Nikolai's voice dropped lower, more intimate, the kind of voice that made Dimitri's skin prickle with something he refused to name because naming it would make it real, and real was dangerous. "You know what I think? I think you're obsessed with me, I think you lie awake at night thinking about me and about how to destroy me."

Dimitri said nothing because there was nothing to say, and silence was its own kind of answer.

"I'm flattered," Nikolai continued, and Dimitri could hear the smile in his voice, that infuriating, knowing smile that made him want to punch him right in the face. "I think about you too, you know. Every fucking single day, and in fact, I'm thinking about you right now, and I'm imagining the look on your face when you see what I've done."

The line went dead before Dimitri could respond, and he stared at his phone for a long moment, his thumb hovering over the redial button for a full three seconds before he stopped himself and pocketed the device.

That was the problem with Nikolai Petrov, he knew how to get under your skin, and he did that effortlessly and lived there rent-free. Like a constant splinter that you couldn’t dig out no matter how hard you tried, and Dimitri had tried everything from bullets to betrayals to burning his warehouses to the ground.

He turned to his men and gave them their orders, his voice crisp and commanding as he told them to secure the perimeter and report back on the fallout by morning. They scattered like leaves in the wind because they knew better than to question him.

Dimitri walked to his car, a black SUV with bulletproof glasses and more firepower than a small army. His driver opened the door without a word, as he slid into the back seat and closed his eyes for just a moment because the exhaustion was starting to creep in, the bone-deep weariness that came from years of war with a man who was just as relentless as he was.

His phone buzzed again. It wasn't a call this time but a text. He opened it to find a message from an unknown number that made his blood run cold. “You're not the only one who can make a statement. If I were you, I’d check my office.”

He didn't need to be told twice, he pulled out his laptop with shaky hands, accessing the security feed from his office building with fingers that were steady despite the ice flooding his veins. The cameras showed the hallway outside his private office, empty and quiet, and the office itself looked exactly as he'd left it, except for the single red rose sitting in the center of his desk like a centerpiece, and next to it a photograph that made his heart stop.

The photograph showed his mother, Maria Volkov, sitting in her apartment and sipping tea, completely unaware that someone had been watching her, and Dimitri's grip on the laptop cracked the screen as fury and terror warred in his chest. He didn't call Nikolai because he didn't need to, because the message was clear and unmistakable. “I can reach you anywhere you are, and I can take away anything you love, so don't forget that.”

Dimitri closed the laptop and set it aside. His hands were steady and his face was calm, but inside something dark and furious was clawing at his chest like a caged animal.

He didn't hate Nikolai Petrov because hate was too simple, too clean, and hate was for people who didn't matter, but Nikolai mattered more than anyone Dimitri had ever known, and that made him the most dangerous man alive.

His phone buzzed one final time, and he looked down to see another text from the same unknown number, and this one made him close his eyes and breathe deeply because he needed to stay calm, needed to stay in control. “I'll see you at the meeting tomorrow. Try not to look so desperate. It's unbecoming.”

Dimitri opened his eyes and stared out the window at the burning warehouse in the distance, and he allowed himself one small moment of weakness, one tiny crack in his armor, because tomorrow he would have to look Nikolai Petrov in the eye and pretend that this was just business.

But they both knew it was so much more than that, and Dimitri had a feeling that the meeting at the Colosseum would change everything.

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