LOGINAdriel Stetson is a masked Mafia boss and notorious playboy who never forgives rejection. When Nyla Reagan turns him down, he makes her life hell, humiliating her nightly at the club where she dances to fund her dreams of University. So she plots revenge. Just a spiking night and a tape. A one chance to expose the face he hides from the world. But before she can destroy him, fate intervenes. A sudden marriage came into view. A new home. And the man she meant to ruin is now her stepbrother.
View MoreThe kitchen back door of The Rusty Anchor swung open with a soft whoosh as Nyla slipped inside, hit by the familiar reek of stale beer laced with lemon cleaner.
She kicked off her scuffed boots and traded them for the non-slip clogs on the shelf, then yanked her apron from her backpack. The strings tangled in her haste, but she knotted them tight. For a brief second, she felt almost safe—like the apron was armor. But the air hummed wrong today, heavy with something she couldn’t name.
She stepped into the bar just as Derek, the manager, materialized behind the counter, holding a glass up to the light. He didn’t look at her, but she knew he’d been waiting.
“Cutting it close, huh?” His voice was calm, too calm.
Nyla froze. “The lecture ran long. Professor wouldn’t—”
“Schedule’s not optional,” Derek snapped, setting the glass down with a sharp click. He finally turned to face her. “Apron off.”
Her stomach dropped. “What?”
“You heard me.”
The words didn’t register at first. “Derek, come on. I’m only twenty minutes late. I’ll take the worst section, close solo—”
“Shut it,” he said flatly. “Third time this month. This isn’t a dorm for slackers.”
The word burned. She’d mopped vomit off these floors last Saturday, worked double shifts when others called in sick, counted inventory no one else wanted to touch.
“Please,” she said, trying to keep her voice steady. “My tuition f*e is due next week. I’ll swap shifts, pick up extra hours—”
Derek wiped his hands slowly on a towel. “Your mess. Not mine.”
Desperation clawed up her throat. “You can’t do this. I need this job.”
“I don’t care what you need.”
Something in his tone made it clear the decision was final. The room suddenly felt too small and the air felt too thin.
“Fine, at least pay me for last night’s double and today’s prep.” Nyla said, forcing the words out.
Derek let out a short laugh. “Fired means no payout, kid.”
“That’s illegal.”
“Then sue me.” He nodded toward the service door. “Now leave before I call the cops for trespassing.”
Her hands curled into fists. A few customers at the bar had turned to watch. Heat rushed to her face.
“You can’t just stiff me on wages,” she said, louder now.
“Watch me.”
Anger flared, hot and reckless. “Maybe I should tell them what’s in your office safe,” she shot back. “Or how that ‘premium’ vodka you sell is just cheap swill in fancy bottles.”
The room went silent except for the hum of the beer cooler.
Derek’s eyes hardened. From a nearby booth, old Gus shook his head. “Give it up, girl. You’re done.”
A few quiet chuckles rippled through the bar.
The fight drained out of her all at once, leaving only hollow embarrassment. She grabbed her backpack, kicked off the clogs, and shoved her boots back on.
“Fine, I'll go.” She muttered, heading for the door.
Derek was already reaching for another glass, like she’d vanished.
At the threshold, Nyla paused. “But I won’t forget this.” She exclaimed and the door groaned shut heavily behind her.
………………..
Outside, the city air bit at her skin. Nyla laced her boots tightly, blinking against the sting in her eyes. Every step away from The Rusty Anchor felt heavier than the last.
Third job this month.
The diner had fired her for being “too slow.” The bookstore had blamed her for a till shortage she didn’t cause. And now this.
Her backpack sagged against her shoulders like dead weight.
She walked without really seeing where she was going, her mind drifting to memories she usually tried to keep buried—her mother’s laugh, soft and warm, before cancer stole it away two years ago. The hospital rooms are the bills are piling higher than hoped.
Her father had never been the same after that. Grief had hollowed him out, leaving a tired man who worked too much and slept too little.
Every shift she worked was supposed to help. To keep them afloat.
And now she had nothing again.
Her phone buzzed in her pocket, jolting her from her thoughts, from an unknown number.
She almost ignored it, assuming it was another debt reminder. But something made her answer.
“Hello?”
“Nyla?” a crisp female voice asked. “This is Selene from The Velvet Embrace. You applied for a hostess position.”
Her breath caught.
Right. The application she’d filled out at three in the morning, half panicked and half exhausted.
“Yeah,” Nyla said cautiously.
“We have a private event tonight. High-roller client, short-staffed. Trial shift. Can you be here in an hour?”
The words made her stomach tighten. Private event. High-roller.
She’d heard rumors about places like that—exclusive clubs where rules blurred and money talked louder than morals.
“I don’t know,” she murmured.
“Pay is double the standard rate,” Selene added smoothly.
Images flashed through her mind: her father hunched over unpaid bills, the tuition portal glowing red on her laptop screen and the empty fridge at home.
Nyla closed her eyes.
“I’ll be there,” she said quietly.
“Good. I’ll text the address.”
The line went dead.
For a long moment, she just stood there while her phone was still pressed to her ear. Then she opened a ride app before she could change her mind.
………………..
The taxi dropped her in front of an unmarked black door tucked between two upscale buildings. Ferns framed the entrance under a faint crimson glow and a tiny camera lens watched from above.
Nyla smoothed her black T-shirt and jeans, suddenly wishing she owned something nicer.
Inside, the air felt different—cooler, perfumed, pulsing with low music. Soft laughter drifted through dim corridors draped in velvet.
Selene appeared almost instantly, tall and polished in a fitted red dress.
“You made it. Good.” She said, giving Nyla a quick once-over.
Selene pressed a silver tray into Nyla’s hands. “Here’s the deal. Keep drinks flowing. Move fast. No chatting unless spoken to. No staring. Understand?”
Nyla nodded. “Yes.”
“Diamond Room tonight. Top-tier clients only.”
Her pulse quickened. “Who’s hosting?”
Selene hesitated, then leaned in slightly. “The gentleman in the silver mask. They call him Maestro.”
A chill slid down Nyla’s spine.
Even she had heard whispers of that name—powerful, untouchable, dangerous.
“Just do your job,” Selene continued. “Eyes down. Ears open. And remember—discretion is everything.”
Nyla swallowed. “Got it.”
The older woman gave her a thin smile. “Good girl.”
She gestured toward a velvet archway at the end of the hall. “They’re waiting.”
Nyla tightened her grip on the tray.
This was just a job, she told herself. Just one night. Just a way to pay bills and keep moving.
But as she stepped forward, the music was growing louder with every step and doubt crept in.
Nothing about this place felt ordinary.
At the curtain, she paused, drawing a slow breath.
Then, with her heart hammering in her chest, Nyla pushed the heavy fabric aside and stepped into the gilded dark.
Adriel’s black SUV screeched to a halt in the mansion’s driveway. He killed the engine and stormed out, still wearing the torn hospital gown under a coat he found in the car.Blood dripped from his side, but the pain was nothing compared to the fury burning inside him.He pushed through the front door with such force it slammed against the wall, and stormed inside, heading straight to Nyla's room. As soon as he arrived, Adriel stopped abruptly as he saw Lucas standing in front of Nyla’s door, knocking repeatedly. Hard, insistent knocks that had clearly been going on for a while.Adriel’s eyes narrowed. He walked up slowly and tapped Lucas twice on the shoulder. Lucas jumped, startled, and spun around. "Adriel? Jesus, you scared me.”“What are you doing here?” Adriel asked, fixing his blazing eyes on him.Lucas gulped down and gestured at the closed door. “I’ve been here for almost three hours now, knocking. Nyla won’t respond. I don’t know what the problem is. She’s been locked in
Adriel stormed down the sterile hospital corridor, his fists clenched tightly at his sides as Nyla’s face kept flashing through his mind. Why was she there? What the hell had she gotten herself into?He turned a corner sharply, but suddenly collided with someone who was hurrying toward a ward to see a patient.“Watch where you’re—”Adriel stopped mid-snarl as his eyes landed on the woman right in front of him. It was none other than his mother, Ariella. “Adriel?!” Ariella screamed with wide eyes. “Oh my God, Adriel!”“Mom?” Adriel blinked, caught off guard. “What are you doing here? Aren’t you supposed to be at La Belle Époque with Michael?”Ariella ignored him and burst into tears instead. Without hesitation, she rushed forward, and began to check him frantically, his arms, his chest, and the blood on his gown.“How could I enjoy a date after getting a call that my son had been shot?!” she cried. “They said you were brought in unconscious. I thought… I thought—”“I’m fine,” Adriel
Adriel’s eyes snapped open to the sharp smell of antiseptic and the steady beep of machines.Ignoring the dull headache throbbing behind his temples, Adriel slowly sat up and stared around the sterile room in disbelief.White walls. Fluorescent lights. An IV line taped to the back of his hand.From the look of things, Adriel needed no one to tell him where he was. But the last thing he remembered was dropping his mother and Michael off at the upscale restaurant.A gift he had insisted on so he could have the house to himself for lunch with Nyla and Lucas.A controlled environment. A chance to remind Nyla exactly who she belonged to now that the papers were signed.So how the hell had he ended up in a hospital?Adriel narrowed his eyes as he tried to piece things together. Suddenly, the memories slammed into him like bullets.He remembered driving home when he spotted a girl running along the deserted roadside, pursued by a man carrying a rifle.He remembered slamming on the brakes and
Adriel’s eyes snapped open to the sharp smell of antiseptic and the steady beep of machines.Ignoring the dull headache throbbing behind his temples, Adriel slowly sat up and stared around the sterile room in disbelief.White walls. Fluorescent lights. An IV line taped to the back of his hand.From the look of things, Adriel needed no one to tell him where he was. But the last thing he remembered was dropping his mother and Michael off at the upscale restaurant.A gift he had insisted on so he could have the house to himself for lunch with Nyla and Lucas.A controlled environment. A chance to remind Nyla exactly who she belonged to now that the papers were signed.So how the hell had he ended up in a hospital?Adriel narrowed his eyes as he tried to piece things together. Suddenly, the memories slammed into him like bullets.He remembered driving home when he spotted a girl running along the deserted roadside, pursued by a man carrying a rifle.He remembered slamming on the brakes and












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