Ace Adreev, an alpha and the most feared Tsar of the Russian Mafia, has built his empire in the human territory in loyalty, and ruthless precision. He ruled over the humans and the hunters alike. But even the coldest ruler cannot escape the pull of fate. His life was constantly in danger and he didn't want any serious relationship but then two women entered his life, both bound to him in ways neither could he imagine. Dennise Lambert, a secret assassin trained by the powerful organization, was ordered to kill Ace. He took Dennise’ older sister Hera as fiance only to discard her and demand Dennise herself. What Ace doesn’t expect is that the woman he should despise most is revealed by the bond of fate to be his mate. Torn between her mission to kill him and the forbidden desire that consumes her, Dennise must choose: betray her organization or betray her heart. Hessa, an Alpha Female and the last hope of a dying werewolf clan. She seeks Ace’s protection, only to realize he is her mate too. She was desperate to keep Ace for herself. But when she learns she must share him with an assassin meant to kill Ace, jealousy twists into something darker. Would she kill Dennise to have Ace’s heart alone, or risk his wrath and face rejection? Bound to two mates, one who wants to kill him and one who wants to kill the other, Ace must walk a line between passion and peril. As mafia wars erupt, hunters hunting werewolf surfaced, and betrayal hides in every shadow, three hearts are caught in a dangerous game of fate. In a world of love, vengeance, and survival, can Ace claim both women, or will destiny force one to destroy the other?
View MoreDennise's Point of View
I was halfway through eating my favorite cookie, which I had the luxury to eat after I checked all the kindergarten papers when my phone lit up with Valentina’s name. The second I saw it, I sighed.
Not again, I whispered. I haven’t been home for a week and here she goes again…calling despite the message I left that I won’t be accepting any assignment for the month but for Valentina, those messages are useless.
I picked the phone up, closed my room’s door and answered it with a mouthful of crumbs.
“This better not be international, V,” I said, reminding her I just arrived from her international mission.
“Charming as always, but no. You’re not going international, it's domestic,” she said dryly. “You’re working tomorrow night.”
“I’m listening,” I muttered, brushing cookie dust off my hoodie. “What’s the job?”
“Sniper hit. Clean. One bullet, window shot. Location’s Maison Étoile, private table, 9 PM sharp.”
I rolled my neck, already reaching for the gun case under the coffee table.
“Who’s the target?”
There was a pause, and then Valentina spoke.
“Ace Andreev.”
My hand froze over the paper. And the dangling cookie from my lips fell.
“I’m sorry. Did you say Ace Andreev?”
“Yeah.”
I blinked. Hard.
“As in Ace Andreev, the Tsar of the Russian Mafia?”
“The very one.”
I sat back slowly. My heart thumping like I just realized the cookie I ate was poison.
“You’re serious?”
“Dead serious.”
“Valentina, that man doesn’t just run a mafia. He is the mafia. He kills people like he eats breakfast, lunch, and dinner. You’re making a dangerous deal, Val,” I said.
“I know.”
“Do you?! Do you really? Because I’m pretty sure people who try to kill him end up either skinned alive or sewn into their own suits.”
“I’m aware.”
I stared at my desk full of papers ot drawings and out quizes half an hour ago.
“And you want me to take him out? Val, are you serious about this? I mean it's not a big deal, I’ll do it. The problem is the Tsar has a lot of connections, even the big assassin groups.”
“You’re the best shot we have,” she said. “And more importantly, you’re off his radar. “You’re a rookie.”
“Yeah, well, even rookies still die when their heads get chopped off,” I answered unsure. I could take any mission she wanted but the Tsar was too dangerous. He has his own sniper position anywhere. I’ll probably die before I could even pull the trigger.
Valerie didn’t answer.
“Do it, or the next name on the list will be yours,” she threatened. “I’m sorry, Dennise, it's just a job, nothing personal.”
Fuck! I cursed
There it was. Classic Syndicate threat. How many of my comrades got shot down after not accepting a job? I couldn’t even count anymore.
“Fine. But if I disappear, I want you to know I left the cat enough food for three days. After that, it’s on you.”
“Don’t worry. I’ll light a candle in your honor.”
Click. She hung up.
I sat there for a moment, just staring at the wall.
Ace Andreev.
He was not some mid-level trafficker or corrupt politician. Not even a greedy banker or a cheating husband.
His Ace fucking Andreev! The tenth Tsar of the Russian Mafia who had all eyes everywhere.
When Valentina decided to assign a job, she expected it to be done at the exact time she gave but the bitch had assigned me to a dangerous target that no assassin dared to target. Well, I’m going to try my luck. If I die, then so be it, rather than being tortured by that damn Valentina.
I grabbed my tote back and hopped on my old pick up truck and returned home.
I live in a one-bedroom house on 6th Street with a chipped white paint, creaky porch, a swing that groans when the wind hits just right.
To my neighbors, I’m Miss Elaine not Dennise. The sweet daycare teacher who waves every morning, drives a beat-up pick up truck, and always remembers their kids' birthdays.
Inside’s a whole different story.
I kicked off my flats as soon as I stepped in, dropping my oversized tote on the chair. Lesson plans, crayon-stained shirts, and a picture of a smiling sun the kids drew for me scattered on my dining table.
I made sure the blinds were down before I walked to the corner of the living room. There’s an old bookshelf pushed against the wall stack with children’s books and a few romance novels for show.
I press the right side of The Dumb girl always hurts first book and the shelf shifts. There was a soft clicking sound followed and it opened.
The air inside the hidden room is cooler, metallic. It was not big, maybe the size of a walk-in closet, but every inch is used. Neat rows of labeled containers sit along the left wall along wigs of every color, length, and texture ranging from innocent blonde bobs to sleek, deadly jet black. Next to them are cases of colored contact lenses and makeup palettes for skin tone changes. My outfits hang on a rail, nurse scrubs, high-end cocktail dresses, delivery uniforms, even a full nun robe from a job in Sicily. Whatever the job calls for.
To the right were all my favorite weapons. All of them were clean, organized and dusted which I actually care about.
Knives were all balanced and personalized. I’ve got daggers tucked into false books and one coated in clear poison that kills in under three minutes. There were guns too like compact pistols, modified Glocks, even a matte-black sniper rifle broken down in a case under the floor tiles. Full magazines stacked in metal drawers. All untraceable. All mine.
You wouldn’t believe how easy it is to go unnoticed when you wear a smile and carry juice boxes in your purse.
I walked in, stripped off my “Miss Elaine” cardigan, and clipped my hair back. The real me doesn’t wear pastel. The real me doesn’t coo over finger painting or sing songs about the alphabet.
The real me had a job tonight.
I ran my fingers across a row of weapons until I stopped at a high caliber sniper rifle with a silencer attached. Sniping is my favorite job. I placed the rifle in its signature box before I changed quickly, pulling on black tactical pants and a fitted hoodie. Tight enough not to catch on anything. I tugged on a shoulder harness, clipped in the gear and adjusted my gloves.
Then I looked in the mirror. No trace of the daycare teacher left, just the Denise who kills for a living with no mercy and conscience.
I was out the door again. The swing creaked as I passed, and from across the street, old Mrs. Taylor waved at me.
I waved back, gave her a soft smile.
“Long night grading papers,” I said cheerfully.
She nodded with a kind smile, none the wiser. No one ever suspects the woman who teaches kids how to read, was a woman who kill for money.
Dennise’s point of ViewI dreamed of running.It was not the kind of running that burns your lungs or makes your knees ache, this was silent, liquid, endless. The air was cold and metallic, like moonlight turned into breath. I ran through trees that didn’t sway, under a sky without stars, chasing something I couldn’t name. Every time I almost caught it, a flicker of silver hair, a whisper of laughter, the ground would shift, and I’d stumble, sinking into shadows that felt warm and soft, like they wanted to keep me.Then the voice came. A woman’s. Velvet over glass.“Do not fight the dark, little one. It remembers you.”When I tried to turn toward it, the trees vanished. A single mirror stood in the clearing, taller than me, framed in gold that pulsed faintly like veins under skin. My reflection blinked once… and smiled.But it wasn’t my smile.It was sharper.And when I opened my mouth to speak, she whispered first.“Wake up.”I jolted upright, gasping. My chest rose and fell too fa
Valentina's Point of viewMy hands stilled a fraction. Drăculești. The girls were taught to walk quietly, to carry the family ledger that listed debts in ink and oaths in blood. I kept my voice even. “Does she see you?”“No,” Dennise said. “She’s looking at the book. She’s… laughing? No, she mustn’t. Someone will hear. She closes it and she looks up and-” The breath she took then was a small, astonished sound I have heard sometimes in lovers and sometimes in the execution yard. “She looks like me.”I let one more measure fall onto her tongue. Stage-II’s last sip. “Ask her what her name is.”“I don’t want to frighten her.”“You won’t,” I said. “You are her homecoming.”Silence. Then: “Dina.”Good. I love when the archives agree with the mirrors. Dina Drăculești, the illegitimate daughter who kept the accounts while the men were out staging morality as battle. She died at nineteen in childbirth; the child lived and pastors changed their name to spare themselves trouble. Blood flees c
Valentina’s Point of ViewIn the mirror-room, blood does what mirrors do: it reflects backward first. The body stands and thinks it sees itself; the blood knows it sees its grandmother. That’s metaphysics. The biologic is simpler: controlled hypoxia, gentle vasodilation, a permeability of the membranes that separate what the pamphlets call human from what the archives call ours.But before Stage-II I required a political securement: the Cross council must accept that I name their Elite. The weapon, awake and hungry for spectacle, must accept that I am making a daughter to suit her epoch and my domestic quiet. And the shifters must feel enough threatened that their Tsar attends to his borders and not to the woman in my house. The vampire who taunted him near his gate did his part, bolder than I would have preferred (they always get theatrical at the edge of sunlight), but effective. And Hessa’s confession, Dennise as mate, spurred the final alignment of my calculus.Jealousy is a solve
Valentina’s Point of ViewThey always imagine the transformation is a thunderclap: fangs, screaming, the moon breaking its spine over a castle. Children’s stories. The truth is slower, more exquisite. If you want an instrument to play the symphonies I conduct, you do not snap it in half and hope it hums; you carve, you tune, you test tension and grain, and you listen to the wood until it admits what music it was meant for.Dennise Lambert was meant for my music.I did not realize the full extent of it when I pulled her from the Cross academy dormitory sixteen winters ago: a quick, obedient child with careful eyes and a too-quiet voice. I recognized pliability, not pedigree. The pedigree revealed itself years later—first as rumor in an Ottoman ledger I purchased at auction, then as a line in a mid-century registry of “problematic lineages,” then finally as a page in the Bathory archive I alone keep unburned:Lambert, Dina (née Drăculești, illegitimate line):Great-great granddaughter o
Valentina’s POVDennise moved like a wind through the corridors of the estate quiet, graceful, unassuming. Every morning she woke when the sun was still lazy on the horizon, made her tea the same way, and always greeted me with that polite half-smile that had fooled men far older and wiser than she.I watched her from the balcony of my study, chin resting lightly on my hand, eyes following the rhythm of her steps. The girl thought she was healing. She thought the wounds on her side, the ones my blood had mended, were a sign of my mercy. She thought I had forgiven her for the failure with Ace Andreev, the Tsar of Wolves, the beast who had dared to put his mark where mine should have remained.I smiled, slowed down and practiced. Let her believe it. Ah, the nature of making a great weapon is pissing me off but I invested patience.There was no need to confront her.I had learned of it days ago. Hessa’s confession still rang in my ears, the trembling defiance in her voice when she had sp
Hessa's Point of View“You won’t betray me, right?” Valentina asked, staring straight right at my eyes. I didn’t answer. I couldn’t. I was torn between keeping the deal and helping Ace. After a long silence Valentina smiled.“Interesting,” she murmured. “You’re learning to doubt. Perhaps your Alpha’s influence isn’t as dull as I feared.”She circled me like a predator, her voice low and poisonous. “You’ll do what I say, Hessa. Because you’ve already damned yourself. The moment Ace discovers you disabled his cameras, the moment he learns you opened the east gate, your fate is sealed.”I swallowed hard. “He won’t know.”“Oh, he will.” Valentina smiled faintly. “But not yet. For now, he still trusts you. Use that. Feed me what he plans. His meetings. His alliances. His weaknesses.”I hesitated.Valentina’s tone turned cold. “Or shall I tell him myself that his mate, the one he pitied and sheltered has been my eyes all along?”My wolf whimpered inside me, furious and ashamed. I clenche
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