Raven Knight is a journalist who lives for the truth, even when it comes wrapped in danger. When her latest investigation leads her to Club Eden, the notorious upscale strip club tied to underground crime, she goes undercover, armed with nothing but fake credentials and a steel spine. Her goal? Expose Jaxon Morreau, the billionaire Don said to be behind a global criminal empire. But nothing could prepare her for Jaxon himself. Jaxon Morreau rules with silence, dominance, and control. He built Club Eden as a front, but it became his kingdom. Cold, calculating, and feared by all, Jaxon doesn’t make mistakes… until he spots the one woman who dares defy him. Raven is a threat. She’s also magnetic. Instead of exposing her, he pulls her closer, offering her protection, power, and submission. Their chemistry is fire. Their secrets, fatal. As Raven falls deeper into Jaxon’s world, and into his bed, lines blur between truth and desire. Their relationship burns hot, twisted with bondage, dominance, and a hunger neither of them can ignore. But when Raven’s best friend is kidnapped, and a child is planted to destroy them, the darkness inside Jaxon threatens to consume them both. Worse, Jaxon’s younger brother, Zane, isn’t just jealous, he’s obsessed. Zane doesn’t want to share Raven. He wants to own her. In a world where loyalty is blood and betrayal is deadly, love may be the riskiest game of all. Owned by the Don is a 150-chapter epic of passion, vengeance, possession, and submission. Perfect for fans of dark romance, mafia empires, and BDSM stories that mix power with heart.
Lihat lebih banyakThe night Club Eden swallowed Raven Knight whole, she wasn’t wearing red, but she should have been. She stepped through the velvet-draped entrance in fitted black slacks, a satin top that caught the light like oil, and a pair of heels she borrowed from her best friend Talia. Her press badge was tucked into the lining of her purse, a necessary betrayal. No one got inside Eden without a story, and hers was as carefully crafted as the lies written on her face.
She wasn’t here as Raven Knight, investigative journalist for The Mirror. Tonight, she was Raye Kincaid, aspiring dancer, newcomer to the city, and too naïve to understand that the club she walked into wasn’t just elite, it was owned by the devil himself. Her heels clicked across the marble floor like a metronome for the music pulsing overhead. The air was thick with perfume, sweat, and something darker, something feral. Women glided past her in lingerie and glitter, men lounged with lowball glasses in hands, and every wall was bathed in red and gold. Raven tried not to gape. Club Eden was beautiful in the way fire was beautiful, if you forgot it could burn you alive. A bouncer gave her a once-over and waved her through. No ID check. No words. Just a nod. She was in. The bar to the left stretched like a runway of dark wood and light. Dancers spun on silken poles at opposite ends of the room, moving like they belonged to no one but themselves. Raven glanced around, her journalist instincts tingling. She didn’t see him yet, the man at the center of every rumor, every whispered threat, every bloodied trail in her files. Jaxon Morreau. He was the man behind Club Eden. The man behind three missing persons cases. The man with ties to an international crime syndicate that everyone in the city pretended didn’t exist. She didn’t know what he looked like, not exactly. No photos ever surfaced. Just sketches. Profiles. Descriptions whispered between sobs or fear. Tall. Cold. Dangerous. She slipped past the bar, pretending to look for the dressing rooms. Her plan was simple: get close, observe, and disappear with her skin intact. But even simple plans unravel when the thread is pulled too tight. “New?” a voice asked. Raven turned. The woman in front of her had skin like cinnamon and lips painted the color of fresh blood. Her name tag said Kira, but her eyes said she noticed everything. “Yeah,” Raven answered. “Raye. Just moved to the city.” Kira smiled. It didn’t reach her eyes. “Don’t wander. Not unless you’re invited. Especially not upstairs.” “Why?” She nodded toward the grand staircase coiled like a golden snake in the center of the room. “Because that’s where he is.” Before Raven could ask who he was, the lights dimmed, and a soft bell chimed through the speakers. Heads turned. Every dancer on stage paused. Every server froze mid-step. Then, the crowd parted. At the top of the stairs stood a man in tailored black, his silhouette cut sharp against the low light. He didn’t move like someone entering a room. He moved like he owned it. Jaxon Morreau. His gaze swept across the club, casual, detached, until it landed on her. Raven didn’t breathe. His eyes were pale, silver maybe, or icy blue. His expression didn’t change, but something flickered. Recognition? Interest? No. Something worse. Possession. He descended the stairs one measured step at a time, never taking his eyes off her. People bowed their heads slightly as he passed. No one spoke. The music shifted to something darker. He reached the floor and moved toward her with the gravity of a man who expected the world to bend around him. “Name,” he said. His voice was low, threaded with silk and steel. “Raye.” “Raye what?” She hesitated. “Kincaid.” He stared at her like he could hear the lie on her lips. Then, a slight smile tugged at the corner of his mouth. Not friendly. Not amused. Interested. “I don’t remember hiring you.” “I’m just auditioning,” she lied. “Talia said...” “Talia doesn’t run my club.” He stepped closer. Raven held her ground. “Where are you really from?” he asked, voice low enough that no one else could hear. She met his gaze. “Does it matter?” The silence stretched. Then he chuckled, a sound without humor. “You’ve got a sharp mouth. I like that.” “I’m not here to be liked.” “No. You’re here to be watched.” Before she could move, his hand wrapped gently, but firmly, around her waist. He leaned in, mouth at her ear. “Come with me.” She should have said no. Every instinct screamed it. But her feet moved, her pulse surged, and she followed him up the stairs. The lounge was quiet, lit by flickering sconces and the city skyline through floor-to-ceiling glass. He didn’t offer her a seat. He simply stood by the window and looked out. “You’re not who you say you are,” he said. “You’re not either.” He smiled again, sharp and dark. “What do you want?” “To dance.” “Liar.” She met his eyes. “To know who you are.” “And if you find out?” “I write stories.” He turned to face her fully. “So do I. Except mine end in blood.” Raven’s breath caught. He stepped forward, slow, deliberate. “I should throw you out,” he said. “Then why don’t you?” “Because I’m curious.” He reached out, fingers brushing a strand of hair from her cheek. The touch was too intimate, too confident. “You’re beautiful when you lie.” She didn’t respond. “You want to know me?” he asked. “Yes.” He leaned in, mouth close to hers. “Then you’ll need to earn it.” And then, without permission, he kissed her. It wasn’t soft. It wasn’t sweet. It was a claim. When he pulled back, her lips were parted, her body humming. “Welcome to Eden,” he said. “Let’s see how long you survive.”The old penthouse at the edge of the docks was nothing like Jaxon’s usual haunts. It had no polished marble floors or expensive leather furnishings. It smelled faintly of rust and salt, the walls scarred from a time when it had served as a discreet safehouse for fleeing clients and dying secrets. But now, it would become something else, something colder. Strategic. A war room.Raven stood in the middle of the living room, which had been gutted to bare essentials: a long table made of steel and glass, power cords snaking along the floor, screens already flickering with surveillance feeds, maps, and names. Her hands trembled as she placed her encrypted flash drive beside a stack of untraceable burner phones."It doesn’t look like much," she said.Jaxon stepped in behind her, silent in his tailored black shirt and dark jeans. The look on his face was no longer that of a possessive lover or a jealous king, it was that of a tactician. Cold. Calculating. Dangerous."It doesn’t need to look
The silence between them was loaded, thick with the weight of too many truths buried too long. Raven stood at the threshold of Jaxon’s study, the man himself seated behind the massive obsidian desk that had once seemed like a throne to her, now, it was simply a barrier between them, what they were and what they might still become.Her fingers trembled around the folder. That had lived in the hollow beneath her mattress like a parasite. Aset of documents that contained everything she’d stolen from his safe, everything she’d read and everything she knew.She stepped forward and placed the file on the desk. "That's everything," she said, her voice low. "Everything I took and everything I know."Jaxon didn’t move. Didn’t even blink. He looked at the folder the way someone might look at a live wire, too dangerous to touch, but impossible to ignore. "You kept it this long," he said.Raven nodded. "Because I didn’t know who you really were. I still don’t, but I can’t keep playing both sides.
The raid didn’t start with sirens. It began with silence. The kind that pressed against the walls of Club Eden like a coming storm. The lights flickered twice, just enough to draw wary glances. Then came the shudder of steel gates locking from the inside. Dancers paused mid-routine. Bottles stilled behind the bar. A slow, crawling dread settled over the room like smoke.Jaxon stood in the VIP gallery, arms folded, expression unreadable. No one dared approach. Not Dante. Not the bartenders. Not even the bouncers who’d once claimed they’d take a bullet for him. He radiated something colder than command, calculation, distance, threat.Raven watched it unfold from the hallway near the dressing rooms, her gut coiled tight. She hadn’t been warned. He hadn’t told her. That meant this was real. Or at least real enough to send a message.Within minutes, men in black tactical gear flooded the club, unmarked, untraceable. Raven knew the difference. These weren’t Feds. They were Eden’s ghosts, of
Raven sat alone in the back booth of a forgotten diner on the edge of the East District, the kind of place where the booths were cracked, the coffee burnt, and no one asked questions. The rain tapped softly on the windows, a steady rhythm that masked the thudding in her chest.A manila folder lay on the table before her, thick with the kind of truth that could ruin empires.She flipped it open one last time, eyes scanning the neatly typed numbers, offshore accounts, forged receipts, and donation ledgers twisted into knots. Zane Morreau’s name never appeared. He was too careful for that, but the shell organizations he’d been funneling money through, especially the children's charity called Bright Horizons, told the story.Money that should’ve gone to underfed kids and neglected classrooms had been quietly redirected into false construction invoices, shell investment firms, and personal security payments. She’d cross-referenced three different whistleblower files. It was airtight.Zane
“I can’t lose myself… I can’t lose you.” Those words had slipped from Raven’s lips like a secret she hadn’t meant to confess. Her voice cracked as she clung to him, breathless, spent, and trembling beneath the aftershocks of pain and pleasure.Jaxon didn’t respond right away. His breath was ragged, forehead pressed to hers. For a moment, they were just skin and heat and confusion. Then he gently pulled away, rolling onto his back, eyes fixed on the ceiling.The silence stretched.Raven stared at him, her chest tight. “Say something.”He didn’t look at her. “I need to take care of something.”“Jaxon...”But he was already getting up, throwing on a black shirt, pants and his watch. The cold was back in his face, the mask sliding into place with precision. She’d broken during that scene, cracked wide open, and she knew he had felt it too, but now he was locking it all away again.Before she could ask what was happening, he kissed her once, softly, almost apologetic.“Stay here.”Then he
The girl wasn’t supposed to be there.Raven had followed Dante into the derelict loading bay behind the old textile factory on the east side. She’d kept her distance, ducking behind concrete pillars and rusting machinery, heart racing. She knew she was taking a risk, but the moment Dante met with the man in the gray coat, exchanging an envelope for a coded phrase, “shipment rerouted to the villa”, she had her proof.That's when she heard it, a whimper, muffled and weak. It came from a side door, slightly ajar. Raven didn’t think as she slipped inside.The air was thick with mold and chemical rot. A single bulb swung overhead, casting harsh shadows. She saw the girl curled on a stained mattress in the corner, barely conscious, one arm bandaged sloppily, the other covered in bruises that painted her skin in shades of plum and yellow. Her eyes fluttered open, vacant and drugged.Raven’s throat closed. This was it. The evidence. The nightmare she’d only read about in anonymous testimonies
Welcome to GoodNovel world of fiction. If you like this novel, or you are an idealist hoping to explore a perfect world, and also want to become an original novel author online to increase income, you can join our family to read or create various types of books, such as romance novel, epic reading, werewolf novel, fantasy novel, history novel and so on. If you are a reader, high quality novels can be selected here. If you are an author, you can obtain more inspiration from others to create more brilliant works, what's more, your works on our platform will catch more attention and win more admiration from readers.
Komen