Masuk
DOMINIC’S POV
My footsteps echoed through their pathetic excuse of a home as I stormed in, my jaw clenched so tight I could feel a vein pulsing in my temple. The air reeked of desperation and fear—exactly what I expected from someone who owed my family money.
"Jimmy Pierce." I didn't ask. I stated his name like the verdict it was.
The man who stumbled forward looked nothing like the confident businessman who'd approached my father six months ago. His eyes darted around the room like a cornered animal, hands trembling as he attempted to straighten his wrinkled shirt.
"Mr. Blackwood... I wasn't expecting you today." His voice cracked. Pathetic.
I raised an eyebrow, letting the silence stretch uncomfortably before responding. "That was rather the point. My father sends his regards." I pulled out the ledger from my jacket pocket, tossing it onto their coffee table. "And his bill."
This debt is long overdue, and I'm not leaving without something of value. These people are beneath me, but business is business.
Jimmy grabbed the paper with shaking hands, his face draining of color as he read the figure. His wife hovered nervously in the doorway, her knuckles white as she gripped the wooden frame.
"There must be some mistake," Jimmy stammered. "This is twice what I borrowed. The interest—"
"Is exactly what you agreed to," I cut him off. "You knew the terms when you signed."
"Please, Mr. Blackwood." Jimmy took a step toward me, hands outstretched in supplication. "I can offer you something else—a partnership in my new venture. It's going to be big, I swear. Just give me another month and—"
The crack of my fist connecting with his jaw echoed through the room. He crumpled to his knees, blood trickling from his split lip.
"I don't negotiate." I towered over him, adjusting my cufflinks. "And I certainly don't enter partnerships with men who can't honor their debts."
His wife rushed forward with a strangled cry. "Please don't hurt him! We'll find a way to pay, I promise!"
They're both on their knees now. Good. They should know their place.
"You had six months," I said, my voice dangerously soft. "My father was generous. I am not."
My gaze drifted around their living room—cheap furniture, faded carpet, nothing of value except... My attention caught on a silver-framed photograph on the mantel. I stepped toward it, ignoring their continued pleas.
The girl in the photo was stunning—raven hair cascading over one shoulder, eyes that seemed to challenge the camera, a slight curve to her lips that wasn't quite a smile. Something twisted in my chest as I picked up the frame.
"Who is this?" I demanded, not taking my eyes off her image.
The silence that followed was heavy with tension. I looked back to find Jimmy and his wife exchanging a panicked glance.
"That's our daughter," Jimmy finally answered, his voice tight. "Antalya."
"Antalya," I repeated, testing the name on my tongue. It tasted exotic. Intriguing.
A plan began forming in my mind—one that would satisfy the debt and give me something far more valuable than money.
I strongly feel that she is my mate. I was looking for her for years; finally, I found her.
"Where is she now?" I asked, turning the frame in my hands.
"She's at university," her mother blurted out. "Please leave her out of this. She knows nothing about the loan."
I smiled then, and watched them both flinch. "I think I've found my payment."
"No!" Jimmy struggled to his feet. "Take the house, take everything we own, but not our daughter!"
I signaled to Marco, my enforcer who'd been silently watching from the doorway. "Break his leg."
"Wait!" Jimmy cried out. "Please, Mr. Blackwood! She's innocent in all this!"
"Should have thought about consequences before you borrowed money you couldn't repay." I shrugged, unmoved by his tears. "One broken leg seems merciful, considering your debt."
The sickening crack that followed, accompanied by Jimmy's scream, didn't faze me. I was still staring at Antalya's photograph, memorizing every detail of her face.
"Have your daughter at my estate tomorrow," I instructed her mother, who was sobbing over her husband's crumpled form. "She'll work off your debt."
"What kind of work?" she asked fearfully.
I smiled. "That's between me and Antalya."
Before leaving, I crouched beside Jimmy, who was moaning in pain. "If you try to run, if you warn her, if you do any nuisance—I'll know. And next time, I won't be so merciful."
Outside, I breathed in the cool evening air, feeling strangely alive. The photograph pressed against my chest in my suit pocket, and I could almost feel her heartbeat matching mine.
"Soon," I whispered to myself, a promise and a vow. Antalya Andrews would be mine, no matter what it took.
Antalya's POVThe crisp air bit at my cheeks, but I barely felt it. The roar of the crowd was a physical thing, vibrating through the ice beneath my skates. Across the center line, Dominic loomed, a dark mountain of intensity in his gear, his focus entirely on me. The annual pack hockey tournament had become our unlikely battleground, a place where all our pent-up passion and competition found an outlet.“Ready to lose, little wolf?” he called out, his voice a low growl that carried over the ice and went straight to my core.I grinned, adjusting my grip on the stick. “You wish, Alpha. My team’s got this.”The puck dropped. It was chaos after that—a blur of swinging sticks, spray of ice, and the thunder of bodies checking against the boards. Dominic was a force of nature, powerful and relentless, but my ladies—Lina, Sasha, Chloe, and me—we were swift and clever. We moved as one unit, a whirlwind of strategy against raw strength.He was everywhere, his dark eyes tracking my every move.
DOMINIC POVThe cold edge of Greeley's blade against Antalya's throat is the only thing in the world. My heart is a frozen, heavy stone in my chest. Every primal instinct screams at me to lunge, to tear his throat out with my teeth. But I'm frozen. One twitch, one wrong move, and he'll end her. The tiny bead of blood under the silver tip is a promise of that.Stay calm. One wrong move and she dies.I take a slow, measured step forward, my hands held out to show I'm no immediate threat. "This is your grand plan, Greeley?" My voice is a low, controlled growl, hiding the storm of panic and rage inside me. "Holding a woman hostage? You've already lost. Everyone here sees you for the coward you are.""They'll see me as the victor who eliminated a traitor and his whore," Greeley sneers, his arm tightening around Antalya's torso. She gasps, a small, pained sound that feels like a physical blow to my gut. "Your pride or her life, Dominic. I won't ask again."I see it then. The briefest flicke
DOMINIC POVThe sight of my brother, my own blood, holding Antalya as a shield made my vision bleed red. He was a fool, a blind, arrogant pawn, and he had his hands on what was mine. The air in the grand hall was thick with tension, but all I could see was the pale, terrified face of my mate over his shoulder."You won't escape this, Dominic," Raymond spat, his voice tight with a fear he was trying to mask with false courage. "The pack council will see you for what you are—a killer. Unfit to lead. You always were too volatile, too dangerous."A cold, mocking laugh escaped me. It wasn't a pleasant sound. It was the scrape of stone on stone. "Is that what they told you, brother? That I'm the monster? Look at yourself. Holding a woman to protect you from the truth you're too much of a coward to face."I will break every one of his fingers for touching her.His grip on Antalya tightened, and a low growl rumbled in my chest."I am the Alpha here," Raymond insisted, his eyes darting toward
Antalya's POVThe elder's question hangs in the air, a death sentence waiting for my signature. I do. Two simple words that would seal my fate and end Dominic's. The shouting from outside grows louder, punctuated by another sharp crack that is definitely a gunshot.Raymond's head whips toward the main doors, his triumphant mask slipping for a fraction of a second to reveal sheer shock. His grip on my hand becomes crushing, a bone-white brace of fear and anger. A wave of murmuring ripples through the assembled crowd, heads turning, people rising from their seats in confusion.He's here.The thought is a lightning strike of pure hope. It floods my veins, washing away the paralyzing fear. My spine straightens. I yank my hand from Raymond's grasp."What is the meaning of this?" the elder stammers, looking from Raymond to the commotion at the doors.Raymond doesn't answer him. His eyes are locked on the entrance, his face like a thundercloud. "Guards! Seal the hall!" he barks, but his voic
Antalya's POVThe night is endless and suffocating. I don't sleep. I don't even try. I just lie there, staring at the fancy ceiling, my mind trapped in its own terrifying thoughts. Raymond. Greeley. Their plot. It plays on a horrible loop behind my eyes. Dominic, weak but free, hunted like an animal. Dominic, cornered. Dominic, falling under a blade held by his own brother's command. The images are so vivid I can almost smell the blood, hear the final, sickening thud.It's not just his life he's risking.My hand flattens against my stomach, over the hollow ache that will never truly leave me.It's his soul. Raymond is walking blindly into his own destruction, and he's taking everyone down with him.My fear for Dominic is a sharp, physical pain, but my disappointment in Raymond is a dull, heavy weight. He could have been so much more. He chose to be a puppet and a murderer.I can't let that happen. I have to find a way to stop this, even if it costs me everything.The first grey light
DOMINIC POVThe last of the poison's fire finally faded from my blood. I drew in a deep, full breath—the first one in weeks that didn't feel like broken glass in my lungs. The weakness was still there, a ghost of what I'd suffered, but it was fading fast. I flexed my hands, feeling the strength slowly returning to my muscles.Good. I'll need it.Marcus watched me from across the safe house's main room, his sharp eyes tracking my every movement. He hadn't spoken much since my... outburst. The memory of my hand grabbing his shirt, the absolute command in my voice, hung between us. He understood now. Antalya was the line. The one nobody crossed."The medic says your system is mostly clear," he said, his tone carefully neutral. "The worst is over.""The worst is just beginning," I corrected him, my voice a low rumble. I walked to the window, pulling the heavy curtain aside just enough to look out at the gloomy dawn. "I wasn't just lying in that dungeon waiting to die, Marcus. I was listen







