Isobel Stout POV
The crystal chandeliers of the Pierre Hotel's grand ballroom glittered like diamonds, casting a fractured light over the hundreds of guests below. To anyone else, this was the wedding of the season-a union between the Stout and Costa families, solidifying territories and trade routes. To me, it was a desecration.
My father, Elroy Stout, a Caporegime who valued profit over loyalty, had chosen to marry Janiyah Costa on the tenth anniversary of my mother's death.
I stood in the shadow of a marble pillar, clutching a glass of champagne I had no intention of drinking. My fingers drifted to my throat, tracing the cool metal of the sapphire pendant resting there. It was the last thing my mother had given me before the cancer took her, a piece of her soul I carried against my skin.
"Isobel."
The voice was like silk wrapped around a razor blade. I stiffened as Janiyah approached. She was a vision in white lace and malicious intent, her dark eyes scanning me with a predator's hunger. She was only five years older than me, a trophy wife hungry for power.
"You look... somber," Janiyah purred, stopping close enough that her cloying perfume choked the air between us. "It's a celebration, darling. Smile."
"I'm saving my smiles for a worthy occasion," I replied, my voice tight.
Janiyah's perfectly painted lips twitched. Her gaze dropped to my neck. "That necklace. It's a bit dated for a girl your age, don't you think? It clashes with your dress. It would look much better as an accessory to my bouquet."
She held out a manicured hand. "Give it to me."
My blood ran cold. "This belonged to my mother. I will never take it off."
"Your mother is dead," she said dismissively, her voice raising just enough to draw the attention of the nearby guests. "And I am the new mistress of this family. Disobedience is ugly, Isobel."
"No."
The smile vanished from her face. She didn't argue. She simply flicked her gaze to the hulking brute standing a few feet away-one of her family's enforcers, now part of her dowry.
Before I could react, a heavy hand clamped onto my shoulder. The force was overwhelming. I was shoved down, my knees slamming painfully onto the plush carpet. A gasp rippled through the crowd, but no one moved. Not the soldiers, not the other Capos. Not my father, who was laughing on the other side of the room, oblivious or indifferent.
"Take it," Janiyah commanded.
I clawed at the enforcer's hands, but he was a wall of muscle. He grabbed the delicate chain and yanked. Metal bit into my skin, snapping with a sharp *ping*.
"Stop! Leave her alone!"
The desperate cry came from Arlene. My mother's maid, the woman who had raised me when my father was too busy counting money, rushed forward. Her gray hair was disheveled, her face pale with terror.
She grabbed the enforcer's arm, a futile attempt to protect me.
"Get off her!" Arlene screamed.
The enforcer didn't even look at her. He simply lashed out with his leg, a brutal, efficient kick to her stomach. Arlene flew backward. Her head cracked against the base of the marble pillar with a sickening thud.
"Arlene!" I screamed, trying to scramble toward her, but the enforcer's boot pressed into my spine, pinning me to the floor.
Arlene slumped against the stone, a trickle of dark blood snaking down her temple. She blinked sluggishly, her eyes unfocused.
Janiyah took the necklace from the enforcer. She held the sapphire up to the light, inspecting it with a sneer.
"Cheap," she pronounced. "Just like the woman who wore it."
With a flick of her wrist, she threw the necklace onto the marble floor. The sapphire shattered on impact, blue shards scattering like frozen tears.
I stopped struggling. The air left my lungs.
Janiyah stepped forward. She placed the heel of her white satin pump directly onto my hand as I reached for the fragments. She pressed down, her weight driving the broken gems and the hard floor into my flesh.
I bit my lip until I tasted copper, refusing to give her the satisfaction of a scream.
"Learn your place, Isobel," she whispered, leaning down so only I could hear. "And learn respect. The dead don't rule this house anymore."
She lifted her foot and walked away, signaling the band to resume playing. The music swelled, drowning out the sound of my heart breaking.
I crawled over to Arlene, my hand throbbing, my soul cold. As I looked at the blood on the floor and the shattered remnants of my mother's legacy, the grief finally receded. In its place, something dark and jagged began to take root.
They wanted a monster? I would find them one. Even if I had to burn myself to ash to do it.
Isobel Stout POV
I didn't walk away from the ballroom; I fled. The applause for my father and his new bride roared behind me like a landslide, threatening to bury me alive. My hand throbbed where Janiyah's heel had crushed it, but the pain in my chest was far worse. It was a hollow, gaping wound where my dignity used to be.
Tears blurred my vision as I navigated the gilded corridors, desperate for an exit, for air, for anything that didn't smell of expensive lilies and betrayal. I wasn't looking where I was going. I turned a sharp corner near the side exit and collided hard with a wall of solid black fabric.
The impact jarred the breath from my lungs. The half-empty glass of champagne I was still clutching-God knows why-tipped forward, splashing amber liquid down the front of an immaculate, bespoke suit.
"I-I'm so sorry," I stammered, looking up in horror.
The apology died in my throat.
The man standing before me wasn't one of the New York soldiers I was used to. He was taller, broader, and radiated a kind of cold, lethal stillness that made the air temperature drop. He had hair the color of midnight and eyes like shattered ice.
Damien Flynn. The Don of the Chicago Outfit.
Panic flared in my gut. Spilling a drink on a man of his rank could get a soldier killed, let alone a Capo's daughter who had just been publicly shamed.
But Damien didn't shout. He didn't even look at the stain on his lapel. His icy gaze drifted over my head, piercing through the open doors of the ballroom to where my father, Elroy, was laughing with a glass of scotch in his hand, oblivious to the wreckage of his own family.
"Pathetic," Damien murmured. The word was soft, but it carried the weight of a gavel striking a sounding block.
He finally looked down at me. There was no pity in his eyes, only a clinical, terrifying assessment.
"A Capo who allows his own blood to be humiliated in public has already lost his territory," he said, his voice a low rumble that vibrated in my bones. "He just doesn't know it yet."
The words struck me harder than Janiyah's slap. For years, I had told myself my father was just busy, stressed, grieving. But this stranger, this predator from Chicago, saw the truth in a single glance. My father wasn't grieving. He was weak.
Damien stepped around me as if I were nothing more than a piece of furniture and headed toward the terrace doors.
I stood frozen for a heartbeat. Then, a strange, dark heat curled in my stomach. It was the heat of a bridge beginning to burn.
My father cared about two things: his reputation and his assets. And as his only daughter, a virgin intended for a strategic marriage alliance, I was his most valuable asset.
I turned and followed Damien Flynn.
The terrace was bathed in the cool glow of the city lights. Damien stood by the stone railing, lighting a cigarette. The flame illuminated the sharp angles of his face, casting him in shadow and fire.
"You're persistent," he said without turning around. Smoke curled from his lips. "Or stupid."
"You think my father is weak," I said, my voice trembling not with fear, but with adrenaline.
Damien turned slowly, resting his elbows on the railing. He looked at me with mild amusement, like a wolf watching a rabbit try to bare its teeth. "I don't *think* anything, Miss Stout. I observe."
I stepped closer. The wind whipped my hair across my face, but I didn't brush it away. I needed him to see me. Not as Elroy's daughter, but as the instrument of his ruin.
"He plans to sell me," I whispered, the words tasting like bile. "To the highest bidder. To solidify a treaty. That's all I am to him. A bargaining chip."
Damien's eyes narrowed slightly. "And you're telling me this because?"
"Because I want to take that away from him." I closed the distance between us until I could smell the tobacco and the dangerous, masculine scent of him. "You despise him. I saw it in your eyes. So help me destroy what he values most."
Silence stretched between us, heavy and electric. Damien dropped his cigarette and crushed it under his polished shoe. He reached out, his large hand wrapping around my throat. He didn't squeeze, but the threat was there. His thumb traced the pulse hammering frantically against my skin.
"You're asking for a devil's bargain, little girl," he warned, his voice dropping to a rough whisper. "If you walk through this door with me, there is no going back. You will be ruined."
"Good," I breathed, leaning into his touch. "Ruin me."
Something dark flared in his eyes-a spark of hunger that mirrored my own desperation. He didn't say another word. He simply released my throat, grabbed my hand, and pulled me toward the private elevators.
The ride up to the penthouse was a blur of silence and escalating heartbeats. When the doors opened to his suite, the city of New York sprawled below us through floor-to-ceiling windows, a glittering ocean of indifference.
Damien didn't turn on the lights. He led me to the center of the room, his grip on my hand tightening.
"Last chance," he growled.
I reached up and unzipped my dress. It pooled at my feet, a pile of expensive silk that felt like a shackle falling away.
Damien's gaze raked over me, possessive and intense. He didn't offer gentleness. He didn't offer love. He offered exactly what I asked for: a weapon.
He kissed me then, hard and demanding, tasting of smoke and champagne. I kissed him back with all the fury I had suppressed for ten years. When he lifted me up and carried me to the dark leather sofa, I didn't close my eyes. I watched the lights of the city blur as I surrendered my future, my name, and my father's honor to the enemy.
I was burning myself to ash, just as I promised. And God, it felt like freedom.
Isobel Stout POV
Consciousness returned not with the gentle warmth of sunlight, but with the cold, crushing weight of reality. The scent of sandalwood and expensive whiskey filled my lungs-a scent that definitely did not belong in my bedroom at the Stout estate.
I opened my eyes. The ceiling was unfamiliar, high and shadowed. I turned my head slowly, every muscle in my body aching with a dull, throbbing reminder of what I had done.
Beside me, sprawled across the dark silk sheets, lay Damien Flynn.
The Don of the Chicago Outfit was asleep, one arm thrown carelessly over his eyes. In repose, the lethal tension that usually radiated from him was gone, leaving only the hard lines of a man who commanded armies. On the nightstand, a gold cufflink gleamed in the early morning light, the Flynn family eagle etched into the metal staring at me like an accusing eye.
Panic, sharp and acidic, flooded my veins.
*Treason.*
The word screamed in my mind. I hadn't just slept with a man; I had slept with the enemy. If my father found out, he wouldn't just disown me. He would have me executed to cleanse the stain on his honor.
I held my breath, sliding out from under the heavy duvet. My legs trembled as my feet touched the cold floor. My dress, the expensive silk gown I had worn like armor last night, lay in a heap near the door. It was torn at the hem, a casualty of our urgency.
I dressed with frantic, clumsy fingers, my eyes never leaving Damien's sleeping form. He didn't stir. I grabbed my heels, not daring to put them on, and crept toward the door. As I slipped into the corridor, leaving the lion's den, I didn't feel the freedom I had claimed last night. I felt the crosshairs of a sniper rifle settling between my shoulder blades.
*
Three weeks later, the nausea started.
At first, I told myself it was stress. The atmosphere in the Stout estate had become suffocating since Janiyah officially took over as the lady of the house. She moved through the corridors like a viper in silk, her laughter echoing in places that used to be quiet.
I sat in the library, a stack of ledgers spread out before me. My father had always allowed me to audit the transport logs-it was the one area where he respected my intelligence. I had found discrepancies in the new contract Janiyah was pushing with a supplier from Jersey. The numbers didn't add up; someone was skimming off the top, and I knew exactly who.
"You're straining your pretty eyes for nothing, Isobel."
I looked up. Janiyah stood in the doorway, wearing a white cashmere dress that cost more than most soldiers made in a year.
"These rates are inflated by twenty percent," I said, my voice steady despite the roiling in my stomach. "If Father sees this-"
"Your father doesn't have time for the ramblings of a girl who can't even secure a husband," Janiyah interrupted, walking over to the desk. She placed a manicured hand on the open ledger and slammed it shut. The sound cracked like a gunshot.
"You are no longer privy to family business," she hissed, leaning down until I could smell her cloying perfume. "You are a liability. An expired asset. Go back to your room before I have the guards drag you there."
I wanted to scream, to throw the book at her, but a wave of bile rose in my throat. I clamped a hand over my mouth, pushed past her, and ran for the nearest bathroom.
I didn't see the triumphant smirk on her face as I fled, but I felt it.
*
The summons came two days later.
Arlene, the only maid who still looked at me with kindness, knocked on my door. Her face was pale, her hands wringing her apron.
"He wants to see you, Miss Isobel," she whispered. "In the study. Now."
"Is it about the ledgers?" I asked, though the dread pooling in my gut told me otherwise.
Arlene didn't answer. She just looked at me with watery eyes, as if she were looking at a ghost.
I walked down the hallway, the floorboards creaking under my feet like dry bones. The door to my father's study was ajar. The smell of cigar smoke and stale scotch wafted out-the scent of judgment.
Elroy Stout was standing behind his massive mahogany desk. He wasn't looking at paperwork. He was staring at the wall, his back to me. Janiyah sat in the leather armchair in the corner, legs crossed, examining her fingernails.
"Father?" I said softly.
Elroy turned. His face was a mask of purple rage, veins bulging in his neck. He didn't speak. He simply picked up a piece of paper from his desk and hurled it across the room.
It fluttered through the air and struck my cheek, the sharp edge slicing the skin before falling to the floor.
I knelt to pick it up, my fingers shaking. It was a medical report from the doctor Janiyah had insisted I see for my "stomach bug."
My eyes scanned the clinical text, but only one word stood out. It was printed in bold, black ink, a death sentence stamped on white paper.
PREGNANT.
The air left the room.
"You whore," Elroy whispered, the sound more terrifying than a shout. He walked around the desk, his heavy steps vibrating through the floor. "You let some mongrel touch you? You defile my name under my own roof?"
I couldn't breathe. I couldn't speak. The secret I had carried from that penthouse suite had grown into a bomb, and it had just detonated.
Elroy stopped inches from me, his shadow engulfing my trembling form. His eyes were devoid of fatherly love; there was only the cold, murderous calculation of a Capo whose property had been damaged.
"Tell me his name," he snarled, his hand hovering over the gun holstered at his hip. "Tell me who did this, so I can butcher him before I deal with you."