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Home > Mafia > Too Late For Regret: The Heiress's Revenge
Too Late For Regret: The Heiress's Revenge

Too Late For Regret: The Heiress's Revenge

Author: : Yuda Xiaojie
Genre: Mafia
I spent a decade learning to save lives as a trauma surgeon, only to discover my parents had sold mine to the highest bidder. To end a turf war, I was forced back into the underworld to marry Ivan Hughes, a rival mob boss known for his brutality. I thought I was just a pawn in a business merger, but then my steady surgeon's hands began to tremble, and a metallic taste filled my mouth. I ran my own toxicology report in secret. Positive for arsenic. My mother wasn't just forcing me into a loveless marriage; she was slowly poisoning me. I broke into my father's safe and found the truth: a birth certificate for Ivan's secret son with his mistress, and a chain of emails between my mother and my fiancé. "The dosage is being increased," my mother wrote. "By the wedding night, she will be too weak to protest. You can dispose of her quietly after the heir is secured." My blood turned to ice. They were using me to transfer my trust fund to Ivan, planning to bury me and replace me with his mistress before the honeymoon even started. They thought they were killing a helpless girl. They forgot that a surgeon knows exactly where to cut to cause the most damage. I taped a microphone to my ribs beneath my white silk gown and walked onto the stage of our engagement gala. I didn't take the microphone to say "I do." I took it to burn their empire to the ground.

Chapter 1

I spent a decade learning to save lives as a trauma surgeon, only to discover my parents had sold mine to the highest bidder.

To end a turf war, I was forced back into the underworld to marry Ivan Hughes, a rival mob boss known for his brutality.

I thought I was just a pawn in a business merger, but then my steady surgeon's hands began to tremble, and a metallic taste filled my mouth.

I ran my own toxicology report in secret.

Positive for arsenic.

My mother wasn't just forcing me into a loveless marriage; she was slowly poisoning me.

I broke into my father's safe and found the truth: a birth certificate for Ivan's secret son with his mistress, and a chain of emails between my mother and my fiancé.

"The dosage is being increased," my mother wrote.

"By the wedding night, she will be too weak to protest. You can dispose of her quietly after the heir is secured."

My blood turned to ice.

They were using me to transfer my trust fund to Ivan, planning to bury me and replace me with his mistress before the honeymoon even started.

They thought they were killing a helpless girl. They forgot that a surgeon knows exactly where to cut to cause the most damage.

I taped a microphone to my ribs beneath my white silk gown and walked onto the stage of our engagement gala.

I didn't take the microphone to say "I do."

I took it to burn their empire to the ground.

Chapter 1

Aliana POV:

I had spent ten years learning how to save lives as a trauma surgeon, only to find out my own had been sold to the highest bidder before I had even finished my residency.

The tires of the black SUV crunched over the gravel, a sound that used to signal safety but now sounded like the closing of a prison gate.

My hands were folded in my lap.

They were steady.

A surgeon's hands are always steady, even when the rest of the body is screaming to run.

The driver didn't speak to me.

He was just one of my father's men, a shadow in a suit, trained to follow orders and ignore the cargo.

And that is what I was.

Cargo.

The Donovan estate loomed out of the darkness.

It was a sprawling mansion of stone and ivy, bathed in the artificial glow of security lights.

It looked majestic to the outside world.

To me, it looked like a mausoleum.

I hadn't been here in seven years.

I thought I had escaped.

I thought my medical degree and my life in Boston were enough to sever the blood ties.

But when the Don calls, you answer.

Or you die.

The car stopped, and the door opened.

I stepped out into the cool night air, but I couldn't breathe.

The air here was thick with secrets and the metallic scent of old blood.

I was escorted to the main hall.

My parents were waiting.

Richard and Eleanor Donovan sat in high-backed velvet chairs like royalty holding court.

They didn't stand.

They didn't smile.

There were no tears of reunion.

My mother's eyes scanned me, critiquing my simple dress, my lack of jewelry, and my exhaustion.

My father looked at his watch.

"You are late, Aliana," Richard said.

His voice was a low rumble, the voice that commanded soldiers and ordered hits.

"Traffic," I said.

I didn't apologize.

I wasn't a child anymore, even if they treated me like one.

"Sit," he commanded.

I sat on the edge of the sofa opposite them.

"We have news," Eleanor said.

She smoothed her skirt, her fingers laden with diamonds that probably cost more than my entire medical education.

"The alliance with the Hughes family needs to be solidified."

I felt a cold knot form in my stomach.

The Hughes family controlled the docks and the chemical plants.

They were brutal.

They were powerful.

And they were our rivals.

"Ivan Hughes has asked for a union," Richard said.

He didn't say marriage.

He said union.

Like a merger of corporations.

I accepted the words in silence.

He didn't ask me.

He didn't need to.

This was the Don's Command.

In our world, a daughter is just a currency to be traded for peace or power.

I looked at my father.

"Ivan Hughes is the Underboss," I said, my voice tight. "He is known for skinning men alive who cross him."

"He is strong," Richard said. "He will protect you."

Protect me.

That was the lie they always told.

They protect us by locking us in cages.

"The wedding is in two months," Eleanor added. "You will stay here. You will learn to be a wife. You will forget your little hospital job."

"My career isn't a job, Mother," I said. "It is my life."

"Not anymore," Richard said.

He stood up.

The conversation was over.

I was led to a guest room.

Not my old room.

That had been turned into a storage space for my mother's furs.

This room was cold.

It smelled of lemon polish and disuse.

I walked to the window.

I looked out at the grounds, at the armed guards patrolling the perimeter.

I was trapped.

The next morning, the house was a hive of activity.

Servants moved with their heads down.

They whispered when I passed, but stopped abruptly when I looked at them.

They knew.

Everyone knew but me.

I was summoned to the library at noon.

He was there.

Ivan Hughes.

He was taller than I expected.

He wore a suit that fit him like a second skin, expensive and dark.

His hair was slicked back, revealing a face that was devastatingly handsome and utterly cruel.

He didn't look like a monster.

That was the dangerous part.

He looked like a prince.

"Aliana," he said.

His voice was smooth, like velvet wrapped around a blade.

He took my hand.

He didn't kiss it.

He inspected it.

"Surgeon's hands," he noted. "Steady."

I pulled my hand back.

"Ivan," I said.

My father stood by the fireplace, watching us like he was watching a horse trade.

Ivan smiled, but it didn't reach his eyes.

His eyes were dead.

Cold, blue ice.

"I look forward to our life together," he said.

He stepped closer, invading my personal space.

I smelled expensive cologne and faint tobacco.

"I have big plans for us. For the families."

He gestured to the papers on the desk.

"Hughes Bio-Med," he said. "A legitimate face for our combined strength. You will be the perfect image for it. A doctor. A Donovan. A wife."

He wasn't looking for a partner.

He was looking for a prop.

I tried to find something human in him.

Some spark of warmth.

But all I saw was calculation.

Later that evening, there was a dinner.

The table was set with silver and crystal.

The wine flowed red and heavy.

I barely touched my food.

I heard a servant whisper near the sideboard.

She mentioned a guest.

A secret guest.

My mother's head snapped up.

She glared at the servant, silencing her instantly.

"Who is the guest?" I asked.

"No one," Eleanor said sharply. "Eat your soup, Aliana."

The tension was palpable.

It vibrated in the air like a plucked string.

Ivan stood up to make a toast.

He raised his glass.

"To Aliana," he said.

"To the future of our families. I promise to protect her."

He looked directly at me.

His smile was predatory.

"To keep her safe. To keep her close."

I raised my glass, my hand trembling slightly for the first time in years.

I looked into his eyes and saw the truth.

He didn't want to protect me.

He wanted to own me.

And I had nowhere left to run.

Chapter 2

Ivan POV

I stood at the floor-to-ceiling window of my office, looking down at the city lights that sprawled beneath me like a chaotic, shimmering galaxy.

They were all down there-sleeping, eating, living their mundane little lives.

They had no idea that men like me were the ones holding the leash.

I am the Underboss of the Hughes family.

I have killed more men than I have years on this earth.

I built this empire on a foundation of fear and blood, and now, I was about to put a crown on it.

I turned away from the panoramic view and unlocked the hidden drawer in my mahogany desk.

Inside lay a single photograph.

Kiera.

She was laughing in the picture, her head thrown back, wild and untamed.

She was everything Aliana Donovan was not.

Kiera was fire-consuming and passionate.

Aliana was ice-cold, brittle, and lifeless.

My capo, Marco, knocked once before entering the room.

"The shipment is secure, Boss," he reported, his voice clipped and professional.

"The new route through the harbor is clear."

"Good," I said, my eyes drifting back to the photo.

"And the money laundering through the Bio-Med accounts?"

"Clean," he replied without hesitation.

"Donovan's accounts are already being merged. It is seamless."

I nodded slowly.

"Perfect."

My phone buzzed against the hardwood of the desk.

It was Kiera.

I answered, my voice softening instinctively, shedding the armor of the Underboss.

"Where are you?" she asked.

Her voice was a purr, demanding and sweet all at once.

"Working," I said, leaning back.

"Dealing with the merger."

"You mean dealing with the Princess," she spat, the sweetness evaporating.

"I hate that she is back, Ivan. I hate that she is in that house."

"It's necessary, Kiera," I said, sitting on the edge of my desk.

"She is just a tool. A key to unlock the Donovan vault."

I gripped the phone tighter.

"Once we have full control, once the legitimacy of the marriage secures the alliance, she becomes irrelevant."

"You promise?" she asked, her voice small.

"I promise," I said.

"My future is with you. And Leo. Always."

I hung up and checked my reflection in the mirror.

I looked the part.

The devoted fiancé. The respectful ally.

I drove to the Donovan estate for a scheduled meeting with Richard and Eleanor.

They were waiting in the study, surrounded by books they probably hadn't read in years.

They looked old. Weak.

They were handing me their kingdom because they didn't have the strength to hold it anymore.

"We need to discuss the transition," I said, taking a seat opposite them.

"Aliana seems... hesitant."

"She is headstrong," Eleanor said, waving a manicured hand dismissively.

"She has always been difficult. But she will obey."

I leaned forward, resting my elbows on my knees.

"I want to make sure she is manageable," I said, my voice dropping an octave.

"Her medical background makes her sharp. Too sharp."

Eleanor exchanged a look with Richard.

A look of guilt. A look of conspiracy.

"We are handling it," Eleanor said softly, refusing to meet my eyes.

"She has... health issues. They tend to flare up when she is stressed."

She paused, a cruel smile touching her lips.

"She will be docile enough by the wedding."

I suppressed a smile of my own.

They were poisoning their own daughter.

It made my job so much easier.

I didn't even have to get my hands dirty.

"Excellent," I said.

"I have the transfer papers for her trust fund. Since she will be my wife, it makes sense for me to manage her assets."

Richard signed without hesitation.

He was selling his daughter's safety for a percentage of my shipping routes.

Greedy old fool.

I left the estate, washing the stench of their desperation off me as I drove to the apartment I kept for Kiera.

It was a penthouse, far removed from the grime of the family business.

Kiera was waiting.

She was draped in silk and diamonds, gifts from me.

Leo was on the floor, playing with a set of hand-painted toy soldiers.

My son.

He had my eyes. He had my chin.

And he was a secret the world couldn't know about. Yet.

"Daddy!" Leo shouted, abandoning his toys and running to me.

I scooped him up, burying my face in his neck.

He was the only pure thing in my life.

"Did you slay the dragon?" he asked, his eyes wide.

It was a bedtime story Kiera told him.

The dragon was the obstacles in our way.

The dragon was Aliana.

"Not yet, buddy," I said, smoothing his hair.

"But the dragon is getting very tired."

Kiera walked over and kissed me deeply.

She tasted of expensive wine and raw ambition.

"Is she suffering?" Kiera whispered against my lips.

I smirked.

"Her own mother is taking care of that."

"She is weak. She is alone."

I pulled back slightly to look at her.

"She thinks she can play detective, but she has no idea the game is rigged."

Kiera stepped back and handed me a manila folder.

"I found this," she said, a triumphant glint in her eyes.

"From her time at the hospital. A malpractice suit she settled quietly."

She tapped the cover with a fingernail.

"It's not much, but it stains her perfect white coat."

I took the folder, feeling the weight of it.

It was ammunition.

Just in case the poison didn't work fast enough.

Aliana Donovan thinks she is a prize to be won.

She thinks she is a person who matters.

She is about to learn that in my world, she is just a sacrifice.

Chapter 3

Aliana POV

The headache began behind my eyes, a dull, rhythmic throb that refused to subside.

At first, I dismissed it as stress.

I blamed the suffocating atmosphere of this house, the weight of the walls closing in.

But then came the fatigue.

It wasn't just tiredness; it felt like lead had been poured into my veins.

I was a surgeon. I knew the exhaustion of thirty-hour shifts and the hollow ache of an adrenaline crash.

This was different.

This was pathology. This felt chemical.

I sat in the garden, staring down into the porcelain cup my mother had insisted I drink.

Earl Grey.

My favorite.

But the steam rising from it carried the wrong notes.

Metallic.

Bitter.

When I was sure I was unobserved, I poured it into the rosebush.

I watched the dark liquid sink into the thirsty soil, a silent accusation.

A servant walked by-an older woman named Maria, who had known me since I was a child.

She glanced at the empty cup, then at me.

Her eyes didn't just widen; they filled with a terrified understanding.

She looked away quickly, her head bowing low as she hurried past.

Why was she afraid?

Unless she knew what I was supposed to be drinking.

I went back to my room.

My sanctuary.

Or so I thought.

I was changing my dress when a flash of movement caught my eye in the mirror.

A tiny, unnatural glint of light beneath the vanity table.

I knelt down.

My fingers brushed against cool plastic. It was a small black disc.

A listening device.

My heart hammered against my ribs, a frantic bird trapped in a cage.

I wasn't a guest here.

I was a prisoner.

And I was being watched.

I stood up slowly, forcing my breathing to even out.

I forced my face to remain neutral, a mask of calm.

If they were watching, I couldn't let them know I knew.

I finished changing and walked out of the room.

I needed answers.

And I knew exactly where to find them.

The archives were in the basement, secured behind a reinforced steel door.

But I knew the code.

My father was a creature of habit and arrogance. He never changed his passwords.

It was always the date he became Don.

I waited until the house settled into silence.

I waited until the heavy, rhythmic snoring of my father echoed from the master suite like the growl of a sleeping beast.

I slipped down the back stairs, my bare feet silent on the cold marble.

The keypad beeped softly.

The door clicked open.

The smell of old paper and dust hit me, thick with the scent of secrets.

Rows of filing cabinets lined the walls.

This was the family history.

The blood ledger.

But I didn't care about the sins of the past.

I cared about the present.

I went to the financial records first.

I pulled the files for the last six months.

The numbers were complex, a deliberately tangled web of shell companies and offshore accounts.

But my mind, trained to find anomalies in human anatomy, saw the pattern in the ledger.

Huge sums of money were being transferred out of my trust fund.

My inheritance.

It was being funneled into a company listed as "K&L Holdings."

Who was K&L?

I kept digging, my fingers flying through the folders.

I found a personnel file in a mislabeled box.

It was thin.

The name on the tab was Kiera Reese.

I opened it.

There was a background check. A list of payments.

She was on the payroll.

"Consultant."

And then, a photo slipped out.

It was a candid shot, taken from a distance with a telephoto lens.

Kiera was holding a toddler.

The boy was laughing.

I froze.

The air left my lungs.

I knew that face.

I had seen that face in the mirror every day for the last two days.

The sharp jaw.

The hooded eyes.

The cruel set of the mouth.

The child was a miniature replica of Ivan.

The room spun.

I grabbed the edge of the shelf to steady myself as nausea rolled over me.

K&L.

Kiera and Leo.

It wasn't just a mistress.

It was a second family.

Ivan had a son.

And my parents... they had to know.

My father's signature was on the payroll checks.

He was financing Ivan's mistress while selling his own daughter to the man.

The betrayal was a physical blow, sharper than a scalpel.

It wasn't just business.

It was a complete erasure of my existence.

I heard a noise in the hallway.

Footsteps.

I shoved the photo and the file into my waistband, hiding them under the loose fabric of my sweater.

I closed the drawer.

I pressed myself into the shadows behind a stack of boxes, holding my breath.

The door opened.

A beam of light swept the room, cutting through the dust motes.

It was James.

My father's oldest bodyguard.

The man who had taught me how to ride a bike when my father was too busy.

He walked into the room, his gun drawn.

"Who is there?" he whispered, his voice tight.

I stepped out.

"It's me, James," I said softly.

He lowered the gun, but his grip remained tight.

"Miss Aliana," he said.

His face was lined with worry, deep grooves etched by years of service.

"You shouldn't be here. It's dangerous."

"I know," I said.

I pulled out the photo.

I showed it to him.

"Did you know?" I asked.

James looked at the photo.

He stared at the child's face, and I saw the recognition flicker in his eyes.

He looked away.

He couldn't meet my gaze.

"The Don... he does what is necessary for the family."

"Is that what this is?" I asked.

My voice broke, fracturing under the weight of the truth.

"Is poisoning me necessary?"

"Is selling me to a man who has a child with another woman necessary?"

James flinched as if I had struck him.

He knew about the poison.

God, he knew.

He looked at the photo again, at the undeniable proof of dishonor.

He reached into his pocket.

He pulled out a small, tarnished silver pin.

It was the Donovan crest.

But it was the old one.

From before my father took over.

From when honor was more than just a word used to justify greed.

"Take this," he whispered.

He pressed it into my hand, his calloused palm rough against my skin.

"There are still some of us who remember the old code."

"Omertà isn't just silence, Aliana."

"It's loyalty."

"And loyalty goes both ways."

He stepped back, holstering his weapon.

"Go back to your room."

"I didn't see you."

I ran.

I ran up the stairs, my lungs burning, my heart pounding a rhythm of survival.

I got to my room and locked the door.

I collapsed on the bed.

I pulled the photo out again.

I looked at Kiera's smug face.

I looked at the innocent boy.

And then I looked at myself in the mirror.

My skin was pale.

My eyes were dark with exhaustion and the remnants of poison.

But beneath the fatigue, something new was kindling.

I wasn't going to die here.

I wasn't going to let them erase me.

I wiped the tears from my face, smearing them away with a fierce hand.

They wanted a victim.

They wanted a compliant wife.

They were going to get a war.

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