Total pages in book: 83
Estimated words: 78587 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 393(@200wpm)___ 314(@250wpm)___ 262(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 78587 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 393(@200wpm)___ 314(@250wpm)___ 262(@300wpm)
Cold. Ruthless. Cruel.
Those were the words used to describe my father.
I was just like him. I had to be.
I was a legacy in the making.
But when he died, I didn’t take his crown.
I walked away and built an empire from the ashes I’d left behind.
But the bratva never truly lets go of a man.
I learned that when Alina showed up at my door.
She was beautiful with ghosts at her heels and fire in her eyes.
One look and I was done for.
We were from the same world.
We knew the rules.
Betrayal was the ultimate sin.
Someone would pay.
While this book follows Sergei and the Volkov brothers, their story unfolds in the Satan’s Fury world. Familiar faces make appearances, but you don’t have to read the Satan’s Fury series to dive into this one. There is no cheating and ends with an HEA
*************FULL BOOK START HERE*************
PROLOGUE
Iwas eight when I found out what kind of man my father really was.
Not just from the stories or rumors.
Not from the whispered warnings from my mother or the house staff.
Not even from the fearful tension that followed him around like a dark shadow.
That night, I saw it for myself.
It was late. I should’ve been in bed hours ago, but I was feeling restless and couldn’t sleep. I decided to make a run to the kitchen. I started down the stairs, and each step seemed to groan under my bare feet. It didn’t matter how many nightlights my mother put out; the house always felt big and cold, empty and dark.
Especially back then.
Maybe it was my overactive imagination or the fact that I was just an all-around nervous kid, but the place had always given me the creeps. It didn’t help matters that I knew there’d be hell to pay if my father caught me out of my room.
He was a stickler for the rules and was heavy with the hand whenever you stepped out of line. I was supposed to be in my room and in my bed, sound asleep. He wouldn’t care that I’d spent the past two hours tossing and turning and had all but fallen out of bed. He’d made the rule, and his rules were to be followed.
I was already scared. It didn’t help matters that the house was quiet. It was like it was holding its breath. My stomach knotted, and my skin prickled as if the air itself knew something I didn’t. Then I heard it. The low, sharp tone of my father’s voice.
The second I heard it, I knew I’d been right.
Something was wrong.
I stopped cold and held my breath, and I quickly determined that his voice was coming from his office. That room was sacred ground. My brothers and I were never allowed in there or even near it, but there was something about the tone in the man’s voice that made me inch closer.
That’s when I noticed the door wasn’t closed all the way. I leaned to the side, taking a peek through the crack, and saw Yuri kneeling in front of my father. He was one of my father’s businessmen who’d worked for him for years. He drove a black Benz and used to sneak me chocolate when no one was looking.
I liked him.
He seemed like a good, decent guy, and I couldn’t understand why he was kneeling in front of my father with tears in his eyes. Then, I heard my father roar, “You think because we are in America, my rules no longer apply?”
He was speaking Russian. It was something he did when he was truly angry. Realizing the seriousness of the situation, the man brought his hands up with his palms together like he was praying for the lord above him to take mercy. “No! No! I would never go against you.”
“But you did.” My father’s tone dropped to a low, menacing level as he snarled, “And you must pay for your betrayal.”
“Please. I beg of you,” Yuri cried. “It was a mistake. I meant no disrespect.”
“No disrespect?” My chest tightened when he stepped into my line of sight. His sleeves were rolled just past his big, silver watch, and his tie was loose around his neck. He looked more like a banker than a killer, but that only made it worse. The vein in his neck pulsed as he growled, “I brought you in. I treated you like family, and you stole from me! You stole from the family! Do you know what that means, Bratan?”
“Please. I’m sorry.” Tears filled Yuri’s eyes. “My family—”
“My family! My name,” my father interrupted. “No more of this nonsense!”
Then he looked to Max and gave him a nod. Max was one of my father’s most trusted guards, and as usual, he was standing in the corner, stone-faced and silent. He was always silent. Always watching. He reached into the sheath attached to the side of his pants pocket and pulled out a knife with a wooden handle and a straight, narrow blade with a slight curve. His face was void of expression as he stepped forward.