Saved by the Devil – Sinful Mafia Daddies Read Online Natasha L. Black

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Erotic, Insta-Love Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 67
Estimated words: 62994 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 315(@200wpm)___ 252(@250wpm)___ 210(@300wpm)
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Next to that, I see a thumbnail of a shared video that I never got around to watching. I kept meaning to, but I was too overwhelmed by it all. It’s from the day Samuil and I saw our baby for the first time. We heard their heartbeat and fell in love with them right then. Samuil filmed it.

My thumb trembles as I hit play. The shaky recording begins with the screen showing a small, curled shape. The heartbeat echoes in the room, fast and strong. My voice catches in the recording. A nervous little giggle escapes me as the tech warns me about the pressure of the wand.

I hear Samuil’s quiet breath next to the microphone, the faint rustle of fabric. Then there’s the soft whisper of a word. I hadn’t even heard him say it that day. It’s not in English, and I have to go back and watch the clip a few times to understand what he’s saying. I turn the volume up and try to phonetically type it out, but I can’t get it quite right. Finally, I just try to say it in my translation app the way he did.

“Lyubimaya.”

The translator buffers for only a moment before returning a single word.

Beloved.

The tears come fast and hot. They roll down my cheeks before I can stop them. I press my hand over my mouth to contain the sound. He loves this child. He always has, from the first moment he heard their heartbeat.

But none of that matters now, because he’ll always choose his damn Bratva over us.

I close my eyes and try to remember what it felt like to believe we could make a family together. I try to remember the warmth of his hand over mine, the awe in his face when he first saw our child on the screen.

It all feels fleeting in the face of that headline. I’ll never be able to unsee the blood or the bodies lying dead on the street. I’ll never get Lena’s smiling face, so similar to Anya’s, out of my head.

Anya endured something that no child ever should, and it was Samuil’s fault. No matter how deeply I feel for Samuil or how much I want him to be in our child’s life, there’s no getting around that. He’s the reason Anya doesn’t have a mother, and he’s willing to put our child in that same situation.

I turn my phone off.

I must have fallen asleep on the couch because the next thing I know, the room is darker. My neck aches and my eyes are burning from all the tears I silently cried. I drag myself upright and realize I need to get some air. I need more than just a long workout in the gym, I need an actual walk outside.

I put on shoes and a coat and slip quietly out the door. I expect Samuil’s security to swarm me and stop me, but no one does. I don’t give it much thought, I’m just glad to finally have a little independence for a change.

When I get down to the street, I realize the city feels different. Maybe it’s just because I’m in a much nicer part of town than I’m used to, or maybe it’s because I’ve barely left the apartment in weeks. Everything just feels harsh and too loud. The world suddenly seems cruel and unforgiving. I hate it.

I walk aimlessly for a few blocks, trying to clear my head. The cold air stings my cheeks and makes my eyes water all over again. My thoughts won’t settle. They spin and crash into each other like waves during a storm.

At the corner near a coffee shop, a homeless man sits on the ground with a cardboard sign. His hands shake when he reaches for his cup. My heart aches for him. The world is so unfair to those of us born without any advantages. I dig into my pocket for a few dollars.

“Here,” I say gently.

I drop the bills into his cup, and in that exact second, everything around me shifts. A shadow falls across the sidewalk. A heavy footstep behind me. A strange smell, something chemical and sharp.

Before I can turn, an arm wraps around my waist. A gloved hand clamps over my mouth. I gasp, kick, try to scream, but it comes out muffled and useless.

“Got her,” a voice says near my ear, low and satisfied.

My heart slams against my ribs. I try to focus on the homeless man, to get him to call for help or do something, but he’s already running in the opposite direction, probably spooked.

No. Oh, God. No.

I try to bite the hand covering my mouth, but the man jerks me back so hard my breath rips out of me. I hear the sound of a van door sliding open beside us. Someone grabs my legs.


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