Chapter 3

Three days of losing my mind.

Every shadow looked like Ronan’s calculating stare. Every stranger could have been Maddox with his silver tongue. And every time I closed my eyes, I saw Jaxon—blood on his lips, violence in his movements, that moment when his mask slipped.

My father hadn’t mentioned my gala disappearance. Either Detective Martinez covered better than I’d hoped, or he was playing a longer game.

“You’re distracted,” he said over breakfast, not looking up from his newspaper.

I nearly choked on coffee. “What?”

“Everything alright, sweetheart?”

The endearment felt wrong now. Sweet words from a man who lived in the shadows and called monsters his enemies. But after three days of replaying that alley, I wasn’t sure who the monsters really were.

“Just tired. Haven’t been sleeping well.”

He nodded, but his expression said he wasn’t buying it. Then something shifted in his grey eyes—actual fear. When was the last time I’d seen Commissioner Hart afraid?

“Maybe you should stay in today.”

“Actually, I was thinking of going for a run.”

“Take Thompson with you. The city’s been… volatile lately.”

“I’ll be fine, Dad.”

“Alina.” His tone ended the discussion. “Take Thompson.”

Four blocks from the penthouse, my phone buzzed.

*Pretty little princess, all alone on scary streets.*

Ice flooded my veins. Someone was watching. Right now.

Another text: Daddy’s security can’t protect you from everything.

Who is this?

*Friends of your new boyfriends. Keep walking straight. Turn right at the next corner.*

The Vultures. Had to be.

I looked behind me for Thompson, but he was nowhere in sight. How had I gotten so far ahead?

*Stop.*

I stopped in a secluded area of Millennium Park, trees blocking the view from main paths.

“Well, well. Commissioner Hart’s little princess.”

Three men emerged from behind trees. Leather cuts with vulture patches. Greasy hair, yellowed teeth, eyes holding no humanity.

“Your daddy’s security man is taking a nap,” the leader said—taller than the others, arms covered in crude tattoos. “Don’t worry, he’ll wake up with just a headache.”

“What do you want?”

“We want the Iron Serpents to know they can’t protect what’s theirs. We Want your daddy to understand his war on motorcycle clubs has consequences.”

“I’m not theirs. I barely know them.”

“No?” One pulled out a phone showing grainy security footage from the Inferno Club. Me in the alley with all three men. “Looks pretty cozy.”

My face burned. “It was just—”

“Here’s what’s happening. We’re going to have a little fun with you. Nothing too permanent. But when we’re done, you’re delivering a message to your new friends.”

“What message?”

His smile turned ugly. “That the Vultures don’t share.”

I ran.

Stupid, instinctive, hopeless—but I ran. Three steps before hands grabbed me, pulling me backward hard enough to knock breath from my lungs.

They dragged me deeper into trees. One produced a knife that gleamed in filtered sunlight.

“Now let’s talk about respect.”

The knife moved toward my face, and I screamed.

It was cut short when a backhand sent me sprawling, tasting blood. This was actually happening.

“Scream all you want. No one’s coming—”

That’s when the trees exploded.

One moment I was on the ground with three men standing over me, the next there was chaos. Bodies flying, wet sounds of fists connecting with flesh.

Through the violence, I saw him.

Jaxon moved like death itself—fast, deadly, and full of rage he kept under control. He seemed to step out of the shadows, and the Vultures never had a chance.

The first man went down with a crack that sounded like his jaw snapping.

The second tried to grab his gun but was knocked out before he could even pull it free.

The leader lasted the longest—maybe ten seconds—before Jaxon had him slammed against a tree, his fingers tight around the man’s throat.

“Want to explain why you’re touching what’s mine?”

“She’s… not… yours…” the leader wheezed.

“No? Then why am I about to kill you for it?”

I should have been horrified. Instead, I found myself mesmerized by violence on my behalf. He’d called me his.

“Jax.” Ronan’s voice cut through morning air like a blade. He emerged from trees looking like he’d stepped out of a boardroom instead of a crime scene. “We need to move. Now.”

Behind him came Maddox, blood on his knuckles and murder in dark eyes. “Three more unconscious fifty yards that way. Someone’s going to find them soon.”

Three more? How many Vultures had been watching me?

Jaxon leaned close to whisper something that made the leader’s eyes go wide with terror. When he released him, the man collapsed and didn’t try to get up.

“Come on, princess.” Maddox was beside me, helping me up with gentle hands that still had blood under the nails. “Time to go.”

“I can’t. Thompson—”

“Will wake up with a story about how you gave him the slip,” Ronan said calmly. “Standard operating procedure.”

The SUV was running. Jaxon slid behind the wheel while Ronan claimed the passenger seat. That left me in back with Maddox, who was studying my split lip with genuine concern.

“You hurt?”

“I’m fine.” But I was shaking now that adrenaline faded.

“You’re not fine,” Jaxon said, meeting my eyes in the rearview mirror. “But you will be. No one touches you again without going through us first.”

Us. Like I belonged to all three now.

“How did you find me?”

“We’ve been watching you since the club,” Ronan said plainly. “Did you think we’d let Commissioner Hart’s daughter wander Chicago without protection?”

“You’ve been stalking me.”

“We’ve been protecting you,” Maddox corrected. “The Vultures would have done worse than stalk, beautiful. What you saw back there? That was them being restrained.”

“Restrained?”

“They didn’t rape you,” Jaxon said bluntly. “They didn’t kill you. By Vulture standards, that’s practically a love letter.”

My stomach turned. “You’re saying they’ll escalate.”

“Your little adventure has consequences. They’ll use you to hurt us, which means they’ll try to hurt you.”

“So what am I supposed to do?”

“That’s one option,” Ronan said when I mentioned hiding. “Go back to your glass tower, pretend this never happened.”

The way he said it made it clear what he thought of that option.

“What’s the other option?”

All three exchanged looks—that silent communication again.

“You come with us,” Jaxon said simply. “Serpent’s Den. Our compound.”

“You want me to move in with three criminals I barely know.”

“Yes,” Ronan said.

The simple honesty caught me off guard. “That’s insane.”

“So is walking around Chicago with a target on your back.”

The SUV pulled up to a red light. For a moment I considered running. Back to safety and boredom and slow suffocation.

Instead, I heard myself ask, “What happens at this compound?”

“You’ll be safe,” Maddox said.

“That’s not what I asked.”

His grin was pure mischief. “No, it’s not. Tell me, beautiful—what do you want to happen?”

What did I want? Three days ago, I would have said college, travel, some nice boy my father approved of.

Now I realized I had no idea. Except…

“I want to understand. Why you saved me, why the Vultures targeted me, why I feel safer with three criminals than with my father’s security.”

Jaxon’s eyes met mine in the mirror, something almost soft in his expression. “That’s going to take more than one conversation, princess.”

“Then I guess we’d better get started.”

The light turned green. As we drove deeper into Chicago’s maze of streets and shadows, I realized I’d just made the most important decision of my life.

I was going to find out what happened when good girls chose to fall.

Chapter 4

The Serpent’s Den wasn’t what I expected. No grimy warehouse or back-alley dive. The SUV rolled through wrought-iron gates into a fortress dressed as a mansion—three stories of dark brick and steel, walls built to stop a tank.

“Home sweet home,” Maddox drawled as we climbed out.

“This is your compound?” I stared up at the imposing structure. “It looks like Wayne Manor.”

Jaxon snorted. “What does that make us—villains?”

I met his amber eyes. “Are you?”

The question hung like smoke. All three men—Maddox, Jaxon, Ronan—went still, their expressions unreadable.

“Depends,” Ronan said finally, “on your definition of villain.”

My phone buzzed, the caller ID freezing my blood. Dad.

“I have to—”

“Not yet.” Jaxon plucked the phone from my fingers, his touch surprisingly gentle. “We need to know what we’re dealing with first.”

“He’ll know something’s wrong if I don’t answer.”

“He already knows,” Ronan said, checking his own phone. “Three squad cars just hit Millennium Park. They found your security detail and a few unconscious Vultures.”

My stomach dropped. “Thompson—is he—”

“Concussion. He’ll live. The Vultures won’t talk.” Ronan’s tone suggested I shouldn’t ask why.

The compound’s interior was as striking as the exterior—polished hardwood, exposed brick, art that belonged in a museum. But it wasn’t the decor that caught me. It was the men. Dozens of them, lingering in the halls, their eyes tracking me like predators sizing up prey.

“They’re staring,” I muttered.

“Of course they are,” Maddox said, his hand grazing my lower back, a touch that felt like a claim. “Fresh meat in a den of wolves. Don’t act like prey, Alina.”

“I’m not prey.”

“Then walk like it.”

Ronan led us to a medical bay—less first-aid station, more wartime hospital. “Sit,” he ordered, gesturing to an examination table.

I perched on the edge as he stepped between my legs, tilting my chin to inspect my split lip. His green eyes locked on mine, his thumb brushing the wound with clinical care. When it lingered a fraction too long, my breath hitched. His gaze darkened.

“We should deal with that,” Jaxon said, holding up my still-buzzing phone.

Ronan stepped back, reluctance in his posture. “What will you tell him?”

Before I could answer, a text from an unknown number lit up the screen: Check your car, princess. We left you a present.

Ice flooded my veins. The same number that lured me into the Vultures’ trap.

“What is it?” Ronan read my face like an open book.

I showed him the message. Jaxon pulled up security feeds on a tablet. “Where’d you park?”

“Garage under my father’s building.”

The feed showed my silver BMW with a manila envelope under the wipers.

“We need to get that,” I said.

“No,” all three said at once.

“Photos,” Ronan said grimly. “Probably from the Inferno Club.”

The implications hit hard—me kissing Jaxon through the cage, standing with three notorious criminals in an alley. “My father can’t see those.”

“Why?” Jaxon’s voice was sharp. “Afraid to tarnish his perfect princess?”

“They’d ruin his career. He’s up for superintendent.”

“And you care about his career, why?” Maddox leaned closer, his breath warm on my neck.

“He’s my father.”

“Your father’s hands are dirtier than ours,” Ronan said. “He just wears gloves.”

Another buzz. One hour, princess. Or those photos hit every news outlet in Chicago. Come alone. – Viktor Kozlov

“Viktor Kozlov. Vulture enforcer,” Ronan said. “Likes to make things personal.”

My phone rang again. Dad. I picked up before anyone could stop me.

“Alina, thank God.” His voice was tight with worry and fear. “Where are you?”

“I’m safe, Dad.”

“Safe where? The park’s crawling with police, men are in the hospital, and my daughter’s missing.”

“I can’t come home. Not yet.”

“What are you saying?” His tone hardened. “Come home. We'll talk about everything. Including the photos.”

My blood went cold. “You know about them?”

“I know a lot, sweetheart. Things you need to understand.”

“Then tell me now.”

“Not over the phone, you need to come home.” I hung up, hands shaking.

I looked at the three men.

“He knows about the photos.”

“So what’s it gonna be?” Jaxon asked, stepping closer, his presence overwhelming.

“Belonging isn't a weakness,” Ronan added. “It’s safety. Truth instead of pretty lies.”

Maddox’s lips brushed my neck. “Three protectors. Three kings for one queen, beautiful. Who wouldn’t want that kind of throne?”

But even as I looked at them, doubt crept in. Was I choosing them, or just running from a life built on lies?

“Walk into Viktor’s trap, or stay here?”

“Stay,” I said, the word heavy with choice. “But what happens now?”

“You face the club,” Ronan said, gesturing toward the sound of rough voices echoing deeper in the compound. “Full membership decides on… unusual situations.”

“And I’m unusual.”

“Princess,” Maddox grinned, “you’re the most unusual situation we’ve seen in years.”

“They’re going to vote on whether I stay,” I blurted, my voice tight, heart racing at what the decision might be.

“They’re going to meet you,” Maddox corrected. “What they decide after that… well, that’s partly up to you.”

We approached double doors, the noise behind them growing louder, more chaotic. My phone buzzed again: Thirty minutes. Don’t test me.

I showed it to them. Jaxon’s jaw tightened. “Viktor can wait. The club won’t.”

The doors swung open, and the room fell silent.

Thirty men in leather cuts turned to stare, their eyes a mix of curiosity, suspicion, and hunger. This wasn’t the controlled officer’s meeting from earlier—these were the Serpents’ soldiers, the ones who got their hands dirty. The air crackled with raw, dangerous energy.

“Well, well,” a lean man with cold eyes stepped forward, his smile sharp as a blade. “Commissioner’s daughter slumming it with us peasants.”

Laughter rippled, edged with menace.

“Enough,” Jaxon snapped, his voice cutting through like a gunshot.

“Is it?” The man—Viper, I remembered—tilted his head. “Last I checked, we don’t roll out the red carpet for cops’ kids.”

“You got a problem, Viper?” Ronan’s tone was ice.

“I got a problem with her compromising us for a quick fuck.”

Heat flooded my cheeks, but Jaxon was already in Viper’s face, radiating violence. “Watch your mouth.”

“Or what? You’ll play knight for your new pet?” Viper’s grin widened. “She’s got you leashed, Beast.”

“The only thing getting leashed,” Maddox said, his voice low and dangerous, “is anyone who disrespects what’s ours.”

Ours. The word sent heat spiraling through me, equal parts thrilling and unsettling.

“Does she belong to you?” another voice called. “Or is she just here until Daddy drags her home?”

The room was testing me, waiting for me to crack. I stepped forward, heart pounding. “I can speak for myself.”

Viper raised a brow. “Then speak, princess. Why’s Commissioner Hart’s daughter in our house?”

I met his gaze, channeling every ounce of defiance that had led me to the Inferno Club. “The Vultures made this personal. They put their hands on me, threatened to rape and kill me to send you a message. So now it’s my fight too.”

Murmurs spread, but I didn’t stop.

“You think I’m a liability? Maybe. But I’m also proof of every deal my father’s buried, every case he’s twisted. I’m a weapon you’d be idiots not to use.”

Silence stretched. Viper’s eyes narrowed. “And when you’re done being useful? What then?”

“Then you’ll see if you’re smart enough to keep a weapon this sharp.”

A gravelly laugh broke the tension. “Girl’s got balls,” someone called.

“More than some in this room,” another added, glaring at Viper.

The mood shifted—not friendly, but less hostile. Like I’d passed a test.

“She stays,” a voice called.

“Agreed,” another echoed.

Viper scanned the room, his jaw tight. “This is a mistake.”

“Then it’s ours to make,” Ronan said coolly.

“When it blows up,” Viper shot back, “don’t cry to me.” He pushed past, his exit heavy with calculation—not anger, but something colder, more dangerous.

“Well,” Maddox said, sidling up, “that was fun.”

“Is it always like this?” I asked, adrenaline still spiking.

“Only when we bring home strays,” a Serpent called, earning lighter laughter.

Jaxon clapped a hand on my shoulder. “You earned your place, princess. Anyone who has a problem, answers to us.”

No one challenged him. The crowd dispersed, some nodding at me with grudging respect.

“Not bad,” Ronan said. “But next time, less explaining, more edge. Try: ‘I’m proof of every crime my father buried. A weapon you’d be fools to waste.’”

I smirked. “Noted.”

“Now what?” I asked, looking between them.

“Now,” Jaxon said, his voice dropping, “we make sure you can survive this world.”

“Meaning?”

“Meaning you train,” he said, eyes glinting with something that wasn’t just protectiveness. “Starting now.”

He grabbed my wrist, pulling me toward a side door. “Let’s see if you can back up that fire with fight.”

My pulse raced as he pulled me toward the gym, the air thick with sweat, steel, and something darker.

I’d made my choice. Now I had to become someone who could survive it.

Chapter 5

Jaxon’s grip on my wrist was iron as he pulled me through the side door into what looked like a cross between a gym and a battlefield. The air smelled of sweat, leather, and metal. Mats lined the floor, scuffed and stained from countless fights. Punching bags hung like silent wardens, and a rack of weapons—knives, batons, even a few guns—gleamed against the far wall.

“Welcome to the real training ground,” Jaxon said, releasing me with a shove that wasn’t quite gentle. His amber eyes burned, assessing me like I was a recruit about to break. “You talk a big game, princess. Let’s see if you can back it up.”

I squared my shoulders, still buzzing from the meeting with the Serpents. “I’m not afraid of a little sweat.”

His laugh was low, dangerous. “This ain’t about sweat. It’s about survival. You froze out there with Viper’s teeth snapping. You freeze like that with the Vultures, you’re dead.”

Maddox leaned against the doorframe, arms crossed, his dark eyes glinting with amusement. “Go easy on her, Beast. She’s still shiny and new.”

Ronan, beside him, adjusted his cufflinks. “Or don’t. If she’s going to stay, she needs to learn fast.”

“Learn what?” I asked, planting my feet. “How to take a punch?”

“How to throw one,” Jaxon said, stripping off his leather jacket to reveal a black tank clinging to every hard line of his body. Scars crisscrossed his arms, a map of violence that made my pulse race. “And how to keep standing when someone’s trying to put you down.”

He tossed me a pair of padded gloves. “Put these on. You’re sparring with me.”

“Sparring?” I caught the gloves, my stomach twisting. “You’re twice my size.”

“And the Vultures won’t be?” He stepped onto the mat, rolling his shoulders like a predator loosening up for the hunt. “Move, Alina. Or I’ll make you.”

The command in his voice sent a shiver through me. Fear mixed with something hotter that I didn’t want to name. I slipped on the gloves, fumbling with the straps. Maddox sauntered over, his fingers brushing mine as he tightened them.

“Don’t let him break you, Little Viper,” he murmured, lips close to my ear. “Not unless you want him to.”

“Enough flirting,” Jaxon snapped, beckoning me onto the mat. “Let’s go.”

I stepped forward, heart pounding. He didn’t even wait for me to settle. His fist came fast, a controlled jab aimed at my shoulder. I dodged on instinct, stumbling slightly.

“Not bad,” he said, circling me. “But instincts won’t save you. You need to think.”

He came at me again, faster this time. I threw up an arm to block, but his other hand hooked my wrist, twisting it just enough to make me gasp. He used the moment to sweep my legs, sending me crashing to the mat.

“Too slow,” he growled, looming over me. “Get up.”

I scrambled to my feet, anger flaring. “That’s not teaching—that’s knocking me down!”

“Lesson one: the world doesn’t wait for you to learn.” He lunged again, and I ducked, swinging a clumsy punch at his ribs. He caught my fist mid-air, his grip like a vise. “Lesson two: don’t give away your moves.”

He pulled me forward, spinning me until my back slammed against his chest. His arm locked around my waist, his breath hot against my neck. “Lesson three,” he growled, lips so close they grazed my skin, “never let them get this close.”

My body betrayed me completely. God, why did I like this? His scent—leather, sweat, and something primal—made my head spin. I drove my elbow back, aiming for his ribs. He grunted but held tight, his grip tightening.

“Good,” he murmured, voice rough as gravel. “Fight dirty. You’ll need to.”

I twisted free, spinning to face him, my chest heaving. His eyes locked on mine, and the room seemed to shrink, the air thick with something heavier than sparring. I swung again, harder, aiming for his jaw. He blocked, grabbing both my wrists and slamming me back against the mat.

His body pinned mine, heavy and deliberate, his thighs bracketing my hips. My breath caught as his face hovered inches above mine, amber eyes burning with something that wasn’t just anger.

“You freeze like this with a Vulture,” he said, voice low and jagged, “you’re dead.”

“Then teach me not to,” I shot back, hating the way my body arched toward his, craving the pressure.

His gaze dropped to my lips, and for a moment, I thought he’d close the gap. His grip on my wrists tightened, pinning them above my head, and his thigh shifted, pressing harder between mine. A small sound escaped me—half gasp, half something else—and his eyes darkened.

“You’re playing with fire, princess.”

I hated how breathless I sounded. “Maybe I want to get burned.”

“Jaxon,” Ronan’s voice cut through, sharp and warning. “Enough.”

Jaxon froze, his breath ragged. For a heartbeat, he didn’t move, his eyes still locked on mine, like he was fighting himself as much as me. Then he shoved off, standing with a curse under his breath, leaving me sprawled on the mat, my skin buzzing like I’d been electrified.

Maddox clapped slowly, his grin wicked. “Well, that was educational.”

“Shut it,” I muttered, yanking off the gloves with trembling hands. My body was a traitor, still aching for Jaxon’s weight.

Jaxon grabbed his cut, not looking at me. “You’ve got fight, Alina. But you need control. Tomorrow, we do this again.”

I nodded, struggling to steady my breathing. “Bring it.”

Ronan stepped closer, his green eyes dissecting me. “You held your own. Barely. But surviving Jaxon isn’t enough. You need to be dangerous.”

“Dangerous how?” I asked, standing to meet his gaze.

“By knowing when to strike,” he said, voice smooth but edged. “And when to run.”

Maddox slid beside me, his hand grazing my arm, sending another jolt through me. “She’s learning, Shadow. Give her time.” He leaned in, his voice dropping to a purr. “You’re wound up tight, Little Viper. Maybe you need dinner.”

My phone buzzed, cutting through the haze. Another text from Viktor: Getting cozy with the Beast? Tick-tock, princess. You can’t hide forever.

I showed it to them, my blood running cold. Jaxon’s fists clenched, Ronan’s eyes narrowed, and Maddox’s grin vanished.

“Viktor’s not playing,” Ronan said, voice like ice. “He’s baiting you.”

“Then let’s bait back,” I said, surprising myself with the steel in my voice.

Maddox’s grin widened. “There’s our queen.”

As they led me out of the gym, Jaxon glanced back, his eyes still fiery. “Rest up, princess. Tomorrow, I won’t go easy.”

I met his gaze, my own defiance rising. “Good. I don’t want it to be easy.”

We walked through the compound’s corridors, my legs still shaky from the sparring session. The adrenaline was fading, leaving behind a strange mix of exhaustion and electric energy.

“You need food,” Ronan observed, studying my face with clinical precision.

Maddox appeared at my side, his smile sharp as a blade. “And answers. Time to play a little game, Little Viper.”

The way he said ‘game’ made my blood run cold.

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