“He Broke My Ribs”—She Texted The Wrong Number—Mafia Boss Replied: “I’m On My Way”
The Siege Begins
“Boss!”
The moment shattered. Luca, Lucas’s head of security, stood in the doorway.
His face was pale, his earpiece blinking. “What is it?”
Lucas asked, not moving away from Evelyn.
“The perimeter sensors, Lucas,”
His voice was tight.
“They didn’t trip.”
Lucas frowned. “What do you mean?”
“I mean they’re offline. Hard cut. Someone hacked the system from the inside.”
The lights in the dining room flickered once, twice. Then the entire estate plunged into darkness.
The estate was silent save for the storm lashing against the floor-to-ceiling windows in the dining room. The air was thick with unsaid words.
Evelyn wore the emerald silk dress Lucas had requested, the fabric clinging to her like a second skin. Across the long mahogany table, Lucas watched her, his expression unreadable but intense.
“Marcus has made a move,”
Lucas said, breaking the silence.
He didn’t touch his wine. “He sold police intelligence to the Petrov family, the Russian Bratva. They want my territory, and Marcus wants you.”
Evelyn’s grip on her glass tightened. “So what now? Do you send me away?”
“I have a jet waiting on the tarmac,”
Lucas said, his voice low.
“I can send you to Europe. You’ll be safe, hidden, and rich. But you will be alone.”
He reached across the table, covering her hand with his. His palm was rough, warm, and grounding.
“Or you stay. If you stay, you are a target. But you are my target to protect.”
Evelyn looked at him, the man who had broken down a door to save her. “I’m tired of running, Lucas. I’m tired of being afraid.”
She turned her hand over, interlacing her fingers with his. “I’m staying.”
Lucas exhaled, a tension leaving his shoulders that he hadn’t shown before. He stood up, pulling her to her feet, pulling her close until she could smell the sandalwood and rain on his skin.
“Good,”
He murmured, his thumb brushing her cheek.
“Because I wasn’t sure I could let you go.”
He leaned in, his lips inches from hers. Click.
The lights died. The estate plunged into absolute darkness.
“Down!”
Lucas roared, shoving Evelyn beneath the heavy oak table just as the sound of shattering glass echoed from the front hall.
Red emergency lights bathed the room in a sinister, bloody glow. Luca, Lucas’s head of security, burst in, his assault rifle raised.
“Perimeter is gone, Boss! They hacked the system! They’re inside!”
“The panic room!”
Lucas commanded, hauling Evelyn up.
He moved with terrifying speed, a gun appearing in his hand. “Move!”
Flight to the Roof
They sprinted into the hallway. Shadows danced on the walls, distorted by the flashing red lights.
Gunfire erupted from the foyer: deafening, rapid bursts that shook the floorboards. “They cut the power to the basement elevators!”
Luca shouted, firing back at a group of shadowed figures swarming the stairs.
“We’re cut off!”
“The roof!”
Lucas decided instantly.
“Get the chopper, now!”
They ran toward the service stairs. Evelyn’s breath came in ragged gasps, her healing ribs throbbing with every step, but she didn’t slow down.
Suddenly, the house intercom crackled to life. “Evelyn!”
The voice was distorted, slurred, but unmistakably Marcus. “I know you’re in there, sweetheart. Come out. The Russians just want him. I just want to take you home.”
“Don’t listen,”
Lucas growled, pushing her up the stairs.
“Did you think you could trade up?”
Marcus laughed, a manic, wet sound.
“He can’t save you. He’s just a thug in a suit.”
They burst onto the third-floor landing. The wind howled through a shattered window, bringing the rain inside.
Three men in tactical gear turned the corner at the end of the hall. “Contact!”
Lucas shoved Evelyn into an alcove and opened fire. The hallway became a wind tunnel of noise.
Bullets shredded the drywall above Evelyn’s head. She covered her ears, screaming silently.
She felt Lucas jerk violently against her, a grunt of pain escaping his lips. He fired two more shots, dropping the lead attacker, then slumped back against the wall.
“Lucas!”
Evelyn gasped.
A dark stain was spreading rapidly across the white dress shirt at his side. “I’m fine,”
He lied through gritted teeth, his face pale in the strobe light.
“Go! The roof access is ten yards.”
“I’m not leaving you!”
“Evelyn, go!”
“No!”
She grabbed his arm, her nurse’s instinct overriding her fear. “Stand up, Lucas Moretti. You promised to protect me.”
Using her own body as a crutch, she hauled him up. Together, they stumbled toward the heavy steel door.
They burst out onto the roof. The storm was a physical force here, rain stinging like needles.
But above the howling wind was the rhythmic thump, thump, thump of a helicopter banking hard toward them. “Almost there!”
Evelyn yelled.
“Stop!”
The Final Stand
The scream tore through the wind. Standing between them and the helicopter was Marcus Thorne.
He looked deranged. He was wearing a hospital gown tucked into jeans, his hands encased in heavy plaster casts.
Behind him stood a massive Russian enforcer holding a shotgun. “Look at you,”
Marcus spat, his hair plastered to his skull.
“Dragging a dying man.”
He nodded to the Russian. “Kill him.”
Lucas tried to raise his gun, but his arm wavered. He was losing too much blood.
“No!”
Evelyn stepped in front of Lucas.
“Move, Evelyn!”
Marcus shrieked.
“Get over here!”
The Russian racked the shotgun slide. Evelyn looked at the helicopter hovering just feet away.
She looked at Lucas’s trembling hand. Then she looked at the tactical flashlight clipped to Lucas’s belt.
She grabbed it. “Lucas,”
She whispered, leaning back against him.
“Do you trust me?”
“With my life,”
He wheezed.
“On my signal?”
Evelyn turned to the Russian. She raised the heavy flashlight.
“Hey!”
She screamed.
The Russian looked at her. Evelyn flicked the strobe to maximum brightness and aimed it directly into his night vision goggles.
The effect was blinding. The Russian roared, tearing at his face as the amplified light scorched his retinas.
He fired the shotgun blindly into the sky. “Now!”
Evelyn dropped to the deck. Lucas fired.
He didn’t aim for the men; he aimed for the industrial propane tank next to the heating unit behind them. Boom!
A fireball erupted, throwing Marcus and the Russian backward into the darkness. “Go!”
Lucas roared.
They scrambled toward the helicopter. Strong hands reached out—Silas, the pilot—and dragged them inside.
The chopper lurched upward instantly, the sudden G-force pinning them to the floor. Evelyn slammed the door shut, sealing out the storm.
She crawled over to Lucas. He was lying on his back, his eyes fluttering shut.
The blood was pooling beneath him. “Stay with me!”
She sobbed, pressing her hands hard against the wound.
“You don’t get to die, not after all that.”
Lucas looked up at her, a faint bloody smile touching his lips. “You…”
He whispered, his voice fading.
“You blinded him.”
“I improvised,”
She said, tears mixing with the rain on her face.
“I told you,”
Lucas breathed, his eyes closing.
“I don’t run.”
