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And now, they pay.

“Faster, Roman,” I said softly. The SUV surged forward into the white abyss of the night.

Chapter Twenty-Three

Mila’s POV

The cold gnawed at my exposed skin, sinking into my marrow until my bones felt like they were made of ice. I shifted my weight, the ropes biting harshly into my wrists. I didn’t let out a sound. I wouldn’t give them the satisfaction of a whimper.

Three of them were guarding me. They’d been laughing for the last hour, drinking from a flask and trading stories about back-alley deals in Naples.

One of them, a man with a jagged scar running through his eyebrow and fingers that smelled of cheap tobacco, walked toward me. He leaned down, his shadow stretching long and distorted across the oil-stained floor.

“Pretty little thing,” he murmured. His voice was like sandpaper. “Hard to believe you’re the prize everyone’s bleeding for. You don’t look like much more than a scared girl.”

I looked up at him, my gaze level. I didn’t blink. I didn’t recoil. He reached out, his hand moving slowly, mockingly. He brushed the pad of his thumb against my cheek, his skin rough and smelling of salt.

I didn’t think. I didn’t hesitate.

As his finger moved toward my jaw, I lunged. I snapped my head forward and clamped my teeth down on the fleshy meat of his hand, between the thumb and forefinger. I bit down with every ounce of fury I had been bottling up since they snatched me from the library. I tasted blood.

The guard let out a strangled yelp and tried to pull away, but I locked my jaw. He swung his other hand, a heavy, open-palmed blow that caught me across the temple.

The world tilted. Stars exploded behind my eyelids, and the metallic taste in my mouth intensified as he finally wrenched his hand free.

“Bitch!” he roared, clutching his bleeding hand to his chest. Red was already staining his sleeve.

The other men laughed.

“Look at that, Marco. The kitten has claws. Or teeth, anyway,” one of them said.

I still didn’t cower.

I’m not a helpless girl.

I am Alexei Lobanov’s wife.

I was a queen in a world of monsters, and I was carrying the heir to a throne built on bone and iron. If I had to die here, in this hollowed-out shell of a building, I would die with my head held high. I would die fighting. Because that was what it meant to be a Lobanov.

The heavy steel doors at the far end of the warehouse groaned open. The sound echoed like a gunshot in the vast space.

A man whom they all greeted reverently walked in.

Enzo Moretti, definitely.

He looked out of place in the grime, wearing a charcoal overcoat that cost more than most men made in a year. He walked straight to me.

“Mila,” he said, almost gently. “You seem to have your father’s eyes. It’s a pity you didn’t inherit his cowardice. It might have kept you safer.”

I spat a mouthful of blood and saliva at his polished shoes. “My father is a ghost. He has nothing to do with me.”

Enzo wiped his shoe on the concrete, his expression darkening. “Actually, he has everything to do with this. He killed one of my best men years ago. I looked everywhere for him. But when you surfaced, I decided you’d have to do. You’re the price he’s going to pay.”

“I know Alexei is coming.” I looked Enzo directly in the eye, a wry smile emanating from my lips. “And I hope he kills you slowly.”

Enzo’s mask slipped for a fraction of a second. I saw the flicker of anger.

He recovered quickly, reaching out to grip my chin, his fingers bruising.