
The Don's Dangerous Addiction
"Take them off yourself, or I will do it for you."
Ten sessions. Two hundred thousand dollars. Her brother's life for her body.
Dr. Avery St. Clair signed a contract in blood. To save her family, she has to fix the mind of Obsidian City's most feared monster, Dominic Kessler. He's a Mafia Don rotting from the inside out. A bullet gave him C-PTSD and a touch so sensitive he can't stand being touched. Avery is the only antidote who can calm him down. So he locked her in his villa.
But Dominic is playing a game he's already lost.
He doesn't know Avery is the woman from seven years ago. The stranger who saved him on that dark gambling ship and disappeared before sunrise.
He doesn't know the scar on his wrist is burned into her memory.
And most of all, he doesn't know the autistic little girl hiding in her clinic is his own daughter.
While Avery hides the truth behind her professional mask, their little girl feels his every nightmare. Every flashback. Every crack in his monster mask.
When the secrets finally come out, his empire will fall. He'll lose his sight. His throne. The only woman who ever made him feel human.
To win her back, he'll have to destroy the monster he became. And help her burn down the man who murdered her parents.
She won't make it easy.
This is not a love story. It's a monster learning to beg.
Why read this?
Obsessive Mafia Hero
Secret Baby with an Autistic and Gifted Daughter
Identity Reveal
"Touch Her And You Die" Energy
Massive Groveling and Revenge
A Heroine Who Fights Back
No Cheating. Happy Ending Guaranteed.
Chapters
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Chapter 10
Morning came.
Dominic's chair was empty.
When Avery woke up, he was already dressed. Hearing her stir, he turned.
"Let's go. The lab."
He didn't give her time to hesitate.
Drake stayed behind to watch the house. The car waited at the gate.
Dominic walked ahead in a dark tactical jacket. Avery followed. They got in the car, both lost in their own thoughts. Neither spoke the whole way.
The road grew narrower. Avery recognized it. Her parents used to take her here when she was little.
Back then, there were lights on both sides. The lab building glowed from within, bright through the windows. From a distance, it looked like a glass box.
Now there was nothing. The trees had grown wild, branches reaching into the road, scraping across the roof of the car.
The car stopped. The ground was covered in dead branches and fallen leaves that crunched underfoot.
The air smelled heavily of rust, mixed with something chemical.
Stepping over the threshold, Avery saw doors hanging crooked, some fallen. Light fixtures dangled from the ceiling, glass tubes shattered. Dark scratches ran down the walls.
"Drake, are the crews clear today?" Dominic spoke into his earpiece.
"All clear, boss."
"But someone's been inside." He aimed his flashlight at the floor. Fresh footprints stood out, the tread pattern still sharp. "More than one."
Avery stayed close behind him.
"You-"
"Don't touch the walls." He cut her off.
A pipe lay across the floor. She didn't lift her foot high enough and stumbled. Her hand shot out-
And caught his back.
His muscles tensed.
Neither of them moved.
Her hand stayed pressed against him. Through the jacket, she could feel his body heat.
He didn't turn around. He didn't say anything. He waited a few seconds to make sure she had her balance, then kept walking.
At the end of the hallway stood a half open door. Dominic pushed it open. Avery followed close behind.
The room was filled with shattered glass and shredded paper. A burned metal cabinet sat in the corner. A hole in the window let the wind blow through.
Avery walked to the center of the room. Something crunched under her foot.
The flashlight beam dropped to the floor. A pile of burned paper ash, edges still smoldering. Something underneath reflected the light.
She crouched down and brushed away the ash.
A folder. The plastic cover was half melted, but the papers inside were mostly intact.
Words printed on the cover, burned down to half legible.
Subject List.
She opened it.
Name blank. Status: Terminated.
Terminated. 003. Terminated.
She flipped page after page, her fingers pressing against the paper.
She stopped. Julian. Status blank.
Dominic. Status blank.
After that, no number. Just a line in italics.
Candidate A. Status: Pending.
"What does this mean?"
"You were never a subject." He stood behind her, his flashlight shining over her shoulder. "Wenger was waiting for the right moment to bring you in officially. He never got it."
She gripped the folder, her fingertips nearly tearing through the melted plastic.
She thought back to the first time Wenger looked at her. The scholarship. The words "you're my last student."
It had all been a setup from the start.
Back in the car.
"Where are 001 through 046 now?" she asked.
He was quiet for a few seconds. "Some went mad. Some burned. Wenger called it 'termination.'"
"Did you ever see 001?"
Another pause.
"Yes." His voice was low. "Seven years ago. He was sitting in a corner, holding a photo of a little girl. That was the first time they brought me through that door."
She looked at him, waiting for more. He said nothing else.
The only sound was the road beneath the wheels.
She looked down at the folder in her hands. She thought of the door Dorothea had drawn. The star shaped mark.
Her daughter had never been there. But she could draw it.
Avery didn't dare think further.
Back at the villa, Drake waited at the door. His face was wrong.
"Boss. A suspicious vehicle was caught on surveillance. Circled the villa twice. The plates are fake. Same model as one registered under Wenger's name."
"When?"
"Not long after you left. Headed north. We followed, then lost it."
Dominic took the tablet and stared at the screen.
"Lost it."
Drake lowered his head. "Once it got into the unfinished development area north of the city-"
"Drake." Dominic tossed the tablet back to him. "You know I don't keep dead weight."
"I'll go myself."
Drake turned to leave, then his finger froze on the screen.
He handed the tablet back. His hand trembled slightly.
"Boss. Look at this."
The surveillance footage had caught a reflection when a streetlight swept across the car window. Drake had zoomed in.
A hand rested on the steering wheel.
In that split second of light, the driver's sleeve had slipped back just enough to reveal a wrist.
Avery stopped breathing.
On the inside of that wrist was a raised, twisted knot of scar tissue. In the center of the knot, a dark number was carved.
On the list, the status for 001 had said-
Terminated.
She looked up at Dominic.
He stared at that number. He didn't move.
The hallway lights hummed. Quiet.
Then he spoke, his voice low.
"He's alive."
The three of them stood in the hallway. No one spoke.
Dominic handed the tablet back to Drake. "Double the men. The perimeter stays guarded tonight."
Drake left. Dominic went to the study.
That night, Avery couldn't sleep.
Lights shone outside. Footsteps sounded downstairs. Drake's men patrolled all night.
She lay in bed, tossing and turning. Kicking off the blanket, pulling it back. Her mind was full of 001, the folder, the black SUV.
Frustrated, she sat up.
Dorothea slept beside her, hugging her rabbit. Her little pink face made Avery's chest feel warm.
She didn't go downstairs. Instead, she climbed the stairs to the top floor.
The hallway lights had been dimmed. Footsteps rumbled dully below as Drake's men changed shifts. She stepped onto the last stair and pushed open the door to the terrace.
The wind was strong, whipping her hair across her face.
Avery walked to the railing. The iron was cold. The rough feel of rust pressed into her palms.
Lights from the city spread out below. Headlights on the highway crawled north, one by one.
She didn't hear him come up. Didn't hear him approach.
She turned and saw him. He had his back to her, sitting on the low wall of the terrace. Moonlight came from behind him, outlining his profile.
His head was down. A cigarette hung between his fingers. He was rubbing the star shaped scar on his wrist. The wind blew through his shirt collar, ruffled his hair.
Avery stood there for a few seconds, then walked over. "You're not sleeping either?"
"What are you doing here? This isn't your business."
She ignored him and stepped closer, standing beside him.
"Drake said they lost the car. You think sitting here will bring it back?"
Dominic let out a cold breath and turned his face toward her.
"He's circling nearby. Trash like that follows the scent."
He stubbed out the cigarette and stood up. As he walked past her, his shoulder bumped hers.
"Go inside. Close the curtains. Watch the child. Don't get in my way."
Avery stayed on the terrace a while longer, then went downstairs.
On the first floor, the gym door was cracked open. A sliver of light leaked out.
A dull thud came from inside. Over and over.
Thud. Thud.
She pushed the door open. The main lights were off. Only a corner spotlight angled onto Dominic.
He wasn't wearing gloves. Just bare fists slamming into a heavy bag. The bag swung wildly, chains squeaking.
Every punch was full force. This wasn't training. This was breaking.
"Dominic. Stop."
He didn't listen. Each punch landed with a deep thud.
Avery rushed over. Before his fist could swing again, she threw her arms wide and lunged onto the bag.
Thud.
Dominic couldn't stop in time. The wind from his punch brushed past her ear and hit the edge of the bag.
The force slammed into her chest. She clung to the swinging leather cylinder. Her palm immediately felt something wet and cold.
His blood.
"Are you insane?" She looked up, her eyes meeting his bloodshot gaze.
He leaned against the other side of the bag, so close his ragged breath burned her forehead.
"Let go." His voice was hoarse.
"No."
She looked down at his hands braced on the leather. The skin over his knuckles was split open. Bright red blood ran down the seams of the bag, staining the white sleeve of her nightgown.
"Do you think breaking your hands will shut the voices off?"
She grabbed his wrist.
"Can't you feel the pain? Your knuckles are already bleeding. One more hit and the tendons will tear. Dominic. Is this how you stay sane?"
Dominic stared at her, his chest still heaving.
"Calm down. You're not in the lab. You're in your own home." Her voice softened. "There's no number here. No Wenger."
Dominic's fingers slowly relaxed.
He stepped back half a step, slid down the wall, and sat on the floor. His breathing was still heavy, but it began to slow.
Avery stayed quiet, watching him from a distance.
He sat against the wall, knees bent, hands resting on them. Blood still dripped from his fingers, drop by drop onto the floor. His eyes were closed. His lashes trembled.
Avery crouched down to his eye level.
"Dominic."
He didn't answer.
She reached out and gently took his wrist. He didn't pull away.
She examined his hand. The wounds on his knuckles were still seeping. The skin was split, revealing dark red flesh beneath. She found his pulse and waited. Finally, it slowed.
From memory, she located the first aid kit in the cabinet. She came back to him and crouched down. Iodine, gauze, tape. She laid them out on the mat.
She pulled his hand over and rested it flat on her knee.
He let her do it. His gaze was somewhere else. The line of his jaw was tight.
When the cotton ball touched the wound, his whole hand flinched. Veins rose on the back of his hand. She paused for a heartbeat, didn't look up at him, and switched to lighter, rolling strokes.
As the gauze wrapped around his hand, his breathing had already steadied. She taped it cleanly and finished.
While putting away the iodine and gauze, she kept her head down and muttered.
"I'm a psychiatrist. I've treated your physical wounds more times in the past few days than I've done actual therapy."
Dominic didn't say anything.
Avery closed the first aid kit and stood up.
"If you break your hands again, stitch them up yourself next time." She turned to look at him.
Dominic's eyes were on her face. His expression was complicated.
She thought he might say something. He didn't. He just pushed himself up the wall slowly.
They stood very close. Close enough that she could smell the blood and sweat still on him. He looked down at her. Avery felt her breathing fall out of rhythm.
"Still hurt?"
Avery didn't get an answer.
She turned and walked to the door. Her hand touched the handle, then paused.
"Are you sleeping tonight?"
Only silence answered her.
Back in her room, she pulled her daughter into her arms.
Her phone buzzed. A message from Dominic.
"001 is outside the city. Didn't come in."
She stared at the screen. Typed a few words. Deleted them. Typed again.
"Your hand. Change the bandages on time."
A few seconds later: "Okay."
She put the phone down and closed her eyes. Lights outside. Footsteps below. She counted the footsteps until sleep finally crept in.
4:00 AM. The phone vibrated on the nightstand.
Avery fumbled for it. The screen lit up. Dominic's number.
"Come downstairs." His voice came through.
"What's wrong?"
"001 is here."
She threw off the covers and ran downstairs. Dominic was already standing at the front door, staring into the dark outside.
"Where?"
"Outside the garden fence. He didn't come in."
He handed her the phone. The screen showed live surveillance. A figure stood outside the iron fence, hat hiding his face. He held something in his hand.
Avery looked through the glass panel in the door. The garden lights were on, but beyond the fence was pitch black. She couldn't see anything.
She turned her head. Out of the corner of her eye, she saw the figure on the monitor move. Not turning away. He stepped forward and pushed something through the gap in the fence.
A few minutes later, Drake brought the object back.
A folder. Damp. It smelled of old formaldehyde.
Dominic peeled open the seal. Inside was a single sheet of paper.
A hand drawn floor plan of the villa.
Red circles marked every single security blind spot. Including the spot where they stood right now.
Avery stared at those circles. Her fingers tightened. This wasn't a threat. This was a message. He could come in whenever he wanted. But he hadn't.
On the back of the floor plan, a single line of writing.
Dominic flipped it over, glanced at it, and his face changed.
He didn't say anything. He handed the paper to Avery.
The line read:
[03:57 AM / Second floor / Dorothea's room / Emergency evacuation mode / Door lock disabled]
Avery stared at the words. Only one thought remained in her head.
It was 4:03 AM now.
He had already been inside. Six minutes ago.
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9.3
I woke up in a freezing, desolate wasteland, my body weak and covered in sores. A mechanical voice in my head informed me that I was a defective rabbit-mutant, and if I didn't conceive within twenty-four hours, I would die permanently.
The terror was suffocating, but the system left me no choice. To survive the brutal cold and the decay of my own heartbeat, I had to force a pregnancy with a stranger.
I stumbled through the snow, my fingers turning blue, until I found a massive, wounded Arctic Fox-mutant in a dark cave. He was a Tier-9 predator, dying and radiating the exact heat I needed to stay alive. I threw away my dignity, crawling into his fur to merge our energies, desperate to trigger the life-reset protocol before my time ran out.
I felt like a monster, forcing myself onto a man who didn't even know I existed, just to keep my own heart beating. How could I ever face him if he woke up? Why did I have to be the one to pay the price for this twisted, mechanical ultimatum?
The fusion was a success, but when I woke up the next morning, the apex predator had me pinned under his massive claws, his fangs inches from my throat. I didn't beg for mercy. I stared into his feral, ice-blue eyes and made a deal that would change everything: I would be his anchor, and he would be my protector. But then I dropped the final, terrifying truth: I was pregnant, and he was the only one who could save us.

9.7
Eighteen months ago, the man I loved shattered my heart, claiming everything between us was a mistake. Now, he's back, a ghost of his former self, a rookie tryout in my pro esports team. And I will make him regret crawling back.
Clifton, captain of a legendary esports team, was secretly battling a severe wrist injury that threatened his career, every match a fight against his own body. He pushed through the pain, ignoring doctors' warnings, desperate to maintain his god-like status.
His world was already on the edge, but nothing prepared him for seeing Justice Terry again in the team basement. Justice, pale and trembling, his eyes wide with naked terror, was now a rookie tryout.
Clifton had spent a year and a half trying to forget that rainy Chicago alley, the raw revulsion in Justice's eyes, the whispered "it wasn't real" that had left him heartbroken. Justice had vanished, and Clifton had erased every trace. Now, the boy who once looked at him like he was the sun was back, flinching at his touch, displaying a deep, primal fear. Amidst sponsor pressure and whispers of being "washed," Clifton saw Justice's return as a chance for vengeance. He publicly humiliated Justice on a live stream, forcing him into a suicide mission, then coldly benched him.
Yet, the satisfaction never came. Instead, a hollow emptiness and a torrent of questions: What had truly happened in the past? Why was Justice here, and what trauma had carved such fear into his bones?
Clifton, unwilling to be fooled again, swore to uncover every secret and every lie. He would force Justice to explain why he had returned, even if it meant tearing down everything they both had left.

9.3
She thought their love could survive anything. She was wrong.
For five years, Amara Hayes was the perfect wife - loyal, gentle, and endlessly forgiving. She believed her husband, Ethan Blackwell, when he said his late nights were for business. She trusted him when he swore his heart was hers.
Until the night she walked into his office and saw him making love to another woman.
Humiliated, heartbroken, and betrayed, Amara left without a word - leaving behind her wedding ring, her identity, and the man who destroyed her faith in love.
Three years later, she returns to New York as a powerful businesswoman with a new name and a cold smile. She's no longer the naive wife he controlled - she's his rival, his downfall, and his punishment.
But Ethan isn't the same man either. He's haunted by the woman he lost and desperate for redemption. And when fate throws them together again, old flames reignite amid a storm of revenge, pain, and forbidden desire.
He once broke her heart. Now, she'll make him wish he never did.

7.6
I woke up to the suffocating smell of copper and sulfur, my fingers wrapped around a blood-soaked leather whip.
Hanging from an obsidian cross in front of me was a boy with silver hair and dead, golden eyes.
His pale chest was torn open to the bone.
I recognized those eyes immediately. I had spent three years describing them on my laptop.
He was Kamari Monroe, the tragic, overpowered protagonist of my own web novel.
And I wasn't just a bystander. I was Benedict Guerrero, the sadistic academy headmaster. The ultimate villain.
A reel of images flashed in my mind: my original ending. Kamari, fully awakened, skinning me alive and burning my soul in a furnace for forty-nine days.
My loyal attack dog, Gideon, stepped forward with a basin of glowing green liquid.
"Headmaster, let me wake him up with this bone-rot acid so you can resume."
If that acid hit Kamari, his hatred would become permanent. My gruesome death would be sealed.
But if I broke character and apologized, the magical world would sense the shift, and Kamari would just think it was a sicker, more twisted trap.
How was I supposed to survive a death sentence I wrote myself?
I couldn't show weakness. I had to play the monster to survive.
Suppressing my terror, I smashed the acid basin, healed his ruined flesh with agonizing dark magic, and lied straight to his face.
"Someone had to be the monster to push you into the fire."
This time, I will rewrite my own fate.

8.7
Kaylee woke up to the smell of rotting leaves and blood, realizing she had transmigrated into the grimdark fantasy novel she was reading last night.
A robotic system in her head immediately delivered a death sentence: she was the tribe's vicious cannon fodder, and the male lead—a brutally tortured slave named Elijah—was currently dying on a totem pole outside.
"If he dies, you will face instant soul-detonation."
Kaylee rushed to the plaza, using her villainous authority to stop the execution and drag his mangled body back to her hut.
But saving him was a nightmare.
The original owner's sadism had traumatized him so deeply that her gentle touches and clean bandages only triggered his PTSD.
His feral energy spiraled out of control, his golden eyes burning with paranoid terror as he waited for a new, twisted psychological game.
To keep his energy from detonating and killing them both, Kaylee was forced to act like a monster.
"I didn't save you because I care. A dead slave is useless to me."
Only her cruel insults and threats of future torture calmed his broken mind.
Adding to her despair, she stumbled upon the novel's supposedly innocent heroine in the forest, only to hear her system detect a terrifying anomaly.
The fragile heroine had her own cheat system.
Trapped with a paranoid future-tyrant and a rival player manipulating the tribe's strongest warriors, Kaylee shoved a bowl of hot stew at the bleeding slave with a mocking sneer.
To survive this hell, she had to play the villain perfectly.

8.5
Alexa Thorne was just an eighteen-year-old girl trying to survive her wealthy friend's sweltering summer pool party.
But a violent asthma attack, triggered by heavy cigar smoke, forced her to confront the man smoking it—Armando Holmes, a ruthless Wall Street billionaire and her friend's older brother. She begged him to put it out. He complied, but his cold gaze instantly shifted into a terrifying, predatory obsession.
From that moment, her quiet life was over. Armando cornered her in a dark hallway, staking a terrifying claim. He forced her into his Bentley, practically kidnapping her to his secluded Hamptons estate, a gilded cage he called the Rose Manor. When he offered her a dark rose and declared his "enchantment," the sheer terror finally made Alexa run. But she tripped, tumbling down the hard stone steps, breaking her arm and severely gashing her face.
Waking up in the hospital, facing the horror of a permanent, ugly scar, Alexa wept in sheer despair. She didn't understand why this dangerous, powerful man had targeted her, tearing her away from her modest life just to lock her in his terrifying grip.
"I swear to you, you will not have a single scar."
Armando vowed, his eyes burning with dark possession as he effortlessly dismissed her own brother's attempts to protect her. As he personally tended to her most humiliating needs with trembling hands, Alexa realized with chilling clarity: the real nightmare wasn't the fall, but the inescapable, obsessive love of the monster who had claimed her.