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Chapter 6 - Father’s Legacy

Adrain POV

The echo of her footsteps still lingered in the hall long after she stormed back upstairs. She hadn't bowed. She hadn't begged. She hadn't even flinched when I raised my voice at her.

Most people broke under my stare. Stacy glared back.

I ground out the cigarette between my fingers, ignoring the laughter of the women who had been clinging to me minutes earlier. I didn't dismiss them, but they didn't matter. Not now. My thoughts were tangled, circling around the very thing I didn't want to admit—I couldn't get her out of my head.

Her brother had thrown her to the wolves, but she acted like I was the villain. Maybe I was. But betrayal changes everything.

My father taught me that.

Flashback

I was thirteen the first time I saw a man beg for his life.

We were in my father's office—no, his throne room, because that's what it felt like. A cavernous chamber with a mahogany desk so large it seemed to swallow men whole. My father sat behind it, a mountain of authority, his dark suit crisp, his eyes colder than winter steel.

A man knelt before him, wrists bound, his face pale with terror.

"He betrayed me," my father said, his voice calm, like he was discussing the weather. He looked at me then, his only son, the heir to everything he ruled. "Adrian, do you know what betrayal means?"

I swallowed. "It means… disloyalty?"

"Wrong." My father's gaze was sharp enough to cut. "It means weakness. It means someone saw an opportunity and thought you were too blind, too soft, to stop them. Betrayal is not just an action. It is an insult. A declaration that you are unfit to lead."

The man on the floor cried, swearing he had only stolen because his daughter was starving. My father didn't blink.

"Family," he said, leaning back in his chair, "is the greatest weakness of all. It will drive a man to make foolish choices. To cross lines he should never dare." He flicked his wrist, and one of his men struck the begging man silent.

Then my father looked at me again. "Never let betrayal go unpunished. Never let family ties excuse it. Do you understand, son?"

I nodded, though my chest felt tight.

"Good." My father's voice was final. "Then watch."

The shot rang out, and the begging stopped.

Present

That lesson had carved itself into me. And now, years later, it was Stacy's brother kneeling before me in spirit—even if I hadn't put a bullet in his head yet.

He betrayed me. He stole, he lied, he dragged my name into the dirt. By my father's law, his life was already forfeit.

But instead of ending him, I took Stacy.

Was it weakness? Was it defiance of the very rule my father had beaten into me? Or was it something worse—something selfish?

Because the moment I saw her picture years ago, when her brother had been stupid enough to brag about his "untouchable sister," I remembered the way her smile looked. And when she was dragged into my house last night, glaring at me as if I wasn't the devil she had been warned about, I realized something dangerous.

I didn't want to kill her.

I wanted to own her.

Not as a lover. Not as a conquest. But as a living reminder to her brother that family is weakness. That his weakness now belonged to me.

And yet… when she snapped at me, when her fire refused to dim, I felt a pull I shouldn't.

My father would call it softness. He would sneer and tell me to crush it before it crushed me.

But my father is dead. And I am not him.

I exhaled, leaning back in my chair, staring at the ceiling. Vera's absence tonight was intentional—I'd dismissed her because I needed silence. But she'd return, claws bared, determined to mark her territory. And Stacy… Stacy wouldn't yield to her any more than she had to me.

That thought made me smirk despite myself.

The real war wasn't with guns or knives. It was with the girl upstairs.

And I wasn't sure who would win.

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