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Oops, I Accidentally Adopted A Mafia Boss

OraPhiffer
7
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
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Synopsis
WARNING: MATURE (R-18) If Sasha Rosario has one regret, it lives in the salt-crusted sand of her island shore. She remembers the weight of him in her arms that morning—his skin cold as the tide that had spit him out, blood dark against wet rock, his breath shallow as sea foam. She carried him home, cleaned his wounds with boiled water and patience, gave him a name when he could offer none. He settled into her life like a stone finding its bed in a stream; his hands learned the curve of her waist, the soft spot behind her ear. They moved together in the quiet of her small house, and when he pulled her close at night, love felt like air filling her lungs. She thought they were building something solid, something that could weather any storm. She woke one morning to find his side of the bed cold. His clothes were gone from the hook by the door, his coffee cup washed and put away. He’d left no note, no trace—just gone, like mist burning off the ocean as the sun rose high. When they met again, years later, the truth crashed over her with the force of a hurricane. He is not the man she loved. He is known across Russia as a Mafia Boss, his name spoken in whispers and silence alike. And every moment of his amnesia was a lie. From the first time he’d looked up at her with those dark eyes, every word he’d said, every touch he’d given her had been calculated, crafted to fit his plan. Now he holds her in his home, far from the sea she knows, and offers her a bargain that thrums with heat and peril. Does she regret pulling him from the water that day? She watches him move through his halls, his shoulders set like stone, his gaze sharp as glass. Can she ever dig past the cold front he shows the world to find what he truly feels for her? Or was every moment between them just another piece of his game? Maybe she should run. Disappear into cities where no one knows her name, bury the memory of him deep enough to forget. But how can she erase the impossible truth: that she once Accidentally Adopted A Mafia Boss.
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Chapter 1 - Prologue

WARNING: This story contains mature, sensitive, and explicit content. Reader discretion is advised.

SASHA ROSARIO'S POINT OF VIEW

A year ago, a man with no name and no memory showed up at my door. I called him Angelo, gave him my spare room, let him fold himself into the cracks of my life until he filled every corner. We loved like we were starving for air—every touch, every word a thing we'd never get enough of. Then he was gone. One morning the bed was cold, his things vanished, and I've been waiting ever since. Ache is my constant now. Love is too.

So why am I curled in the back of a van, blindfold tight over my eyes, jostling against metal as we bounce over potholes that feel big enough to swallow a jeepney? I've spent thirty-two years trying to do right by people—feeding stray dogs, paying my neighbor's water bill when she's short, saying my prayers even when I don't feel like it. Why did I have to be the one pulled into an unmarked van on market street?

"Please—just let me go. I'll pray for your souls to the Lord Himself. Rosario's my name—you know what that means? I'll hold my rosary up to the sky and He'll hear me clear as church bells." My voice wobbles even as I grin, shoulders pressed to the cold metal wall.

Laughter rumbles through the van's belly, deep and rough. I bite my lip hard enough to taste copper. Okay. The holy card routine isn't working.

God above. I've been good. Am I really about to end up in some back-alley clinic, carved up for parts?

"You need to shut your mouth, Miss. I don't like noise."

His voice hits me low in the chest—smooth as melted chocolate, gritty as gravel. "Wow. You could narrate romance films. You're way too pretty to be snatching people off the street." I force a chuckle, even as my palms slick with sweat against my jeans. "Want me to pray for you to get a screen test instead? Hehe."

A fist slams against the wall beside my head. Metal rings loud enough to make my teeth ache. I flinch so hard my shoulders bunch to my ears. "Jesus Christ! Don't touch me—you'll answer for this when we stand before Him!" My threat is hollow as a broken cup. More laughter follows.

"Then shut it. You talk too much. Wanna die right now?"

I shake my head until my hair tangles in my mouth, the taste of shampoo and fear thick on my tongue. Who wants to die young? I curl into the corner, knees to my chest, and strain to make out words between the men.

"Damn, you sure this is who the Boss asked for?"

"Looks nothing like his usual type, man."

My brow furrows under the cloth. "Hey! What boss? What 'type'? I'm gorgeous—thank you very much!" I puff out my chest, even though no one can see. "Though my organs are probably shot all to hell. So just let me go, yeah? Hehe."

"Didn't I tell you to be quiet?!"

I yelp and squeeze my eyes shut behind the blindfold. "Okay! Okay!"

Ugh. Why can't I keep my mouth shut? If I die here, it'll be because my tongue ran faster than my brain.

"You don't question the Boss. This woman is exactly who he wanted."

Exactly who he wanted?

They're going to be in so much trouble when their boss sees they grabbed the wrong girl. I'm just a woman with a big heart—and a few bad habits—not whatever prize they're hunting for.

Hours pass before the van rolls to a stop. The engine cuts out, silence heavy as a blanket. Hands haul me up, rough but not cruel, guiding me forward. I drag my feet until a gentle push sends me stumbling.

You've got this, Sasha. Same as stepping off a crowded jeepney. One step. Two steps. Three steps.

My hands are free. I tense every muscle, ready to bolt. Did they really think I'd let them slice me open? Please. I'm God's favorite troublemaker. I was born to survive.

I huff a quiet giggle, slowing my pace until I can match the rhythm of their footsteps behind me.

One.

Two.

Three—"RUN!"

The word tears from my throat before I can think. I rip off the blindfold and spin to find them stumbling, eyes wide with shock—then lunging after me.

"WAAAAH! LORD ALMIGHTY—GIVE ME WINGS! AHH! STOP CHASING ME! AHHHH!" I scream at the top of my lungs, my legs pumping hard over dirt and grass toward a tall iron gate.

"Hey! Get back here!" That deep voice thunders behind me, close now.

I glance over my shoulder—he's eating up the distance fast. "NO! I'M NOT READY TO DIE! YOU WON'T GET A SINGLE USEFUL THING OUT OF ME!" I shout before leaning forward and sprinting harder.

I burst through the gate, gasping so hard my chest burns—only to see a sleek black car bearing down on me. My feet won't stop; they fly over the ground like they have minds of their own.

God. It's all up to You now.

Can I outrun a car?

Yes. Yes, I can.

The vehicle doesn't slow. Fine. I'll just leap over it. Easy. Hehe.

But as I tense to jump, my foot catches on a loose stone. I crash to the ground, my face scraping against gravel until my skin raw and stinging. The car's front tire stops one inch from my forehead—I can feel heat rolling off the rubber, can smell burnt asphalt and rain-soaked earth.

My head throbs. The world blurs at the edges, colors bleeding into one another. Exhaustion pulls me down like water in my lungs, and everything goes black.

DALLIUS ALEXANDRONOVICH SERGEVEV'S POINT OF VIEW

"I told you to bring her unharmed. It seems your ears still need attention—you nearly let her be run over."

I stare at them, my shoulders set, my hands folded at my waist. I want them to feel the weight of it—every ounce of my anger, every promise that carelessness where she's concerned will not be tolerated.

"Hey. Easy. It wasn't on purpose—she's wilder than a street cat." Percival, my second-in-command, holds up his hands, a half-smile on his face.

I let out a sharp breath, my gaze cutting across each man in the room. "The next time this happens, you'll be lucky if only your eyes remain intact." I turn and grab the leather vest I'd tossed over a chair, the material cool and heavy in my hands.

"Where is she, Percival?"

"She's in the guest room… and…" He trails off, and my brow creases.

"And what?" I press, but he only shakes his head and laughs.

"Just see for yourself, Boss."

I click my tongue and stride down the hall, my boots silent on the marble floor until we reach the door. When I push it open, I freeze.

Chaos. That's all the room is.

"Percival… am I imagining this? Are those men crying?" I say it low, my eyes fixed on three of my guards huddled on the floor in a circle. They stare up at a chair in the center of the room. Sasha is tied to it, blindfolded again.

"Nope. What you see is real."

My attention locks on her. I clench my jaw as I take her in—her shoulders are sharper than the last time I held her, her hair shorter, pulled back in a messy knot.

"W-Who even is your boss, huh? Don't you feel bad for me after I told you about my life?" Her voice trembles, but I can hear the fire underneath—the same spark that made me stay long past the week I'd planned.

"I'm just a simple woman—or I used to be. I drink too much, smoke too much, and live on soda more than water. So trust me—my lungs are tarry, my liver's stubborn, and my kidneys are probably tired of my nonsense."

"Pfft." Percival chokes on a laugh.

What in the hell is happening here?

"I know organs cost a fortune these days. Can you tell your boss he'll get nothing out of me?"

She hasn't changed. Not one bit. The woman who'd given me a name that was everything I am not. Angelo. Gentle. Kind. A lie I'd let her believe so Percival could finish our work in the city.

I'd planned to stay seven days. Instead, I'd lived in her small house for months.

"And if he wants my heart…" She pounds a fist against her chest, the sound solid and true. "It's already broken. Smashed to pieces since my hot—I mean, handsome—boyfriend left me without a word."

I can't stop the smile that tugs at my lips.

What am I going to do with you, Sasha?

How will you react when you learn that one year ago, you accidentally adopted a mafia boss?

We've got a long road of chaos ahead before we find our way to anything close to a sexily ever after.

Will you stay? Or will you run from me again?