Filed to story: Sold to The Possessive Mafia Boss Book (Xavier & Jane) Free Online >>
And behind that gun, her father, a man whose betrayal cuts deeper than any enemy’s blade could.
“Let her go,” I say. “It’s over.”
He snorts loudly. “I let her go and you kill me. Fuck you, Xavier. Tell your men to stay out.”
I wave my crew back from the doorway.
“She’s your child,” I spit out the words like venom, my gaze locked on him, the man who’s supposed to protect her above all others. “You’re supposed to take care of her, you fuck.”
“She is my property. I can do what I want with her,” he retorts, his voice cold and devoid of any paternal warmth.
It’s a declaration so vile it sends a wave of disgust crashing through me. “She’s a nasty ungrateful fat little bitch, just like her mother. Now she’s going to watch you die and she’s not going to do anything and you know why? Because I know her. She’s a weak pathetic girl and I’m a fucking winner. Me. I win, you bastard.”
“You don’t have to die,” I say, my voice steady despite the storm of emotions raging inside me. It’s a plea for him to see reason, a chance for him to walk away from the edge of the abyss he’s teetering on. “I will let you go.”
His response is a sneer, the arrogance of a man who’s gambled everything on a losing hand. “Put the gun down, or she dies,” he demands, his confidence unshaken even in the face of his impending downfall.
Jane gives me a slight nod. I know exactly what she’s trying to tell me.
With a heavy heart, I lay my gun down, a silent vow to Jane that I’ll do whatever it takes to save her.
Her father laughs. “You’ve changed for the worse. The old you would never have trusted an enemy. She’s weakened you,” he taunts, mistaking my surrender for weakness.
He points the gun my way. “Goodbye Xavier.” Then he pulls the trigger.
Jane’s POV
“No,” I scream, a raw burst of defiance, as I wrench the gun upward. The bullet tears into the ceiling, sending plaster cascading down onto my head. My heart is a wild thing in my chest, adrenaline igniting my blood.
The accusations, the venom dripping from my father’s words, accusing me of weakness, ignite something fierce within me, a rage that’s both terrifying and exhilarating.
“Weak? Pathetic?” The words echo in my skull, not as labels I accept, but as challenges I refuse. My body is a tight coil of energy, every muscle tensed for action. I’m not the frightened child I once was, trembling under the shadow of his disapproval.
“Stop!” His command slices through the chaos, a desperate attempt to regain control. “Do as you’re told. Get away from me. He has to die.”
For a heartbeat, I’m paralyzed, a visceral flashback to a childhood spent under his thumb, where every misstep invited punishment. Fear, cold and sharp, claws at me, threatening to drag me back into that helpless place.
But then, through the whirlwind of emotions, I see my mother. “You’ve got this,” she says. I see Mrs. Henderson. “You can do this.” Then I see Xavier, my beacon in the storm.
He’s charging towards us, determination etched into every line of his body. He’ll save me, yes, but I realize now, he’s also taught me to save myself.
The fear that grips me transforms, morphing into a weapon of its own. My grip on the gun tightens, not in terror, but in resolve. I’m no longer the girl who flinched under the weight of a harsh word, who doubted her worth at every turn.
I’m a woman who’s stared down death, who’s loved fiercely and fought bravely. I’ve found strength in my love for Xavier, a strength that’s become my own.
I meet my father’s gaze, and there’s a clarity in the defiance I see reflected back at me. It’s a revelation, a shattering of chains that once bound me. The realization emboldens me, filling me with a power I draw from deep within, a power he’s never known.
The standoff shatters with another tug of the gun. More shots fire, chaotic and loud in the confined space. Xavier’s nearing form is a promise of backup, of partnership, but in this moment, it’s my actions that tip the scales.
He sneers at me. “Then I guess I’ll kill that friend of yours.” The moment stretches, each tick of the clock a thunderous echo in the tense air. His hand tightens on the gun, his intention clear as he aims it at Emma, who’s paralyzed by fear in the corner. Her shriek slices through the heavy atmosphere.
“No, you don’t,” I scream, not as a plea but as a battle cry. My hand latches onto his arm with a strength born of desperation. The gun discharges, shots ringing out, chaotic and deafening, as we struggle.
The weapon between us feels alive, a serpent twisting and turning, seeking to strike. Xavier’s figure flashes in my peripheral vision.
Then, as if the universe itself intervenes, my father’s grip slackens, a sudden release of tension that feels almost anticlimactic after the frenzy of our struggle. He slumps, an eerie silence enveloping him as he hits the ground.
The threat, the man who loomed so large in my nightmares, now nothing more than a still figure on the cold floor. Was it his own doing, or was it fate that fired a bullet into his chest?
My father’s power over me, his demands for obedience, now lie as broken as his body. He’s a corpse on the ground, the culmination of a life lived in manipulation and control, undone by the very strength he sought to suppress.
As silence falls, I realize the magnitude of what I’ve accomplished. Not just survival, but a reclamation of self, a breaking free from the shadows of the past.
Xavier reaches me, a mix of concern and pride in his eyes, but it’s the reflection of my own strength I see in his gaze that cements my transformation.
Xavier’s smile, a rare and precious thing in the aftermath of violence, acknowledges the journey we’ve both undertaken. “You did it,” he says, his hand finding mine, a tangible reminder of the partnership that’s become our greatest strength.
In this moment, marked by the echoes of a struggle both internal and external, I stand reborn. Not as the victim of my father’s designs, but as a woman who’s faced down her demons, who’s learned that the greatest battles are often fought within, and that victory lies not just in overcoming, but in the discovery of the strength we hold inside.
Xavier’s smile falters, his face loses its color, turning a ghostly shade of pale that screams wrong. My gaze drops to his chest, to the dark stain spreading across his shirt like a shadow at dusk. It’s a stark contrast to the fabric, a bloom of red that grows with each passing second.
Time seems to dilate, stretching thin the seconds that follow. My heart stalls, a beat skipped in shock, then races, trying to outrun the reality unfolding before me. I move towards him, each step heavy with a dawning horror, the distance closing yet feeling insurmountably far.
He tries to steady himself, a soldier bracing against a wound unseen until now. His legs buckle slightly, a sign of vulnerability from the man who’s been my rock, my protector.
As I reach his side, his arm reaches out, seeking support, seeking me. His voice, a whisper now, barely carries the words, “Well done,” but they’re laced with a pain that cuts deeper than the physical.