Twisted Addiction (Doomed Vows #2)
Chapter 1
PENELOPE
When my eyes fluttered open, the world was swallowed in darkness so thick, that for a heart-stopping moment, I thought I’d gone blind.
Panic raced through me, cold as ice in my veins, my breath coming in short, ragged gasps as I tried to make sense of the void.
I was lying down, my back pressed against what felt like a hard mattress, the air stale and heavy with the scent of damp stone and rust.
I bolted upright—or tried to—only to be yanked back by the bite of ropes around my wrists and ankles, the coarse fibers digging into my skin like teeth.
The poles of the bed frame creaked under the strain as I thrashed, my body jerking in futile rebellion, the restraints holding firm.
My mind raced, fragments of memory crashing over me like a tidal wave.
The miscarriage—the thick, warm blood gushing between my legs, soaking my nightgown, the emptiness inside me where my baby had been.
I’d staggered from the villa, numb and broken, toward the lake’s inviting darkness, its waters whispering of escape from the pain.
But I’d veered into the woods instead, the twisted oaks and shadows calling me deeper, my bare feet bleeding on thorns as I mumbled like a madwoman, lost in grief.
Then Antonio—his cruel smirk, his degrading taunts, his hands slamming me down, the gun cracking against my skull.
Blackness.
Had he brought me to Rome? His family’s stronghold in Italy, far from Lake Como’s gilded prison?
Fear gripped me, twisting my stomach as I imagined the horrors waiting—Antonio’s threats of rape, of men taking turns on me, of stuffing me like a pig to mock my body.
And the miscarriage—had it been real?
The blood, the cramps, the void inside me—it had to be.
But what if he’d done something while I was unconscious? Touched me, violated me? The thought sent bile rising in my throat, my body shaking violently against the ropes.
“Help!” I screamed, my voice echoing off unseen walls, desperate. “Someone please help!” I thrashed harder, my wrists burning as the ropes rubbed my skin raw, my ankles straining until I felt the warm trickle of blood.
The restraints didn’t give, only tightened with each pull, the bed frame groaning like a beast mocking my efforts.
“Please! Anyone!” My screams turned to sobs, the darkness pressing in, suffocating, as if the room itself fed on my fear.
Minutes—or hours?—passed in that void, my throat raw from crying out, my body exhausted but my mind racing with terror.
What if no one came?
What if this was Antonio’s plan—to leave me tied, starving, breaking in the dark? Then, without warning, a blinding light exploded into the room, searing my eyes like fire.
I gasped, squeezing them shut as the world turned white, spots dancing behind my lids.
The intensity was overwhelming, my head pounding as I forced my eyes open gradually, blinking against the glare, tears streaming down my face as my vision adjusted.
The room came into focus—a dingy chamber with cracked stone walls, a single bare bulb swinging from the ceiling, casting harsh shadows.
I was on a rusted iron bed, its frame cold, the ropes thick and knotted around my limbs.
Footsteps echoed, deliberate, each thud vibrating through the floor like a death knell.
My pulse spiked as two massive figures emerged from the shadows.
They moved with the heavy inevitability of executioners, eyes glinting like shards of ice. My stomach lurched, bile rising in my throat—the kind of primal terror that screams these men don’t see you as human, only prey.
I froze.
Another figure stood beyond them—how had I not seen him before?
Antonio.
At the foot of the bed, his lean frame lounged with the ease of a man in control, a cigar dangling between his fingers, smoke coiling upward like a serpent tasting the air.
The sight of him ripped the breath from my lungs, my body seizing with a terror colder than the ropes had ever been.
His cruel smirk was a blade, and when his eyes caught mine, glinting with malice, I felt it—that suffocating certainty that I hadn’t escaped anything. I’d only stumbled deeper into his nightmare.
The two men bent down, shadows swallowing their hulking forms as their rough hands reached for me. Instinct screamed to recoil, to curl into myself, but the chains bit deeper when I tried to flinch away.
My heart hammered as their fingers worked at the buckles, each brush of their skin against mine making my stomach churn with revulsion.
The scrape of metal against metal filled the silence, every click sounding like the cock of a gun.
I clenched my jaw, forcing myself not to scream, not to give them that satisfaction. When the first shackle snapped open, blood rushed to my hand in a painful surge, my skin raw and burning where the iron had gnawed into it.
One by one, the restraints fell away, leaving angry welts and trickles of blood in their wake. I yanked my hands back the instant I was able, rubbing at the sores with frantic fingers, my breath uneven, my chest tight with the terror of how close their touch had been.
My ankles throbbed as the final chain clattered to the floor, freedom coming not as relief but as another wave of dread.
Because I was loose now—loose, but still in Antonio’s den.
The two hulking men stepped back without a word, retreating to the corners like obedient dogs, their cold eyes never leaving me.
Antonio puffed on his cigar, the glowing tip flaring as he drew in slow and deep, then exhaled a heavy cloud of smoke that curled through the air and stung my eyes.
He watched me through the haze, like a predator savoring the twitch of prey caught in his claws.
“You’re nothing but a vulture, Antonio,” I rasped, forcing steel into my trembling voice. “Picking at scraps that were never yours.”
My pulse thundered in my ears, but I forced myself to meet his gaze. “Kidnapping me won’t make you powerful. It just makes you a desperate little tyrant.”
He exhaled smoke in a slow curl, eyes glittering. “Your father sold you to me, whale. And I would have collected every debt. Every scream. Every tear. But your Dmitri Volkov—ah, he couldn’t stomach the thought. He voided it. Ripped away my rights to you.”
His smile darkened. “Tell me, does it sting that the only reason you’re free of me... is because another man claimed you first?”
I forced a laugh, sharp. “Claimed, sold, caged—it doesn’t matter. At least Dmitri doesn’t reek of desperation like you do.”
Antonio’s smirk twisted, his voice a hiss.
“Trust me, whale, Dmitri is drowning in it. Why else would he bleed half his empire and scorch a dozen alliances just to tear up the contract that bound you to me? The entire underworld still talks about it—Volkov sacrificing power for a woman he swears he despises. That, Penelope, is desperation.”
His words struck like a slap, confusion tangling with a flicker of relief.
Dmitri had gone to such ruthless lengths to sever the contract binding me to Antonio—something even my father hadn’t been able to undo.
But why? Why would the man who mocked me, broke me, bleed for me in ways my own blood never had?
Antonio’s phone beeped, slicing through the silence.
He glanced at the screen, and for a fleeting second, the mask slipped—hesitation flickered across his face, a shadow of reluctance, as though he wished the game hadn’t twisted this way.
But when his eyes lifted back to me, the cold arrogance returned.
He shoved the phone into his pocket and jerked his chin toward the door.
“Let’s go,” he muttered, striding out, his tone edged with impatience—like a man forced into a move he hadn’t planned, yet had no choice but to play.
I followed, though my steps faltered, my bare feet cold against the stone floor.
My mind reeled, suspicion knotting with unease.
Let’s go?
Where? Why now, after binding me like an animal, would Antonio suddenly release me? Each step deepened the questions clawing at my chest, but dread smothered the words before I could ask them aloud.
We moved through the house—a sprawling labyrinth of corridors that seemed to stretch forever, each step echoing too loud in the silence.
The guards stationed at each intersection stood like statues, their eyes sharp, faces devoid of humanity.
They didn’t move, didn’t speak—only watched. Cold, predatory.
My skin prickled as we passed, as though I’d become a ghost walking through the underworld, unseen but not unjudged.
By the time we stepped into the courtyard, the open air felt no less suffocating. A sleek black chopper waited, its blades idle but poised, like a predator ready to lunge.
“It’ll take you back to Lake Como,” Antonio said flatly, jerking his chin toward the chopper. But his voice carried an edge, brittle with anger.
His jaw clenched so hard a vein pulsed at his temple, and when he shoved his hands into his pockets, I caught the twitch of his fingers—like a man itching to strangle what he couldn’t keep.
He didn’t want this. He hated every second of it. But something bigger than his pride forced his hand. I could see it in the tight set of his shoulders, the simmering loathing in his eyes. He had to let me go—or choke on the consequences.
“I don’t understand,” I said, pulse thrumming in my throat. “You said my father ordered you to take me back to New York—that night you cornered me at the club. So why are you letting me walk away now? What changed?”
Deep down, I already knew why: Dmitri Volkov. Whatever he’d done, however he’d bled, Antonio was cutting his losses because Dmitri had made it impossible to hold me.
Antonio’s smirk curved back, dark and mocking, but the edge of strain pulled at it. “Don’t you get the memo? I’ve already pissed off all four mafia families in Lake Como. If I keep you one second longer, I’ll have their bullets in my skull before dawn. I’m in enough trouble—leave.”
For the first time, fear flickered in his eyes, warping the mask of arrogance.
His confidence cracked, just enough for me to glimpse the desperation beneath.