
The toilet floor was cold beneath Dante's knees. He scrubbed harder, watching soap suds spiral toward the drain.
Forty-eight hours ago, he'd sat across from three cartel bosses who controlled half of South America's drug trade. They'd called him Phantom Lord, voices hushed like prayers. Today, the head maid clicked her tongue at a streak he'd missed.
"Honestly, three years and you still can't clean properly." She stepped over him. "The parlor needs setting up. Mrs. Hayes has guests arriving."
Dante stood, wrung out his rag, and said nothing. In shadows, he commanded empires. Here, he was nothing but a worthless househusband.
The parlor hummed with arriving voices—sharp, crystalline laughter that announced wealth before the women even entered. Twelve of the city's elite, dripping diamonds and designer labels, air-kissing Victoria Hayes like she was royalty.
"Dante!" Victoria's voice cut through the chatter. "Come here. Now."
He walked in, still wearing the damp cleaning clothes. The women's conversations died. They looked at him the way people look at roadkill.
"Put this on." Victoria tossed a server's uniform at his chest. "And bring the tea service. Quickly."
He changed in the hallway bathroom, the uniform two sizes too small and smelling of mothballs. When he returned with the silver cart, the women had settled into their seats, a circle of judgment in Chanel and Hermès.
"Ladies, meet my burden." Victoria gestured at him with a champagne flute. "The worthless waste my foolish husband forced upon us before he died."
Mrs. Grey leaned forward, eyebrows arched in theatrical sympathy. "Victoria, darling, I heard the three-year marriage contract your husband insisted on expired last month. Why haven't you thrown this beggar out yet?"
Victoria's smile was acid-sweet. "Oh, I have my methods. You see, if I make his life unbearable enough, he'll leave on his own. Then I won't be breaking dear Leonard's dying wish. I'm simply encouraging him to seek better opportunities elsewhere."
The women laughed, a chorus of cruelty dressed up as concern.
"Dante, pour the tea." Victoria waved her hand dismissively. "Try not to embarrass me this time."
He moved around the circle, silver teapot steady in his grip. Mrs. Whitmore wrinkled her nose as he approached. "I wouldn't let trash like him breathe the same air as my poodle. How do you stand having him in your home, Victoria?"
"It's quite simple." Victoria examined her manicure. "I don't acknowledge his presence unless absolutely necessary. To me, he's furniture. Less valuable than furniture, actually. At least my chairs serve a purpose."
More laughter. Dante poured Mrs. Ashford's tea, his face blank as stone. Three days ago, he'd had a governor on his knees, begging for mercy. That man had thought himself untouchable too.
"Oh!" Mrs. Ashford jerked her arm suddenly, bumping his hand. Hot tea splashed across her dress. "You clumsy fool! This dress costs more than you'll earn in ten lifetimes!"
Dante stepped back, teapot still level. He hadn't flinched.
Victoria didn't even ask what happened. She grabbed an envelope from the side table and slapped it down. "Take this from his 'allowance' for the month. Though I doubt two hundred dollars will cover dry cleaning for your Valentino."
The women gasped, delighted.
"You only give him two hundred a month?" Mrs. Grey pressed a hand to her chest. "Victoria, you're crueler than I thought! I tip my pool boy more than that!"
"Well, he's worth less than my pool boy." Victoria sipped her champagne. "At least the pool boy knows how to do his job."
Dante retreated to the kitchen, setting the teapot down with hands that didn't shake. His phone buzzed against his thigh—silent mode, always. He pulled it out.
V: Boss, the Hayes Corp hostile takeover has been neutralized. The stocks you stabilized are recovering. Should I route the credit to Mr. Reid as usual?
Dante's thumbs moved across the screen. Yes.
He paused, then added: And the situation with Mrs. Hayes's gambling debts?
V: All $3.2 million paid off through offshore accounts. She'll never know how close she came to losing everything.
He pocketed the phone. In the parlor, Victoria was telling her friends about Marcus Reid's latest "miracle" business deal. The same deal Dante had orchestrated through seventeen shell companies and six international intermediaries. Marcus had signed the papers and taken the applause.
"Mother, has Marcus called?"
Dante's spine straightened at the voice. Scarlett Hayes walked into the parlor like she owned the air itself—devastating in a white dress that probably cost more than most people's cars. She didn't glance at the kitchen doorway where Dante stood.
"We have dinner reservations at Le Bernardin tonight," Scarlett continued, checking her phone.
Victoria's entire face transformed. "Marcus Reid! Now that's a real man. Dante, you should study him." She raised her voice to make sure he heard. "He's closed another major deal for Hayes Corp. Fifteen million in new contracts!"
Scarlett finally looked toward the kitchen. Her eyes passed over Dante like he was wallpaper. "Did you pick up my dry cleaning like I asked?"
He nodded.
"And my car needs washing. Do it before you sleep." She turned away. "The garage, not the driveway. I don't want neighbors seeing you."
One of Victoria's friends—Mrs. Patterson—gasped dramatically. "Scarlett, isn't today your third wedding anniversary?"
Scarlett paused mid-step. For one second, something flickered across her face. Then she laughed, bitter and sharp. "Is it? I honestly forgot. When you're married to a ghost, dates stop mattering."
The women erupted in sympathetic murmurs and knowing looks.
Dante slipped out of the kitchen through the side door. In the hallway, he pulled a small wrapped box from his pocket and set it on the hall table. Nobody noticed. Inside was a silver bracelet with an inscription: Three years of forever.
The attic stairs creaked under his weight. His so-called room was a converted storage space with a single mattress, a lamp, and a window that didn't quite close. He sat on the thin blanket and pulled out his phone.
Vincent was calling.
"Boss, I'm begging you." Vincent's voice was rough with frustration. "You've stabilized Hayes Corp seventeen times in three years. You've eliminated six assassination attempts on Mrs. Hayes that she doesn't even know about. You've paid off millions in hidden debts. When will this end?"
Dante looked at the photograph he kept on the narrow windowsill—Leonard Hayes in a hospital bed, gripping his hand with desperate, dying strength.
My daughter... protect her... you're the only one I trust... you owe me nothing but I'm begging you...
"She used to smile at me, Vincent." His voice came out quieter than he intended. "Five years ago, before her father got sick, she used to smile when she saw me. I thought if I stayed close, proved myself through actions, maybe she'd smile again."
Vincent was silent for a moment. Then: "Boss, I have news. It's about Marcus Reid and Mrs. Hayes. Our surveillance team captured something tonight. You need to see this."
A video file came through.
Dante stared at the d******d notification. Outside his window, he could hear Scarlett's car starting—off to her dinner with Marcus. The engine purred, expensive and smooth. Then silence.
His finger hovered over the play button.
The screen lit up his face in the dark attic, and for the first time in three years, his hand trembled.
Latest Chapter
TAMING THE UNDERWORLD KING!
Vincent's fingers flew across the keyboard, pulling up tactical maps overlaid with real-time data. "Locations confirmed. Scarlett is in the warehouse in Sector 7, east side. Sophia is in the abandoned hospital, Sector 12, west side. Distance between them: forty-seven minutes by the fastest route we have.""They've split our forces perfectly." Vincent's voice was tight. "If we send teams to both locations, we're too divided to be effective. If we focus on one, the other dies. It's a textbook tactical trap."Isabella studied the maps with sharp eyes. "Why does Sophia matter to you if Scarlett is the one you were married to?" She wasn't asking out of curiosity—she was probing, trying to understand what made Dante move.Dante's mind flashed back to Leonard's hospital room three years ago. The old man's grip on his hand had been surprisingly strong for someone dying."There's another daughter," Leonard had whispered, voice ragged. "From before Victoria. Her name is Sophia. She's innocent—d
MY DAUGHTER HAS BEEN KIDNAPPED!
Isabella's office became a war room in under three minutes.Dante commandeered the space without asking, pushing aside art catalogs and auction records to make room for laptops and tactical displays. Vincent worked at lightning speed, pulling up surveillance feeds, satellite imagery, city maps overlaid with security camera networks.The door opened and six operatives entered—moving with the kind of precision that screamed military training. They wore civilian clothes but carried themselves like weapons waiting to be deployed. Each one looked at Dante and snapped to attention."Commander," the lead operative said. "Team Shadow reporting as ordered."Isabella raised an eyebrow. Commander. Not boss, not sir. Commander."Status," Dante said, not looking up from the screens."Fully armed, three vehicles on standby, ready for deployment on your mark."Dante nodded. Isabella pulled out her phone and made three calls—each conversation less than thirty seconds. By the time she hung up, Vincent
DESTROYING EVERYTHING
Dante woke to the sound of his city burning.Not literally—though the morning news made it feel close. He stood in his penthouse suite, coffee in hand, watching three different news channels on the wall-mounted screens. Each one screamed a variation of the same story."HAYES CORP MIRACLE MAN EXPOSED AS FRAUD!""Marcus Reid: Con Artist or Business Genius?""Socialite Scarlett Hayes in Love Triangle Scandal—Marriage to Mystery Investor Falls Apart!"The penthouse itself told a different story than the attic he'd left behind. Floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking the city. Furniture that whispered wealth without shouting it. Art on the walls that museums would kill for. This was how Dante actually lived when he wasn't playing the fool.His phone buzzed with updates from Vincent. Hayes Corp stock in freefall. Investors pulling out faster than rats from a sinking ship. Marcus Reid's phone going straight to voicemail for everyone who called.Across town, the Hayes mansion looked like a war z
WHO'S THE PHANTOM?
Marcus's laugh came out strangled. "Mr. Westfield, you must be mistaken. Dante is just a—he's nobody! He's been living off his wife's charity for three years! Sleeping in our attic like a servant!"Westfield's expression turned glacial. "Living off charity? Mr. Reid, this 'nobody' facilitated seventeen of my international deals over the past decade. When my daughter was kidnapped three years ago, he recovered her in forty-eight hours when the FBI failed. The ransom was five million. He returned her unharmed and eliminated the threat permanently."The ballroom had gone so quiet that Scarlett could hear her own heartbeat. She stared at Dante—at this stranger wearing her husband's face—and felt reality fracturing around her. "That's impossible. You're lying. Dante can't even afford his own phone plan. He doesn't have connections. He doesn't have—"Her voice died as memories replayed with new context. Three years of miraculous luck. Threats that vanished. Deals that materialized from nowh
THAT'S IMPOSSIBLE! HE'S A NOBODY!!
Scarlett found the envelope when she stepped out of her bedroom at dawn.White. Formal. Sitting on the hallway floor like an accusation. She picked it up, frowning, and tore it open. Divorce papers fell out, every signature line already filled in Dante's neat handwriting. A note card slipped free with them.Contract fulfilled. You're free.She read it twice. Then a third time, waiting for emotion to hit—sadness, relief, anything. Instead, she felt insulted. How dare he file for divorce? How dare he leave first?"Mother!" She stormed downstairs, papers clutched in her fist. "Mother, wake up!"Victoria emerged from her suite in a silk robe, looking annoyed until she saw Scarlett's face. "What's wrong?""Dante filed for divorce." Scarlett shoved the papers at her. "He left. His room is empty. Everything's gone."Victoria snatched the documents, scanning them with narrowed eyes. Her face went from confusion to fury in seconds. "How DARE he! We were supposed to make him leave so we could c
WHEN THE PHANTOM STOPS HIDING
Dante pressed play.The video loaded—Marcus Reid's penthouse, timestamp five hours ago. The camera angle suggested hidden placement, probably Vincent's surveillance team working from the building across the street. The image was crystal clear.Scarlett walked through Marcus's front door using her own key.She was still wearing the white dress from earlier, the one she'd claimed was for a business dinner with clients. Marcus appeared in the frame, two champagne flutes in hand, and kissed her. Not a friendly peck. Not professional. The kind of kiss that said they'd done this before."Did the fool suspect anything?" Marcus's voice came through tinny but clear.Scarlett laughed, the sound light and careless. "Dante? Please. He's too busy being grateful we let him sleep in the attic. He probably thinks I'm at a board meeting."Dante's jaw tightened. That was all.Marcus pulled her closer, his hands familiar on her waist. "I can't believe your father made you marry that worthless nobody. Th
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