Content Warning
This novel contains explicit content intended for mature readers aged 21 and above.
Silver and Sin includes, but is not limited to:
— Graphic sexual content including BDSM, dominance and submission dynamics, and explicit scenes with no filter
— Graphic depictions of mafia violence, murder, torture, and organized crime
— Depictions of the criminal underworld including drug operations, dark web activity, organ trafficking, and illegal arms
— Rape and non-consensual situations depicted as part of the antagonist's world and the reality of the underworld — not romanticized
— Psychological manipulation, coercion, forced proximity, and morally grey characters with no redemption arcs guaranteed
— References to human trafficking and other criminal operations as context for the world — the male lead is aware of this world and operates within it
— Strong language throughout
This story is fiction. It does not glorify or endorse any illegal activity. Reader discretion is strongly advised.
If these themes are not for you, please do not proceed. If they are — buckle up.
Synopsis
She opened the wrong door.
Ana Calloway needed one thing: money. Her mother's hospital bills, her sister's school fees, the quiet weight of a family that depended on her. When a contact offered her a waitress position at Noir — the most exclusive, most dangerous club in the city — Ana said yes. She needed the money. She didn't need complications.
And then she followed a corridor she shouldn't have. Pushed open a golden door she shouldn't have touched. Walked into a room where a man was dead on the floor and the man responsible sat on a throne-like chair, whiskey in hand, silver hair catching the light, watching her like she was the most interesting problem he'd encountered in years.
Lucien Voss. Don of the Voss organization. The most feared man in the city's underworld. A genius in hacking, in strategy, in the precise application of power. Cold, controlled, and absolutely, dangerously interested in the redheaded waitress who talked back to him while standing next to a corpse.
He lets her go. He shouldn't have.
Because now he can't stop watching her.
What begins as obsession disguised as strategy unravels into something neither of them planned. Lucien keeps her close under the pretense of protection. Ana keeps her distance under the pretense of self-preservation. Between them: a fake relationship that feels devastatingly real, a rival mafia lord who wants her as leverage, secrets buried in her father's past that connect her to Lucien's world in ways she never imagined, and a tension so electric it could burn the whole city down.
But Lucien Voss operates in the dark. He always has.
And Ana is about to find out exactly what that means.
Some rooms should never be opened.
She opened one.
Now she belongs to it.
Excerpt — Chapter 1
(The following is an excerpt for promotional use. Full chapter follows.)
The man on the floor had been handsome once.
She couldn't look away from him. She knew she should. Every neuron firing in her skull was screaming at her to look away, to back through the door she'd just walked through, to forget the corridor and the golden handle and whatever catastrophic lapse in judgment had led her here. But her body had stopped accepting instructions.
The glass slipped from her fingers.
It hit the obsidian floor and the sound cracked through the silence like a gunshot.
Every head in the room turned.
He was the only one who hadn't moved.
He sat the way people sat when movement was a choice they made deliberately. His hair was silver — not grey, not blond-going-silver, but fully, strikingly silver, the kind that should have read as old but read instead as something else entirely. Something rare, and cold, and very deliberate. His eyes were green. She could tell even from across the room, because they were the kind of green that caught light and threw it back differently.
He was the most beautiful man she had ever seen.