Stories

“A Mafia boss was dining with his fiancée and future in-laws when a waitress leaned in and warned him, ‘Run now.’”

“Run Now” — A Story of Betrayal, Survival, and Love

The clinking of glasses and the low hum of jazz filled the air inside Marello’s, one of Manhattan’s most exclusive Italian restaurants. Candlelight shimmered off crystal, painting warm flickers across mahogany walls. To most, it was just another perfect evening in Midtown.

But to Maya Chen, every heartbeat sounded like a countdown.

She tightened her grip on the wine bottle as she approached table seven, her hands trembling slightly. The man sitting at the head of the table was unmistakable—Logan Marcellus, New York’s youngest and most feared mafia boss. His tailored black suit fit like a second skin, his every movement precise, controlled. Power seemed to ripple from him even when he sat still.

Across from him sat his fiancée—elegant, blonde, a smile sharp enough to cut glass. And the moment Maya saw her, her stomach turned to ice.

Sabrina Volkova.

Maya recognized that face. Six months ago, she’d seen it in the encrypted files her brother Daniel had sent before he died. Those files—his final warning—had shown Sabrina meeting with Russian Bratva leaders.

She wasn’t Logan’s future wife.

She was his executioner.

Maya’s pulse quickened. Sabrina’s hand rested lightly on Logan’s arm, her diamonds catching the light, her purse placed within easy reach. Inside that purse, Maya knew, was a gun.

For six months, Maya had lived like a ghost—scrubbing office floors by day, waiting tables by night, running errands for cash while hiding in a cheap Queens studio. Daniel’s death—called an “accident” by the FBI—was anything but. He’d uncovered something big about the Volkova family.

And before he died, he’d sent her everything.

“If you see her,” he’d written, “run.”

But now, she wasn’t the one who needed to run.

When Maya reached Logan’s table, he looked up, his eyes locking onto hers—dark, unreadable, dangerous.

“Champagne?” she managed.

His voice was smooth as velvet but edged with warning. “Careful. That bottle costs a thousand.”

“I know,” she whispered. “I won’t spill.”

“Good girl.”
Her pulse jumped.
“You’re new?”

“Four months.”

Across the table, Sabrina smiled, polished and poisonous. “Don’t interrogate the staff, love. She looks terrified.”

Inside, alarms screamed. Maya had seconds to choose: stay silent or act.

As she leaned in to pour Logan’s wine, her lips brushed close to his ear.

She whispered:

“Run. Now.”

Logan froze. His instincts kicked in. He stood, overturning his chair just as the first bullet shattered the window.

Screams erupted. Glass rained down. Logan’s men—Jackson Hale and Victor Lane—moved instantly, guns drawn.

Sabrina’s chair was empty.

She had vanished.


“Get down!” Logan barked, dragging Maya behind a marble column.

“They planned this,” Maya gasped. “She—she left to trigger it.”

Logan’s gaze cut into her. “You know something.”

“They killed my brother,” she choked. “He warned me. You were the target.”

Logan’s eyes darkened. “You just saved my life.”

Gunfire ripped through the wine racks. Logan shielded her with his body, firing back with deadly precision. Then he pulled her toward the cellar.

“Downstairs. Now.”

They descended into darkness. The cool air wrapped around them.

“I know a way out,” Maya said. “There’s a tunnel.”

“Show me.”

She pulled a wine rack aside, revealing a hidden door. Logan’s expression shifted—respect, surprise.

“Smart girl.”

They slipped into the tunnel and emerged blocks away. Maya trembled. Logan opened the door of a black Mercedes.

“Get in.”

“Why should I trust you?”

“Because the people who killed Daniel will come for you next,” he said quietly. “And because my word still means something.”

Against every instinct, she got in.


They drove in silence until Logan finally said, “Daniel Chen… FBI analyst. I knew him.”

Maya’s breath hitched. “You knew him?”

“He came to me three years ago. Told me my mother didn’t die of cancer—she was poisoned. The Volkovas paid her doctor to test drugs on her. Daniel gave me proof. He saved me.”

The truth shook her.

“You… owe him.”

Logan nodded once. “Seems I owe you now too.”

He brought her to a quiet Brooklyn brownstone—his mother’s old home. Sacred ground.

“You’ll be safe here,” he said.

“Why save me?” Maya whispered.

“Because you risked everything for a stranger. In my world, that doesn’t happen. You’re worth protecting.”


Morning came softly. Logan was in the kitchen—cooking.

“You… cook?” Maya said.

“My mother’s kitchen. No one else touches it.”

Later, in the study, she typed LoganMarcellus into the password field of Daniel’s files.

They opened.

Internal FBI memos. Offshore accounts. Evidence of Volkova deals with federal prosecutors.

“Corruption,” Maya whispered.

“And Sabrina,” Logan said coldly. “She was placed with me years ago. The engagement was a setup.”

“They used you.”

“They tried. They forgot—I don’t lose.”

He looked at her. “You’re under my protection now.”

“I don’t want protection,” she said. “I want justice.”

A slow, dangerous smile. “Then you’ll get it.”


Weeks passed. Logan moved Maya to his secure Westchester estate. They worked together—days strategizing, nights decoding files. They struck blow after blow against the Volkovas.

And somewhere in the fire, something else ignited.

Logan began calling her Bella.
Dangerous. Tender. Inevitable.

One night she found him bloodied after an attack.

“You shouldn’t see this,” he said.

“I already have,” she replied. “And I’m still here.”

He kissed her—fierce, desperate, undeniable.


The war ended at a Newark warehouse. Sabrina Volkova was captured, spitting venom as she was dragged out.

“Was it worth it?” she hissed.

Maya rolled down the window. “Ask yourself in twenty years.”

Logan returned, smoke clinging to him. “It’s over.”

She squeezed his hand. “No. It’s just beginning.”


Eighteen months later

Peace. Quiet. A transformed empire. A transformed woman.

When Logan came home that night, Maya teased, “You’re late.”

“Board meeting ran long. But the community center you proposed was approved.”

Pride lit her face. “You listened.”

“Always.”

He wrapped her in his arms, the past finally behind them.

“The words you whispered that night,” he murmured. “I owe everything to them.”

Maya smiled softly. “Run now?”

He nodded.

“You saved my life.”

She placed a hand over his heart. “You gave me one worth living.”

He kissed her—not with desperation, but with certainty.

With love.

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