Firecracker
Mikhail's POV
The splash hit like a grenade—cold, sticky, and utterly audacious. Red wine splattered across my face, dripping down my jaw, soaking my tailored shirt with a fruity tang that mocked my dignity. I blinked through the sting, tasting the sharp bite on my lips, and locked eyes with the culprit. She was a vision: dark hair framing a face that could stop traffic, eyes blazing with unapologetic fire, chest heaving under her soaked uniform. Stunning, yes, but it was her raw defiance that sank its claws into me. In my world, people groveled at the whisper of my name. This waitress? She’d just doused me like I was some barroom nobody. Bold. Infuriating. And damn if it didn’t ignite something in me.
Before I could toss out a quip—maybe about her aim or a jab at her nerve—her manager swooped in, flustered, dragging her away with a torrent of apologies. The girl tried to spit venom, but a hand over her mouth cut her off. I watched them retreat, a smirk tugging at my lips despite the mess. Aleksei, my right-hand man, slid up beside me, his dark eyes glinting with barely contained amusement. He caught me staring after her, that fiery figure vanishing into the crowd, and raised a brow. “Boss, you’re soaked and smiling? That’s a new one.”
I swiped at my face, wine smearing. “Shut it, Alek. She’s got fire. Not many dare cross me like that.” He chuckled, reading me too well. Women threw themselves at me—models, heiresses, actresses—but this one threw a drink. Instant obsession.
We slipped out through the VIP exit, the club’s thumping bass fading. My driver had the SUV idling, blacked-out and ready. I slid into the leather seat, Aleksei beside me, the fruity stench filling the car. I cracked a window, letting the city’s cool air cut through as we sped uptown to my penthouse.
I’m Mikhail Alexandrovich Romanov, 24, heir to the Romanov Empire—a kingdom of boardrooms and blood. By day, I’m the playboy CEO of Romanov Enterprises, all cocky charm and billion-dollar deals, flashing grins at galas that seal empires. By night, I’m a mafia don, cold as steel, ruthless with a twisted sense of humor that keeps my enemies off balance. The Romanovs don’t just own wealth—we own power, our grip on everything from skyscrapers to shipments that slink through the city’s shadows. My father, Maxim, built it from grit, a hard man whose approval I chase and curse. Our relationship’s a battlefield—he demands I be colder, harder. “Weakness is a death sentence, Mikhail,” he’d growl. I joke it off, call him the Ice Czar in my head, but it stings. My mother, Katarina, softens the edges when she can, but she’s caught in his shadow too. Then there’s Andrei, my 21-year-old half-brother from Dad’s affair with Yvonne. Kept at a distance to dodge gossip, he’s a tech genius at university, untouched by our world’s filth. I envy his clean hands but protect them fiercely. Family’s blood, even when it’s fractured.
The penthouse loomed over the skyline, a glass fortress of marble and money. We rode the private elevator, Aleksei’s laughter breaking free as we stepped into the living room—windows framing the city, art worth more than most people’s lives.
“She nailed you, boss,” he cackled, slumping onto the sectional. “Mikhail Romanov, taken down by a waitress with a drink. Epic.”
I tossed my ruined jacket aside, playing up the drama. “Laugh it up, clown. That hellcat didn’t know who she was hitting. Throwing wine at me? Me!” I paced, shirt clinging uncomfortably, but a grin betrayed me. “Most women beg for my attention; she douses me. I need her name.”
Aleksei smirked, sipping whiskey. “Smitten already? Careful. She’s trouble—fiery ones bite hard.”
“Exactly why she’s intriguing,” I shot back, heading to my bedroom. “Gotta scrub this fruit punch off.” I stripped, the shower’s steam washing away the stickiness but not her image—those defiant eyes burned into me. Wrapped in a black silk robe—because even my pajamas scream power—I rejoined Aleksei, pouring a scotch.
“Business,” I said, settling into an armchair. “Startups? Andrei’s picks?”
Aleksei leaned in, serious now. “Solid. His tech could streamline our... discreet operations. But Maxim’s riding you, right? Legacy crap?”
I snorted. “Always. Called today, griping I’m not ruthless enough. Me! The guy who made the Petrov crew a punchline last month.” I mimed a throat-slit, grinning. “Cold? Check. Ruthless? In spades. But I make it fun—keeps the fear sharp.”
We laughed, but Aleksei’s gaze turned serious. “Andrei’s clean, at least. No mafia stains.”
“Good. He stays that way.” I sipped, mind drifting to Andrei’s normal life—code, classes, no blood. I’d kill to keep it so.
Talk turned to club profits, a new arms deal. Then I checked my watch. “Ingrid’s coming over. Need to blow off steam. Dad’s been a bear, and that waitress got me wired.”
Aleksei’s face darkened. “Ingrid? My cousin? Mikhail, that’s a bad move. She’s clingy—eyes like she wants to own you. I despise her, you know that.”
I waved him off, cocky as ever. “Clingy? Nah. It’s just sex. Started at your family’s gala a few months back—she prowled in like a seductress, all curves and cunning. I’m not blind; I took her up on it. She keeps coming back, and I’m not turning down a free pass. She knows it’s no strings—she’s too smart for that. Besides, she’s your cousin, so it’s... convenient.”
He shook his head, voice tight. “She’s manipulative, ambitious. You’re dancing with a snake. She’ll want more, and when you shut her down? Trouble.”
“Relax, Alek. I’ve got it handled.” I flexed my fingers, joking, “These hands don’t just charm—they crush problems.”
My phone buzzed before he could argue. Dmitri, warehouse muscle. I put it on speaker. “Talk.”
“Boss, trouble,” he stammered. “Last night’s shipment—packages missing. High-value, thousands gone. Security’s scrambling.”
Rage spiked, but I kept it playful-cold. “Missing? What, they sprouted legs? Or did you idiots leave the vault open for tourists?” My laugh was sharp, deadly. “Find the bastard with the balls to steal from me. Pull the cameras—every frame. And Dmitri? What the fuck am I paying you for? Good vibes?”
“S-sorry, boss. On it.”
I slammed the phone down, turning to Aleksei. “Unbelievable. Someone thinks they can rob the Romanovs?” My eyes narrowed. “Find the thief—alive, for a chat. And haul in the security from that night. I want words with them. Painful ones.”
Aleksei nodded, already texting. “Done. We’ll make it loud—no one crosses us.”
I leaned back, robe slipping, mind racing. Theft was a direct challenge to my name. I’d handle it with a smirk, make the culprit a laughingstock for the underworld. But beneath the bravado, fury churned. No one betrayed me—not thieves, not Maxim, not even seductive cousins. Yet that waitress lingered in my thoughts, a fiery anomaly in my world of ice. Ingrid was due any minute, but it was the spitfire’s face I saw, her defiance a challenge I was already itching to conquer.
