
FLOWERS FOR THE DEVIL“She sold him roses. He bought her soul.”A dangerous mafia heir who burns the world for one girl. A heroine who went from selling roses to holding a gun. And a love story that will ruin you for all othersMaxine Ruela Dela Cruz, an 18-year-old, raised by alleys and shadows, she knew the language of hunger better than lullabies. knows the weight of being nothing. At night she whispered her dreams to the stars, hoping they would carry her wishes to her parents. Orphaned at seven, kicked out of the shelter after her debut birthday, broke and she now calls a rotting tree house a home. By sunrise, she’s a ghost on the dangerous Manila’s streets, selling roses to strangers who won’t even meet her eyes. By night, she’s invisible at The Velvet Room. A bar where not just the men and women where, meeting, drinking and dancing, politicians also sell the country and men with guns sell silence.Her work was scrubbing toilets and mopping blood off VIP floors. She has three rules to survive: Stay quiet. Stay unseen. Stay alive. One wrong move and she’ll disappear in just a blink She’s invisible. Safe. Until him.Then it rains, and Draven Moretti steps into her world. Draven Moretti, a 32-year-old man. The heir of the most feared mafia empire in Asia. He entered the room like a storm in a tailored suit, every glance commanding silence, every step echoing authority. Eyes like frozen lakes. His smile never reached his eyes, and those who saw it knew it was the last thing they’d remember. A scar that cuts through his brow like a warning. Has tattoo on his neck to collar and down to his broad shoulders. A body count that keeps Interpol awake at night. “A staggering tally of violent deaths, so vast and chilling in scope, that it haunts investigators, rattles global law enforcement, and forces Interpol into sleepless nights of pursuit.” His name is whispered in criminal circles. He doesn’t buy flowers. He buys companies. Politicians. People. But that night, he buys every wilting rose from Maxine’s trembling hands for 1,000 pesos. He doesn’t take a single flower. He only looks at her, like she’s the first real thing he’s seen in years. Like he’s already deciding how to keep her. Maxine thinks it’s pity. She’s wrong. It’s the start of a war. It’s an obsession. One week later, her boss tells her to replace one of her co-worker for 10,000 pesos, without knowing her boss sales her into high price. Agatha the head waitress tells her it’s just one night. One old man in Room 235. One drink to calm her nerves. Maxine puts on a uniform that cuts too high and heels she can’t walk in, because she wants to but something and hunger is louder than fear. But the man in Room 235 isn’t old. He isn’t weak. He’s Draven.And the drink wasn’t for her nerves. Agatha laced it with something that sets her skin on fire and makes her crave the very devil she should run from. Drugged. Trapped. Trembling. Maxine kisses him first. Draven could take everything. He’s a monster—he knows it. The world knows it. But when he tastes the drug on her lips, when he sees the fear fighting the desire in her eyes, he stops. Because even devils have rules: He doesn’t take what isn’t freely given. Instead, he carries her unconscious body to his penthouse, lays her on silk sheets, and watches her sleep like she’s something holy. When Maxine wakes, she’s alone. But on the pillow is a single red rose and a note written in sharp, violent handwriting: “You’re mine now, Mia Cara. Don’t run. I’ll always find you.” Draven doesn’t ask. He claims. He installs guards outside her door. Cameras in her hall. He gives her Room 235 and says, “You’re safer as my possession than as nobody’s prey.” Maxine should hate him. She does. But she also sees the way he kills a man for whistling at her. The way he brings her books instead of diamonds. The way he stands outside her door all night, guarding her from ghosts she can’t see. His possessiveness is a cage, but it’s the first time in her life someone thinks she’s worth protecting. But Draven didn’t find her by accident. Her dead father stole 500 million pesos from the Moretti family. Draven was sent to collect the debt in blood—by taking the daughter. Except Maxine doesn’t know the money was never her father’s. She doesn’t know she was framed by Marco De Luca, Draven’s cousin, the man who wants the Moretti throne and will burn the world to get it. Now Marco knows Draven’s weakness: an 18-year-old girl who sells roses. When Maxine discovers her father’s journal and learns the truth—that her father died trying to expose Marco’s human trafficking ring—she stops running. She picks up the gun Draven taught her to use. She stops being the rose. She becomes the thorn. He’s the devil she never meant to meet.She’s the rose he’ll bleed to keep.But in a world of guns, betrayal, and blood oaths, love is the deadliest weakness of all.Will she destroy the devil who caged her...... or rule the empire beside him?

