Chapter 1
I am the Don's wife, but I can't wear a coat without Elena's passcode.
My cards are monitored. My cash is approved. My life runs through the woman who loves my husband and hates my existence.
Dante calls it protocol. He calls it protection. He never asks why I wear the same faded sweater in winter.
I swallowed every humiliation because my mother's ventilator depended on his signature.
But Elena intentionally delayed funds for my mother’s medical treatment. Our brutal clash made me miscarry.
My mother died alone without timely treatment. I stopped filing all daily spending applications for three days straight.
Today he calls, calm and condescending, telling me the medical accounts are restored.
He thinks I'll fall back into line.
He doesn't know the only thing I'm requesting now is a signature—his, on the divorce papers.
The master bedroom of the Moretti estate was a masterpiece of Italian architecture, all imported marble, vaulted ceilings, and suffocating silence.
I stood in the center of it, looking at the small, battered leather duffel bag on the edge of the king-sized bed. It was the same bag I had brought with me three years ago when I married Dante Moretti.
It was the only thing in this sprawling mansion that actually belonged to me.
My phone vibrated against the glass of the nightstand. The caller ID flashed: Dante.
I stared at the screen for a long moment, watching the name pulse. My chest, which for years had tightened with a pathetic mix of hope and anxiety whenever he called, felt nothing.
I swiped to answer, bringing the cold metal to my ear without saying a word.
"Are you done throwing your tantrum?" Dante’s voice was a low, resonant baritone, laced with the casual arrogance. "Elena told me you caused a scene at the syndicate headquarters today. Seraphina, I don't have the patience for your petty jealousy. You know the protocols."
Protocols. That was the word they used to dress up my imprisonment.
"I'm not throwing a tantrum, Dante," I said.
"Good," he said, recovering his haughty tone. "Because I'm tired of this. You are the Don's wife. Act like it. I’ve authorized Elena to increase your monthly allowance by a thousand dollars. Go buy yourself a new dress. We have the Romero gala this weekend, and I expect you to be on my arm, smiling."
He thought a thousand dollars was a grand gesture. He didn't know that just yesterday, I had to submit a written request to Elena—his underboss, his shadow, the woman who looked at me like I was a cockroach—just to get twenty dollars for a haircut.
He didn't know that the walk-in closet in our bedroom, filled with designer gowns and furs, was locked with a digital keypad. The passcode was changed weekly by Elena.
If I wanted to wear a coat in the winter, I had to text her and wait for her to deem my request "appropriate for the syndicate's image."
"I won't be attending the gala," I said quietly, zipping the duffel bag closed.
"Don't push me, Seraphina," Dante warned, a dangerous edge creeping into his voice. "You think because your family name is Rossi, you can act like a princess? Your family is bankrupt. Your father is a ghost. I took you in. I pay for your mother’s hospital bills. "
He played his trump card. He always played the hospital bills. I had swallowed my pride, my dignity, and my soul to keep the machines breathing for my mother.
But he doesn't know, I thought, looking at the faint, dried blood on the cuff of my sleeve. He doesn't know what it cost me today.
"You're right, Dante," I replied, my voice trembling with a grief he couldn't comprehend. "My family is broken. But I won't be your puppet anymore. I'm not going to your gala."
"Is that so?" he snapped, his casual arrogance vanishing into lethal ice. "Seraphina, if you hang up on me, I swear to God, I will have Elena freeze the hospital account right this second. Let's see how long your defiance lasts when the doctors turn off your mother's ventilator."
I closed my eyes. The horrifying, warm rush of blood down my legs just hours ago flashed behind my eyelids.
The baby I hadn't even known I was carrying, lost on the cold tile of the syndicate's lobby. Elena had deliberately blocked my mother's medical approvals again and again, mocking my frantic pleas until the sheer, agonizing panic finally broke me. The extreme emotional distress had shattered my body, taking my unborn child with it.
I had lost my child today. I couldn't lose my mother, too.
The silence stretched, thick and suffocating. My hand gripped the handle of my battered duffel bag. The divorce papers were tucked safely inside, waiting to be signed.
"Seraphina. Answer me." Dante's voice was a whip crack.
A single tear carved a hot path down my cheek, but my voice came out dead, hollowed out by the ultimate sacrifice.
"Tell Elena..." I choked on the ash of my own pride. "Tell Elena to send me the passcode for the closet. I need a dress for the gala."
"Good girl," Dante murmured, satisfied. "I knew you'd see reason. I'll see you this weekend."
The line went dead.
I let the duffel bag slip from my fingers, hitting the marble floor with a dull thud. I stared at the locked closet, the heavy Moretti ring still shackling my finger.
I would smile at his gala. I would play his perfect, obedient wife.
Because my mother was still breathing.
But as I stood alone in the suffocating silence, staring at the dried blood on my sleeve, a terrifying exhaustion crept into my bones. I was holding on by a single, fraying thread... and I truly feared the day I would finally, completely break......
