He Followed: Building Our Scarred Life

He Followed: Building Our Scarred Life

Two Degrees

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On the night of my triumph, my husband chose her. As the champagne flutes toasted my resurrected Renaissance masterpieces, the news channels showed Lorenzo "Enzo" Conti shielding his new business ally-and rumored future bride-from a storm. I stood alone in the glittering gallery, the perfect, neglected wife of Chicago's most formidable shadow-king. For four years, I was his most beautiful possession. A restorer of broken art, trapped in my own gilded cage. That night, I saw the final crack. So I began my own restoration project. Myself. I forged my escape with the precision of my craft, embedding my divorce papers within a genuine museum loan agreement. He signed it without a glance, too busy building his empire to notice he was losing his wife. I vanished into the Swiss Alps, carrying two secrets: my unborn child, and the cold resolve to never be erased again. I thought that was the end of the story. I was wrong. He followed. The man who once commanded a criminal empire now lives in a mountain hut. He chops my wood, clears my path, and learns to soothe our daughter at 3 a.m. When assassins from his old life came, he buried them in the frozen earth with his bare hands. "Let me be your sentry," he says, his eyes holding a peace I've never seen. "Let me use the only skills I have left to keep you safe." This is not a story about forgiveness. This is a story about fracture, and what grows from the ruins. It's about the Don who became a carpenter, the restorer who learned to break free, and the new life we're building-piece by scarred piece-in the shadow of the mountains. Some masterpieces aren't found in museums. They're forged in the silent space between a second chance, and the courage to take it.

Chapter 1

On the night of my triumph, my husband chose her.

As the champagne flutes toasted my resurrected Renaissance masterpieces, the news channels showed Lorenzo "Enzo" Conti shielding his new business ally-and rumored future bride-from a storm. I stood alone in the glittering gallery, the perfect, neglected wife of Chicago's most formidable shadow-king.

For four years, I was his most beautiful possession. A restorer of broken art, trapped in my own gilded cage. That night, I saw the final crack.

So I began my own restoration project. Myself.

I forged my escape with the precision of my craft, embedding my divorce papers within a genuine museum loan agreement. He signed it without a glance, too busy building his empire to notice he was losing his wife.

I vanished into the Swiss Alps, carrying two secrets: my unborn child, and the cold resolve to never be erased again.

I thought that was the end of the story.

I was wrong.

He followed.

The man who once commanded a criminal empire now lives in a mountain hut. He chops my wood, clears my path, and learns to soothe our daughter at 3 a.m. When assassins from his old life came, he buried them in the frozen earth with his bare hands.

"Let me be your sentry," he says, his eyes holding a peace I've never seen. "Let me use the only skills I have left to keep you safe."

This is not a story about forgiveness.

This is a story about fracture, and what grows from the ruins. It's about the Don who became a carpenter, the restorer who learned to break free, and the new life we're building-piece by scarred piece-in the shadow of the mountains.

Some masterpieces aren't found in museums. They're forged in the silent space between a second chance, and the courage to take it.

Chapter 1

Alessia POV:

On the night my four years of work were finally presented to the world, my husband, Lorenzo "Enzo" Conti, was on the news, his broad frame shielding another woman from a relentless downpour.

This wasn't merely a gallery show. It was the culmination of my life's work: Forgotten Masters: The Truth Beneath the Cracks. Four years of painstaking restoration, of breathing life back into damaged Renaissance masterpieces that others had deemed lost causes. For four years, I had poured every ounce of my loneliness, my silent despair, into these canvases, working in the sterile, soundproof studio Enzo had built for me on the penthouse floor of his skyscraper. A gilded cage, he called it a gift. I knew it was a place to keep me occupied, to keep me out of his way while he ran his empire of shadows.

I smoothed the front of my silk dress, my hands trembling only slightly. My gaze drifted to the empty space beside me, a void where my husband should have been. He had promised. "Of course, cuore mio. I wouldn't miss it for the world," he'd said, his voice a low rumble that once sent warmth through me. Before leaving, his hand had settled on my shoulder, his fingers pressing into the delicate fabric for half a second longer than necessary, leaving an almost imperceptible wrinkle. Now the memory felt like another lie, polished to a deceptive shine.

My phone buzzed in my clutch. A news alert. I clicked it open, a knot of dread tightening in my stomach. The headline was stark: Lorenzo Conti and Chiara Valenti Brave Storm for Emergency Summit.

There was a picture. Enzo, his suit jacket dark with rain, holding an umbrella entirely over Chiara Valenti, the formidable heiress to the Valenti family empire, as they rushed into a government building. His expression was focused, protective. She looked up at him with an expression of absolute trust. The caption read: "Sources say the meeting is crucial for the new Conti-Valenti alliance, a merger that will reshape the city's underworld."

A wave of cold nausea washed over me. It wasn't just a meeting. It was a statement. He was choosing his business, choosing her, over me on the one night I had ever asked for.

The delicate stem of my champagne glass pressed against my palm. I looked down and saw it-a hairline fracture spiraling up from the base. A perfect, invisible flaw. No one else would notice.

People around me began to whisper. Phones were discreetly lifted. I could feel their pity, a physical weight pressing down on my shoulders. I was the Don's neglected wife, a public spectacle.

My phone buzzed again. A text from Enzo.

Critical situation. Chiara needed my presence. You understand. Business.

My heart didn't break. It didn't shatter. It simply stopped, like a clockwork mechanism finally grinding to a halt. This was Omertà, the code of silence, twisted into a domestic edict. See nothing, say nothing, endure everything.

All the air left my lungs. The bright gallery lights seemed to dim. For four years, I had understood my place: a beautiful object he owned, proof the beast had a cultured side. My art, the very thing that preserved my sanity, was just another asset on his balance sheet.

Gabriel, the gallery owner and my only friend, appeared at my side, his face etched with concern. "Alessia? Are you alright?"

I forced a smile, a brittle thing. "He's stuck in a last-minute meeting. You know how it is." The lie was automatic, a reflex honed by years of practice.

"Of course," Gabriel said, though his eyes told me he believed none of it. "Well, your public awaits. You should say a few words. This is your night."

I nodded, my body moving on autopilot. I walked to the center of the room, stopping before my pièce de résistance: a once-shattered 15th-century Madonna, her serene face now whole. I placed a hand on the cool glass of the display case.

"The greatest skill of a restorer," I began, my voice clear and steady, "is not to make the repair visible. It is to convince the viewer that the damage never existed at all. That the masterpiece has always been perfect, whole." I paused, meeting the eyes of the crowd, seeing their fascination. "It is, in its way, the most perfect form of lie."

The room erupted in applause. Only I knew the truth behind my words.

Gabriel stepped forward for his toast. "Alessia Rossi Moretti shows us that some beauty can only be reborn from brokenness."

The double meaning hung in the air, a secret only I could taste.

As the crowd mingled, I stood before the restored Madonna. On my phone, the image of Enzo shielding Chiara glowed. My fingers rose, tracing the exact spot on the painted cheek where a fissure had once run deep-a flaw now invisible to everyone but me. The fracture in the glass stem bit into my palm.

"Enough," I whispered, the word lost in the gallery's hum.

A new feeling bloomed in the void where my heart used to be. Not sadness. Not anger. It was ice. A cold, sharp, unbending resolve.

He would not erase me.

I excused myself, slipping into the quiet of Gabriel's office. My hands were steady now. I pulled out my phone and dialed.

"Matteo. It's Alessia Conti. Draw up the papers."

"The divorce papers?" His voice was cautious.

"Yes. And prepare the ancillary documents for the Bellini triptych loan to the Met. I have an idea."

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