The Mafia Don's Regret: Torturing His True Savior

The Mafia Don's Regret: Torturing His True Savior

Hua Jian

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My husband crushed the metacarpals of my left hand-my drawing hand-with a heavy leather-bound book. This was Punishment Ninety-Six. The offense? I had missed a single phone call from my stepsister, Joyce. According to Don Austen Ballard, ignoring the woman who allegedly saved his life fifteen years ago was akin to high treason. "Discipline is the highest form of love, Alana," he whispered, watching the violet bruise spread across my skin. He calls shattering an architect's hand "love." He believes Joyce dragged him from a burning building when he was a boy. He treats her like a living saint and me like a punching bag to pay his life debt. But it is all a lie. Fifteen years ago, Joyce was at a cheerleading camp three towns away. I was the one in that crawlspace. I was the one who found the bleeding boy in the dark. I was the one who called him "Stellen" because he was too terrified to tell me his real name. He has spent our entire marriage torturing his true savior to please a fraud. Tonight, the pain finally burned away my fear, leaving only cold resolve. I didn't cry. I waited until the house was silent, then I retrieved a burner phone hidden in a false bottom of a box in the bathroom. I dialed the number of his sworn enemy, Don Dalton Underwood. "I have the blueprints," I said, my voice steady despite the agony in my hand. "And I have the controlling shares of Ballard Industries. I'm ready to burn his kingdom to ash."

Chapter 1

My husband crushed the metacarpals of my left hand-my drawing hand-with a heavy leather-bound book.

This was Punishment Ninety-Six.

The offense? I had missed a single phone call from my stepsister, Joyce.

According to Don Austen Ballard, ignoring the woman who allegedly saved his life fifteen years ago was akin to high treason.

"Discipline is the highest form of love, Alana," he whispered, watching the violet bruise spread across my skin.

He calls shattering an architect's hand "love."

He believes Joyce dragged him from a burning building when he was a boy. He treats her like a living saint and me like a punching bag to pay his life debt.

But it is all a lie.

Fifteen years ago, Joyce was at a cheerleading camp three towns away.

I was the one in that crawlspace.

I was the one who found the bleeding boy in the dark.

I was the one who called him "Stellen" because he was too terrified to tell me his real name.

He has spent our entire marriage torturing his true savior to please a fraud.

Tonight, the pain finally burned away my fear, leaving only cold resolve.

I didn't cry.

I waited until the house was silent, then I retrieved a burner phone hidden in a false bottom of a box in the bathroom.

I dialed the number of his sworn enemy, Don Dalton Underwood.

"I have the blueprints," I said, my voice steady despite the agony in my hand. "And I have the controlling shares of Ballard Industries. I'm ready to burn his kingdom to ash."

Chapter 1

Alana POV

The moment my husband crushed the metacarpals of my left hand with a leather-bound edition of Dante's Inferno, I realized that saving his life fifteen years ago was the sin I was finally paying for.

Pain is a cruel architect.

It builds walls where doors used to be, sealing you inside your own suffering.

I lay sprawled on the cold Carrara marble of the master bathroom, the grout digging into my cheek like dull teeth.

My left hand-my drawing hand-throbbed with a violent rhythm that synced perfectly with my racing heart.

A grotesque bloom of violet and black was already spreading beneath the skin.

This was Punishment Ninety-Six.

The offense?

I had missed a single phone call from my stepsister, Joyce.

According to Don Austen Ballard, ignoring the woman who allegedly saved his life was akin to high treason against the Crown.

I tried to flex my fingers, but agony shot up my arm-hot, blinding, and absolute.

I didn't cry.

I had stopped crying somewhere around Punishment Forty.

My phone vibrated on the bathmat, inches from my nose, buzzing like an angry insect.

A photo message from Joyce lit up the screen.

She was holding a crystal flute of champagne, her smile wide, predatory, and untouched.

The caption read: Another victory. The Don favors loyalty above all, sister.

I stared at the screen until the pixels blurred into a meaningless haze.

Then came a text from Austen.

The Family Doctor will be there in twenty minutes. This lesson was necessary for your growth, Alana. Discipline is the highest form of love.

Love.

He called shattering an architect's hand "love."

He called locking me in wine cellars "love."

I sat up, fighting the nausea as the room spun on a tilted axis.

I cradled my ruined hand against my chest, shielding it like a broken bird, and forced myself to stand.

The house was tomb-silent.

Austen was at a meeting. The guards were patrolling the perimeter.

I wasn't supposed to leave the master suite, but the pain had clarified something in my mind.

It had burned away the fear, leaving only a cold, hard resolve.

I walked out of the suite, my bare feet silent on the plush carpet, moving like a ghost in my own home.

I went straight to Austen's private study.

The door was secured with a biometric keypad.

I punched in the code: 0824.

Joyce's birthday.

The lock clicked open with a submissive beep.

The humiliation of that code usually stung like a slap, but tonight, I felt nothing.

I slipped inside and approached his mahogany desk.

I didn't know exactly what I was looking for, but I knew the foundation of this marriage was built on rot.

I needed to see the blueprints.

I opened his laptop.

It was password protected, but I had watched him type it a thousand times from across the room.

Debt_Life_15.

I accessed the encrypted drive labeled The Incident.

Inside, there was a single audio file dated two weeks after the kidnapping, fifteen years ago.

I clicked play.

Austen's voice-younger, shakier, stripped of its current arrogance-filled the room.

"She pulled me from the crawlspace. The fire was everywhere. I couldn't breathe. Joyce dragged me out. She burned her arms for me. I owe her my life. My blood is her blood."

I froze.

The air vanished from my lungs.

I replayed the audio, needing to hear the lie again.

Joyce dragged me out.

Fifteen years ago, I was the one in that crawlspace.

I was the one who found the heir to the Ballard crime family bleeding out in the dark.

I was the one who hid him.

I was the one who called him "Stellen" because he was too terrified to tell me his real name.

Joyce had been at a cheerleading camp three towns away.

She had stolen the story. She had stolen the credit.

And because of that lie, Austen treated her like a living saint and me like a punching bag.

He thought he was protecting his savior by punishing the jealous sister.

I looked down at my crushed hand.

My career as an architect, my designs, my sanity-all sacrificed on the altar of a lie.

I didn't feel angry.

I felt cold.

Ice cold.

I closed the laptop with a snap.

I wasn't a wife anymore.

I was a Consigliere planning a coup.

I went back to the bedroom and pulled a burner phone from the false bottom of my tampon box.

I dialed the number I had memorized from a heavy card stock slipped to me at a gala three years ago.

It rang twice.

"Speak," a deep voice answered, rough with sleep or violence.

Don Dalton Underwood.

Austen's sworn enemy.

"I have the blueprints," I said, my voice raspy but steady. "And I have the controlling shares of Ballard Industries."

Silence stretched on the other end, heavy and assessing.

"Who is this?"

"The woman who is going to help you burn Austen Ballard's kingdom to ash," I replied. "I want out. Tonight."

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