The Maybach glided through rain, Dante's cold cedar cologne a familiar comfort. Seven years, my life revolved around him, my fingers on his suit cuff, a silent promise. But tonight, our normal shattered with a single phone call. He answered, speaking rapid Italian – a language he thought I didn't understand. Every word: a death knell. Confirming his engagement to Sofia Moretti, dismissing me as a 'consolation prize.' Seven years of loyalty vanished. His loving mask back, he left for his fiancée. I stumbled into freezing rain, recalling my foster past. My numb fingers dialed his mother, Isabella, demanding fifty million for my silence. Her insults didn't sting. The true gut punch: Sofia's Instagram, a prenup on Dante's desk, proudly showing *my* watch, captioned: 'Fourteen days left.' This wasn't their celebration; it was my death sentence. I wouldn't stay another day in this gilded cage. My old duffel bag, packed, waited. The Australia brochure, a childhood dream, in my pocket. This time, I would live for myself, and they would all pay.
The Maybach glided through rain, Dante's cold cedar cologne a familiar comfort. Seven years, my life revolved around him, my fingers on his suit cuff, a silent promise. But tonight, our normal shattered with a single phone call.
He answered, speaking rapid Italian – a language he thought I didn't understand. Every word: a death knell. Confirming his engagement to Sofia Moretti, dismissing me as a 'consolation prize.'
Seven years of loyalty vanished. His loving mask back, he left for his fiancée. I stumbled into freezing rain, recalling my foster past. My numb fingers dialed his mother, Isabella, demanding fifty million for my silence. Her insults didn't sting.
The true gut punch: Sofia's Instagram, a prenup on Dante's desk, proudly showing *my* watch, captioned: 'Fourteen days left.' This wasn't their celebration; it was my death sentence.
I wouldn't stay another day in this gilded cage. My old duffel bag, packed, waited. The Australia brochure, a childhood dream, in my pocket. This time, I would live for myself, and they would all pay.
Chapter 1
Elena Rossi POV:
The Maybach glided smoothly through the torrential Manhattan rain, the heavy tires hissing against the flooded asphalt. Inside the cabin, the air was perfectly climate-controlled, thick with the scent of Dante's bespoke cold cedar cologne. The privacy partition separating us from the driver was raised, sealing us in a soundproof vault of dark leather and ambient lighting.
I sat beside him, my fingers gently resting on the edge of his tailored suit cuff. I was always touching him, a lingering habit from the days when he needed me to guide him through the dark.
His private, encrypted phone vibrated against the console. The screen lit up, flashing the name of his most trusted underboss and assistant, Marco.
Dante picked up the device. He pressed the answer button and instinctively shifted his broad shoulders toward the rain-streaked window, angling his body away from me. It was a subtle movement, but it created a canyon between us on the plush backseat.
Marco's voice bled through the receiver, speaking in rapid, hushed Italian. He was detailing the logistics of an upcoming alliance, the merging of territories, and the specific terms of a marriage contract with the Moretti family.
Dante replied in the same fluent, icy Italian. He confirmed the date and time for his official engagement dinner with Sofia Moretti.
My fingers, still resting on his cuff, went completely rigid.
Three years. When Dante lost his sight in the warehouse explosion, I had spent three grueling years secretly teaching myself Italian. I listened to audio tapes in the middle of the night while he slept, desperate to understand the doctors, the muttered threats of his capos, the world he was navigating blindly. I wanted to be his eyes and his ears. He never knew. He still thought I was just the uneducated American girl who couldn't comprehend a word of his mother tongue.
Over the phone, Marco paused. He asked a direct question about what to do with the "old arrangement." He was asking about me.
Dante let out a low, dismissive scoff. It was a sound that vibrated right through the leather seat. In a pure, thick Sicilian accent, he casually dropped the word *consolazione*. A consolation prize. A plaything to be managed.
It felt as though a sledgehammer had been swung directly into my sternum. My lungs stopped working. The air in the car suddenly felt too thin to breathe. Seven years ago, I had dragged his bleeding, broken body out of a burning building. He had gripped my soot-stained hands and sworn I was the only thing that mattered. Now, my entire existence, my seven years of devotion, was reduced to a logistical annoyance to be cleared away before his wedding.
Dante ended the call. When he turned back to face me, the cold, calculating mafia boss was gone. In his place was the gentle, attentive lover I thought I knew.
He reached out, his large, warm hand brushing a stray lock of black hair behind my ear. The motion was practiced. It was flawless. It was entirely fake.
My stomach violently churned. Acid rose in my throat, but I swallowed it down. I forced my muscles to relax, letting my head lean into his touch even as every nerve ending in my body screamed in revolt.
"Emergency meeting," Dante said in low, smooth English. "There's an issue with the docks. I need to get out at the next intersection."
I lowered my eyes, letting my thick lashes conceal the absolute devastation-and the sudden, freezing clarity-that had just washed over me.
"I understand," I said softly.
The Maybach slowed to a halt at a red light. The electronic click of the door unlocking sounded like a gunshot in the quiet cabin.
Dante leaned in and pressed his lips against my forehead. The kiss had absolutely no warmth. It was the kiss of a man checking a box on a to-do list.
He pushed the heavy door open. Immediately, a bodyguard materialized on the street corner, snapping open a massive black umbrella to shield Dante from the downpour.
Through the rain-battered window, I watched him walk away. He didn't head toward any corporate building. He walked straight toward a sleek black Rolls-Royce parked half a block down.
The rear window of the Rolls-Royce rolled down just a fraction. Under the harsh glare of the streetlights, Sofia Moretti's delicate, spoiled face appeared. She smiled, a triumphant curve of red lips.
Dante climbed into the back seat with her. The Rolls-Royce pulled away, taking a right turn, while my driver waited for the light to turn green.
"Straight back to the penthouse, Miss Rossi?" the driver asked through the intercom.
The scent of Dante's cedar cologne was suddenly suffocating. It was trapped in the fabric, in the air, in my lungs.
"Pull over," I choked out. "Right here."
The driver hit the brakes. Before the car even fully stopped, I shoved the door open and stepped out into the raging storm.
The freezing rain hit me like a physical blow. It instantly soaked through my thin trench coat, plastering my clothes to my skin. The physical shock of the cold was exactly what I needed. It dragged me back to reality. Growing up in the foster system, I had learned early on that when you are abandoned, you don't cry. You survive. The cold was a reminder that I was alone again.
The driver scrambled out, holding an umbrella, shouting for me to get back in.
I turned and glared at him. I waved my hand in a sharp, dismissive motion. "Leave."
He hesitated, but he knew better than to physically force me. He retreated to the car and drove off, leaving me standing in ankle-deep water on the curb.
I let the rain wash over me, scrubbing the lingering scent of Dante's cologne from my skin. I walked two blocks until I found a rusted public payphone outside a closed bodega. Dante monitored my cell phone. He monitored the penthouse lines. But he couldn't monitor this.
I dug into my wet pockets and pulled out a few quarters. My fingers were numb as I fed the coins into the slot.
I punched in a sequence of numbers I had memorized years ago, a number I had sworn to myself I would never use.
The line rang twice. A woman answered.
"Signora Isabella," I said, my voice steady over the sound of the pouring rain. "I think we need to talk about my severance package for leaving your son."
Mafia Betrayal: Her Escape From Darkness
Meng Xinyu
Mafia
Chapter 1
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Chapter 2
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Chapter 3
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Chapter 4
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Chapter 5
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Chapter 6
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Chapter 7
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Chapter 8
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Chapter 9
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Chapter 10
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Chapter 11
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Chapter 12
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Chapter 13
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Chapter 14
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Chapter 15
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Chapter 16
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Chapter 17
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Chapter 18
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Chapter 19
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Chapter 20
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Chapter 21
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Chapter 22
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Chapter 23
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Chapter 24
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Chapter 25
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Chapter 26
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Chapter 27
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Chapter 28
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Chapter 29
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Chapter 30
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Chapter 31
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Chapter 32
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Chapter 33
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Chapter 34
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Chapter 35
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Chapter 36
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Chapter 37
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Chapter 38
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Chapter 39
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Chapter 40
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