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For five years, I was the loyal shadow behind Dominic Falcone, the ruthless Don of the Cosa Nostra.
But for the third year in a row, he forgot my birthday.
Instead, I watched him scrape my untouched birthday cake into a thermos.
"This is for Elena. She is having a severe panic attack."
With those cold words, he rushed off to comfort his Consigliere's fragile daughter.
He always claimed Elena was just a ward he was sworn by blood to protect.
Yet, he gave her the custom armored SUV he bought as my compensatory gift.
He shared a drink from her straw in front of his soldiers, letting her publicly mock my place in his life.
During cartel shootouts or when I was burning with a severe fever, his fierce protection was solely reserved for her, leaving me to fend for myself.
I used to think his emotional distance was simply the heavy burden of a Mafia Boss.
I couldn't understand how a man who once claimed me with terrifying devotion could now completely erase my existence for another woman's trivial whims.
Why did I have to bleed out in a one-sided war just to fight for second place?
Sitting in his cold marble penthouse, I finally realized it is not difficult to surrender something that was never truly yours.
So, on the day my security lease expired, I packed a single black canvas bag.
I transferred my exact half of the living expenses to his illicit offshore account.
Then, I blocked the Don's number and vanished without a trace.
Chapter 1
Serena POV
As I watched the silver spoon in his hand scrape the last smear of my birthday cake into a tactical thermos, its metallic rasp against the porcelain setting my teeth on edge, I knew I had precisely three days to vanish before his particular brand of loyalty consumed what was left of me.
Dominic Falcone was not a man who made mistakes.
He was the Don of the Cosa Nostra, a man who once calculated the depreciation cost of bloodstains on a Persian rug before ordering the extermination of a rival family. His authority was a physical pressure, and when he entered a room, the air thickened, as if the building's ventilation system had seized and the barometric pressure had dropped to the bottom of a mine shaft.
But for the third year in a row, he had forgotten my birthday.
I stood by the cold, veined Carrara marble of our penthouse kitchen island, my silence a weapon I had long since stopped sharpening. I watched him pack the meal I had spent three hours preparing—a pale, delicate assembly of poached fish and steamed vegetables, a monument to my own erased preferences. I had suppressed my love for the searing heat of chilies, the sting of pepper, just so he and his fragile ward could eat without complaint.
He moved with the rushed, mechanical precision of a soldier packing a field kit, his gaze never once intersecting with the space I occupied.
He shoveled the expensive imported ice cream cake into a plastic container. The delicate frosting smeared against the sides, the elegant script of my name melting into a pathetic, sugary slurry. I never indulged in such things, but I had bought it for myself today.
"This is for Elena," Dominic said, the words not an explanation but a decree. He snapped the lid onto the thermos, the sound unnaturally loud in the quiet kitchen.
"She is having a severe panic attack," he added. "Do not wait up."
He finally turned. His dark eyes were hard and unreadable; there was no apology in their depths, only the flat, sterile glint of duty.
Elena was the Consigliere's daughter. Her father had died saving Dominic's, and with that act, a blood debt was forged, an oath Dominic wore like a second skin.
I watched his broad back disappear into the private elevator. The heavy metal doors slid shut with a final, pneumatic hiss and a dull, echoing thud that seemed to vibrate up through the soles of my feet.
A strange lightness washed over my skin, leaving behind a profound emptiness, the kind that follows a long fever. The anger was gone, replaced by a weariness so deep it felt geological.
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