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I took a blade for my husband, Marco, five years ago. It saved his life, but the wound to my stomach cost me the ability to give him an heir. He swore it didn't matter. "I only need you," he had whispered.
Today, he brought home my replacement. He called her a "surrogate," a university student named Bianca who was meant to secure his family's bloodline. But that night, I found them tangled in our guest bed.
I stood in the doorway, a ghost in my own home, and listened to him praise her.
"You're so pure," he whispered. "Lia... she's so frigid."
The betrayal was a second blade twisting in my old scar. His affair became blatant. He showered her with gifts and forgot my birthday. When she coveted the heirloom pendant my dying mother gave me, he ripped it from my neck and gave it to her.
"It's a worthless trinket," he scoffed.
That night, she tried to run me over with his Aston Martin. He arrived to find me bleeding in the driveway, and he didn't even ask if I was okay. He just looked at me with disgust, believing her lies instantly.
"What the hell have you done now?" he bellowed. "You're not dead, are you?"
I laughed then, a hollow, chilling sound. I picked up my suitcase, turned my back on the ruins of my marriage, and made a single phone call.
"Dante," I said to my brother, the Don of the Romano family. "It's done. Cut them off."
Chapter 1
Alessia's POV:
Five years ago, I took a blade meant for my husband, Marco Bellini. It saved his life, but the wound to my abdomen cost me the ability to bear an heir-the ultimate currency in our brutal world.
Today, he brought home my replacement.
The memory of that night is seared into my skin, a permanent ghost clinging to the scar that marred my stomach. The flash of steel under the moonlight, Marco's shocked face, the searing pain as I threw myself in front of him.
He was the rising Capo of the Bellini Famiglia, a man whose ambition burned brighter than the city lights below his estate. His power was raw, his reputation forged in the back alleys and boardrooms of Virelia, a city that bowed to men like him.
He was dangerous, magnetic, and for five years, he was mine.
Before our arranged marriage, he had sworn a blood oath to my father, the former Don of the Romano family, to protect me forever.
"Children don't matter, Lia," he'd whispered against my hair in the sterile white of the hospital room afterward. "I only need you."
I believed him. I loved him so much I deliberately downplayed the sheer power of the Romano name, letting him believe his rise was his own, so his fragile pride would never feel the shadow of my family's influence.
Now, his words are ash in my mouth.
Two weeks ago, he'd cornered me in the library, his face tight with a resolve I hadn't seen since he'd taken over his family's operations.
"My Nonna is relentless," he said, not meeting my eyes. "The Bellini line needs a successor, Lia. It's about legacy."
I already knew where this was going. I'd felt the shift in him for months-the growing distance, the way his eyes would skim past my scar with a flicker of something that looked like resentment.
"I've found a surrogate," he continued, the words clinical and cold. "A university student. She's healthy. She... resembles you."
He was oblivious. He didn't see the calm in my eyes wasn't acceptance. It was finality.
The divorce papers, signed five years ago as a strange pre-nuptial request from my family, were locked in my private safe. I had decided then, in that moment, that our marriage was dead. I was just waiting for him to bury it.
He moved her into the estate yesterday. Her name is Bianca.
He cited his grandmother's pressure, the need to secure his bloodline. He put her in the guest suite at the end of the hall, a space reserved for honored visitors, not surrogates.
Late last night, the silence of the house became suffocating. I walked the halls, my bare feet cold against the marble, and stopped at her door.
It was ajar. I heard my husband's low murmur, then a soft, feminine giggle.
I pushed the door open.
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