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From Unread To Cherished: My Mafia Second Chance

Chapter 4 

Word Count: 645    |    Released on: Today at 15:52

na

ly packed and zipped shut, the

f the bed in the ai

, I heard the fron

the door open, bringing in the chill of early autumn and th

onto a chair, approaching me with a well

bing the back of his neck. "Did you manage to get an

on the sofa an

e had not ca

hours between seven and eleven, nor did he even bo

my way back and wait for him all

d not know how to shut off the main water valve. The place was a

front of me, movin

t familiar, tender register

ke up for our anniversary tomorrow. W

nds made contact with my sho

froze in

sed his eyes, but he quickly ma

ands and turned

r. "I still need to help Sophie revise a pro

d not

o the bedroom, and softly

absolute dark, taking out my phone and

ce message button

appendectomy two weeks ago. I almost died in this house. The inc

o of th

later, the messa

erfectl

rd the distinct notification chime r

inking at my

creen lit up, and William'

erst

line of text appeared

ce I am done with this busy peri

s of text glowing in the d

, empty laugh that

ink his quick replies m

ys kept his phone close

rstood the

because he did n

t because he d

someone hear you if they hav

rson who is pretending to b

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From Unread To Cherished: My Mafia Second Chance
From Unread To Cherished: My Mafia Second Chance
“I was just trying to plug my mafia Capo boyfriend's backup phone into the charger. The screen lit up, and I accidentally swiped into his encrypted chats. There, I saw a glaring red dot next to every single voice message I had sent him over the past five years. Thousands of seconds of my deepest fears, my unwavering love, and my midnight pleas for help had been completely ignored. Yet, pinned at the very top was a chat with his female subordinate, Sophie. He had listened to every sixty-second complaint she made about her bitter coffee, replying with meticulous, tender care. Two weeks ago, I almost died from a ruptured appendix on our bathroom floor. I sent him desperate voice notes begging for a doctor, but he only typed a cold "Understood" and never came home. But tonight, on our seventh anniversary, when Sophie cried over a burst water pipe in her apartment, he slammed on the brakes. "Get out and call an Uber." He abandoned me in the pouring rain and sped off to save her. The first two years had been different. He used to listen. But somewhere along the way, he stopped. For five of the seven years we were together, I had deceived myself, thinking his quick replies meant he was just too busy running the underground city to listen. I couldn't understand how my life-and-death emergencies meant absolutely nothing to him, while her trivial office drama could move the most ruthless man in the city. Realizing his love had died long ago, my heartbreak suddenly vanished, replaced by a chilling sense of relief. I took off my diamond ring, packed a single black suitcase, and blocked him on every network. "William, we are done." I sent my final three-second message, and walked out the door to start a new life.”