I was three days away from marrying the Underboss of the Fazio crime family when I unlocked his burner phone and read the message that shattered eight years of loyalty.
The screen glowed toxic bright in the darkness of our shared penthouse bedroom.
Dante was asleep beside me. His chest rose and fell in a rhythm that used to comfort me. Now, it just looked like the breathing of a liar.
I looked down at the device in my hand.
The contact was saved as 'Little Trouble.'
The latest message read: I miss your hands on me. She is just a statue, Dante. You said it yourself. Come back to bed.
Attached was a photo.
It was a selfie of a woman lying in sheets I recognized. They were the Egyptian cotton sheets from Dante's private office suite downtown. She was wearing his shirt.
My heart did not break. It simply stopped.
For eight years, I had played the part of the perfect Mafia Princess. I was Elena Vitiello. I was raised to be seen and not heard, to be the glue in a political alliance that would keep the peace in New York.
I had convinced myself I loved Dante Fazio. I thought he was the hero who pulled me from the burning rubble of the Opera House when I was fourteen.
I looked at his sleeping face. He was handsome in a way that made women stupid. He had the jawline of a movie star and the soul of a coward.
I slid out of bed. The silk of my nightgown felt like ice against my skin.
I walked into the bathroom and locked the door. I did not cry. Tears were for women who had options. I? I had a strategy.
I sat on the edge of the marble tub and pulled my own encrypted phone from a hidden pocket in my robe.
My hands shook, but not from fear. They shook from the adrenaline of lighting a match in a room full of gasoline.
I dialed a number I had memorized a decade ago but never dared to call.
It rang once.
"Speak."
The sound of his voice was like gravel grinding against bone. It was deep, dark, and terrifying.
Lorenzo Moretti. Enzo. The Capo dei Capi of the rival family. The man my father called the Devil.
"The wedding is off," I whispered.
There was a pause on the other end. I could hear the faint sound of a lighter flicking open, then the sharp inhale of smoke.
"Elena," he said. My name sounded like a prayer and a curse coming from his mouth. "Are you sure?"
"Dante broke the code," I said. My voice was steady now. "He has a comare. He has been disrespectful."
In our world, infidelity was common. But disrespect was a death sentence. Dante hadn't just cheated. He had mocked me to a mistress. He had exposed our future marriage to the ridicule of a stripper.
"I want out," I said. "I want an alliance with you."
Enzo laughed. It was a low, dark sound that vibrated through the phone line. "You know the price, Elena. If you come to me, there is no going back. I will burn the Fazio family to the ground for you. But once you step through my gates, you belong to me."
I looked at my reflection in the mirror. I looked pale. Fragile. But my eyes were hard.
"I know," I said. "I am ready."
"Good," Enzo said. "I am in Italy. I will be in New York in three days. Do not let him touch you."
"He won't," I promised.
"Elena?"
"Yes?"
"If he touches you, I will cut off his hands."
The line went dead.
I stared at the phone. For the first time in eight years, I didn't feel like a statue. I felt like the match.
I walked back into the bedroom. Dante shifted in his sleep, murmuring something incoherent.
I placed his burner phone back on the nightstand, exactly where I found it.
I lay down beside him. I stared at the ceiling.
Tomorrow, we were supposed to go pick up the custom engagement ring. It was supposed to be a symbol of our power.
Now, I knew it was just a piece of glass on a sinking ship.
Dante smiled at me across the breakfast table. It was his signature politician smile—perfect teeth, empty eyes, and utterly practiced.
"Happy Anniversary, tesoro," he said. He slid a velvet box across the mahogany.
It wasn't the ring. My heart sank before I even opened it. It was a pair of diamond earrings.
"They are beautiful," I said, though I made no move to put them on.
"I have a surprise for you later," he said, checking his watch. "The jeweler called. The Graff Pink is ready."
He stood up and kissed my forehead. His cologne smelled expensive, crisp and clean, but it barely masked the cloying, floral undertone of another woman's perfume.
"I have to go to a meeting," he said. "I'll pick you up at noon."
"Okay."
The front door clicked shut. I watched his Ferrari pull out of the driveway from the window, waiting until the roar of the engine faded into silence.
I opened my laptop and logged into my secret account. I wrote romance novels under a pseudonym. It was my escape. My heroines always had men who would die for them. Men who would burn the world down just to see them smile.
I used to think I was writing about Dante. Now, I realized I was writing about a ghost I had never met.
I closed the laptop and opened Instagram, navigating straight to the search bar.
I typed in the name I saw on the burner phone: Little Trouble.
Her real name was Mia. Her profile was public.
She was pretty in a chaotic way—big eyes, pouty lips, and displayed a lot of skin. She worked at a club called The Velvet Room. Fazio territory.
I scrolled through her stories.
There was a video posted three hours ago. The caption read: "Daddy spoils me."
In the video, a man's hand—wearing a watch identical to Dante’s Patek Philippe—was sliding a ring onto her finger.
I froze.
It was a pink diamond. Oval cut. Halo setting.
It was my ring.
The caption continued: "He says the one for the wife is just a copy. This is the real one."
Acid churned in my stomach.
It wasn't just cheating. It was a humiliation ritual. He had given his mistress the original and was planning to give me, the daughter of the Vitiello Don, a duplicate.
I took a screenshot and saved it to a secure folder.
At noon, Dante picked me up. He was in a good mood, tapping his fingers on the steering wheel as he hummed along to the radio.
We arrived at the jeweler's. The security guard nodded at us. We were royalty here.
The jeweler, Mr. Rossi, came out from the back. He looked nervous, a sheen of sweat glistening on his upper lip.
"Mr. Fazio, Miss Vitiello," he said, bowing slightly. "The ring is exquisite."
He placed a box on the glass counter and opened it.
The pink diamond sparkled under the halogen lights. It looked exactly like the one in Mia's video.
"One of a kind," Mr. Rossi said, his voice wavering slightly. "Sourced from the Argyle mine. There isn't another stone like it in the world."
Dante picked it up. He took my left hand.
"For my Queen," he said softly.
I looked at him. I looked at the ring.
It was a beautiful lie.
"It fits perfectly," Dante said, sliding it onto my finger.
I looked at the stone. I wondered if Mia was wearing hers right now. I wondered if they laughed about it in bed.
"Thank you, Dante," I said. My voice was flat.
He frowned slightly. "Is something wrong? You seem... distant."
"Just nerves," I said, forcing a tight smile. "The wedding is close."
"Don't worry," he said, squeezing my hand. "I'll take care of everything."
He paid, and we left.
In the car, I twisted the ring on my finger. It felt heavy. It felt like a handcuff.
"I was thinking," Dante said. "Tonight, we should go out. Luca is throwing a little party at The Velvet Room. Just close friends."
The Velvet Room. Where she worked.
He wanted to take me to his mistress's workplace. He wanted to parade me in front of her while she wore the real ring and I wore the paste.
The audacity was breathtaking.
"Sure," I said. "I would love to go."
Dante smiled. He thought he was winning. He thought I was the stupid, sheltered princess he could play with.
He didn't know that I had already made the call. He didn't know that every breath he took was now on borrowed time.
The Velvet Room wasn't just loud; it was deafening.
The bass reverberated against my chest, mimicking a second, frantic heartbeat.
We were perched in the VIP section, a dais raised above the main floor like a throne room, separated from the commoners by a velvet rope and two bodyguards the size of vending machines.
Dante occupied the center of the sprawling leather booth.
I sat beside him.
His arm was draped heavy over my shoulders—not an act of affection, but a territorial marker.
His Capo, Luca, sat across from us, flanked by a few other soldiers from the Fazio family.
They were knocking back scotch that cost more than most people's annual rent.
I wore a red dress.
It was tight, a second skin of silk.
It was armor.
I scanned the room, my gaze cutting through the strobe lights.
I saw her immediately.
Mia was working the floor, dressed in a skimpy waitress outfit that left little to the imagination.
She looked up at the VIP section, and her eyes didn't wander.
They locked instantly on Dante.
Then, slowly, they slid to me.
She smirked.
Instinctively, I touched the diamond ring on my finger.
In response, she touched the silver chain around her neck.
The ring wasn't on her hand, but I saw the distinct outline of a band pressing against the fabric of her shirt.
She was wearing it on a chain, close to her heart.
Dante signaled for a waitress.
Mia came over.
Of course she did.
She carried a tray of crystal glasses and a bottle of Blue Label, her hips swaying with a practiced rhythm.
She set the tray down on the table, her eyes lingering on Dante like a caress.
"Can I get you anything else, Mr. Fazio?" she asked.
Her voice was breathless, a performance for an audience of one.
"We're good," Dante said.
He sounded casual, dismissive even, but I felt the muscle in his arm tense around my shoulders.
Mia turned to leave.
As she spun around, her hip bumped the edge of the table.
The tray tipped.
Gravity took over.
The bottle of scotch shattered on the floor, sending shards of glass flying like shrapnel.
Amber liquid splashed onto Luca's pristine Italian loafers.
"Fuck!" Luca yelled.
He jumped up, his face twisting in rage.
"Watch it, you stupid bitch!"
The music seemed to cut out.
The VIP section went dead silent.
Mia gasped, covering her mouth with her hands.
"I'm so sorry! I slipped!"
Luca stepped forward, his hand raised high.
It was a reflex.
In our world, clumsiness was not tolerated; it was punished.
"Don't touch her!"
The shout came from beside me, primal and sharp.
Dante was on his feet before I could blink.
He moved with such speed that he knocked his own drink over, ignoring the spill.
He stepped between Luca and Mia, a human shield.
He shoved his own Capo back with a force that rattled the table.
"Back off, Luca," Dante snarled.
Luca looked confused, his hand freezing in mid-air.
"Boss? She ruined my shoes. She wasted a three-thousand-dollar bottle."
"It was an accident," Dante snapped.
He turned his back on his men and faced Mia.
"Are you hurt?"
He reached out and took her hands in his.
He checked them for cuts, his thumbs brushing over her skin with tender familiarity.
I sat there, frozen in the red light.
The entire table was watching.
The soldiers were exchanging uneasy glances.
This was a violation of the code.
You did not defend the help against your own men.
You definitely did not do it while your fiancée was sitting two feet away.
"I'm okay," Mia sniffled.
She looked at me over Dante's shoulder.
Her eyes were dry.
They were triumphant.
"I was just... nervous. Because of the special guests."
Dante turned to the manager, who had rushed over in a panic.
"Clean this up," Dante ordered, his voice dropping to a growl.
"And get her a bandage. She's bleeding."
I looked closely.
She had a microscopic scratch on her pinky.
Dante sat back down.
He was breathing hard, his chest heaving.
He realized what he had done.
He looked at me, guilt flashing in his dark eyes.
"She's just a girl, Elena," he said defensively.
"Luca was out of line."
"Of course," I said, my voice steady.
I took a sip of my water to wash down the bile rising in my throat.
"You are very chivalrous, Dante."
The tension in the air was thick enough to choke on.
Luca sat back down, muttering curses under his breath.
He looked at Dante with something new in his eyes.
It wasn't respect.
It was doubt.
A few minutes later, the drinks were replaced, but the atmosphere remained shattered.
Someone suggested a drinking game to break the ice.
Truth or Dare.
It was childish, but at their core, these men were just violent boys with expensive toys.
The empty bottle spun on the table.
It slowed, wobbled, and landed pointing directly at Mia.
She had lingered near the booth, pretending to clean a spot on the railing that was already spotless.
"Dare," she said boldly.
One of the soldiers, drunk and trying to be funny, grinned.
"I dare you to hug the most handsome man in this section."
It was a setup.
He expected her to hug Luca to apologize, or maybe just laugh it off.
Mia didn't laugh.
She walked straight past Luca.
She walked straight past the soldiers.
She stopped directly in front of Dante.
"A dare is a dare," she giggled.
She leaned down.
She wrapped her arms around his neck.
She pressed her chest firmly against his face.
Dante didn't push her away.
For a heartbeat, his hands came up to her waist.
He held her.
I watched them.
I watched my fiancé hold his mistress in front of his men, in front of me, in the middle of a public club.
It was the ultimate insult.
I stood up.
The movement broke the spell.
Dante snapped out of it and pushed Mia away gently.
"Elena," he said, reaching for me.
"I need the restroom," I said.
I walked away.
I didn't run.
Queens don't run.
But inside, I was screaming.