Chapter 3

Dante POV:

The summit in Paris hadn't just been a headache; it was a diplomatic disaster.

The other families were restless, sensing blood in the water regarding the Chicago territories. And bringing Jade had been a tactical error.

She was obnoxious, guzzling too much champagne, flashing that damn shark tooth bracelet around like it was the Crown Jewels.

I caught Arturo eyeing her with quiet disdain.

"Where is Elena?" he asked me, low and serious, during a smoke break on the balcony. "The other Dons are asking. It looks... unstable, Dante. Bringing the mistress to the high table."

"Elena is unwell," I lied smoothly, taking a drag of my cigar. "She's resting at the lake house."

"She's a good woman, Dante. Don't push her too far. Even saints have limits."

I waved him off. Elena wasn't going anywhere. She was probably at home right now, redecorating the living room or painting one of her sad little watercolors.

She was a fixture. Predictable. Mine.

When we landed back in Chicago two days later, the air was thick with rain. I left Jade at the hangar—I couldn't stand her voice for another minute—and took the car straight to the penthouse.

I wanted a shower, a scotch, and maybe, if Elena had calmed down, I'd let her sleep in the bed tonight.

I unlocked the door.

Silence.

Not the quiet of a sleeping house. This was the heavy, suffocating silence of a tomb.

"Elena?"

My voice echoed off the marble floors. I walked into the living room.

It was empty.

Not just empty of people. Empty of *her*.

The throw pillows she loved were gone. The paintings on the walls—the ones she made—were gone, leaving stark white squares like scars on the gray paint.

The vase of fresh flowers she always kept on the console table was missing.

I ran up the stairs to the master bedroom, taking them two at a time.

Her side of the closet was bare. Not a shoe, not a dress, not a single silk scarf remained.

Panic, cold and sharp, spiked in my chest. This wasn't a tantrum. This was an evacuation.

My phone rang. It was Arturo.

"Dante," his voice was tight. "We have a problem. A lawyer named Lucia Moretti just served papers to our front office."

"What papers?" I roared, tearing through the drawers of her nightstand. Barren. Barren. Barren.

"Divorce papers. And Dante... she attached evidence. Photos. Videos. The text messages from Jade. It's all there. She's citing 'irreconcilable abuse and breach of contract'."

"Find her," I snarled. "Find her now!"

"We can't. She's gone, Dante. Her phone is dead. Her cards are inactive. She vanished."

I hurled the phone against the wall. It shattered into plastic shrapnel.

I looked at the nightstand again. There was one thing left.

Right in the center of the mahogany surface, where she used to keep her book, sat a small velvet pouch.

I opened it, my hands shaking with a rage so potent it felt like poison.

I tipped the contents into my hand.

It wasn't a ring.

It was a lump of gold. Ugly. Misshapen. Twisted.

It looked like it had been melted down with a blowtorch and left to cool in a violent puddle.

I stared at the unrecognizable metal. This was my grandmother's ring. A Paletti heirloom.

She hadn't just returned it. She had butchered it.

She had taken the symbol of my ownership and turned it into a piece of trash.

Elena POV:

The Atlantic Ocean looked different from the European side. In Chicago, the water was gray and angry. Here, in this tiny village in Portugal, it was a deep, endless blue.

I sat on the terrace of the small cottage I had rented for cash. My phone was currently sitting in a trash can at O'Hare airport.

And my name was no longer Elena. My name was Hope Veretti.

I took a deep breath of the salty air. It didn't smell like exhaust and expensive cologne. It smelled like fish and citrus.

I opened my laptop and logged into a secure email server Lucia had set up.

One message from Sofia.

*Subject: He's losing his mind.*

*Body: He tore the city apart looking for you. He thinks you're hiding in the suburbs. He has no idea you're gone-gone. Stay safe. P.S. Jade tried to move into the penthouse and he threw her clothes off the balcony. It was legendary.*

A small, genuine smile touched my lips. It was the first time I had smiled in years without forcing it.

I picked up my camera. It was heavy, familiar in my hands. I hadn't taken a photo for myself since the day I married Dante.

I looked through the viewfinder at the horizon.

*Click.*

The image froze. Just the sea. Just the sky. No bars. No cages.

I wasn't safe yet. I knew Dante. He wouldn't stop hunting. His ego wouldn't allow it. But for the first time, I wasn't just waiting to be saved. I was saving myself.

I looked down at my bare ring finger. The skin was pale where the gold had been.

I didn't miss the ring. I missed the time I had wasted wearing it.

Chapter 4

Elena POV

The heat of the torch hadn't just been hot; it had been purifying.

I stood in the back of the jeweler’s workshop—a shady, windowless alcove Lucia knew in the Diamond District—and watched the fire lick at the gold. The jeweler was a man of grease-stained fingers and silence. He held the flame steady, a professional arsonist of memories.

I watched the intricate engraving of the Paletti crest soften. I watched the diamonds loosen and fall out onto the tray like teeth being pulled from a jaw.

"You want the stones?" the man had asked, his voice gruff.

"No," I said. "Keep them. Payment."

Those diamonds had witnessed me crying myself to sleep. They had witnessed Dante coming home smelling of bourbon and other women's perfume. I didn't want them. They were cursed.

But the gold... the gold was the shackle.

I watched it turn into a glowing orange liquid. It pooled, losing all form, all history. It was violent. It was necessary.

"Pour it," I commanded.

He poured the molten gold onto a steel block. It hissed as it died, hardening into a grotesque, lumpy nugget.

"Ugly," the man grunted.

"It’s the most honest thing I’ve ever seen," I whispered.

Now, thousands of miles away in Portugal, the memory of that melting gold warmed me when the Atlantic breeze turned cold.

I had left precise instructions with a specialized cleaning crew before I fled. *The Clean Slate Initiative*. They were a charity organization that repurposed high-end furniture for women’s shelters. I donated everything.

My instructions were absolute: *Leave nothing that was mine. If I bought it, if I chose it, if I touched it—take it. Leave him with the shell.*

I imagined Dante walking through that empty apartment right now. He was a man who defined himself by what he owned. By taking my things, I hadn’t just moved out; I had amputated my existence from his narrative.

Dante POV

I was drinking too much. The bottle was merely a vehicle for the numbness.

Three days since she left. The apartment didn't just echo; it screamed silence. I had fired the cleaning staff because I couldn't stand the way they looked at me—with that suffocating, silent pity.

I sat on the edge of the mattress, staring at the lump of gold on the nightstand. I hadn't moved it. It sat there like a malignant tumor excised from a body but not yet discarded.

My phone buzzed against the wood. Lucia Moretti.

"Mr. Paletti," her voice was crisp, professional, and entirely unimpressed. "I trust you’ve reviewed the documents."

"I’m going to ruin you," I said, my voice a low, vibrating rumble. "I’m going to dismantle your firm brick by brick. Tell me where she is."

"Threatening legal counsel is a felony, Dante. And frankly, beneath a man of your stature. Elena is safe. That is all you are privileged to know."

"She’s my wife."

"She is your petitioner in a divorce case involving adultery and emotional abuse," Lucia corrected sharply. "And she has instructed me to convey a message: if you continue to harass her friends or family, she will release the 'B-Roll'."

I froze, the whiskey glass hovering halfway to my mouth. "What B-Roll?"

"The videos she didn't send you. The footage from the security cameras she installed in the bedroom three months ago. The ones that show you... well, let’s just say they contradict your public image of a 'devoted family man' quite severely."

I gripped the phone so hard the screen spider-webbed under my thumb. She had bugged the room? Elena? My sweet, quiet, painting Elena?

"She wouldn't," I whispered.

"She melted her wedding ring, Dante," Lucia said, her voice softening just a fraction—not with kindness, but with the gravity of a warning. "She burnt the bridge while she was standing on it. Do not test her."

The line went dead.

I looked around the room. The charity workers had stripped it bare. The curtains were gone. The Persian rug was gone. It was just me, the bed, and that damn lump of gold.

Then, Jade walked in.

She was wearing one of Elena’s old silk robes she had scavenged from the donation pile before I could stop her.

"Baby," she cooed, trying to settle onto my lap.

"Forget her. She’s crazy. Look what she did to this place. It’s disrespectful."

I looked at Jade. I mean, I really looked at her.

Her makeup was too heavy, caked in the creases of her eyes. Her voice was too shrill, grating against my headache. She was wearing my wife’s silk, but on her, it looked like a costume. A cheap imitation.

"Take it off," I said.

"What?" She smiled, a slow, suggestive curve of her lips, thinking I meant sex.

"Take the robe off. It’s not yours."

"Dante, don’t be like that—"

I stood up and grabbed her arm. Not gently. The rage I couldn't vent at Lucia, I poured into my grip.

"I said take it off. Get out. Get out of my house."

"But I’m pregnant!" she shrieked, her eyes going wide with shock.

"I don't care," I roared, the sound tearing raw from my throat. "Get out!"

She scrambled away, terrified by the monster she had uncovered.

I was alone.

I picked up the lump of gold. It was heavy. Cold. Dead.

"I will find you, Elena," I said to the empty, hollow room. "And when I do, you’re going to wish you had just bought the damn dresses."

Chapter 5

Elena POV

I bought a studio.

It was a run-down garage near the docks in the Algarve, a hollowed-out shell where the walls were peeling, the floor was stained with decades of oil, and the air smelled thick with brine. To anyone else, it was a ruin. To me, it was perfect.

I spent my days sanding.

Manual labor offered a different kind of exhaustion than the emotional fatigue of being Mrs. Paletti. My muscles ached with a dull, satisfying throb. I had splinters embedded in my fingers, and my manicure was ruined beyond repair.

I loved every second of it.

I was sanding down a heavy oak beam, lost in the rhythm of friction and dust, when a shadow fell across the open doorway.

My heart stopped cold. Instinct took over; I gripped the block of sandpaper like a weapon, my knuckles turning white as I spun around.

But it wasn't Dante.

It was a local man—tall, with streaks of paint on his jeans and a kind, weathered face that held no malice.

"You are making a lot of dust for one small woman," he said in heavily accented English.

I exhaled, the air rushing out of my lungs as my knees shook slightly. "I'm renovating."

"I am Ciro. I own the gallery next door. Your dust is... how do you say... invading my space." He smiled, and the warmth of it actually reached his eyes.

"I'm sorry," I said, lowering my makeshift weapon. "I'm Hope."

"Hope." He tested the name on his tongue, tasting the weight of it. "A heavy name to carry."

"You have no idea," I muttered.

He didn't ask who I was, why I jumped at shadows, or where I came from. He just handed me a bottle of water and offered to help me move a heavy drafting table.

I let him.

For the first time in my life, a man helped me without expecting a transaction.

*

Back in Chicago, the war was starting.

Lucia forwarded me an email that evening. Dante was trying to bribe me.

*Offer: $10 Million lump sum. The Villa in Tuscany. Full custody of any future children (negotiable). Condition: Return immediately. Issue public statement of reconciliation.*

I laughed. I actually laughed out loud, the sound echoing off the bare walls of my dusty, empty studio.

He thought the Villa in Tuscany was a reward? That was where he took me for our honeymoon. That was where I spent two weeks watching him take business calls by the pool while I ate dinner alone, staring at the empty chair opposite me.

I typed a reply to Lucia.

*Response: No.*

Then, my fingers hovering over the keys, I added: *Tell him if he contacts me again, I send the video of him discussing the 'disposal' of the Russian rivals to the FBI. The statute of limitations hasn't run out on conspiracy to commit murder.*

It was a bluff. Mostly. I didn't want to be a rat; that could get me killed for real. But Dante didn't know what I had. Fear was the only leverage I had left.

Dante POV

"She said no."

Arturo placed the printout on my desk with a trembling hand. He looked tired. We all were. The family was bleeding money because I was too distracted to manage the unions, too consumed by the ghost of a woman who was supposed to be mine.

"Ten million dollars," I whispered, the words tasting like ash. "She turned down ten million dollars."

"She threatened the FBI, Dante. She's gone rogue."

I walked to the liquor cabinet, needing to burn the frustration out of my throat. I reached for the crystal decanter of vintage cognac—the one I saved for special occasions, the one Elena had bought me for my birthday last year.

It was gone.

I stared at the empty shelf, blinking.

Right. The cleaning crew. They had reported missing items. She hadn't just left. She had raided the place.

"She took the booze," I said, a hysterical laugh bubbling up in my chest, sharp and jagged. "She took the fucking booze, Arturo."

"Boss, you need to focus. The Commission is asking questions. They say you can't control your house. If you can't control your wife, how can you control the city?"

I slammed my fist into the cabinet, shattering the glass door. Pain exploded in my hand, blood dripping from my knuckles to mix with the shards on the floor.

"She thinks she can destroy me?" I snarled, turning to face him, not bothering to check the wound. "She thinks she can erase me?"

I wiped the blood on my suit pants, leaving a dark streak against the expensive fabric.

"Put a bounty out. Not a hit. A retrieval. Five million to anyone who finds Hope Veretti."

Arturo's eyes widened. "You know her alias?"

"Lucia slipped up. She registered a domain name for a photography site. 'Hope Veretti Photography'."

I walked to the window, looking out at the city that felt smaller, greyer than it used to.

"She wants to be an artist? Fine. I'll be her patron. Find her, Arturo. Bring her home. And bring the shackles."

Elena POV

I finished hanging the last photo on the pristine white wall of my newly renovated studio.

It was a picture of the melted gold nugget. I had taken it with a macro lens, blowing it up until the ugly lump looked like an alien landscape—craters and valleys of destroyed ambition.

I titled it: *The Price of Admission.*

Ciro walked in, wiping paint from his hands. He stood next to me, looking at the photo in silence.

"It looks like pain," he said softly.

"It is," I answered, crossing my arms. "But it's over now."

My phone buzzed in my pocket, vibrating against my hip. A news alert from Chicago.

*BREAKING: Paletti Crime Family Under Investigation. Anonymous Leak Exposes Internal Corruption.*

I froze. I hadn't leaked it.

I stared at the screen, my pulse quickening. If I hadn't leaked it... who did?

Then I saw the second headline.

*FBI Raids Paletti Warehouse. Tip-off linked to 'disgruntled associate'.*

Jade.

I realized with a jolt of ice-cold clarity that I wasn't the only woman Dante had underestimated. Jade wasn't just a pregnant mistress. She was a woman scorned, abandoned, and desperate. She knew the secrets because she had been trying to replace me in the bed where he whispered them.

Dante wasn't just fighting me anymore. He was fighting the consequences of his own sins, coming at him from all sides.

And I was just watching the fire from across the ocean, wondering if the heat would reach me here.

I touched the shark tooth necklace I had bought at a local market—a cheap, plastic thing I wore as a joke to myself, a talisman of a predator.

"Let it burn," I whispered.

"What?" Ciro asked, turning to me.

"Nothing." I turned to him, forcing a smile. "Just... I think I'm ready for the grand opening."

But deep down, I knew the opening act was just finishing. The main event—the fall of Dante Paletti—was just beginning. And I had front row seats.

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