Lorenzo POV:
Two weeks later, I stepped off my jet onto the Chicago tarmac feeling like a king. The Conti-Valenti merger was sealed. We’d crushed two rival factions without firing a shot. A masterpiece of strategy. Chiara was a sharp weapon, yes, but I was the hand that wielded it.
Victorious. Untouchable.
My driver met me. “Home, Mr. Conti?”
“Home,” I said, a rare, genuine smile touching my lips. I’d earned this. I craved the quiet of the penthouse, a glass of my best Scotch, and the uncomplicated, familiar presence of my wife. Alessia would be in her studio, the air smelling of linseed oil and quiet concentration. She’d be angry about missing the gallery, of course. She’d give me the silent treatment for a day. But she’d get over it. She always did. Her displeasure was a soft, manageable thing.
The penthouse was silent when I walked in. Eerily so. The air was still, sterile. No faint classical music from her speakers, no trace of solvent or varnish.
“Alessia?” I called out, my voice echoing in the vast space.
Nothing.
An unfamiliar, cold thread of unease began to coil in my gut.
I walked through the living area, into the kitchen. Pristine, untouched. Our bedroom—the bed perfectly made. But her scent, the subtle fragrance of jasmine and turpentine that always clung to her, was gone.
Then I saw them. On my bedside table.
Her wedding ring. And next to it, the small marble Madonna.
My blood ran cold.
I picked up the ring. It was a block of ice in my palm. My fingers, suddenly clumsy, fumbled with the statue. It was whole. Impossibly, perfectly whole. I turned it over. On the base, etched in her meticulous script, was a date. Last year’s anniversary. A date I had been in Milan finalizing a hostile takeover.
A memory sliced through me: my mother, in a rare moment of fury before her illness took her, throwing this very statue against the hearth. “Nothing in this house is whole!” she’d screamed. I’d kept the fragments in a drawer, a bitter relic.
Alessia had restored it. In secret. For years.
The unease turned into a stone of dread. I set the statue down and saw the leather-bound album beneath it.
I opened it.
The first photo was from a charity gala two years prior. Alessia in an emerald gown, smiling, but her eyes were distant, sad. She stood alone. I remembered that night. I’d been in a back room, securing a shipping contract.
I turned the page. Alessia on a yacht in Capri. Alone. I’d sent her on that “vacation” while I dealt with a border dispute.
Page after page. Alessia at Christmas, at the far end of a twenty-foot table. Alessia at the opera premiere, an empty seat beside her. The final photo: her gallery opening night, captured by some attendee. She stood before her restored Madonna, a perfect, brave smile on her face. The space beside her, where I had promised to stand, was a gaping void.
On the back, her handwriting: The last wait.
It was a catalogue of my neglect. A silent, brutal audit.
This wasn’t her usual quiet anger. This was something final.
“No,” I whispered, the word hollow in the dead air.
I threw the album aside and strode to her studio, throwing the doors open.
Empty.
Not a canvas, not a brush, not a tube of paint. The room was sanitized, a shell. Only a faint, ghostly scent of turpentine remained, and on the windowsill, a single, discarded square of gold leaf caught the moonlight, glinting weakly.
Panic, raw and suffocating, seized my throat. I ripped my phone out, dialed her number. It rang once, then a cold, automated voice: “The number you have dialed has been disconnected.”
I tried again. And again.
Just then, Vito entered, holding a thick manila envelope sealed with the crest of the Cook County courthouse. “Sir, this just arrived by courier. From a law firm.”
Chiara followed him in, champagne flute in hand, a smug look on her face. “Trouble in paradise, Lorenzo? Did your little songbird finally fly away?”
I ignored her. I snatched the envelope, my fingers tearing it open.
I scanned the legalese, my mind struggling to parse the words. “Decree of Dissolution of Marriage.” “Irreconcilable Differences.”
Final. Legally binding.
My eyes dropped to the signature page. My own sharp, black scrawl. The date: the night of her gallery opening.
“I just need a signature for the insurance.” The thick document. The ‘X’. My impatient pen.
I had signed my own divorce papers.
I had signed them like an invoice, a nuisance, a distraction from more important things.
My own arrogance. My own dismissal. She had used it as a stiletto, sliding it between my ribs with such precision I hadn’t felt the wound until now.
A sound tore from my throat—a guttural, inhuman roar of pure fury and agony. It wasn’t the controlled anger of a Don; it was the raw cry of a wounded animal.
“Get out,” I snarled at Chiara, my voice a low, dangerous vibration.
“Lorenzo, don’t be absurd—”
“GET OUT!” I bellowed, swiping the crystal decanter of Scotch off the bar. It exploded against the wall, showering amber liquid and shards like jagged tears.
She flinched, fear flashing in her eyes for the first time, and scrambled out. Vito was already gone.
I stood there, breathing heavily, in the ruins of my silent, empty kingdom. I had conquered a city. I had built an empire.
And in a single, quiet moment of my own blind pride, I had lost the only thing that had ever been truly, quietly mine. My entire world had just turned to dust.
I walked to the empty studio, picked up the fragile square of gold leaf. It crumpled at the slightest pressure. I closed my fist around it, feeling the dull edges bite into my palm, a pathetic substitute for the warmth I had thrown away.
Lorenzo POV:
My first instinct was to burn the city down until she was found. My second was to call my lawyer.
“Fix this,” I commanded Matteo, my voice rough from disuse and rage.
“Lorenzo,” Matteo, my consigliere for fifteen years, said gravely. “I’ve reviewed the decree. It’s ironclad. She had you sign a voluntary, uncontested petition with a comprehensive settlement agreement. You waived all rights to contest or appeal. It’s a fortress. She’s gone.”
Rage erupted, a physical force. I slammed my fist into the wall, plaster cracking. “I don’t care what it says. Find a judge. Buy him. Threaten him. Make it disappear.”
“This isn’t about a judge,” Matteo said with infuriating patience. “This is about her. She played you, Lorenzo. Perfectly. She knew you wouldn’t look. She used your own power, your own dismissal of her world, as the weapon.”
His words were truth, and they only fed the fire. She thought she could just leave. Vanish. No one leaves me.
“I don’t give a damn,” I snarled. “I will not allow this.” It wasn’t just pride anymore. The ache in my chest was a cavern, a physical void where she had been.
I hung up and drove to Gabriel’s gallery myself. I stormed in, my presence sucking the air from the room. A young assistant froze, wide-eyed.
“Where is Gabriel?” My voice was deadly quiet.
Gabriel emerged from his office, his expression not fearful, but one of pure, icy contempt.
“Conti,” he said, the name a curse. “To what do we owe this displeasure?”
“Where is she?”
He actually laughed, a bitter, sharp sound. “Oh, the great Lorenzo Conti finally notices his collection is missing a piece?”
I took a step closer, using every inch of my height and reputation. “Gabriel. I am her husband.”
“Were,” he spat. “You were her husband. Do you have any idea what she learned, restoring those centuries-old corpses of art? Patience. Precision. And how to make something vanish completely from a vault everyone thinks is impenetrable. You were never her equal, Conti. You were just her most challenging project—a flawed artifact she has finally decided is beyond repair.”
The term flawed artifact hit me like a physical blow. My control wavered.
“She left me a note,” I said, the lie automatic, trying to regain ground.
“She left you a reckoning,” he corrected, his eyes blazing. “Do you know she collapsed the day after the opening? She was running on fumes, sick with stress for months, all for a night you couldn’t be bothered to attend.”
A sliver of ice pierced my gut. I’d noticed she was thinner, paler. I’d dismissed it as artistic temperament.
“She was ill?”
“She was more than ill, you selfish bastard,” Gabriel hissed, his composure breaking. “She was carrying your child.”
The world stopped.
Sound, breath, heartbeat—everything ceased. The air turned to cement in my lungs.
Pregnant.
My mind reeled. A child. An heir. My child. Alessia… A memory surfaced, blurred by whiskey and indifference. That night, weeks ago. It had been quick, impersonal. A duty. But it had happened.
A sickening wave of realization. The exhaustion. The illness. It wasn’t drama. It was life.
“What?” The word was a choked whisper.
“She was pregnant,” Gabriel repeated, venom in every syllable. “And she was so terrified of you, of the gilded prison you’d build around her and that baby, that she ran. She ran to protect your child from you.”
I stumbled back a step, my hand hitting the wall for support. The truth of his words was a sledgehammer, shattering the last of my arrogant fury, leaving only a raw, gaping wound.
I had not just lost a wife.
I had lost my child. A child I never knew existed.
“Where is she?” I asked again, but my voice was different now. Broken. Pleading. All the menace was gone, replaced by a desperate, clawing need. “Gabriel, please. I have to find them.”
He looked at me, his eyes cold and unforgiving as a winter lake.
“No,” he said, his voice final. “She is finally free. She is finally safe. You are the last person on earth who deserves to be near that child. You forfeited that right when you left her standing alone in a room full of pity.”
He turned his back and walked into his office, closing the door with a soft, definitive click.
It was the sound of my world ending.
I walked out of the gallery, my steps steady, my back straight. A perfect performance. At my car, I placed a hand on the cold roof to steady myself. My other hand came up, pressing hard against the center of my chest, as if to physically contain the sudden, seizing pain there. I bowed my head, taking three long, shuddering breaths that did nothing to fill the void.
Inside the car, I didn’t start the engine. I gripped the steering wheel, my knuckles bone-white, and let my forehead rest against it. For one full, silent minute, I stayed there.
Then I drove back to the empty penthouse. I went straight to her sterile studio and slid down the wall, sitting on the cold floor. I pulled out my phone, accessed the security feed I’d had Vito pull from the gallery that night.
There she was. Seeing the news photo on her phone. Her face didn’t crumple in anger or sorrow. It just… settled. Into a deep, weary understanding. As if a long-held hypothesis had finally been proven. Then she lifted her chin, and the perfect, public smile slid back into place.
I watched that smile. Then I closed my eyes, pressed the glowing screen of the phone against my sternum, and sat there in the dark, chasing a phantom warmth.