The diagnosis was ulnar nerve compression with potential severance.
Serious, but fixable—if you had the right surgeon.
I stood in the sterile corridor outside Dante's room.
Matteo, the Consigliere, blocked my path.
He looked like a funeral director, but possessed the soul of an accountant.
"We have a problem, Elena," Matteo stated flatly.
"Sofia needs surgery," I replied, crossing my arms to hide a tremor. "I saw the chart."
"She needs Dr. Rossi," Matteo corrected. "He is the only one who can restore full mobility. She is a pianist. She writes. Her hands are her life."
"Dr. Rossi is fully booked for the next six months," I argued. "He is in Switzerland."
"I know," Matteo said smoothly. "But there is one slot open next week. A cancellation."
My blood turned to ice.
I knew that slot.
It was *my* slot.
I have a genetic kidney condition—polycystic kidney disease. It was a slow killer, but it was actively destroying my right kidney. Dr. Rossi was scheduled to perform a partial nephrectomy to save the organ.
I had waited five years for this appointment.
"That is my slot, Matteo," I said, my voice tight.
"I know," he replied, his expression unchanging. "We need you to give it to Sofia."
I stared at him in disbelief.
"My kidney," I choked out. "Versus her pinky finger?"
"It is her hand, Elena. And it is about optics," Matteo insisted. "Sofia is a public figure. If she is crippled on a Cavallaro mission, the press will destroy us. We need her happy. We need her whole."
"And me?" I asked, a bitter laugh escaping my lips. "Do you need me whole?"
"You can wait," Matteo said dismissively. "Your condition is... manageable. Dialysis is an option."
Dialysis.
He was suggesting I tether myself to a machine for the rest of my life just so Sofia could play the piano.
"No," I stated firmly.
Matteo sighed.
He opened the file he was holding, anticipating the resistance.
He pulled out a photograph.
It was a picture of a cemetery—a small, overgrown plot on the edge of the city.
Luca's grave.
"The city is rezoning this area," Matteo explained calmly. "They want to build a highway. We have been holding off the permits with bribes."
He met my gaze.
"If the Family stops paying the bribes... the bulldozers come next week. They will dig him up. They will pave over him."
I felt the blood drain from my face.
"You wouldn't."
"Dante agrees it is necessary leverage," Matteo said.
The door to the hospital room opened.
Dante appeared in a wheelchair, pushed by a nurse.
He looked pale, but his eyes were hard as flint.
"Do it, Elena," he commanded.
He had heard.
He knew they were threatening to bulldoze my brother's grave.
"You are blackmailing me," I whispered, horror coating my tongue. "With my dead brother."
"It is for the greater good," Dante said, his voice void of emotion. "Sofia was injured under my protection. I owe her this."
"You owe me a husband!" I screamed.
The nurse flinched.
Dante didn't even blink.
"Make the call, Elena," he said softly. "Transfer the appointment. Or Luca gets paved over."
I looked at him.
I looked at the man I had shared a bed with.
He wasn't a man anymore. He was a monster in a three-piece suit.
"Fine," I whispered, defeated.
I took out my phone.
I dialed Dr. Rossi's office.
My hand shook so violently I almost dropped the device.
"Cancel my surgery," I told the receptionist, my voice hollow. "Give the slot to Sofia Ricci."
I hung up.
Dante let out a long breath.
"Thank you," he said. "You are doing the right thing."
I looked at him, hatred burning in my chest.
"I hope she plays a requiem for you," I said.
I signed the divorce papers three days later.
I did it standing in the kitchen, washing down the reality of it with coffee that tasted like bitter mud.
Dante wasn't there. He was at the hospital with Sofia. Her surgery had been a success. Of course it was. In Dante’s world, failure was not an option.
I was already packing.
I moved with agonizing slowness. My kidney was aching again, a dull throb buried deep in my flank that radiated sharply to my back. The stress was only fueling the fire.
I didn't have much to pack.
I left the diamond jewelry. I left the silk clothes he had bought to dress his doll. I left the keys to the luxury car.
Instead, I took my medical degree. I took my passport. And I took the framed photograph of Luca.
My phone buzzed against the granite counter.
It was a news alert.
*Sofia Ricci wins Journalism Award for bravery in North Africa.*
I looked at the photo on the screen. Sofia was in her hospital bed, her bandaged hand held up like a trophy. Dante was standing beside her, looking proud.
He looked like a King surveying his queen.
I set the phone down, face first.
The front door opened.
Dante walked in. He was early.
His dark eyes swept over the bags in the hallway.
"You are really leaving," he said, his voice void of surprise.
"The lawyer already has the papers," I replied, keeping my back to him.
He walked past me into the kitchen. He moved with that predatory grace I used to admire. He poured himself a glass of water with deliberate slowness.
"Sofia is coming back here to recover," he announced. "The medical wing is better equipped than her apartment."
I nodded. "Of course she is."
"But she is missing something," Dante said, his tone shifting.
He put the glass down hard enough to make a sound.
"Her father's Gold Service Medal. The one the Family gave him posthumously. She says she left it on the counter before the crash. It is gone."
I looked at him, truly looked at him.
"And?"
"She thinks you took it," Dante stated.
I laughed. It was a breathless, incredulous sound that scraped my throat.
"Why would I want her father's medal?" I asked. "I have enough ghosts of my own."
"She says you were jealous," Dante countered, stepping closer. "She says you threatened her."
"I didn't take it, Dante."
"Return it, Elena," he commanded. His voice was low. A warning.
"I don't have it."
Dante slammed his hand on the counter, making the silverware jump.
"Do not lie to me! That medal is sacred! It represents a blood sacrifice!"
"So did my brother!" I yelled back, the grief finally piercing through my composure.
Dante grabbed my arm. His grip was iron.
He dragged me toward the back door.
"Where are we going?" I gasped, stumbling as my leg caught on the threshold.
"The courtyard," he snarled.
He pushed me out into the sun.
It was July. The heat was oppressive, a physical weight pressing down on the earth. Ninety degrees and suffocatingly humid.
"You will stand here until you remember where you put it," he declared.
He pointed to the center of the stone patio. There was no shade. Only the merciless glare of the sun.
"Dante," I pleaded, panic fluttering in my chest. "I am sick. My kidney..."
"Confess, and you can come inside," he said coldly.
He went back into the house and locked the glass sliding door with a decisive click.
I stood there.
The sun beat down on me. It felt personal, like a heavy hand pushing me into the ground.
Sweat trickled down my back, soaking my shirt instantly.
My side began to cramp. Sharp, stabbing pains that stole my breath.
I saw Dante in the kitchen. He was watching me through the glass.
He was waiting for me to break.
I stood for an hour.
The pain became a roar in my ears, drowning out the cicadas.
My vision blurred. Black spots danced in front of my eyes like ink in water.
I wasn't going to confess to a crime I didn't commit.
I wasn't going to give him that satisfaction.
I looked at him through the glass one last time.
I saw him checking his watch.
My knees gave out.
The stone patio rushed up to meet me.
I didn't feel the impact.
I just felt the sweet, dark relief of letting go.
Dante POV
The silence in the house wasn't peaceful; it was oppressive.
It hung heavy in the air, a physical weight that pressed against my eardrums.
I had returned from the gala celebrating Sofia's recovery. She had been the star of the evening, holding court and recounting the dramatic tale of how she survived the crash, how she bravely faced surgery.
I should have been happy.
But there was a knot in my stomach, a cold coil of dread I couldn't explain.
I walked into the foyer.
"Elena?" I called out.
Silence.
I checked the kitchen. Empty.
I checked the courtyard.
She wasn't there.
I had let her back inside after she fainted yesterday. I had told myself it was discipline. A necessary lesson. I had convinced myself she needed to respect the hierarchy.
Taking the stairs two at a time, I went up to the master bedroom.
The door was open.
The closet was open.
Her side was empty.
Not just messy. Empty.
The hangers were bare, skeletal against the dark wood. The drawers were pulled out, gaping like open mouths.
My heart gave a strange, erratic thump.
She had actually done it.
I walked to the nightstand.
There was a large envelope.
I opened it.
The divorce decree. Signed. Notarized. Final.
Underneath it was a photo.
It was a Polaroid. Me and her, years ago. I was on the phone, turning away from her, my attention elsewhere. She was looking at my back.
She had written on the back of it.
*Year 4. He still doesn't see me.*
I stared at the handwriting. It was neat, precise. Surgeon's handwriting.
The air left my lungs in a rush.
"Dante?"
I turned.
Sofia was standing in the doorway. She was wearing a silk robe, the fabric shimmering under the hallway lights. She held a glass of champagne.
"Where is the maid?" she asked, her voice light and unbothered. "I need someone to steam my dress for tomorrow."
"The maid?" I repeated, my voice sounding foreign to my own ears.
"Elena," she said. "Where is she?"
Something inside me snapped.
It was a violent, audible crack in my chest, severing whatever blind loyalty I had been holding onto.
I looked at Sofia.
I mean, I really looked at her.
I saw the entitlement in her eyes. The selfishness.
She wasn't fragile. She was a parasite.
"Get out," I said.
Sofia blinked, her smile faltering. "What?"
"Get out of my house," I said. My voice was a low growl, vibrating with suppressed rage.
"Dante, you're joking. It's late."
I walked toward her.
She took a step back, fear flickering in her eyes for the first time.
"You stole the medal, didn't you?" I asked.
"What? No! Elena took it!"
"I found it in your purse, Sofia," I lied. I hadn't checked, but I knew. Suddenly, with a clarity that cut like glass, I just knew.
Her face crumbled.
"I... I just wanted you to see how petty she was! She hates us, Dante!"
"Get out!" I roared.
I grabbed her arm. I didn't care about her nerve damage. I dragged her to the stairs.
"Dante, please!"
I marched her to the front door. I opened it. I shoved her out into the night.
"Call a cab," I said. "And never come back."
I slammed the door.
I locked it.
I leaned my forehead against the wood, breathing hard.
I turned around.
The house was massive. It was a fortress.
And it was completely, terrifically empty.
I looked at the divorce paper in my hand.
*Elena Vitiello.*
She had taken back her name.
She had taken back her life.
And she had left me with the wreckage.