Isabella POV
The walk to the dining room felt less like a stroll through a home and more like a procession toward an executioner's block. The Moreno estate was a labyrinth of gilded corridors and marble floors that echoed with the ghosts of a violent history. But unlike the trembling girl who had walked down the aisle yesterday, the woman whose heels clicked rhythmically against the stone today carried a weapon: Damien's permission.
Break him if you have to.
The words replayed in my mind, a dark mantra shielding me from the oppressive weight of the house.
I entered the Grand Dining Room, and the conversation died instantly. It was a cavernous space, dominated by a mahogany table long enough to seat thirty men. Crystal chandeliers dripped from the ceiling like frozen tears, casting a cold, prismatic light over the silver service and fine china. Portraits of dead Dons lined the walls, their painted eyes following me with judgmental stares.
Damien was already seated at the head of the table, a dark anchor in the room's opulence. To his right sat Sofia Moreno, the Dowager Queen, her posture rigid, her gray hair coiffed into an intricate crown. Further down sat the vultures—Francesca and Lia, wives of the high-ranking Capos, their eyes sharpening the moment I crossed the threshold.
A servant pulled out the chair to Damien's left—the seat of the Mafia Queen.
I sat, feeling the heavy silence press against my skin. Francesca leaned over to whisper something to Lia, their gazes darting to my neck, likely searching for bruises, for signs of how thoroughly the Don had broken me.
I kept my chin high, unfolding my napkin with deliberate slowness.
Halfway through the silent meal, the clinking of silverware ceased abruptly. Sofia Moreno placed her fork down. The sound was soft, but it commanded the attention of a gunshot.
"Isabella," Sofia said, her voice raspy but commanding.
I looked up, meeting the older woman's gaze. There was no warmth there, only a fierce, assessing intelligence. Slowly, she began to twist the heavy gold ring on her right hand—a massive, blood-red ruby surrounded by diamonds. The Moreno Matriarch's Ring.
The air in the room grew thin. Francesca's fork hovered halfway to her mouth, her eyes widening in disbelief.
Sofia slid the ring off and stood. She walked around the table, her steps slow and heavy, until she stopped beside me. She held out the ring, the ruby catching the light like a drop of fresh blood.
"Give me your hand, child."
I hesitated, my heart hammering against my ribs. This wasn't just jewelry; it was a target. To wear this was to claim a throne that half the people in this room believed I had stolen.
I glanced at Damien. He didn't look at his mother; his obsidian eyes were fixed on me, unreadable and intense.
"You are Mrs. Moreno now," he said, his voice a low rumble that vibrated through the table. "Wear it."
It was an order, but it was also a validation.
I extended my hand. Sofia's skin was dry and cool as she slid the heavy band onto my ring finger. It was loose, cold, and terrifyingly heavy.
"May you have the strength to bear its weight," Sofia murmured, her eyes locking with mine for a brief second before she returned to her seat.
The silence that followed was shattered by the sharp intake of breath from across the table. Francesca was staring at my hand, her face a mask of poorly concealed fury. She and Lia had spent years vying for influence, hoping to position their own daughters or daughters-in-law for this role. Seeing the ruby on the finger of a "disgraced" bride was evidently too much to bear.
Francesca reached for her champagne flute, her knuckles white. A tight, synthetic smile stretched across her face, not reaching her eyes.
"Well," she began, her voice dripping with a sweetness that tasted of arsenic. "We must offer a toast, I suppose."
She raised her glass, her gaze boring into mine. "To Isabella. You must be so relieved, dear. To land on your feet like this after... well, after my nephew's unfortunate lapse in judgment."
The room went dead still. Even the servants froze in the shadows. Francesca took a sip, savoring the tension she had just unleashed, before delivering the final blow.
"Not every girl gets a second chance at this family," she purred, setting the glass down with a delicate clink. "Let alone an upgrade. It's quite the Cinderella story, isn't it? From the son's discarded toy to the father's... wife."
The insult hung in the air, toxic and undeniable. She had just called me a whore in the most polite way possible, stripping away the dignity of the ring I had just been given.
Damien shifted in his seat, the leather creaking, a predator disturbed. But I didn't look at him. I didn't look at Sofia.
I kept my eyes on Francesca. My pulse remained steady, a slow, rhythmic drum of war. She wanted me to cry. She wanted me to look at my husband for protection.
Instead, I felt a cold, sharp smile blooming in my chest. She thought she was twisting a knife in a wound, but she had just handed me the hilt.
Isabella POV
The silence that followed Francesca's insult was thick enough to choke on. It wasn't the silence of peace, but the vacuum before an explosion. Every eye at the table was fixed on me, waiting for the tears, the flush of shame, or the trembling lip of a girl out of her depth.
Francesca smirked over the rim of her crystal flute, her eyes gleaming with the satisfaction of a predator who had just drawn blood. She expected me to crumble. She expected the "disgraced" bride to hang her head.
But as I looked at her, the cold weight of the ruby ring on my finger felt less like a burden and more like a promise. Damien had told me to break them.
I didn't look at my husband. I didn't need to. I could feel his dark presence beside me, a silent, brooding storm waiting to see if I would sink or swim.
Slowly, deliberately, I placed my silverware down on the fine china. The soft clink echoed like a gavel strike. I offered Francesca a smile—not warm, not polite, but sharp enough to cut glass.
"You're right, Francesca," I said, my voice steady and clear, carrying effortlessly to the far ends of the long mahogany table.
Francesca's smirk faltered, just for a fraction of a second. She hadn't expected agreement.
"It was an upgrade," I continued, leaning forward slightly. "An upgrade from a boy who dishonored this family's name to the Don who defines it."
A collective gasp rippled through the room. Lia dropped her napkin. Even the servants in the shadows seemed to stop breathing. To speak of the family's shame so openly was taboo; to weaponize it was a declaration of war.
I didn't stop. I let my gaze drift to the empty chair where Alexzander should have been sitting—the seat of the son who had abandoned me at the altar, the boy whose cowardice had forced this union.
"My first duty as Mrs. Moreno is to ensure such disgrace never happens again," I said, my tone hardening into steel. I turned my eyes back to Francesca, whose face had drained of color, leaving her makeup looking stark and garish. "I will personally oversee Alexzander's... re-education. He needs to be reminded of what the Moreno name stands for. Respect. Loyalty. And the consequences of forgetting them."
Francesca's mouth opened, but no sound came out. She had tried to paint me as a whore, but I had just painted myself as the enforcer of the Don's will. I had claimed authority over her own nephew, the heir she likely hoped to manipulate.
Beside me, I felt a shift in the air. Damien hadn't moved, but the lethal tension radiating from him had changed flavor. It was no longer a test. It was approval.
I glanced at Sofia Moreno. The Dowager Queen was watching me, her fingers idly twisting the band of her own ring, now absent of the ruby. Her gaze flickered from the heavy stone on my hand to the empty chair of her grandson. There was no pity in her eyes, only a cold, calculating assessment. She looked at the void Alex had left, and for the first time, I saw the shadow of a decision forming behind her gray eyes. A realization that a weak heir was a rot that had to be cut out, and perhaps, I was the knife she had been waiting for.
The rest of the breakfast passed in a blur of clinking cutlery and hushed whispers. No one dared to speak to me directly. I had drawn a line in the sand with blood and insults, and I was the only one standing on the other side.
When the meal finally ended, the family scattered like roaches fleeing the light. Francesca and Lia practically ran from the room, their heads bent together in furious whispers.
Only three of us remained in the cavernous dining room: Sofia, Damien, and I.
Sofia stood slowly, her movements graceful despite her age. She walked over to Damien, placing a withered hand on his shoulder. Her expression was grave.
"She made enemies today, Damien," Sofia said, her voice low, rasping with the weight of decades of survival. "Francesca is not one to forgive. You must protect her. This world will eat a girl like her alive."
I opened my mouth to speak, to tell her I didn't need a shield, but Damien's voice cut through the air first. It was a deep, resonant rumble that vibrated in my chest.
"Mother," he said, turning his obsidian eyes toward me.
There was no warmth in his gaze, no softness of a husband looking at his new bride. Instead, there was a dark, dangerous amusement, a recognition of the violence I had just displayed. He looked at me not as a possession to be guarded, but as a weapon he had just unsheathed.
"I didn't marry a lamb to be protected," Damien said, his lips curving into a faint, terrifying smile. "I married a wolf. They should be afraid of her."
The validation hit me harder than any insult Francesca could have hurled. He saw me. He saw the darkness I had nurtured to survive, the claws I had hidden beneath the silk and lace.
Sofia looked between us, a flicker of surprise crossing her face before settling into a resigned, knowing nod. She patted his cheek once, then turned and left the room, the heavy oak doors closing behind her with a finality that echoed in the silence.
I stood there, my heart pounding against my ribs, trapped in the gaze of the monster I had married. He hadn't promised me safety. He had promised me a hunt.