Chapter 4

Seraphina Vitiello POV

I woke up in a hospital room that reeked of antiseptic and the metallic tang of regret.

The emptiness in my womb wasn't just a sensation; it was a crushing physical weight, a hollowed-out crater where hope used to live.

Luca was sitting in the vinyl chair by the window, silhouetted against the gray city light.

He looked as if he hadn't slept in days, weariness etched deep into his features.

"The doctor said it was a boy," he said softly, his voice rough.

I didn't cry.

I had no tears left to shed. My grief had already calcified into something colder, harder.

"Where is Dante?" I asked, my voice scraping against my throat.

"At the Commission Auction," Luca replied, unwilling to meet my eyes. "He took her. He took Camilla."

I stared at the ceiling. "Does he know?"

"No. He thinks you just had a stress ulcer," Luca said, his jaw tightening. "The doctors were... instructed not to call him."

"By whom?"

"By me," Luca said darkly.

He stood up and handed me a clipboard.

The divorce papers.

And underneath them, a bank authorization form.

I signed the divorce papers first.

My signature was steady, the ink flowing like a final verdict.

Then, I signed the bank form.

"This triggers the infidelity clause," I said, the words tasting like ash and iron.

Luca nodded solemnly. "It freezes everything. The offshore accounts in the Caymans, the shell companies in Jersey, the liquid assets in the main vault. He will be destitute within the hour."

I sat up, ignoring the sharp, tearing pull of pain in my abdomen.

"Get me a dress, Luca."

"You should rest, Seraphina. You've lost blood."

I swung my legs over the side of the bed, my vision swimming.

"I will rest when he is ruined."

Two hours later, I walked into the Grand Ballroom of the Plaza Hotel.

The Commission Auction was the apex of the underworld social calendar, a place where blood money was washed in champagne.

Dante was sitting at the front table, Camilla draped over him like a cheap, glittering ornament.

She was wearing a diamond necklace that caught the chandelier light, beaming with a brilliance she didn't deserve.

Then, the auctioneer brought out the next lot.

My grandmother's rosary.

It was a vintage piece, blood-red rubies and diamonds set in gold-the only thing I had left of my family before I sold it to save Dante's territory years ago.

It had resurfaced.

The auctioneer held it up, the gems glinting under the stage lights.

"Bidding starts at five hundred thousand," he announced.

I saw Dante look at it.

He froze.

He knew what it meant to me.

He knew he had sworn, on his life and honor, to get it back.

Camilla whispered something in his ear, pouting, and pointed to a gaudy sapphire set listed in the catalog.

Dante hesitated.

For a heartbeat, he looked at the rosary.

Then he turned away.

He raised his paddle for the sapphires instead.

"One million," he called out, his voice booming with confidence.

He was buying her jewels while I was bleeding out his son.

"Sold to Don Vitiello!" the auctioneer shouted, slamming the gavel.

A waiter brought the wireless card machine to Dante's table for the immediate deposit.

Dante pulled out his black Centurion Amex.

He tapped it with the casual arrogance of a man who believed he owned the city.

The machine beeped.

A harsh, jagged sound.

A red light flashed.

Declined.

The waiter looked nervous, sweat beading on his brow. "Perhaps the chip, sir?"

Dante frowned, annoyance flickering across his face.

He swiped it.

Declined.

He pulled out another card-Platinum this time.

Declined.

A murmur went through the room, a ripple of dangerous gossip.

Dons did not get declined.

Dante stood up, his face flushing with rage.

"There is a mistake," he snarled at the waiter. "Call the bank."

"There is no mistake, Dante."

My voice cut through the whispers like a blade.

I walked toward his table.

I was pale, ghostly against the black silk of my dress, and I was in agony, but I stood tall.

"I froze them," I said.

He looked at me as if I were a phantom risen from the grave.

"You what?"

"I froze the assets. The clause in our contract," I said, my voice devoid of emotion. "You are bankrupt, Dante."

Camilla looked at him, panic flickering in her wide eyes. "What does she mean, bankrupt?"

"It means," I said, stopping directly at their table, looming over their seated forms, "that the necklace you are wearing is technically stolen property. And you..."

I pulled a thick dossier from my purse.

I dropped it on the table between the crystal champagne flutes with a heavy thud.

"You are about to find out exactly how expensive she really is."

Chapter 5

Seraphina Vitiello POV

Dante stared at the dossier on the table as if it were a ticking bomb.

In every way that mattered, it was.

"Open it," I commanded softly.

He glanced around the room, sweat beading on his brow.

The heads of the Five Families were watching him like hawks.

He couldn't back down now.

With a trembling hand, he flipped the folder open.

The first photo was grainy, yet the subject was unmistakable.

It showed Camilla perched on the lap of a soldier from the Russian Bratva.

The date stamp in the corner marked it as three months ago.

The next photo was even more damning: it captured her entering a hotel room with the underboss of the Irish mob.

Dante's hands began to shake violently.

"This is fake!" Camilla shrieked, her manicured nails clawing at the glossy prints. "She photoshopped them!"

I didn't argue.

Instead, I simply pointed to the massive screen behind the auctioneer's podium.

My ten-grand bribe to the technician was about to pay off.

"Play it," I murmured into my phone.

The screen flickered.

The elegant logo of the auction house vanished, replaced by a shaky video feed.

It was Camilla.

She was lounging in a dimly lit room, surrounded by three men wearing the colors of our rival family.

She was laughing.

"He's so stupid," her voice rang out through the ballroom speakers, clear, crisp, and mocking. "He thinks he's a wolf, but he's just a sheep with a heavy wallet. He actually thinks the brat is his."

The room went deathly silent.

On the screen, one of the men leaned in. "Who's the father then?"

Camilla shrugged, taking a long drag of a cigarette.

"Does it matter? As long as the check clears."

The video cut to black.

Dante stood frozen, a statue of disbelief.

The humiliation radiated off him in palpable waves.

Slowly, he turned to Camilla.

His face was a mask of absolute horror.

"You said..." he whispered, his voice cracking. "You swore on your mother's grave."

Camilla scrambled up, backing away in terror.

"Dante, listen to me! She's lying! It's a deepfake! I love you!"

Dante struck her.

It was a vicious backhand that sent her crashing into the table, shattering the crystal champagne flutes.

She screamed, curling into a ball amidst the shards.

Dante looked down at his stinging hands.

He looked at the room full of powerful men who were laughing at him behind their hands.

Then, he looked at me.

There was a plea in his eyes.

A desperate, silent beg for me to fix this, just like I had fixed everything else for seven years.

I looked back at him with nothing but cold indifference.

"I'm not done, Dante," I said softly.

I reached into the dossier and retrieved one final sheet of paper.

It was a medical record.

"This is the part that hurts the most."

I held it up for him to see.

It was from a renowned specialist in Switzerland.

Patient: Dante Vitiello.

Diagnosis: Azoospermia. Sterile.

"You can't have children, Dante," I stated, my voice carrying to the very back of the silent room. "You never could."

His knees finally buckled.

He gripped the edge of the table, knuckles white, just to stay upright.

"The baby I just lost," I continued, the grief finally cracking my composure, "was a miracle. It was the result of five years of IVF-procedures you were too proud to even acknowledge. It was yours. And you killed him today when you pushed me."

"Camilla's baby?"

I looked down at the sobbing woman on the floor.

"That belongs to the streets."

I turned my back on him.

The silence in the room was heavy, pressing down with the weight of a fallen King.

I walked out of the ballroom.

I didn't look back at the ruin I had left behind.

I walked out into the crisp night air of New York City.

I was alone.

I was empty.

But for the first time in seven years... I was free.

A gunshot echoed from inside the hotel.

I didn't flinch.

I just kept walking.

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