Chapter 13

Seraphina Vitiello POV

We walked out of the restaurant together just as the sun was setting.

The sky was a bruise of purple and orange, bleeding into the horizon.

"You live around here?" Luca asked, his voice low and even.

"Just moved in," I said, gesturing vaguely down the block. "Down the street."

He walked me to the building, matching his pace to mine.

He didn't try to come up.

He didn't try to make a move.

He just stood at the door, hands relaxed in his pockets, watching the street before turning his gaze back to me.

"You're safe here, Sarah," he said. "Whatever you're running from, it's a long way away."

"I hope so," I said softly.

"Goodnight," he said.

"Goodnight, Luca."

I watched him walk away under the streetlights.

He moved with a loose, easy gait.

Dante had always walked like a tiger stalking prey—every muscle coiled, every step calculated.

But Luca walked like a man who had nothing to fear.

I went up to my empty apartment and locked the door behind me.

I sat on the floor, the silence of the room pressing in against my ears.

Slowly, I pulled my old phone out of my bag.

It was the only thing I had left from Chicago. The only tether to a life that no longer existed.

I had kept it turned off since the hospital.

But I needed to know.

I needed to see if the bomb had finally detonated.

I powered it on.

It vibrated instantly, a violent buzz against my palm.

Dozens of missed calls flooded the screen.

My father. My mother. Marco.

And one text from Isabella.

It was sent three hours ago.

I opened it, my breath hitching in my throat.

It was a photo of a wedding dress.

Layers of intricate lace. Cascading silk. Diamonds catching the light.

It was the dress she was wearing to marry Dante.

The caption was short, brutal, and precise.

*He is finally mine. You were never even a player in the game.*

I stared at the screen, the blue light stinging my eyes.

She was right.

I wasn't a player.

I was just the ball they kicked around.

But the game was over.

I felt a dull ache spread through my chest. It wasn't heartbreak.

It was the phantom pain of a limb that had been severed a long time ago.

I stood up, my movements mechanical.

I walked to the kitchen counter and set the phone down on the granite.

My eyes landed on a heavy metal pestle the previous tenant had left behind.

I picked it up, weighing the cold steel in my hand.

I raised it.

And brought it down on the screen.

*Crack.*

Glass shattered, spiderwebbing outward.

I hit it again.

And again.

And again.

I didn't stop until the phone was nothing but twisted metal and plastic shards, unrecognizable.

Breathing hard, I swept the pieces into the trash.

Seraphina Vitiello was dead.

She died in the wreckage of that SUV.

I walked to the window and looked out at the dark expanse of the ocean.

I was Sarah now.

And Sarah was going to survive.

Chapter 14

Dante Moretti POV

The reception hall was a gilded cage, suffocating and overly bright.

Five hundred guests pressed in on all sides, and the air grew heavy with the cloying scent of expensive perfume and desperation.

Isabella was hanging off my arm, her fingers digging into my bicep with a possessive vice grip. She had been anchored to me for four hours.

Her smile was bright, brittle, and entirely fake.

She waved her ring at everyone who walked by, flashing the diamond under the chandelier's glare like a trophy.

"Look at the size of it," she cooed to the Don's wife from New York. "Dante has such exquisite taste."

I didn't choose the ring.

My mother did.

I just footed the bill.

I took a long sip of whiskey. It burned going down, but not enough to numb the irritation crawling under my skin.

"Where is your sister?" a Capo from the Rossi family asked, swirling his wine.

Isabella stiffened against my side.

"She's ill," Isabella lied without missing a beat. "She went to London for treatment. Poor thing. She's always been... fragile."

*Fragile.*

I thought of Seraphina in the basement.

Fifty lashes.

She hadn't screamed. Not once.

She had stared at the wall with eyes that were ancient with pain, far older than her years.

Fragile wasn't the word I would use.

Broken, perhaps. But never fragile.

A waiter weaved through the crowd with a tray of juice.

A small child—the son of one of my soldiers—darted past.

Impact.

He bumped the waiter, and apple juice splashed onto the pristine white hem of Isabella's dress.

She gasped, the sound sharp and ugly.

"You little brat!" she shrieked.

The music seemed to die instantly.

Isabella raised her hand.

She was going to strike the boy.

I caught her wrist mid-air.

My grip was unforgiving.

"Enough," I growled.

She looked at me, eyes wide with shock.

"But he ruined my dress, Dante! It's custom Vera Wang!"

"It's a dress, Isabella. He's five."

She yanked her arm away, rubbing her wrist dramatically.

"You're hurting me," she hissed.

I looked at her.

Truly looked at her.

I saw the cruelty etched in the set of her mouth. The vacuous vanity in her eyes.

She wasn't the girl who had sat by my bed in the safe house.

That girl had been patient. Gentle.

That girl had read to me for hours when darkness was my only companion.

That girl had smelled like vanilla and rain.

Isabella smelled like Chanel No. 5 and cold ambition.

I felt a cold knot tighten in my stomach.

Something was fundamentally wrong.

I turned to Marco.

He was loitering by a pillar, looking bored.

"Where is the box?" I asked.

"What box?"

"The one Seraphina left at the gate."

Marco hesitated, shifting his weight.

"Isabella told me to burn it. She said it was just trash."

"Did you burn it?"

"No, Boss. I put it in your office. Just in case."

"Get it," I said.

"Now? But the speeches are starting."

"Now, Marco."

He saw the darkness in my eyes.

He nodded and disappeared into the crowd.

I looked back at Isabella.

She was viciously berating the boy's mother now.

A sudden, overwhelming urge to be anywhere but here clawed at my throat.

"I need a drink," I told her, though I had no intention of stopping at the bar.

I walked away before she could answer.

I walked straight out of the ballroom and into the blessed silence of the hallway.

I was going to open that box.

And I had a sickening feeling that whatever was inside was going to ruin me.

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