The day before the holiday, I gave the household staff the week off.
Agnes was still in the kitchen before she left, packing desserts into a bag while talking to herself with a smile. "Miss Vanessa finally got what she wanted this time. Mr. Moretti even booked that seaside villa in Amalfi."
I was texting Vanessa, asking her to come over later to try on the bridesmaid dress. Without thinking much of it, I asked, "Got what?"
"The wedding," Agnes said naturally. "Isn't Mr. Moretti taking Miss Vanessa to Italy?"
My fingers froze above the screen.
Two seconds passed before I looked up at her. "Whose wedding?"
The smile on Agnes's face slowly froze.
She looked at me as if she had only just realized something was wrong. "You... didn't know?"
For a moment, I almost laughed at how absurd it sounded.
"Agnes, Luca and I signed the family marriage registry three years ago. Next week is only supposed to be the ceremony."
The kitchen fell silent.
Agnes opened her mouth, embarrassment spreading across her face. "I'm sorry, ma'am. I thought you knew."
She hesitated, then lowered her voice. "A while ago, when I was cleaning the study, I heard Mr. Moretti mention it to his lawyer. He said the marriage registry in your hands was never officially submitted to the family council."
My heart sank.
Three years ago, Luca had handed that document to me himself.
He said the Moretti family was unstable, that we could not announce the marriage yet. Once he entered the inner circle of the Five Families, he would hold a proper wedding.
So for all these years, I never pushed him.
I even turned against the Castellano family for him.
Thinking back now, maybe he had never planned to truly let me through the doors of the Moretti family in the first place.
I went back to the bedroom and pulled the document out from the bottom drawer.
The black wax seal was still perfectly intact.
But beside it, where the family council's certification should have been, there was nothing.
Luca's call came in while I was still standing in the bedroom, staring at that marriage registry.
"Baby, I have to go to Italy tomorrow," he said, his voice low and lazy, like he was coaxing me. "The wedding may need to be pushed back a few days. When I come back, I'll give you an even grander ceremony. Okay?"
The rain outside was heavy.
I held the edge of the document and suddenly remembered the final deadline my father had given me last month.
If the Moretti family still refused to publicly acknowledge the marriage by this holiday, the partnership between Castellano and Moretti would be terminated immediately. And I would have to go home and accept the alliance marriage my father had arranged.
After a few seconds of silence, I answered softly, "Okay. I have other plans for the holiday anyway."
Luca seemed to pause. He probably had not expected me to agree so easily.
But soon, he gave a low laugh. "I'll make it up to you when I'm back."
After the call ended, the room went quiet again.
Agnes was still standing by the door, looking awkward. "Ma'am, I didn't mean to say the wrong thing. I really thought you knew."
I slid the document back into the drawer and said calmly, "It's fine. You can go."
The old woman looked like she wanted to say more, but in the end, she left.
Not long after the door closed, my phone rang again.
This time, it was my father.
Cedric Castellano never liked wasting words. The moment the call connected, he asked, "Have you decided?"
I leaned against the edge of the bed and looked out at the blurred New York skyline. My voice was very quiet.
"I'm coming home."
There was silence on the other end for two seconds.
"And the Moretti partnership?"
"Cancel it."
My father clearly paused.
Three years ago, because of Luca, I had nearly broken with the entire Castellano family. Everyone had told me Luca Moretti was too ambitious, too desperate to climb, and not suitable as a husband.
But I had refused to believe them.
Now, thinking back, maybe they had been right all along.
After hanging up, I was about to go downstairs when the doorbell rang.
Vanessa stood outside with a dessert box in her hand, rain still clinging to her coat. She wore a beige trench coat, her long hair loose over her shoulders. The Tiffany key necklace at her throat caught the light sharply.
Luca had given it to her last week for her birthday.
"Selene!" She smiled and threw her arms around me. "I brought your favorite tiramisu."
I stepped aside and let her in.
The way Vanessa changed her shoes was so familiar, it was almost as if she lived here too.
I used to think nothing of it.
Two years ago, I was the one who introduced Vanessa into the port operations line under the Moretti family. It was not her first time in this world. She had followed Evelyn in and out of the Castellano estate since she was young. She knew which drink to pour for which Capo, and when to keep quiet while men discussed business. But her real entry into Moretti had come through me.
Later, Luca began taking her to family gatherings and underground casinos. He said she knew the accounts and understood how to deal with difficult port managers. Gradually, the passenger seat stopped belonging to me.
Vanessa always said she got carsick in the back. Luca never refused her.
Whenever the three of us went out together, I sat in the back seat and listened to them talk about the southern route, permits, and dock transfers. Sometimes, when I added a sentence, I sounded like the unnecessary one.
"Selene? You okay?" Vanessa waved a hand in front of my eyes.
I came back to myself and said lightly, "The dress is in the walk-in closet. Go try it on."
She smiled and hurried inside.
Not long after, her excited voice came from the closet. "Selene, come look. Does it look good?"
When I walked in, she was standing in front of the mirror, turning in a slow circle.
The pale gold bridesmaid dress hugged her waist. It did look beautiful.
Vanessa looked at herself in the mirror, then suddenly sighed. "Too bad I probably won't be able to be your bridesmaid this holiday."
My heart tightened slightly, but I still asked, "Why?"
She lowered her head and smiled, the tips of her ears turning pink. "Because I have another important arrangement."
As if afraid I would keep asking, she quickly changed the subject. "By the way, have you tried on your wedding dress yet?"
I shook my head. I had fought for this wedding for a long time, but Luca had always been busy. The date had been delayed again and again. Even that custom wedding dress had to wait until tonight before I could go to the boutique and try it on.
Vanessa, however, seemed to remember something. Her tone turned bright. "The last time I went to try on wedding dresses, the designer said that couture piece suited me perfectly. Luca thought it looked beautiful too."
I said nothing.
A while ago, Vanessa had suddenly said she was getting engaged, but every time I asked who the man was, she brushed it off. Later, she simply dragged Luca with her to try on wedding dresses and smiled at me as she said, "Come on, Selene. I just need a man who actually understands how a suit should fit."
She said it so naturally, as if she were borrowing a jacket.
Not my fiancé.
Luca had not even hesitated. He only laughed and ruffled her hair. "You're always trouble."
They stayed at the bridal boutique for the entire afternoon.
When they came back that day, Luca was in a good mood. For once, he brought up the dress himself and said it really was beautiful.
Thinking about it now, maybe he had not been praising the dress at all.
And I, the woman who had been "registered" to him for three years, had never once truly worn a wedding dress.
Every time I brought up the ceremony, Luca said he was busy. He had been busy for three years. The wedding date was set, then postponed, then set again. At some point, even I lost count of how many times it had happened.
"Selene?" Vanessa leaned closer and looked at me. "Why do you look so pale?"
I looked at the necklace around her throat and suddenly smiled.
"Nothing."
A little after eight, the lock clicked.
Luca came in with the rain still on his coat. A damp chill followed him into the apartment as he tossed his black overcoat over the arm of the sofa. In his other hand, he carried coffee and a small box of desserts.
Vanessa was already walking toward him in heels.
She took one of the cups from him as naturally as if she had been waiting for it, glanced down, and smiled.
"Still a hot latte?"
"You were the one who said the place downstairs makes it too bitter," Luca said casually.
Her eyes curved at once. "You remembered."
Luca gave a low laugh but said nothing. He only set the other cup on the table.
"Yours. Americano."
Vanessa's latte was warm, with cinnamon dusted over the foam and the pale gold sleeve she always liked. My iced Americano had been sitting long enough for the ice to melt, water beading all over the plastic cup.
It had probably always been like this.
I just hadn't noticed, or maybe I had never wanted to.
Vanessa was still wearing the champagne-gold bridesmaid dress. The satin clung to her waist and made her skin look almost luminous under the living room lights. She turned in front of the mirror, lifting the skirt a little as she asked Luca, "What do you think? Am I going to steal the bride's spotlight?"
Luca leaned against the sofa and looked at her for two seconds before answering, slow and easy.
"Looks good."
Vanessa laughed immediately. "Just the dress?"
Luca didn't answer. He only lowered his head and took a sip of coffee.
Somehow, the silence was more intimate than a compliment.
For one strange moment, with the warm light falling over both of them, I felt like I had walked into someone else's home.
Vanessa had always liked wearing my things.
Back then, Evelyn was still a private medical aide at the Castellano estate, in charge of my father's medication and meals. Vanessa practically grew up inside the estate. She was two years younger than me and always followed a step behind.
She would secretly try on gowns I no longer wore. She would stare at the jewelry I put on before family dinners. After banquets, she liked standing behind the railing on the second floor, watching the men in dark suits downstairs, the heirs and Capos who were born knowing which doors would open for them.
Once, she asked me, "Selene, what kind of man do you think you'll marry?"
I was young then and found the question boring, so I said, "I don't know."
Vanessa thought about it for a long time. Then she whispered, very seriously, "I'm going to marry into a family like this."
When she first entered Moretti's port operations line, I was the one who introduced her to Luca.
She had just graduated from business school then and was placed on the outside, handling dinner lists, dock receptions, and some of the less clean paperwork. She was smart, careful, and knew when to keep her mouth shut.
It did not take long before Luca started bringing her to family gatherings and underground casinos. She remembered what every Capo liked to drink. She organized transaction lists and port ledgers before anyone asked. Once, when the west-side transport line ran into trouble, she rearranged the dock handoff order in one night.
After that, Luca looked at her differently. He began taking her to more private meetings. And somehow, the seat beside him became hers by default.
"Where's Agnes?" Luca asked suddenly.
"I let her leave early."
He nodded and came toward me, lowering his head as if to kiss me.
The familiar scent of cedarwood came close. Before I could think, I turned my face away.
His lips had not even touched me when something shattered behind him.
Vanessa's coffee had fallen to the floor. Hot liquid splashed across the rug, and she drew in a soft breath as it burned her hand.
Luca let go of me almost instantly and strode over.
"Did it burn you?"
Vanessa frowned and murmured that it hurt.
Luca cursed under his breath, found the first-aid kit, and crouched in front of her to treat the red mark on the back of her hand.
"When are you going to stop being so clumsy?"
Vanessa looked wounded. "You startled me."
I picked up my iced Americano and took a sip.
It was bitter enough to leave my tongue dry.
I didn't look at them again. I turned and went back to the bedroom.
My suitcase was still open beside the bed with only a few pieces of clothing inside. I pulled open the drawer and took out my passport, a few cards, and the marriage registry. The Moretti crest was pressed into the parchment, a black rose wrapped around a dagger. It looked solemn. Dangerous. Real.
Three years ago, when Luca handed it to me, I had believed it was a promise.
I folded the papers and slipped them into the inner pocket of my suitcase.
Not long after, the bedroom door opened.
Luca stood in the doorway with his sleeves rolled to his elbows and a faint crease between his brows. He must have just finished treating Vanessa's hand; there was still a trace of ointment on his fingers.
"What are you doing?"
"Packing." I folded a black jacket and placed it in the suitcase. "I'm going home for the holiday."
"Selene, the wedding is postponed. Not canceled." His voice lowered, as if he were dealing with a small inconvenience rather than the third year of the same promise. "You don't need to run back to those old connections over this."
Old connections. Even now, he still thought my family was just somewhere I went when I wanted to vent.
I kept folding my clothes and said nothing.
In Luca's mind, I was nothing more than an unimportant distant branch of the Castellano family.
Three years ago, I left my family because I truly wanted to bet on love. I did not want Luca to know who I really was. I did not want him to love the Castellano name instead of me.
"I know you're upset about the wedding," he said, stepping closer as if to touch my shoulder. "When the Italy matter is over, I'll go meet your family myself. Isn't that what you wanted?"
I lifted my eyes to him.
"What if I don't want it anymore?"
Luca frowned. "You will."
"Why?"
For a few seconds, he said nothing. Then he gave a low laugh.
"Because you'll stand with me."
He was certain I would never leave.
Every time I had backed down, every time I had stayed quiet, every time I had explained him to my family and smoothed things over for him, I had only taught him one thing.
That I would always be there.
"Then let's not pretend there's still a wedding to postpone," I said, pulling the suitcase zipper closed. "You won't even be in New York tomorrow. What exactly am I supposed to stay here for?"
For once, Luca didn't have an answer ready.
He watched me for a few seconds, then his voice softened. "I said postponed, not canceled. Something came up in Italy. The port permits, the council votes—everything tied to the southern route is sitting on this negotiation. I can't walk away from it."
It was the kind of explanation I used to accept before he even finished saying it.
Moretti had spent years trying to earn real recognition from the Five Families. Luca had fought for every shipping route, every dock permit, every private dinner where men in dark suits decided who was allowed closer to the inner circle. I knew what the southern route meant to him.
But tonight, I was too tired to help him make excuses.
"Then handle it," I said, slipping my passport into the suitcase. "I have things to deal with at home too."
Luca frowned, but before he could answer, Vanessa came in from the living room with the champagne dress gathered in one hand. A thin layer of ointment shone on the back of her hand. She looked as if she were trying to help, but there was a brightness in her eyes she couldn't quite hide.
"Selene, don't blame him," she said gently. "You don't usually deal with the family business, so you don't know how bad things have been. East Dock just changed hands, and Customs has been watching the southern route. Luca hasn't slept properly in weeks."
I looked at her. "How do you know all this?"
Her face stiffened for the briefest moment.
Then she smiled, quick and smooth. "I've been helping Luca with some of the transport files. You know I handle reception and port accounts on the outside. It's nothing important. I just do what I can."
She paused, then added, softer, "You never liked this part of the business anyway. I couldn't just stand there and watch him carry it alone."
I had grown up at the Castellano long table, listening to my father and his men discuss cargo ships, campaign money, dock taxes, and committee seats. They thought children didn't understand, so they never bothered to lower their voices around me. By thirteen, I could spot a compromised route from one misplaced number in a ledger.
I wasn't useless.
I had only stopped touching that world after I left my family.
And Luca had been happy to keep it that way.
"With me, Selene," he used to say, "you get to live a normal life."
Back then, I thought he was protecting me.
The front door opened before Luca could speak again.
Agnes stepped into the entryway, her worn handbag clutched to her chest and rain dampening the edges of her hair. She froze when she saw all of us still standing there.
"Mr. Moretti. Ma'am." She gave an awkward little smile. "Sorry. I got downstairs and realized I left my ticket in the room."
Luca's expression darkened. "I thought you were already off for the holiday."
"I'll only be a minute." Agnes hurried toward the kitchen drawer, flustered. She rummaged around for a while, then looked up as if something had just come back to her. "Sir, when you leave for Amalfi tomorrow, ask the driver to pack a few light coats. Miss Vanessa said on the balcony the other day that the sea wind gets cold at night."
The apartment went silent.
Vanessa's face changed.
"Agnes," she said tightly, "you heard wrong."
Agnes blinked at her, confused. "I don't think so. You said the white dress had to be sent to the villa early so the sea breeze wouldn't wrinkle it. Oh, and you told Mr. Moretti not to forget the pearl earrings because you wanted them for the photos."
Luca's face went cold.
"Agnes, you're tired," he said quietly. "Get your things and go."
Only then did Agnes seem to realize she had said too much. Her lips parted, but she swallowed the rest and lowered her head.
Vanessa's eyes reddened almost instantly. She turned to me, her voice thin and wounded. "Selene, you don't really believe that, do you? Agnes mixes things up all the time."
She reached for my hand, as if proving she had nothing to hide.
I stepped away.
Her hand hung there for a second before she lowered it, tears gathering in her eyes.
Luca frowned. "Selene, don't take a servant's gossip seriously. Vanessa is coming with me because of the southern route. She handles those contacts now."
I nodded. "I know."
He studied my face, then seemed to relax. When he spoke again, that old confidence was back in his voice. "When I come back, I'll meet your family properly. It's about time they understood Moretti isn't a name they can look down on anymore."
I looked at him and almost smiled.
He still thought all I had behind me were a few distant Castellano relatives with old money and bad tempers.
"Fine," I said. "I'll wait for you to come back."