There's an unwritten rule in the Chicago Outfit.
The Don never keeps a mistress for more than a hundred days.
When the hundred days are up, the women he’s finished with always take the money and leave quietly.
Once, someone asked him, unwilling to accept it: “Why?”
Santino Falcone smiled softly.“Because I love my wife.”
Everyone knew that his wife of seven years was his weak spot.
But this new mistress wouldn’t behave.Emboldened by his favor, she sent me a taunting text message.
“Arabella, isn’t your husband cute when he’s asleep in my arms?I’ve got plenty more photos. I can send them to you if you want.”
“I’m his one true love. If you know what’s good for you, you’ll step down and give me your place as his wife.”
I didn’t argue with her.Instead, I generously gave her my wedding ring.
Because what she didn't know was that I had gotten my memory back.
I was never the orphan Santino saved.
I am the long-lost princess of New York’s most powerful family, missing for seven years.
In three days, my brother Matteo’s armored motorcade will arrive in Chicago to take me home.
At the dinner party in the Falcone estate, Fiora held up her hand, showing off the ring symbolizing the Don’s wife on her ring finger to the socialites around her.
Exclamations erupted from the crowd, who then turned mocking glances toward me in the corner.
Santino sat at the head table, his gaze flickering over to me every now and then.
After soaking up all the flattery, Fiora picked up a glass of red wine and walked over to me.
Her gaze fell on my wrist.I wore an extremely rare jadeite bangle.
It was a birthday gift from Santino three years ago. Knowing I loved antiques, he had bought it at an auction for fifty million dollars.
Fiora let out a soft laugh and leaned deliberately close to my ear.
“Arabella, since you’ve already handed over the ring that symbolizes the Don’s wife, don’t you think it’s inappropriate for you to wear jewelry that belongs to the lady of the Falcone family?”
She reached out, trying to touch the bangle.
I took a step back.
Fiora took the opportunity to tilt the glass of red wine in her hand.The red liquid spilled all over my couture gown.
With a sharp clatter, the stemmed glass fell to the floor and shattered into countless pieces.
Fiora immediately covered the back of her hand, her eyes reddening at once, and large tears streamed down her face.
“Arabella, I just thought the bangle was pretty and wanted a look. If you didn’t want me to, you could’ve just said so… why did you push me?”
The music screeched to a halt.
All eyes were on us.
For the past seven years, any woman who dared to challenge me was thrown out of this estate without a second thought.
I once shoved a movie star's head into a freezing fountain in front of all of Chicago. She had tried to climb into Santino’s bed.
"What's wrong?" Santino pushed through the crowd, pulling Fiora into his arms.
He looked down at an extremely faint red mark on the back of Fiona's hand, his brows knitting together at once.
"Arabella! You're being jealous over nothing again!
His voice was filled with undisguised favoritism and blame.
I looked at the face I once loved more than life itself. A sharp pain shot through the depths of her heart.
I took a deep breath, holding back the soreness in my eyes.I didn't explain, nor did I lose my temper.I raised my hand and took off the bracelet I cherished so much.Under everyone's shocked stares, I held the bracelet out in front of Fiona.
"If you like it, it's yours. I just lost my balance earlier, sorry."
Santino froze stiff.
A flash of extreme astonishment crossed his eyes, and his frown deepened.
Fiora was also stunned, so much so that she forgot to keep crying.
I took out a handkerchief and dried the wine off my hands, then squatted down.I picked up the broken glass shards from the floor one by one with my bare hands and placed them into the waiter’s tray.When I finished, I stood up and looked at Santino.
“My dress is dirty. I’ll go upstairs to change first.”
I turned and walked toward the second floor, my back straight and rigid.Santino’s gaze remained fixed on my back the entire time.
Back in my room, I shut the door and finally let my legs give out. I slid down, my back against the wood.
The obsession, the love, the seven-year-long fight.
Today, it was finally over.
In the darkness, the phone screen lit up.
It was an encrypted message from my brother Matteo.
"Elite team arrives in Chicago in three days. Wait for me, Arabella.The Falcone family owes you.I will make them pay back tenfold, a hundredfold.
I stared at this message,my eyes burned with unshed tears.
The next second, the door was suddenly pushed open from the outside.
Santino strode in, his fierce eyes locking onto the phone in my hand.
He crossed the room in three long strides and snatched it from me.
The screen went dark at that exact moment.
He didn't try to unlock it. He just tossed it onto the expensive Persian rug.
He reached out, his fingers digging into my chin, forcing me to look up at him.
“Why did you stop making a scene downstairs just now?” Santino’s tone carried a scrutinizing edge.
I looked him straight in the eye, my voice completely flat.
“Didn’t you always complain that I had a bad temper and tell me to be more generous? I gave her both the ring and the bracelet. Isn’t this what you wanted?”
A flicker of complex emotion crossed Santino’s eyes.
He released my chin, wrapped his arms around my waist, and pulled me into his embrace.
He smelled faintly of tobacco and Fiora’s perfume.The mixture of the two scents made my stomach churn.
Santino lowered his head, his lips brushing against my ear.
"Arabella,I know you were wronged today.Fiora's brother, Carlo, died saving my life. He was my most loyal man. I have to take care of her."
"As long as you behave yourself, you will always have a place in the Falcone family. You are still the woman I, Santino, love the most."
He was making me a promise, in a condescending, charitable manner.
He thought I would be grateful for these words.
I looked at his confident face and felt a wave of sorrow.
Seven years.
He never knew me at all.
Just then,A rapid knock sounded on the door.
Fiora's delicate voice came through the door.
Santino, I'm having a panic attack! I saw Carlo—he's bleeding! Can you come stay with me?”
Without the slightest hesitation, Santino turned to leave the room.Just as he reached the door, he paused and looked back at me.
"There's a joint dinner with the Five Families tomorrow night. I'm taking Fiora," he said. "She's new to the city. She doesn't have anything that commands the room. That haute couture gown in your closet—have the tailor alter it for her tomorrow."
I stared at him in disbelief.
Five years ago, when he crowned me his Donna, he had a master tailor in Milan make that dress just for me.
The Falcone eagle crest was hand-embroidered into the black velvet skirt using pure gold thread and nine hundred and ninety-nine crushed diamonds.
It was my greatest honor, my absolute treasure. I never even let the maids touch it.
Once, a maid in the villa sneaked in to try it on. I put a bullet in her leg and had her thrown out of Chicago.
Santino even praised me for doing the right thing back then.
He said anyone who touched what was mine would die.
And now, he himself was asking me to give this dress to Fiora.
My nails dug into my palms until they almost bled.
I looked at his self-righteous expression and nodded slowly.
"Fine. I'll have it sent over tomorrow."
Santino gave me a long look, pushed the door open, and left.
Down the hall, I heard his soft whispers comforting Fiora. Then came the heavy thud of the door closing next door.
I picked up my phone, glanced at the date on it, and let out a deep breath.
Two more days until I was gone.
Santino, seven years ago you pulled me out of a gang shootout and gave me a second life.
Over these seven years, I’ve taken bullets for you, eliminated traitors for you. With my talent for forgery, I built your entire underground art empire for you.
Santino, we don't owe each other a thing anymore.
The next morning.
I had the maid send that haute couture gown to Fiora's room.
Fiora made sure to leave her door wide open.
As I walked down the hall, I saw her twirling in front of the mirror. The gown was entirely wrong for her. It swallowed her whole.
She held a pair of sharp silver scissors. Without a second thought, she cut right into the skirt, slicing off the intricate diamond eagle—the ultimate symbol of the Falcone power.
"This gold embroidery is too heavy and old-fashioned," Fiora complained to the maid. "It needs to be shorter. Sexier."
The maid was shaking. She shot a terrified glance at me in the doorway and didn't dare say a word.
I didn't stop. I walked straight to the kitchen.
Santino drank hard last night. He suffers from severe stomach problems. Every time after a hangover, he needs a bowl of specially made herbal tea to soothe his stomach.
For seven years, I’ve personally brewed his herbal tea for him.
I stood by the stove, watching the dark liquid boil in the pot.
It would be the last time I ever made it for him.
I poured the tea into a bone-china cup and carried the tray to Santino's study.
The door was slightly ajar. Through the crack, I heard Santino talking to his Consigliere, Marco.
"Boss, didn't you push it too far this time?" Marco asked. "You took back the Donna ring. The bangle is destroyed. You even gave haute couture gown to Fiora. Arabella has been with you for seven years. She’d take a bullet for you. Are you really trying to drive her away?"
I froze in my tracks.
Santino's cold voice followed immediately.
"Where could she possibly go? She's an orphan who can't even remember her own past. She has nowhere to go but by my side."
"I've spoiled her far too much these past seven years, and her temper's only gotten worse. Fiora is emotionally unstable, and she must learn to back down."
"Once she's thoroughly learned her lesson and behaves herself, I'll naturally reserve a room for her and make sure she wants for nothing."
Marco sighed."By humiliating her like this, aren't you afraid she'll truly lose all hope?"
Santino let out a scornful sneer."Lose hope? Arabella's greatest skill in life is clinging to me like a vine. She can't leave me."
The tray tilted in my hands.
A few drops of scalding tea spilled onto the back of my hand.
The skin instantly blistered red.
But I didn't feel a thing.
I stared at the heavy wooden door for a second, then set the tray down on the console table in the hall.
I picked up the cup I’d spent two hours brewing and walked to the end of the corridor.
A pot of Santino's favorite black tulips sat by the window.
I flicked my wrist and poured the tea straight into the dark soil.
Right then, Fiora walked up to me. She was wearing the butchered dress.
She watched me empty the cup, a smug smirk twisting her lips.
"Arabella, Santino was just telling me that the master bedroom has better light and a nicer view. It would be good for my recovery."
She paused for effect. "He wants me to move in tonight. Shouldn't you be packing up your things to make room?"
The master bedroom of the Falcone estate. I had lived there for five years.
It was filled with traces of my life with Santino. Every inch of it breathed him.
I looked at Fiora's smug face and nodded.
"Fine. I'll pack now."
My calm acceptance seemed to bore her. The triumphant smirk on her face faltered. She opened her mouth to say more, but I was already walking away.
Back in the master bedroom, I looked around the space that had been mine for five years.
My paintings hung on the walls. Our photo sat on the desk. The closet was full of gowns he'd had made for me.
Everything here was a witness to the love we once shared.
And now, it would all belong to Fiora.
I took out a simple canvas bag. I packed a few paintbrushes, a passport, and my most precious pigments.
Nothing else. I didn't want any of it.
My phone vibrated.
A message from my brother, Matteo.
"All social traces of the 'Arabella' identity are being erased. Bank accounts, social security, all official records."
I carried the canvas bag out of the master bedroom and went straight to the storage room.
It was cold and damp, filled with the smell of mildew, but it was quiet.
Quiet enough to block out any sound I didn't want to hear.
I spread a thin blanket in a corner and sat down.