Three days after Mia came home, Luca asked for the lake house.
It was the first place we bought after our courthouse wedding, back when the Moretti name still felt like a family instead of a fortress. No guards, no cameras, just wide windows facing Lake Michigan and cheap shelves we built ourselves on the living-room floor. Luca had once burned his hand making coffee there and laughed until I kissed it better.
"Vivienne is afraid of the main house now," he said over breakfast. "The guards, the patrol cars, the noise. It all takes her back to that night. Nico needs somewhere quieter too. The lake house would be better for them."
He paused, braced for a fight. "If you're attached to it, I can arrange something else."
"They can have it," I said, closing Mia's medicine case.
Luca looked up, surprised. "Elena, that is generous of you."
He mistook my silence for peace. He often did. To him, no argument meant forgiveness. He never understood that I had stopped fighting because there was nothing left I wanted badly enough to beg for.
That afternoon, movers came for the keys. I was cutting dead roses in the garden when Vivienne stepped behind me.
"You're more practical than I expected," she said.
Without Luca nearby, her voice lost its helpless tremble. Her lipstick was brighter too, her eyes clearer.
I did not look up. "I don't know what you mean."
"First the house, then the divorce papers." She laughed softly. "Once everything is final, you and Mia will finally be out of the way."
The shears paused in my hand.
Vivienne smiled. "Don't look so shocked. Luca never reads documents when I'm calling him. You know that better than anyone."
"Dante has been dead for three years," I said.
"Exactly." She brushed her thumb over her wedding ring. "A dead man is perfect. He never comes home, and Luca will spend his life paying a debt he can never settle. Sometimes the nightmares are real. Sometimes they're just useful."
So I had not imagined it. She had turned Luca's guilt into a leash, and he had handed her the end of it himself.
That evening, Luca came home with a wedding binder.
"We only had a courthouse signing," he said, sitting beside me. "You once wanted vows, white roses, music, the whole thing. Elena, I owe you a real wedding."
I flipped through the pages: candles, a string quartet, flowers over the private chapel, fireworks over the lake. At twenty-three, I would have cried. At thirty, I knew the difference between being chosen and being compensated.
"It isn't necessary anymore," I said.
"It is." He covered my hand with his. "Let me give you this much. Let me fix at least one thing."
For a second, I saw the boy I had loved beneath the boss he had become. Then his phone lit up with Vivienne's name, and his fingers tightened around mine as if he already knew he would answer if she called again.
I looked at him, then nodded.
He thought I had agreed to a wedding.
I had agreed to a clean ending.
The estate spent two weeks preparing for a wedding that was already too late.
The chapel filled with white roses. The glass conservatory was set for dinner. Fireworks were scheduled over the lake. Luca recreated almost every detail I had once wanted when I was young enough to believe a wedding could prove a man remembered you.
Everyone said he had finally come to his senses. The old wives from allied families called it romantic. The captains called it smart. A happy wife made a stable house, and a stable house made Luca look steady again.
Only I knew the divorce was moving toward its final date at the same pace.
I signed off on menus, flowers, seating charts, and security details with the same calm hand I used to pack Mia's things at night. Luca mistook my cooperation for hope. In truth, every approval was just one more door closing behind me.
Three days before the ceremony, Vivienne had another breakdown. Someone had mailed an old article about the harbor shooting to the lake house, and she collapsed so badly that Luca spent the night there.
He came back at dawn, pale and tired. "Until the wedding, stay in the east guest house. This isn't a punishment. I just don't want more stress around Vivienne. Once the ceremony is over, everything will settle."
I looked at him. "You think I sent that clipping?"
He hesitated. "I don't know."
That was answer enough.
The east guest house sat only a few hundred yards from the main residence, but two extra guards appeared outside the door. Luca called it protection. When I tried to leave, they politely blocked the path and said Mr. Moretti preferred I rest until the wedding.
A velvet cage was still a cage.
The old me might have shouted until the house shook. The woman I had become only checked that our passports were still hidden in the drawer. I no longer needed to be believed by a man who doubted me whenever doubt made his life easier.
The night before the wedding, Mia slipped in through the back entrance with her stuffed rabbit under one arm. After I dried her hair, she sat on the bed and asked, "Mommy, if you marry Daddy again, do we still have to live here?"
"Do you want to?"
She shook her head. "I went to the chapel today. The florist said Daddy is giving you a big wedding because everyone knows he treats Aunt Vivienne better. The maid said you stayed too long, so he has to make it look nice."
The words did not cut. They landed somewhere already hollow.
Mia climbed into my lap and wiped my cheek with her small hand. "Don't cry. I love you. I'll stay with you."
At four in the morning, I changed out of the silk robe meant for the bridal suite and put on jeans, boots, and a trench coat. Mia shouldered her little backpack with two picture books, her rabbit, and her favorite hair clip inside.
She had memorized the back lock code by watching security. I had prepared everything else: a prepaid phone, cash withdrawn in small amounts, a rental car under an old client's name, copies of Mia's documents, and a route no one in the Moretti family knew.
I did not need revenge. I needed an exit that would hold.
Before sunrise, Mia and I were on a flight from O'Hare to Vancouver. As Chicago shrank beneath the clouds, she pressed her face to the window and asked, "Do we still have to wait for Daddy after this?"
"No," I said.
She leaned against me and fell asleep before the seatbelt sign went off. For the first time in years, I did not check my phone every few minutes. There was no apology I needed to hear, no explanation I needed to give, no last-minute promise I needed to believe.
At that same hour, Luca stood at the end of the aisle in the private chapel, dressed in black, surrounded by captains, allies, and old-money wives with careful smiles. To them, the wedding meant the Moretti household was steady again. To Luca, it was the start of a repair.
Then the bridal suite stayed closed.
The quartet repeated the same song until the family attorney stepped in with a sealed document.
"Mr. Moretti," he said, "Mrs. Moretti confirmed the final filing through counsel this morning. Your divorce is finalized."