Chapter 5

The following morning, the air in the foyer was heavy, suffocated by the looming departure.

Dante stood near the door, a briefcase gripping his hand, looking every inch the king preparing to leave his castle.

"I am going to New York for the Commission meeting," he said, his voice clipping through the silence. "I will be gone for three days."

He looked down at me.

I was on my knees, clad in a simple, coarse grey uniform, scrubbing the marble floor. I made myself small, invisible.

"Elena is in charge," he continued, his gaze boring into the top of my head. "Do not test her."

I didn't look up. I focused on the swirling pattern of the marble.

"Safe travels, Don Moretti."

He hesitated. I could feel his irritation radiating off him like heat. The formality irked him. He didn't want a servant; he wanted me to beg. He wanted the old Sera, the one who would have clung to his lapels, eyes wide with worry, pleading with him to stay safe.

But that Sera was dead. She had died in the cold dark of the cellar.

Without another word, he turned and left. The heavy door clicked shut, sealing my fate for the next seventy-two hours.

Elena wasted no time.

She sat at the head of the dining table for lunch, posturing like a queen on a stolen throne. She rang the little silver bell, the sound sharp and demanding.

"Clear the table," she ordered.

I stood up, wiping my damp hands on my apron, and walked to the table. I reached for her half-eaten bowl of tomato bisque.

Just as my fingers brushed the porcelain, she flicked her wrist.

The bowl crashed to the floor.

Porcelain shattered with a violent crack. Thick, red bisque splattered across the pristine white rug, looking disturbingly like an arterial spray.

"Oh dear," she said, her voice dripping with mock sympathy, her eyes dancing with malice. "You are so clumsy. Clean it up. On your knees."

I stared at her for a heartbeat. Leo was watching from the next chair, grinning as he chewed on a chocolate bar, his face smeared with sugar.

Slowly, I knelt. I began to pick up the larger, jagged shards.

Leo jumped off his chair. He scrambled over, his movements quick and erratic, and before I could brace myself, he shoved me hard.

I fell forward.

My hands slammed down onto the jagged porcelain.

Pain sliced through my palms, hot and sharp. Blood bloomed instantly, dark and rich, mixing with the red soup until I couldn't tell where the food ended and I began.

I gasped, sitting back on my heels, breathless. Shards of fine china were embedded deep in my skin, glistening under the chandelier light.

Leo laughed, clapping his sticky hands. "Mommy, look! She's bleeding!"

Elena sipped her wine, unbothered. "That is what happens when you are useless, sweetie."

Something snapped.

It wasn't a loud snap. It wasn't a scream. It was a quiet, metallic click in the back of my mind, like the safety being flicked off a gun.

I stood up.

Blood dripped from my hands, hitting the pristine floor with a rhythmic *tap, tap, tap*.

I walked toward Elena.

She faltered. The dead, hollow look in my eyes must have finally pierced her arrogance, because she set her wine glass down with a tremble.

"What are you doing?" Her voice pitched higher. "Back off! Or I will tell Dante you attacked me again!"

I leaned over the table. I placed my bloody, lacerated hands flat on the white tablecloth.

I pressed down, leaving two perfect, crimson handprints staining the linen.

"You think you have won," I whispered, the words scraping out of my throat. "You think because you have his ear, you have his soul. But you don't know Dante. You don't know what he does to things that lie to him."

"I'm not lying!" she screeched, shrinking back.

I smiled. It felt jagged, a broken thing on my face.

"Mutually Assured Destruction, Elena. That is where we are," I said softly. "You can play the Queen while the King is away. But when he comes back... make sure your story holds water. Because my silence is the only thing keeping you alive right now."

"Get out!" she screamed, pointing a shaking finger at the door. "Get out of my sight!"

I turned and walked away, leaving the blood and the fear behind me.

I went to the servant's quarters. I sat on the narrow cot and pulled the shards out of my hands with tweezers, stifling every whimper. I wrapped the wounds in clean bandages, pulling them tight.

Then, I knelt by the bed and pried up the hidden floorboard. I pulled out the burner phone Lorenzo's secretary had slipped me at the Gala.

One message blinked on the screen.

*The boat leaves at midnight on Friday. Be at the docks. Pier 4.*

Friday. That was the day Dante returned.

I looked at my bandaged hands. I looked at the grey uniform that marked me as property.

I had forty-eight hours.

I had forty-eight hours to burn his empire to the ground.

And I wasn't going to use fire. I was going to use the truth.

And then, I was going to vanish like smoke.

Chapter 6

Sera POV

Dante returned on a Friday, just as the sun began to bleed behind the Chicago skyline.

The house had been holding its breath for three days. The servants moved like shadows, afraid to disturb even the dust.

Elena lounged in the living room, flipping through a bridal magazine she had no business reading, while I polished the silverware in the dining room.

The front door opened. The heavy thud of boots on marble echoed through the foyer.

I didn't look up. Instead, I focused on the spoon in my hand, rubbing the silver until my distorted reflection stared back at me: a woman with hollow cheeks and dead eyes.

Dante walked in, smelling of jet fuel and cold air, and tossed his keys onto the console table with a sharp clatter.

"Welcome home, Dante," Elena cooed.

She was up instantly, floating toward him in a cloud of perfume, wrapping her arms around his neck.

He held her waist, but his eyes scanned the room until they landed on me.

I kept polishing.

Thomas, the butler, hurried in to take Dante's coat. He was an old man, flustered by the palpable tension.

"Good evening, Don Moretti. Good evening, Madam."

He nodded at Elena.

The air left the room.

Dante stiffened. He pushed Elena away—gently, but firmly—and looked at Thomas.

"Who did you just call *Madam*?"

Thomas paled. He looked between Elena and me, his hands shaking. "I—I meant Ms. Russo, sir. It was a slip of the tongue."

Elena let out a small, wounded sound. She pressed a hand to her chest, looking at Dante with wide, watery eyes.

"It's okay, Dante. I know my place," she whispered. "Sera reminds me of it every day. She tells the staff not to listen to me. She makes sure I know I'm just... a guest."

It was a lie so effortless it was almost art.

Dante turned to me. He crossed the room in three long strides and gripped the back of the chair I was standing next to.

"Is this true?" he asked, his voice low and dangerous.

I looked at the silver spoon. I looked at the lie. I looked at the exit that was only hours away.

"Does it matter?" I asked quietly.

"Answer me, Sera."

I finally looked at him. I saw the man I had worshipped for ten years, the man who used to braid my hair when I had nightmares. He was gone, replaced by this stranger who needed me to be the villain so he could justify his sins.

"I'm tired of fighting, Dante," I said. "I'm tired of being your wife."

He recoiled as if I had slapped him, and his eyes narrowed.

"You don't get to be tired," he spat. "You get to be obedient. Tonight is the Masquerade Ball. You will attend. You will stand in the back. And you will watch as I show this city what a real partner looks like."

He turned to Elena.

"Wear the red dress," he said softly. "The one I bought you in Milan."

I went to my room. I didn't cry. I didn't pack. I had nothing left to pack.

The ball was a sea of masks and diamonds. The orchestra played a waltz that sounded more like a funeral march.

I stood in the shadows near the kitchen entrance, wearing a plain grey dress that blended into the curtains.

Dante stood under the chandelier, looking like a god of war in his tuxedo. Elena was a blood-red stain by his side, laughing, touching his arm, preening under the gaze of the city's elite.

Guests whispered as they passed me. Some spilled champagne on my shoes; someone bumped my shoulder and didn't apologize. I was a ghost at my own funeral.

Dante tapped a spoon against his glass, and the room fell silent.

He raised a glass of scotch.

"To the future," he announced. "To loyalty. And to those who stand by us when the fire comes."

He looked down at Elena and pulled a velvet box from his pocket.

It wasn't a wedding ring—he wasn't that stupid yet. But it was a promise ring: a massive ruby surrounded by diamonds.

He slid it onto her finger.

The room erupted in applause as Elena kissed him—a performance for the ages.

Dante looked over her shoulder, searching for me in the shadows. He wanted to see my pain. He wanted to see me break.

I met his gaze. I lifted my chin. And I smiled.

It wasn't a happy smile. It was the smile of a prisoner who sees the gate left open.

A man in a waiter's uniform walked past me. He didn't look at me, but he deftly dropped a napkin on the side table.

I picked it up. Inside was a key card and a slip of paper:

*Pier 4. The boat leaves in twenty minutes.*

I didn't say goodbye. I didn't make a scene. I waited until Dante turned back to accept the congratulations of a senator.

I slipped through the kitchen doors, weaving past the busy chefs, and walked out the service entrance into the cool night air.

I took off my heels and left them on the pavement.

Then, I ran.

I ran toward the water, toward the dark, toward the silence. And for the first time in three years, I could breathe.

Chapter 7

Dante POV

The silence in the house was heavy. It wasn't the peaceful kind. It was the oppressive kind, the sort that pressed against your eardrums until they threatened to pop.

I sat in my study, staring at the stack of reports. Three days. It had been three days since the ball.

Sera was sulking. That was her new favorite pastime. She was hiding in the servant's quarters or the attic, nursing her wounded pride. She wanted me to come find her. She wanted me to drag her out and force her to apologize.

I wouldn't give her the satisfaction.

She needed to learn that her jealousy had consequences. She needed to understand that Elena was under my protection, and I wouldn't tolerate her petty vindictiveness.

"Let's go to the Hamptons," Elena had suggested the morning after the ball. "Just you, me, and Leo. Get away from the stress."

I had agreed. I needed a break from Sera's cold, dead eyes. I needed to punish her with my absence.

We spent three days on the coast. I took photos. I let Elena post them. *Family time,* the captions read. I wanted Sera to see them. I wanted her to feel the sting of exclusion.

We returned late on Tuesday. The house was dark.

I walked into the kitchen and sat at the island.

"Tea," I barked into the emptiness. "Earl Grey. Two sugars."

Usually, Sera would be there before the words left my mouth. She would have the kettle on. She would have my favorite mug waiting.

Nothing happened.

The house remained silent.

I slammed my hand on the counter. "Sera!"

Elena walked in, yawning. "She's probably asleep, Dante. Or ignoring you."

I stood up. Anger coiled in my gut. I walked to the servant's quarters in the east wing.

The door was unlocked. I pushed it open.

"Get up," I said. "I want my tea."

The room was empty.

The bed was made. The sheets were tight, undisturbed. No one had slept here.

I frowned. I checked the small closet. Her grey uniforms were hanging there.

I checked the bathroom. Dry.

"She must be in the attic," I muttered.

I climbed the stairs to the attic. It was locked from the outside, just as I had left it. I unlocked it.

Empty.

Dust motes danced in the beam of my flashlight. The bed was stripped.

A cold prickle of unease started at the base of my neck.

"Where the hell are you?" I whispered.

I went back downstairs and called the head of security.

"Where is my wife?"

Mario hesitated. "Sir? We haven't seen her since the ball. We thought she was with you."

My grip on the phone tightened until the plastic creaked. "You thought she was with me? Did you see her get in the car?"

"No, sir. But..."

"Find her," I roared. "Check the grounds. Check the guest house."

I hung up. She was playing games. She was hiding somewhere, trying to scare me. Trying to make me worry.

It wouldn't work.

I went to my office and pulled up her bank accounts. I had given her a black card. I had given her access to the household funds.

If she was gone, she would need money.

I logged in.

Last transaction: Three months ago. A grocery store.

Nothing since.

She hadn't touched a dime.

Elena walked in, holding a glass of wine. "Is she hiding?"

"She's gone," I said, staring at the screen.

Elena smiled, hiding it behind the rim of her glass. "Maybe she finally realized she doesn't belong here. Maybe she did us a favor."

I looked at Elena. For a second, her voice grated on my nerves.

"She has nowhere to go," I said. "She's an orphan. I am her world. She'll be back when she gets hungry."

I picked up the phone and dialed the bank.

"Freeze her cards," I ordered. "Cut off everything. When she tries to buy a sandwich, I want the card to decline. I want her to know who feeds her."

I hung up. I leaned back in my chair.

"You're playing a dangerous game, Sera," I said to the empty room. "But I always win."

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