Nora POV
On the morning of the second day, I baited the trap.
I sat at the vanity in the guest room, weighing a small black velvet box in my palm. Inside sat the Marino Signet Ring.
It was more than an heirloom; it was the crown, passed down from Don to Don for four generations. Lucien had given it to me for safekeeping during the war with the Russians last year. He said as long as I had it, his power was safe.
He had forgotten to ask for it back.
I tucked the folded divorce papers underneath the ring, snapping the box shut.
I walked downstairs. Lucien was in the dining room, nursing an espresso. Weariness was etched into his features, but when he saw me, his face lit up.
"How are you feeling?" he asked.
"Better," I said.
I placed the box on the table in front of him.
"What is this?"
"An anniversary gift," I said. "But you can't open it until tomorrow. I want it to be a surprise."
He smiled-that arrogant, devastating smile that used to bring me to my knees. He picked up the box, weighing it in his hand.
"You spoil me, Donna," he said. "I will put it in the safe."
He stood up to kiss me.
Then, the intercom buzzed.
"Sir," the gate guard's voice crackled over the speaker, tight with panic. "We have a situation. It's... Miss Vittori. She's hysterical."
Lucien froze. His eyes darted to me.
"Handle it," he barked at the intercom. "Send her away."
"She says it's an emergency, Boss. She says... she says she has medical records."
Lucien's face went ashen.
I stood very still.
"I'll deal with this," he said, turning to me. "Go upstairs, Nora. Please."
"Why?" I asked calmly. "Is my sister okay?"
"Just go!" he snapped.
He stormed out to the garden.
I didn't go upstairs. I went to the window overlooking the driveway.
I saw Sophia. She was crying, her makeup smeared into jagged lines. She was waving a manila envelope. Lucien was trying to quiet her, dragging her toward the rose bushes, away from the house.
I opened the window just a crack.
"...nine weeks!" Sophia screamed. "Look at it! It's a boy, Lucien! A son!"
The earth didn't just stop; it shattered.
A son.
I watched Lucien. He stopped dragging her. He took the envelope. He stared at the papers.
His posture changed. The anger evaporated, instantly replaced by something primal. Awe.
He looked at Sophia's stomach. He reached out, his hand hovering over her belly with trembling reverence.
I touched my own flat stomach. The doctors had told me it was unlikely I could conceive due to the stress and a hormonal imbalance. Lucien had always told me it didn't matter. He said we were enough.
He lied.
He looked at Sophia like she was the Holy Grail. She carried the bloodline. She carried the future.
"Get Dr. Rossi," Lucien yelled to his guards. "Now! Get her in the car. Gentle!"
Sophia was sobbing, but I saw the smirk she flashed at the house. She knew I was watching.
Lucien helped her into the car. He looked protective. He looked like a father.
He turned back to the house, pulling out his phone. He dialed me.
I let it ring twice before answering.
"Nora," he said, breathless. "I have to go. The Romanos are moving on the docks. It's war."
"War," I repeated.
"Yes. I might be gone for a few days. Stay inside. Lock the doors."
"Okay," I said. "Be safe."
"I love you," he said.
"Goodbye, Lucien."
I hung up.
He got into the car with her.
That afternoon, my phone buzzed. An unknown number.
A picture. An ultrasound. And a second photo-Lucien kissing Sophia's stomach in the back of the car.
Text: He finally has a real woman. Don't wait up.
I stared at the screen. I didn't feel pain anymore. I felt cold. Surgical.
I spent the next forty-eight hours systematically erasing Eleonora Marino.
I burned my journals in the fireplace. I shredded my photos. I wiped the laptop. I packed a single suitcase with plain clothes, cash, and my passport.
I left the diamonds. I left the furs. I left the wedding ring on the nightstand.
Departure Day arrived.
It was raining. Fitting.
Sophia texted again: It's a boy. He's going to legitimize us. You're just a placeholder, Nora.
I typed a reply.
Congratulations. You can have the life you so desperately want. I hope it's worth it.
I hit send. Then I took the SIM card out of my phone and snapped it in half.
The extraction team was waiting in a black van two streets over. I walked out the service entrance. The guards were changing shifts-a schedule loop I had discovered three years ago.
I slipped into the van.
"Go," I said.
As we drove past St. Mary's Cathedral, the traffic slowed.
I looked out the tinted window.
Lucien and Sophia were coming down the steps. She was wearing white-a cream suit. He was holding an umbrella over her, shielding her from the rain. He looked attentive.
He was ushering her into his armored car.
Suddenly, a gust of wind caught the umbrella, jerking it back. He looked up.
His eyes locked onto the passing van.
He couldn't see me through the blackout tint. But he stared right at where I was sitting. He frowned, a look of confusion crossing his face. He mouthed a name.
Nora?
I turned my head away.
I didn't look back.
Lucien POV
The rain was relentless, hammering against the armored windshield of the SUV like shrapnel.
A knot of unease had been tightening in my gut all morning, a primitive warning system I had learned never to ignore.
I stared at a black van that had just merged past us. It was nondescript, ordinary-invisible to the untrained eye. But for a split second, a strange tension seized my chest. A magnetic snap. It felt as if a piece of my own soul was being dragged away in that vehicle.
"Lucien?" Sophia whined from the seat beside me. "You're getting wet. Get in."
I glanced down at her. She was preening, rubbing her stomach with a performative tenderness that made my teeth ache.
"Shut up," I muttered.
I climbed in and slammed the door, sealing out the storm. Immediately, I pulled out my phone and dialed Nora.
Straight to voicemail.
I dialed again. Voicemail.
"She's probably sleeping," Sophia said, checking her reflection in the tinted window. "Or maybe she's finally realized she's irrelevant."
I turned on her with the speed of a striking cobra, grabbing her jaw in a vice grip.
"One more word," I hissed, my voice dropping to a lethal whisper, "and I will cut that tongue out. You are a vessel for my heir. That is the only reason you still draw breath."
She paled, shrinking back against the expensive leather, her eyes wide with fear.
I released her and dialed the estate.
"Where is my wife?" I demanded the second the line connected.
"Sir... the Donna... she is not in her room."
"Check the garden."
"We checked everywhere, Sir. It's the house... it feels hollow."
"What do you mean, hollow?"
"Her closet. It is full, but... the personal things. The photos. They are gone."
The phone slipped from my hand. It hit the floor of the car with a dull, final thud.
Gone.
Not taken. Gone.
"Drive!" I roared at the driver, the panic finally clawing its way up my throat. "Get me back to the estate! Now!"
"But the doctor appointment-" Sophia started.
"Get out," I said.
"What?"
"Get out of the car!"
I shoved the door open and pushed her out into the downpour. She stumbled onto the wet asphalt, screaming my name in disbelief.
"Take her to the safe house," I barked at the trailing security detail. "Lock her in."
I slammed the door. "Drive!"
We tore through the city, the engine screaming as we blurred past traffic. I ran three red lights, indifferent to the chaos we left in our wake.
When we screeched through the estate gates, I didn't wait for the car to stop fully. I jumped out, my boots skidding on the wet stone, and sprinted into the house.
"Nora!"
Silence answered me. A heavy, suffocating silence.
I ran up the stairs, taking them two at a time. I burst into the master bedroom.
The bed was made. Perfectly smooth. Military tight. And cold.
I ran to the closet. Her dresses were there. The furs I bought her. The jewels. All there.
But the small things-the wooden comb she loved, the old sweater she wore when she studied-were missing.
She hadn't been kidnapped. Kidnappers take the person. They don't let them pack.
I walked to the safe. It was slightly ajar, a deliberate message.
My heart hammered against my ribs like a trapped bird desperate for flight.
I pulled the heavy steel door open.
There, sitting on the velvet shelf, was the black box she had given me two days ago.
An anniversary gift.
My hands shook as I opened it.
The Marino Signet Ring gleamed up at me. The symbol of my authority. The one thing I told her to guard with her life.
Underneath it was a folded document.
I unfolded it.
Petition for Dissolution of Marriage.
Signed. Eleonora Vittori.
She had dropped the Marino name.
I fell to my knees. The paper crushed in my fist. A sound tore from my throat, a guttural roar of agony that echoed off the walls like a wounded animal.
She left me.
She knew. She knew everything.
"Boss!"
Giuseppe, my Consigliere, ran into the room, followed by a tech specialist. Giuseppe looked pale. He was holding a plastic evidence bag.
Inside was a smashed phone.
"We recovered it from the roadside," Giuseppe said quietly. "Just before the GPS signal died. It was where the extraction van was spotted on traffic cams."
"Extraction?" I whispered, the word tasting like ash. "Who took her?"
"No one took her, Boss," the tech guy said, his voice trembling. "She hired a private contractor. Ghost Protocol. We can't track her."
"Recover the data," I said, standing up. My voice was dead, devoid of humanity. "Now."
The tech plugged the smashed remains into his tablet. He worked furiously for a minute, sweat beading on his forehead.
"Most is corrupted," he said. "But the last incoming messages... they were restored."
He turned the screen to me.
I looked.
My blood turned to ice.
Screenshots. Ultrasound photos. A picture of me kissing Sophia's stomach.
And the texts.
He finally has a real woman.
It's a boy. You're just a placeholder.
Sophia.
The realization hit me with the force of a freight train.
Nora didn't leave because I worked too much. She didn't leave because she stopped loving me.
She left because my mistress taunted her with my betrayal.
Sophia had driven my wife away.
I looked at the text again. I carry the Marino Heir.
A dark, cold calm settled over me. It was the calm of the executioner.
"Giuseppe," I said.
"Yes, Boss?"
"Bring the car around."
"Where are we going?"
I picked up the Signet Ring and slid it onto my pinky finger. The gold was heavy. Cold. It felt less like jewelry and more like a shackle.
"To the safe house," I said.
I walked out of the room, leaving the divorce papers on the floor.
"I need to have a word with the mother of my child."
Nora was gone.
But someone was going to pay.