Follow
Chapters
Share
Annulled Love, Mafia's Fall: She Bulldozed All

Annulled Love, Mafia's Fall: She Bulldozed All

On my wedding night, I made a vow to Liam Gallo, the most feared man in New York. "If you ever betray me," I whispered, "I will vanish from your life as if I never existed." He laughed, thinking it was a romantic promise. It was an oath. Three years later, I discovered his betrayal. It wasn't just an affair; it was a public humiliation. His mistress, Ava, sent me photos of herself in my places, wearing jewelry he'd given me, taunting me with her presence in my life. And Liam let her. The final blow came at our Hamptons estate. I saw them together, Liam and a triumphant, pregnant Ava, in front of his inner circle. He was choosing her, his pregnant mistress, over his injured wife, demanding I apologize for upsetting her. In my own home, I was an obstacle. In my own marriage, I was a prop. The love I clung to for years finally died. Ava's texts confirmed it all, including a picture of an ultrasound captioned "Our baby," and another of her wearing the necklace he named "Maya's Dawn." So, on the morning after our anniversary party, I enacted my plan. I liquidated my assets, bulldozed the garden he planted for me, and served him divorce papers. Then, with a new identity, I walked out of the service exit and disappeared into the city, leaving the man who broke his vows to the wreckage of the life he destroyed.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 4

Maya POV: The first strike had to be silent. Over the past year, as the evidence of Liam’s affair with Ava mounted, I had begun to move my assets. It wasn’t a sudden liquidation but a quiet, methodical conversion. Stocks he had signed over to me were sold off in small, untraceable increments. The boutique hotel downtown was transferred into a holding company controlled by my mother. I was turning the gilded bars of my cage into cash, funneling it into the accounts prepared for my new life as Maya Evans. This wasn't a tantrum; it was a long-planned extraction. The "Maya's Dawn" necklace was the final piece. A week ago, I had it authenticated by a discreet appraiser. Yesterday, I sold it to a private international buyer through a proxy. The money was the last deposit into my escape fund. He hadn't noticed its absence yet. He was too busy. The weekend at the Hamptons estate was his theater, a stage set to reassert control after he sensed my withdrawal. He gathered his inner circle—his Consigliere, Marc Chen, and his most trusted Capos. They were all there with their wives, a perfect portrait of family and loyalty. But their eyes told a different story. They all knew about Ava. I could see it in the pitying glances from the wives and the smirks shared between the men. Their complicity was a poison in the air, thick and suffocating. I felt like I was in a den of snakes, and I was the only one without fangs. I spent the day by the pool, a fixed smile on my face, feeling the phantom weight of the necklace that was already gone. Liam played the part of the doting husband, bringing me drinks, touching my arm, his actions a performance for his men. I wasn't a person to them. I was a beautiful, fragile object that belonged to the Don. An object that was apparently causing him some trouble. As the sun bled across the horizon, painting the sky in bruised shades of orange and purple, a familiar wave of exhaustion washed over me. The effort of breathing in that toxic air was too much. "I have a headache," I murmured to Liam, the lie tasting like ash. "I'm going to lie down for a bit." He barely glanced at me, already deep in conversation with Marc. "Fine," he said, a dismissive wave of his hand. The relief I felt walking away from them was so profound it almost made me dizzy. I was utterly alone. And for the first time, it didn't feel like a weakness. It felt like a foundation.