
Bethroted To The Mafia Boss
Chapter 5
Chapter 5 edited
Alice’s POV
I was halfway through reviewing a contract when my office door burst open, slamming against the wall.
I flinched, my pen slipping from my fingers.
“Alice Smith,” a sharp female voice rang out, dripping with mock amusement. “You really do have some guts.”
A tall blonde woman strode into my office like she owned it. My secretary hurried in behind her, breathless.
“Ma’am, I tried to stop her...."
“It’s fine,” I said, even though my heart was already pounding. “You can go back to work.”
The door clicked shut, leaving the stranger and me alone.
I leaned back slowly, forcing calm into my posture.
“Good day. And who are you?”
She folded her arms, her gaze sweeping over me with open contempt.
“You don’t need to know me. Just stay away from my man.”
Confusion flickered through me. “What man? I’m not with anybody’s man.”
She laughed....loud, mocking, certain.
“You think you can fool me?”
Something about the certainty in her voice made my chest tighten. Still, irritation rose to the surface first.
“I don’t know what you’re talking about. Explain yourself, or I’ll call security. You can’t barge into my office and start throwing accusations. You’re embarrassing yourself… and you’re embarrassing me. And I hate to be embarrassed.”
She smiled wider, like she was enjoying this.
“Alice,” she said, her tone dropping into a warning, “stay away from my man. Consider this your only warning.”
Then she walked out and slammed the door.
The sound echoed in the room long after she left.
Silence pressed in.
I stared at the door, my jaw tight.
“What nerve,” I muttered.
“What audacity.”
But the anger didn’t sit cleanly in my chest.
It tangled with something else.
Something heavier.
I exhaled slowly and pressed my fingers to my temple.
Why did that feel so personal?
Why did it sting?
Her face lingered in my mind.
Familiar.
Too familiar.
I leaned forward, frowning.
“No… it can’t be.”
Then it clicked.
My eyes widened.
“Amelia Coke. The celebrity actress.”
I let out a disbelieving laugh, but it sounded hollow even to my own ears.
“No way. Her man? What would I be doing with her man?”
Yet unease crawled under my skin.
My hand moved to my phone almost on its own. I opened social media and scrolled.
Then I froze.
There it was.
A picture of Amelia and Victor.
They stood close, smiling at each other like they shared something private… something real.
My stomach twisted.
For a moment, I just stared.
A strange ache spread through my
chest...sharp and unwelcome.
Of course Victor had women.
I knew that.
Everyone knew that.
So why did seeing it… hurt?
I swallowed hard.
Why did it feel like I had just been humiliated over something I didn’t even choose?
Why did it feel like I had been dragged into a drama I never asked for?
Why did it feel like he had allowed this to happen to me?
“Oh no,” I whispered.
Understanding settled in slowly.
“Victor did this.”
My grip tightened on the phone.
“Victor caused me this embarrassment.”
But beneath the anger was something softer.
Something I didn’t want to name.
A quiet sting.
A bruised pride.
And, annoyingly… a flicker of disappointment.
I scoffed at myself and quickly shoved the feeling down.
Why should I care?
He wasn’t mine.
I didn’t even want this marriage.
Still… being publicly mistaken for the other woman didn’t feel good.
Not at all.
I locked my phone and leaned back, forcing my expression into something cool, controlled.
Slowly… a smile spread across my face.
Not a happy one.
A strategic one.
“Well,” I murmured, folding my hands on the desk, “I just might have found exactly what I need to change my father’s mind about this whole marriage.”
I walked through the quiet house, my heart heavier with every step, until I found Dad in his study. Papers were spread across his desk, his glasses low on his nose as always.
“Hi, Dad.”
He looked up immediately, his face softening.
“How are you, my little pod?”
Despite everything, I smiled faintly at the nickname. It always made me feel five years old again.
“I was fine this morning,” I said, closing the door behind me, “but I’m not so sure now.”
His brows knitted together as he leaned back in his chair.
“What happened?”
I hesitated, rubbing my palms together.
“Dad… you won’t believe who came to my office today.”
“Who?”
“Amelia Coke. The celebrity actress.”
Recognition flashed across his face and he nodded.
“Oh, I know her. You made me watch some of her movies.” He gave a small amused huff. “Well, what did she want?”
I swallowed.
“She came to warn me to leave her man.”
Dad straightened slowly.
“Which man is she talking about?”
I stared at him, searching his face.
“Dad… who do you think she’s talking about?”
“I don’t know, Alice. You tell me.”
I exhaled shakily and pulled out my phone.
“Well… I asked her, but she refused to explain. She was so upset. She just stormed out of my office.”
My fingers trembled slightly as I unlocked the screen.
“Then I remembered something. I once stumbled on a picture while scrolling through social media. I saved it.”
I stepped closer and handed him the phone.
“Let me show you.”
“Okay.”
He adjusted his glasses and looked down. The photo showed Victor and Amelia standing close, smiling at each other like they shared some private joke.
“Dad…” My voice came out softer now. “Don’t they look so happy together?”
He handed the phone back slowly, confusion lining his face.
“I don’t understand what you’re trying to say, Alice.”
I felt my chest tighten.
“All I’m saying is… Victor and Amelia look happy together. So I don’t understand why Victor is so determined to marry me.”
Dad’s expression hardened slightly, the warmth leaving his eyes.
“Alice, we’ve already talked about this. Victor wants to honour his father’s last wish, and so do I.” His voice turned firm. “Besides, the marriage is already a done deal.”
A cold wave ran through me.
“Dad… what do you mean?”
“I mean,” he said, folding his hands on the desk, “I already gave Victor the go-ahead to start preparations.”
My breath caught.
“He even asked about your inheritance,” Dad continued, as if discussing something ordinary. “And I plan on handing everything over to him. He’s going to be your husband soon.”
“Dad, no!” I stepped forward quickly, panic rising in my throat. “Don’t give my inheritance to him. I think… I think that’s what he truly wants.”
He tilted his head, studying me.
“Really?”
“Yes, Dad.” My voice shook now. “Think about it. Why rush the marriage? Why ask about my inheritance already?”
Dad’s face closed off completely.
“Alice,” he said, his tone final, leaving no room for argument, “there’s nothing to think about. You are marrying Victor. And that is final.”
The words landed like a door slamming shut.
I stood there, frozen, my fingers tightening around my phone as a knot formed in my chest.
After talking to my father and realizing his decision wasn’t going to change, frustration burned low in my chest like trapped smoke.
That left only one person.
Victor.
I stared at my phone for a long moment, my thumb hovering over his name. Calling him felt like stepping into a cage and locking it myself.
But I pressed dial anyway.
He answered almost immediately.
“Hello, Victor. Alice speaking,” I said, forcing my voice to stay steady.
A soft hum came from the other end, slow and knowing.
“Hmmm… my little Allie.”
The nickname slid over me like warm poison. My cheeks heated instantly, and I hated that reaction.
“Don’t call me that,” I snapped, gripping the phone tighter. “Anyways, we need to talk. Let’s meet at Fine Diner Restaurant near my place. Five p.m.”
Silence.
Not empty silence. The kind that feels like someone is studying you.
Then he spoke again, voice lower now.
“Little Allie… are you asking me out on a date?”
My jaw tightened. “No. Not a date. A talk, Victor. We need to talk.”
“At a dinner place,” he repeated, amusement curling in his tone. “You always did like dramatic settings.”
I exhaled sharply. “Victor....."
“Alright,” he cut in smoothly. “Five p.m.”
Relief barely had time to touch me before he added, softer… almost possessive:
“And little Allie… wear yellow.”
I frowned. “What....”
“You’ve always looked good in yellow,” he continued, voice dipping into something darker. “Soft. Bright. Easy to spot in a crowd.”
A chill ran down my spine.
Easy to spot.
Before I could respond, the line clicked dead.
I lowered the phone slowly, my heartbeat louder than the quiet room around me.
This is going to be harder than I thought.
You’ve always looked good in yellow.
The words replayed in my head, tangled between warmth and warning. Butterflies stirred in my stomach, but they weren’t gentle anymore. They felt sharp. Dangerous.
Why does he remember things like that?
I pressed a hand to my stomach, annoyed at my own reaction.
This is not how I’m supposed to feel.
Victor isn’t just a man from my past anymore.
He’s calculated. Controlled. And far too confident for someone walking into a forced marriage.
Which means he wants something.
And I need to know what it is.
Only then can I find leverage.
I refuse to enter this marriage blindly.
I need weapons.
Not knives. Not guns.
Secrets. Weaknesses. Truth.
Something that can shake Victor the way he keeps unsettling me.
But how do I find those weapons?
My eyes dropped back to my phone.
Maybe… I don’t start by fighting him.
Maybe I start by letting him think I’m harmless.
And then I watch.