
Betrayed For A Fake Heir: The Wife's Exit
At the auction, my husband raised his paddle and bid five million dollars on the only keepsake I had left of my dead mother.
But he didn't buy the sapphire necklace for me.
He handed the velvet box to his pregnant mistress, Mia, right in front of the entire New York underworld.
When I reached for it, Mia faked a stumble.
Dante moved with the speed of a predator. He shoved me hard to clear space for her.
My body slammed into a marble pillar, shattering my hip, while he scooped her up and carried her out, stepping over my dress without a single glance.
That was only the beginning.
He forced me to drain my blood to save her during a false emergency.
He exiled me to a freezing cabin with no heat, leaving me to be buried alive in an avalanche while he comforted her over a lie.
Lying in the hospital bed after surviving the snow, I realized I no longer hated him.
Hate is passion. Hate implies he still matters.
I felt nothing but a cold, heavy silence.
So when he finally left the house to hunt down the truth about Mia’s baby, I didn't wait for his apology.
I left my wedding ring on the bathroom counter.
I dropped my phone into a sewer grate.
By the time the Dragon of New York realized his wife was gone, I was already in Seattle, painting a new life where monsters couldn't find me.
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Chapter 2
The ink on the divorce papers was barely dry when I stepped into the foyer of the mansion.
The air smelled of lemon polish and old money-sharp, sterile, and suffocating. My hip was a throbbing canvas of purple and black bruises, carefully concealed beneath the heavy wool of my sweater.
Dante was in the living room, commanding a small army of movers who were hauling boxes stamped with Hermès and Chanel logos into the guest wing.
Mia was perched on the sofa, nursing a bowl of strawberries. She offered me a saccharine smile the moment I appeared.
"Oh, Serena," she said, her mouth stained red. "Dante insisted. He said the stairs in my apartment were simply too dangerous for the heir."
Dante turned to face me.
Exhaustion had etched deep grooves around his eyes. Being a Don meant running an empire built on blood and coin, but lately, he seemed to expend all his reserves managing the volatile moods of his mistress.
His gaze dropped to the envelope in my hand.
"What is that?" he asked.
I tossed it onto the coffee table. It slid across the polished mahogany surface and came to a rest directly in front of Mia.
"My resignation," I stated flatly.
Dante's brow furrowed, a storm gathering in his eyes.
"Don't start this again, Serena. We talked about this. Once the child is born, she leaves. It is a business arrangement."
"Business." I let the word hang in the air, tasting its bitterness.
"Was standing in the rain for three days outside my father's gate ten years ago just business? Was swearing on your life that I was your only weakness... was that business too?"
"Sign it," I demanded.
Mia picked up the documents, scanning them with a gleam of triumph in her eyes. She pulled a pen from her purse and held it out to him.
"Here," she urged softly. "Maybe it's for the best, Dante. She's clearly unstable. The stress isn't good for the baby."
Dante slapped the pen out of her hand.
"Enough!" he roared.
The movers froze in place. Dante stalked toward me, his looming shadow swallowing me whole.
"You are my wife," he snarled, his voice low and dangerous. "You don't get to quit. You belong to me. That is the vow."
He grabbed my arm, his fingers digging into the exact spot he had bruised yesterday. I didn't flinch. I didn't blink. I simply stared up at him, seeing a stranger wearing my husband's face.
"I need to go out," I said.
"Where?" he demanded.
"Away from here."
I wrenched my arm free and turned toward the door. He followed me, just as he always did when he felt his control slipping.
"I'll drive you," he said, his tone leaving no room for argument. "You're not going anywhere alone."
We climbed into his armored SUV. The silence inside was suffocating, heavy with unsaid words. He drove aggressively, weaving through the New York traffic, his knuckles white against the leather steering wheel.
He was angry that I wasn't bending. He was used to me breaking.
His phone rang. A specific, priority ringtone.
He answered on the first ring.
"Mia?"
His voice softened instantly, a tenderness I hadn't heard in years.
I watched the rain streak against the bulletproof glass, blurring the city lights.
"What? Pain? Where?"
He slammed on the brakes. The heavy vehicle screeched to a halt.
We were in a desolate neighborhood, blocks away from safety, surrounded by graffiti-tagged walls and boarded-up windows.
"I have to go back," he said, turning to me with wild eyes. "She's having cramps."
I looked at him, incredulous.
"You're kicking me out?"
"Serena, it's an emergency. The heir..."
"Get out," he snapped.
It wasn't a request.
I opened the door. The rain hit me like a physical slap, cold and unforgiving. I stepped onto the curb, icy water soaking through my shoes instantly.
"Call a car," he shouted, already shifting the gear into reverse.
He didn't wait to see if I had my phone. He didn't wait to see if I was safe.
He spun the massive car around and sped off, his taillights fading into the storm.
I didn't call a car. I had no phone. I had no wallet.
So I walked.
I walked for hours. I walked until my bones shook and my teeth chattered so hard they ached.
I trudged all the way to City Hall, only to find the heavy doors locked for the night. With nowhere else to go, I walked back.
When I finally stumbled into the mansion, I was burning up. My head swam in a dizzying haze, and my throat felt as though it were filled with shards of glass.
I dragged myself up the stairs to the master suite.
The door to the panic room-now converted into Mia's suite-was slightly ajar.
I heard a voice. Dante's voice.
Soft. Loving.
He was reading Goodnight Moon.
I leaned against the wall, sliding down as my legs finally gave out.
I listened to my husband read a bedtime story to another woman's belly while I lay on the floor, shivering in my wet clothes, burning with a fever he had caused.
I closed my eyes.
And I let the darkness take me.