
His Mafia Queen, My Substitute Heart
My perfect marriage to Don Dante Moretti, the most powerful man in the New York mob, ended the moment my father died. I was twenty-four, pregnant with his heir, and I believed I was his queen.
But for two days, while I planned a funeral alone, my husband was unreachable. Then a friend sent me a photo. Dante in London, his hand tangled in the hair of the woman beside him.
It was my cousin, Valentina.
He came home with lies about a dead phone and a difficult summit. That night, I found his private journal, and my world disintegrated.
He had married me because I had "Valentina’s eyes." I was a substitute.
Our unborn child wasn't a product of love. It was a project. A girl he planned to name Elena, after Valentina, calling her a "perfect, tiny piece of the woman I can never truly possess."
I wasn't his wife. I was a stand-in. The love I felt for him didn't just die. It was murdered.
The next morning, I slid a folder across the kitchen island. "Donation forms," I said. He didn't even look before scrawling his signature on what were actually our finalized divorce papers.
His arrogance was my weapon. As he slept beside me that night, smelling of lies and my cousin, I made an appointment at a private clinic. He wanted a legacy?
I would give him nothing.
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Chapter 1
My perfect marriage to Don Dante Moretti, the most powerful man in the New York mob, ended the moment my father died. I was twenty-four, pregnant with his heir, and I believed I was his queen.
But for two days, while I planned a funeral alone, my husband was unreachable. Then a friend sent me a photo. Dante in London, his hand tangled in the hair of the woman beside him.
It was my cousin, Valentina.
He came home with lies about a dead phone and a difficult summit. That night, I found his private journal, and my world disintegrated.
He had married me because I had "Valentina’s eyes." I was a substitute.
Our unborn child wasn't a product of love. It was a project. A girl he planned to name Elena, after Valentina, calling her a "perfect, tiny piece of the woman I can never truly possess."
I wasn't his wife. I was a stand-in. The love I felt for him didn't just die. It was murdered.
The next morning, I slid a folder across the kitchen island. "Donation forms," I said. He didn't even look before scrawling his signature on what were actually our finalized divorce papers.
His arrogance was my weapon. As he slept beside me that night, smelling of lies and my cousin, I made an appointment at a private clinic. He wanted a legacy?
I would give him nothing.
Chapter 1
Isabella POV:
My perfect marriage ended the moment my father died.
At least, that’s when the first crack appeared in the beautiful, gilded cage Don Dante Moretti had built around me. Before that, my life was a fairy tale written in blood and diamonds. I was twenty-four, the wife of the most powerful man in the New York Cosa Nostra, and I believed I was the center of his universe.
Dante was magnetic. He commanded rooms with a glance, his presence a mix of raw power and predatory grace that made men fear him and women desire him. To the world, he was the Don of the Moretti family, a ruthless leader whose empire was built on the bones of his enemies. His name was a weapon. But to me, he was the man who brought me white peonies every week, who traced the line of my jaw with a calloused thumb and whispered that I was his queen.
Our beginning was a whirlwind, a blur of stolen moments in art galleries and passionate nights in his penthouse overlooking the city that was his kingdom. He had pursued me with a relentless intensity that left me breathless. He made me feel seen, cherished, owned. I mistook his possession for love. I wrapped myself in his control and called it safety.
I loved him with a purity that bordered on foolishness. I gave him my body, my heart, and my unwavering trust.
And I was pregnant with his child, our first. The heir to the Moretti throne. I thought we had everything.
Looking back, the signs were there, small and unsettling, like hairline fractures in a masterpiece. The way his eyes would sometimes glaze over when he looked at me, as if he were seeing someone else. The fleeting moments of coldness that would flicker in his gaze before being replaced by that familiar, burning adoration. I dismissed them all. I chose to be blind.
Then my mother’s call came, her voice shattering over the phone, thick with a grief so raw it stole the air from my lungs. “Bella… it’s your father. His heart… it just gave out.”
Panic seized me, cold and suffocating. My father. My gentle, kind father who taught me how to develop my first photograph. Gone. My first instinct was to call Dante. I needed him.
I called his cell. It went straight to voicemail.
I called again. And again. Ten, fifteen, twenty times. Each unanswered ring was a drop of ice water on my skin. His assistant, Luca, was polite but firm. “Mr. Moretti is in an important summit in London. His phone is off. It is the family’s rule—Omertà, silence and discretion above all.”
For two days, a black hole of silence. For two days, I planned my father’s funeral alone, the weight of my grief pressing down on me, on the small life growing inside me.
On the third day, a message buzzed on my phone. It wasn’t from Dante. It was from my friend, Chloe. There was no text, just a single image.
It was a candid shot, taken from across a London street. Dante stood outside a high-end restaurant, his head bent low, his lips almost touching the ear of the woman beside him. His hand, the one that wore the heavy gold Moretti family ring, was tangled in her dark, silky hair.
The woman was laughing, her head tilted back in a gesture of pure, unguarded intimacy.
It was my cousin. Valentina Moretti. The family’s Consigliere.
The world didn't just crack. It disintegrated. The air turned to glass in my lungs, and every breath was a shard of pain. My perfect life, my perfect husband… it was all a lie.
He finally came home that night, smelling of expensive cologne and transatlantic travel. He wrapped his arms around me, his voice a low murmur against my hair. “My love, I’m so sorry. The summit was a nightmare. My phone died. I came as soon as I heard.”
I looked up at his face, the handsome features etched with what I now saw was performative concern. For the first time, I didn't see my husband. I saw a stranger.
The next morning, while he showered, I took a folder from my art portfolio and placed it on the marble kitchen island.
He came out, knotting a silk tie, looking every bit the Don of New York. “What’s this?” he asked, glancing at the papers.
“Just the donation forms for the museum’s new wing,” I said, my voice steady, a stranger’s voice. “They need your signature.”
He didn’t even look at them. He trusted me. He believed in my devotion, my blindness. He picked up a pen, scrawled his powerful signature on the bottom line, and pushed the folder back to me. His arrogance was my only weapon.
“Good girl,” he said, and then his hand came to rest on my belly, a warm, heavy weight that made my skin crawl. “We have to take care of our little one. Our legacy.”
My heart felt like it was being squeezed by an invisible hand.
That night, I couldn't sleep. I wandered the cavernous penthouse, a ghost in my own home. I heard him in his study, his voice low and intimate. I crept closer, the thick oak door slightly ajar.
“…I know, Lena,” he was saying, his voice softer than I’d ever heard it. “She needed me, but this was more important. Consolidating our hold on the London ports… that’s for us.”
Lena. The name was a punch to the gut. Valentina’s middle name was Elena.
I remembered then, a memory I had buried. Our first meeting. It wasn’t a chance encounter at a gallery. Thugs had tried to snatch my camera bag, and out of nowhere, Dante had appeared, a brutal, beautiful savior, dispatching them with cold efficiency. He had orchestrated it. He admitted it later, calling it a grand romantic gesture to get my attention. It wasn't romantic. It was a strategy.
My feet carried me to a part of the study I rarely entered—a small, private annex behind a bookshelf. His safe room. It was unlocked. Inside, the wall wasn't lined with ledgers or weapons. It was a shrine. Dozens of photos of Valentina. Valentina as a girl, as a teenager, as the stunning, powerful woman she was today.
And on his desk, a leather-bound journal. My hands shook as I opened it.
His neat, sharp handwriting filled the page. The entry was dated four years ago, right after we met.
*Her name is Isabella, but she has Valentina’s eyes. The same dark fire. When she looks at me, I can pretend it’s her. Valentina chose the family over me, she chose power. Fine. I will have it all. I will have the power, and I will have a wife who looks at me with my Lena’s eyes.*
I flipped forward, my vision blurring with tears.
*She’s pregnant. It must be a girl. We will name her Elena. A perfect, tiny piece of the woman I can never truly possess. She will have her mother's face but Valentina's name. She will be mine.*
The world swam. I stumbled back, my hand flying to my mouth to stifle a sob. I wasn't his wife. I was a substitute. My baby… our baby wasn’t a product of love. It was a tool. A proxy for his sick, twisted obsession.
The shock gave way to something else. A cold, hard clarity. The love I felt for him didn’t just die. It was murdered.
He wanted a legacy? He wanted a child to be a monument to his obsession?
I pulled out my phone, my fingers moving with a purpose that felt foreign and yet utterly right. I found the number for a private clinic. As he slept beside me, smelling of lies and my cousin, I finalized the appointment. I would give him nothing.
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9.0
I shattered my knee jumping in front of a silver bullet meant for him.
The poison seeped into my marrow, putting my wolf into a coma and leaving me crippled.
I thought my sacrifice would secure his love forever.
Instead, five years later, Brennan stood in a warehouse while a Rogue held a silver-laced dagger to my throat.
Beside me sat Debbi, his mistress—a spy who had staged the whole kidnapping.
"You can only save one," the kidnapper sneered.
Brennan didn't even hesitate.
He looked me in the eye, his gaze cold and devoid of the bond we once shared.
"I choose Debbi," he said.
He walked out with her in his arms, leaving his Fated Mate to bleed out on the concrete floor.
As the blade dug into my skin, I felt the mate bond snap.
He thought I died in the explosion that followed.
He spent weeks howling in grief when he finally realized Debbi was a traitor and he had killed the only woman who truly loved him.
But he was wrong.
I didn't die.
A federal agent pulled me from the fire, and the trauma didn't kill my wolf—it woke her up.
A year later, Brennan walked into a small bistro in Italy, looking for redemption.
He fell to his knees when he saw me standing there, healed and glowing with the aura of a White Wolf.
"Alyssa," he wept, reaching for me. "I'm so sorry. I'll do anything."
I looked him dead in the eye, my gaze icy blue.
"Get out," I said. "We don't serve traitors here."

8.6
Ten days before our scheduled wedding, my fiancé, Capo Leo Gallo, came to my family's estate in the pouring rain.
He didn't come to comfort me over my parents' recent deaths. He came to tell me that his mistress, Angelica, would remain by his side and hold the real power in our home. I was to be his wife in name only.
He wanted to publicly humiliate me and steal my family's Brooklyn docks.
In my past life, I didn't realize Leo and his family had actually orchestrated the brutal ambush that left my parents dead in a pool of blood.
I endured his insults, only to be locked away in a gilded cage while they used my six-year-old brother, Luca, as a hostage.
They drained my mother's trust fund, elevated his mistress to rule my home, and eventually sent my little brother and me to our miserable graves.
They thought I was just a powerless orphan they could easily crush.
They thought I didn't know the absolute truth behind the massacre that ruined my family and crippled the Don's eldest son, Damien Moretti.
Opening my eyes again, I was back in the cold drizzle, listening to his arrogant demands.
"As you wish, Leo," I said, burying my burning need for vendetta beneath a mask of hollow defeat.
The moment he left to celebrate his victory, I turned to my loyal maid.
"Send a message to the Mafia Queen. Tell her I am breaking my engagement to Leo. I wish to marry her crippled son, Damien, instead."

9.6
I was the Chicago Outfit's princess, and Luca and Matteo were my sworn protectors. We had mixed our blood at ten years old, promising that nothing would ever touch me.
But that oath turned to ash the night Sofia Ricci aimed a Roman candle at my chest.
The firework slammed into my shoulder, igniting my silk dress instantly. As I rolled on the concrete, screaming while the flames ate into my skin, I waited for my boys to save me.
They didn't.
Instead, I watched through the smoke as they rushed to Sofia. They wrapped their jackets—the ones meant to shield me—around the girl who had just set me on fire, comforting her because the "kickback" had scared her.
They let me burn to keep her warm.
When I woke up in the hospital with permanent scars, they brought me a letter of apology from her and defended her "accident." They even cut their palms to pay her debt, ignoring the fact that I was the one in bandages.
That was the moment Elena Vitiello died.
I didn't scream. I didn't beg. I simply packed my bags and defected to the one place they couldn't follow: the arms of Dante Moretti, the lethal Capo of New York.
By the time they realized their mistake and came crawling back to beg in the rain, I was already wearing another man's ring.
"You want forgiveness?" I asked, looking down at them.
"Burn for it."

7.4
In a world ruled by guns, secrets, and blood-soaked loyalties, love is the most dangerous currency of all.
Alessandro De Luca is the unseen king of a global cartel-ruthless, brilliant, and feared across continents. His word is law, his mercy nonexistent. Until one night, one woman, and one mistake unravel everything he has built.
Elena Hart is innocent but unbreakable, drawn into the underworld through a debt she never created. She should have been collateral-nothing more. Instead, she becomes his weakness.
As enemies close in and betrayal festers within the cartel, Alessandro must choose between the empire crowned in blood... or the woman who threatens to destroy it.
Love was never part of the plan.
Survival was.
And in this world, both demand a price.

8.5
My fiancé left me standing alone at the podium during our rehearsal dinner to rush to the side of a woman whose only illness was a desperate need for attention.
He humiliated me in front of the heads of the Five Families, abandoning our alliance to scoop his "dying" mistress off the floor.
I didn't cry. I didn't run. I walked straight to the head table, to the most terrifying man in the city—his older brother, the Don.
"The Woodward family owes me a husband," I declared calmly.
An hour later, I was married to the Capo dei Capi. But my ex-fiancé didn't accept his demotion.
He kidnapped me, strapping me to a chair in a soundproof basement.
For three days, he drained my blood pint by pint to "save" his mistress, Jaidyn, who watched me fade while she casually ate an apple.
"Take another bag," she ordered, smiling at my agony. "She still has too much fight in her."
As the cold crept up my chest and my vision blurred, I realized I was going to die for a lie, drained dry by a madman.
Then, the steel door detonated.
Through the smoke and debris walked my husband, not with a ransom, but with a serrated knife and a promise to burn them alive.

8.7
On our wedding anniversary, I was diagnosed with terminal cancer, and I only had three months to live.
I planned to tell my husband, Tobias Wright, but I accidentally heard a conversation between him and his mother, Joanna Wright, when I was outside the study.
"Mom, she's finally going to die. I've been waiting for that day for five years."
"Don't rush, Tobias. Once she's gone, her heart can be given to Jolie."
So I realized that they had an evil plan when Tobias decided to marry me. They had just wanted my healthy heart.
I laughed. Then I decided that I would give them a taste of their own medicine for their five years of 'anticipation.'