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I Let Scarlett Die So Siena Could Burn His Empire Novel Cover

I Let Scarlett Die So Siena Could Burn His Empire

Dante was my fiancé, the future Don of the Costa Syndicate, and my entire world—until he strapped me to an interrogation chair. Tricked by my adopted sister’s toxic lies, he injected me with a truth serum that destroyed my womb and killed our unborn heir. I didn't just walk away; I let Scarlett die in the snow. Five years later, I am Siena, the underground's most lethal asset, standing at Dante's gala on the arm of his deadliest rival, Damien. Dante thinks he can buy me. He doesn't realize I'm here to burn his empire to the ground.
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Chapter 4

The chandelier above the ballroom was a cathedral of light — a thousand crystal drops catching the glow and fracturing it into blades across the marble floor, across the white tablecloths, across the faces of men who had built empires on other people's suffering. It was the kind of room designed to make you feel small. I had spent five years learning to walk into rooms like this and make them feel small instead.

Damien's hand rested at the small of my back, light and proprietary, the way a man rests his hand on something valuable. I let him. It was theater, and we both knew our lines.

The red dress had been his choice. *Red,* he'd said when Darya laid out the options, *because it's the color they'll remember when everything goes wrong.* I hadn't argued. I understood the logic. You dress a weapon to be seen.

I moved through the room the way I'd been trained — spine straight, chin level, eyes doing the work my face refused to show. Scanning exits. Cataloguing threats. Counting the bodies between me and the door. Old habits from a different life had been stripped away and rebuilt into something sharper, something surgical. Scarlett used to enter a room and look for the people she knew. Siena entered a room and looked for the people who might kill her.

There was a difference. There would always be a difference now.

The gathering had drawn the city's entire upper echelon — old families, new money, men in suits that cost more than most people's yearly rent, women draped in diamonds that had probably funded small wars. The air smelled of champagne and ambition and the particular, cloying sweetness of people pretending they weren't afraid of each other.

Damien leaned close to my ear. "Northeast corner. He arrived twenty minutes ago."

I didn't look. Not yet.

We made our way through the room slowly, deliberately, pausing to exchange pleasantries with three separate men whose names I knew from Damien's files. I smiled. I laughed, once, at something that wasn't funny. I let one of them kiss my hand and I did not think about what my hands used to feel like, before the chemicals, before Darya's instruments, before I became someone who could hold a gun without shaking.

And then Damien steered us left, toward the champagne display, and I saw him.

Dante.

Five years had done something to him. He was leaner, harder, the softness I'd once loved burned away entirely. He sat at the head table like a man who had decided gravity was optional — one arm draped over the back of his chair, his jaw set, his eyes moving through the room with the flat, patient assessment of a predator who had already chosen his prey and was simply waiting for the right moment. He wore black, of course. He always wore black. His hair was shorter than I remembered.

Harper sat beside him.

She looked exactly the same. That was the cruelest part. She looked untouched by any of it — soft and luminous in ivory silk, her hand resting near his on the tablecloth, close but not quite touching, the way she'd always managed to be close but not quite touching until suddenly she was everywhere. She was laughing at something. Her head tilted back, her throat exposed, and Dante watched her with an expression I recognized.

I had worn that expression once. It had been mine.

I breathed in through my nose. Out through my mouth. Slow and even, the way Damien had taught me — *you cannot afford to feel it until the job is done, and then you cannot afford to feel it at all.*

We passed within ten feet of the table.

Then five.

Damien kept moving, unhurried, his hand still at my back. I kept my gaze forward, my chin level, my face a perfect, polished mask.

We were level with the table when I felt it — the precise, prickling awareness of someone's attention landing on me like a hand on my shoulder. I had felt that particular weight before. I had felt it across crowded rooms, across years, across a life that no longer existed.

I didn't stop. I didn't look.

But I heard it.

The sharp, clean crack of crystal shattering.

Damien's hand tensed slightly at my back. Just once. A warning.

I took two more steps before the voice came.

"Stop right there."

Low. Hard. The voice of a man who had not been told no in a very long time.

I stopped.

Not because I had to. Because I chose to. Because I had rehearsed this moment in the dark for five years and I knew exactly what I looked like when I turned around — composed, curious, faintly bored, the expression of a woman who has never heard that voice before in her life.

I turned.

Dante had risen from his chair. The shattered champagne flute lay on the tablecloth, a spreading bloom of gold around the broken stem. He didn't seem to notice. His chest was heaving, just slightly — barely visible, but I knew how to read him, even now, even after everything. His eyes were locked on me with an intensity that made the nearest guests take a half-step back without seeming to realize they'd done it.

"Who the hell are you?"

Harper's hand was on his arm. He shook it off without looking at her.

I held his gaze. My pulse was steady. I had made it steady through sheer force of will and five years of practice and I was not going to let it betray me now, not here, not in front of him.

"I'm sorry?" My voice came out exactly right — polite, slightly puzzled, the voice of a woman who has never been interrogated in a Vault, who has never knelt in an alley in the snow, who has never watched the man she loved choose someone else's life over her daughter's.

He moved around the table in three strides. The room had gone quiet in that particular, held-breath way of people who sense violence approaching and cannot decide whether to run or watch.

His hand closed around my bare arm.

His grip was hard, certain, the grip of a man who believed he had the right. And beneath it — beneath the pressure of his fingers on my skin — I felt him go still. A different kind of still. Not the stillness of control, but the stillness of a man who has walked into a dark room and touched something he cannot see and cannot name and cannot explain.

His nostrils flared.

I watched it move across his face — confusion, then something rawer, something that had no business being there, something that looked almost like grief.

"You—" he started.

The gun appeared at his jaw before he could finish the sentence.

Damien had moved so quietly that even I hadn't tracked it — one moment at my side, the next with his Beretta pressed clean and cold under Dante's chin, the muzzle tilting his head back by a fraction of an inch. His face was utterly calm. His voice, when he spoke, was almost pleasant.

"Take your hand off her."

The room had stopped breathing.

Dante's grip on my arm didn't loosen. His eyes were still on me — not on the gun, not on Damien, on *me* — and there was something in them I hadn't prepared for. Something that cracked the edge of my composure in a way the Vault never had, in a way the alley never had, in a way nothing in five years had managed.

He looked like a man who had seen a ghost.

He looked like a man who was starting to understand that the ghost was real.

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