
Left for a Stuffed Animal
Left for a Stuffed Animal Chapter 1
The Consigliere—my husband, Sal Barzini—who'd always despised anything soft or weak—suddenly started sleeping with a teddy bear. One button eye missing, filthy as a stray dog, yet he cuddled that beast every night, curled up in silk sheets like a baby returning to the womb.
And left me freezing on the edge of the master bedroom.
I couldn't stand it anymore. At our son Luca's first-year baptism, I announced I wanted out.
Everyone went numb with shock.
Sal grabbed a glass of red wine and threw it in my face. "You're jealous of a stuffed animal? Have you lost your fucking mind?"
I wiped the wine from my cheek, cold as ice. "You say you want to spend your life with that beast. I'm giving you my blessing."
The Consigliere—my husband, Sal Barzini—who'd always despised anything soft or weak—suddenly started sleeping with a teddy bear. One button eye missing, filthy as a stray dog, yet he cuddled that beast every night, curled up in silk sheets like a baby returning to the womb.
And left me freezing on the edge of the master bedroom.
I couldn't stand it anymore. At our son Luca's first-year baptism, I announced I wanted out.
Everyone went numb with shock.
Sal grabbed a glass of red wine and threw it in my face. "You're jealous of a stuffed animal? Have you lost your fucking mind?"
I wiped the wine from my cheek, cold as ice. "You say you want to spend your life with that beast. I'm giving you my blessing."
...
"Cara Lucchese!" He used my full name—that's always a bad sign. "Luca just turned one, and you pick this holy day to humiliate me with such insane nonsense? You're completely unhinged."
I stared him down. "Sign it. Tomorrow, nine sharp, Family Council Room."
I had nothing more to say. I tossed the parchment divorce scroll onto the table and turned to leave.
Every capo in the room was stunned.
No one could understand why the perfect couple—Sal and his faithful wife—were suddenly tearing each other apart.
Panic flashed in Sal's eyes. His parents—the Barzini Family, the old guard—frowned instantly, their faces dropping into darkness.
They never expected me to be this absolute.
Donna, Gigi, his childhood sweetheart, grabbed my arm and yanked me back. Her nails dug into my flesh. "Who says a man can't have a little comfort? Stop acting crazy and apologize to Sal."
"Don't forget how he spoiled you. When you mentioned you loved Sicilian blood oranges, he drove through a storm all night to get them. Came back with the front of the car smashed in, blood dripping from his forehead, clutching those oranges to his chest."
"When he heard you were in labor, he ran through a gang shootout to reach you. Took a bullet in the shoulder, bled all the way, and still stumbled into the hospital."
"He sleeps in the guest room so he won't wake you and Luca. How can you not see his good intentions?"
The other family members started chiming in, berating me.
"Gigi's right. You have a perfect life. Do you know how many women would kill to marry Sal?"
"Is it postpartum nerves? If something's bothering you, sit down and talk. Don't play games with Family honor."
Sal took a deep breath, steadied himself, and rushed forward to embrace me. He smelled of ambergris and gunpowder.
"Cara," he whispered, voice trembling with fake fragility, "we've known each other twelve years. I know you're usually gentle, never raise your voice. Is managing the Family books too much pressure? Tell me. We'll fix it together."
Seeing him play the victim, the capos nodded approvingly, looking at me like I was an ungrateful traitor.
"Good daughter-in-law," the old guard finally spoke, "I may be retired, but the Family still listens to me. We're blood. Speak your mind, don't bottle it up."
Sal's parents—silent until now—chose to trust my character.
After all, they'd handpicked me as their daughter-in-law.
Ignoring every eye in the room, I shoved Sal away. "Simple. I don't love you anymore."
Dead silence. Not a breath.
"What?" He froze, eyes reddening. "Say that again…"
"I said I don't love you!" I raised my voice, driving each word like a bullet into his temple. "Did you hear me this time?"
I stepped around him. Gigi lunged again, grabbing my wrist hard. "Have you finished making a scene? Even I can't watch this anymore."
"Did you forget how much you loved him? You chased him for three years! Waited six more to marry into the Family!"
"Did you forget what you swore in church? Till death do us part, never abandon each other!"
"And your son is only one! You want Luca to grow up without a mother?"
Seeing her defend him so desperately, I smirked. "What's it to you? Why so urgent? Unless…"
Gigi cut me off, voice rising sharper. "Anyone with a conscience hates seeing an ungrateful wolf like you."
"You came from nothing. Sal never looked down on you—he brought you into the Family's inner circle."
"Without the Barzini Family, would you have this life? Would you be Finance Chief?"
I leaned in close, my voice dropping to a whisper that cut like a switchblade. "And you're just a childhood friend playing house, Gigi. But tell me—does a sister usually sleep in his bed when he has nightmares? Or is that just your special comfort?"
Her face went pale, then instantly flooded with tears—too fast, too perfect. She turned to Sal, trembling with indignant rage.
"How can she say that?" she gasped, mascara streaming in black streaks. "We grew up together! I'm family!"
Sal lost it immediately.
"Cara!" He roared my full name, face twisting with a rage I'd never seen—not in twelve years of marriage, not during a turf war. "How dare you?"
He lunged. His hands slammed into my shoulders and shoved—hard.
I stumbled backward, crashing into the champagne tower. Glass exploded everywhere, ice and crystal shattering.
He didn't look at me. He rushed to Gigi, gathering her in his arms, wiping her tears with a tenderness he hadn't shown me in years. "It's okay," he murmured. "Don't listen to her."
I lay there on the cold marble, shards biting into my back. I didn't cry out. I didn't move. I just looked up at them—at my husband cradling the Don's wife, at the room full of eyes that had already judged me—and felt something inside me go stone cold.
The room turned against me. But I was already gone.