
Left for a Stuffed Animal
Chapter 4
Within hours, word spread through the Family like wildfire.
Rumors swirled in the back rooms of every social club, whispered between soldiers at street corners, scribbled on encrypted messages sent between capos.
They said I was keeping seven or eight young lovers in a downtown safe house.
They said I'd been seen entering the VIP rooms of underground casinos, alone with strange men.
They said I had bastard children hidden overseas—twins, some claimed—with evidence photos to prove it.
I became the Family's whore, the traitor who'd abandoned a devoted husband and innocent son. A gold-digging viper who'd bitten the hand that fed her.
I said nothing. I let them drown me in filth.
For three days, I disappeared into silence.
...
On the third day, I walked into the Chamber.
The Don sat at the head of the long mahogany table, his ring catching the dim light. Behind him stood his personal guards, hands resting casually on their holsters. The room was packed—every capo, every soldier, every connected friend and enemy was there to watch the show. The air smelled of cigar smoke and old blood.
"Cara," Sal called out, standing at the opposite end. He looked haggard, playing the wounded husband to perfection. "I'm giving you one last chance. Kneel. Apologize. Come home, and we'll forget this ever happened."
Gigi stood beside him, clutching a file to her chest like a prayer book. "You have no case, Mrs. Barzini. You'll lose everything—the money, the reputation, your place in the Family. You'll be sleeping in alleyways. No one will touch you after this."
"Admit you're wrong," she added sweetly, "before it's too late."
The old guards and his wife sat to the left, faces stone-cold. "Cara," the Elder said heavily, "think hard about what comes next. Citing a teddy bear as grounds for divorce won't hold water here. You have no leverage."
I ignored them all.
I walked straight to Marco and sat down beside him. He was dressed in a sharp black suit, briefcase at his feet, calm as a blade before the strike.
Sal's family snorted in unison, disgusted.
The Don raised a hand. The room fell silent.
He reviewed Sal’s submitted documents—photos, bank statements, the false testimony. Then he turned to me, his voice like gravel scraping iron.
"Sleeping with a stuffed animal," he said slowly, "does not constitute betrayal under Family law."
"However, Sal has submitted fifty photographs of you with other men. Intimate encounters."
"If you cannot produce new evidence to refute these claims, I will rule you the guilty party. You will leave this marriage with nothing. Not even your name."
Sal's eyes burned into mine, waiting for me to crumble.
I stood up.
The room held its breath.
"I have evidence," I said. "Surveillance footage of Sal and Donna Gigi. From the guest suite."
My voice didn't shake. It was clear, cold, and final.
His face flickered—just for a second—with real fear.
I looked at the Don, then at the packed gallery of made men and whisperers.
"Let the show begin," I said.