
Mafia Don's Wife: My Sweet Architect Revenge
For years, I was the secret architect behind my fiancé Ethan's success. I even torched my own reputation to cover up his theft, believing he was the love of my life and we were a team.
Waking from a car crash he engineered, I overheard his plan. He had not only caused my accident but also orchestrated the "stress" that led to my miscarriage. Now, he was stealing my masterpiece, "Echoes of the City," and planning a public proposal to trap me in a gilded cage.
At the gala, he left me on stage mid-proposal, the ring clattering to the floor, to rush to his mistress's side. At another party, after she told me he was "relieved" I'd lost our baby, I confronted him. He shoved me hard, sending me sprawling to the floor in front of everyone before walking away with her.
Lying there, humiliated, I realized he didn't see me as a person. I was just a tool to be used and discarded. The love I felt for him didn't just break; it turned into a cold, dark void.
But he made one mistake. He forgot about the one man in the city he truly feared, a powerful Don who had once praised my work. I picked up my phone and sent a single, desperate text to his rival: "This is Sarah Jenkins. I need your help."
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Chapter 2
Sarah POV:
My phone buzzed on the nightstand. A reply, almost instant. My breath caught.
Liam Sterling: I'm surprised to hear from you, Ms. Jenkins. But not entirely.
My fingers flew across the screen, the words a frantic confession.
Sarah: He's going to propose tomorrow to shut me up. He's taking my life's work, Echoes of the City, and giving it to Olivia Monroe. I'm leaving him. I have nowhere else to go.
The three dots appeared and disappeared. He was thinking, calculating.
Liam Sterling: That is a serious accusation against a Capo. Why come to me? His rival?
Sarah: Because you're the only one he fears. And because the plans are all I have left. I saw the article about my work on your bookshelf. You understand what it's worth.
The pause this time was longer. I thought maybe I had overplayed my hand, that he would dismiss me as a scorned, hysterical woman.
Liam Sterling: I have always admired your talent. And your spirit. Come to New York. My car will meet you at JFK. But know this, Sarah. Once you take this step, there is no turning back.
Relief washed over me, so potent it left me dizzy. No turning back. The words echoed in my mind-a promise, not a threat. I didn't hesitate. I opened a travel app on my phone, my fingers securing the first one-way flight to New York for the following afternoon.
Ethan didn't come home that night. His assistant, Chloe, called, her voice tight with apology, to say he was with Olivia, dealing with a "family emergency." I knew what that meant. They were celebrating.
He returned the next morning, walking in like a conquering hero, buzzing with an ecstatic energy that made my skin crawl.
"Baby, you're not going to believe the surprise I have for you tonight," he said, kissing my cheek. The gesture felt like a brand.
The charity gala was a blur of flashing cameras and forced smiles. I felt like a ghost, moving through a world that was no longer mine. Ethan held my hand tightly, a proprietary grip that was meant to look like affection but felt like a shackle.
Then came the moment. He led me onto the stage, under the hot glare of the spotlights. He got down on one knee, holding up a diamond so large it looked obscene. The crowd gasped.
"Sarah Jenkins," he began, his voice ringing with false emotion, "will you make me the happiest man in the world?"
The room held its breath. My own heart was a stone in my chest. This was the cage. The beautiful, sparkling cage he'd designed for me.
Before I could answer, a collective gasp rippled through the audience. On the other side of the stage, Olivia Monroe, clad in a blood-red dress, had collapsed dramatically into her father's arms.
Ethan's head snapped toward the commotion. He dropped my hand without a second thought, the ring box clattering to the floor. The man who had just asked me to be his wife, his everything, left me abandoned on a stage under the merciless eye of a hundred cameras.
He rushed to Olivia's side, scooping her up into his arms and carrying her out of the ballroom as if she were the only person in the world.
I felt hundreds of eyes pivot my way. The lenses of the cameras followed. Then, the whispers started, a rising tide of speculation. Humiliation, hot and sharp, washed over me.
But beneath the stinging heat of it all, a strange, cold calm began to settle in my bones.
He had made his choice. Now I would make mine.
I turned my back on the stage, on the whispers, on the life that had been a lie. I walked calmly through the stunned crowd, out the grand doors of the hotel, and into a waiting taxi.
"LAX," I said to the driver, my voice even. "And please, hurry."