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Mafia Princess: Escaping His Deadly Lie

Mafia Princess: Escaping His Deadly Lie

For three years, a rare liver disease has been killing me. Through it all, my husband Julian has been my rock. Our last hope was a black-market liver, secured through a life-debt owed to my family, the Volkov Bratva. But from my hospital bed, I overheard him promise that very liver to another woman. It was for his mistress's mother. I soon discovered he had a four-year-old daughter with her. Their family was established; I was just the placeholder. On a hidden security feed, I watched him in my dead parents' penthouse—a sacred place he forbade me from visiting—bouncing their child on his knee. Then he fastened the diamond necklace he'd bought for my birthday around his mistress's neck. The final blow came when I heard her whisper, "Just a little longer... the fever will do the rest." He wasn't just leaving me. He was actively trying to kill me. The love I had for him didn't just die; it turned to a cold, hard stone in my chest. The man whose devotion I never questioned now made my skin crawl with revulsion. The next morning, I signed myself out of the hospital against medical advice. I left my wedding ring and the signed divorce papers on the entryway table, blocked his number, and walked out of our house without looking back.
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Chapter 4

Katerina POV: The next morning, Julian left for his "business," kissing my forehead with the same lips he'd used on his mistress. The moment his car was out of the hospital parking lot, I was in motion. I ignored the frantic protests of the nurses, signed the discharge papers-AMA, against medical advice-and took a cab straight to my parents' penthouse. The key slid into the lock. The air inside was cold, sterile, yet it was contaminated. I could still smell her. A faint, cloying floral perfume that clung to the velvet curtains like a foul secret. It was a desecration. For three years, this place had been a shrine in my mind. Now it was just a crime scene. Methodically, I moved through the rooms. I packed the few things that were truly sacred-my mother's handwritten recipe book, my father's favorite watch, a faded photograph of the three of us on a boat, laughing. I arranged for them to be shipped to my aunt's home in Jasperton. Then I called a realtor, a man who owed my family a favor. "Sell it," I said, my voice devoid of inflection. "I don't care about the price. I just want it gone." I was locking the heavy oak door for the final time when he appeared. Julian. His face was a mask of worry, his breathing heavy as if he'd run up the stairs. "Kat! I went back to the hospital and you were gone. I was so worried." He pulled me into a tight embrace, burying his face in my hair. The scent of his cologne, mingled with the phantom smell of her perfume, made my stomach churn. I shoved him away, hard. My hands were flat against his chest, and he stumbled back-not from the force of the push, but from the raw revulsion in my gaze. He saw it. He finally saw it. "What's wrong?" he asked, his voice a careful study in confusion. I could almost see the ground cracking beneath his feet, and for the first time, he looked genuinely lost. He tried to placate me, his hands reaching for me again. "I have your birthday gift in the car," he said, a desperate edge to his voice. "The necklace. I was going to give it to you tonight." The lie was so audacious, so shameless, it almost made me laugh. "I'm not hungry," I said, my voice as cold as the grave he was digging for me. "And your touch... it makes me feel filthy." He flinched, but recovered quickly. The consummate actor. "Okay," he said, forcing a gentle smile. "We'll go home. I'll cook for you." The arrogance was breathtaking; he was still confident he could win me over, that his performance was enough. As we stood there on the cold marble landing, a sudden, cruel impulse took me. I looked straight into his eyes. "Julian," I asked, my voice deceptively soft. "If I don't get the transplant... if I die... would you be sad?" He stared at me, his handsome face crumbling into a mask of perfect, theatrical grief. Tears welled in his eyes. "Don't say that, Kat. Don't even think it. I wouldn't be able to live without you." I watched the single, perfect tear trace its path down his cheek and felt nothing but a cold, absolute certainty.