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Mafia's Bloody Wife Novel Cover

Mafia's Bloody Wife

On her wedding day, Anna is lured to an abandoned lighthouse by her new husband Peter and his lover Kasha, who lock her in a flooded, kerosene-soaked cage to collect her insurance and burn the evidence. Anna frees herself, but the lighthouse collapses; she is swept into Lake Michigan and presumed dead. Instead, she washes up at Crow’s Bay—territory of the criminal K-Wing organization—burned, half-drowned, and wearing the tattered remains of her wedding dress. Their enigmatic leader rescues her, declaring the “fire-rose bride” an omen and taking her into his world, launching her transformation from victim to player.
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Chapter 1

The chapel bells had fallen silent, their echoes still trembling in the October air as I stood at the altar in my mother's wedding dress. The ivory lace felt like a second skin, the rose embroidery along the back catching the filtered sunlight streaming through stained glass windows. Each delicate thread seemed to whisper promises of the future I'd dreamed of since childhood.

Peter's hands were steady as he reached for mine, his dark eyes reflecting something I mistook for devotion. The Novak family chapel was packed with faces I'd known all my life, their murmurs of approval creating a warm cocoon around us. This was everything I'd imagined—the fairy tale my mother had promised me before cancer stole her away when I was twelve.

"Do you, Anna Marie Novak, take Peter James Novak to be your lawfully wedded husband?" Father McKenzie's voice carried the weight of tradition, of generations of Novak unions blessed in this very spot.

"I do." The words came easily, naturally, like breathing.

Peter's smile was radiant as he slipped the wedding band onto my finger. The gold felt cold against my skin, heavier than I'd expected. But as the ring settled into place, I felt something else—a small piece of paper pressed against my palm. My heart fluttered with surprise and delight. Even now, in this sacred moment, Peter was thinking of romantic gestures.

I closed my fingers around the note, hiding it from the congregation's view. The ceremony continued in a blur of vows and blessings, but my thoughts kept drifting to the secret message burning against my palm. What surprise could he have planned? Perhaps a honeymoon destination he'd kept hidden, or a gift waiting in our new home.

The kiss that sealed our union was brief but tender, and the chapel erupted in applause. Rice fell like snow as we walked down the aisle, Peter's arm strong and sure beneath mine. I felt like I was floating, carried by the weight of my happiness and the promise of our life together.

It wasn't until we were seated in the wedding car, waving goodbye to our guests, that I finally unfolded the note with trembling fingers. The handwriting was Peter's familiar scrawl, but the words made my breath catch:

*Meet me at the lake tower—I have a surprise.*

The lake tower. The old lighthouse on the shore of Lake Michigan that had been abandoned for decades. It seemed an odd choice for a romantic rendezvous, but perhaps that was the point. Peter had always been one for grand gestures, and the isolation would give us privacy for whatever he had planned.

"The reception is at the Grand Ballroom, isn't it?" I asked the driver, a man I didn't recognize but who wore the Novak family colors.

"Change of plans, Mrs. Novak," he said without turning around. "Mr. Peter requested a detour first."

My stomach fluttered with anticipation. Mrs. Novak. The title still felt foreign on my tongue, but hearing it from someone else made it real. I was married. I was Peter's wife. The girl who'd spent her teenage years reading romance novels and dreaming of true love had finally found her happily ever after.

The car turned away from the city center, heading toward the lakefront. Through the window, I watched Chicago's skyline grow smaller, replaced by stretches of empty road and sparse trees. The October afternoon was crisp, the kind of day that made you grateful for the warmth of love and the promise of a cozy evening ahead.

"How much further?" I asked, but the driver didn't respond.

A chill ran down my spine that had nothing to do with the autumn air. The road was becoming increasingly desolate, and I couldn't shake the feeling that something was wrong. But then I remembered Peter's note, his promise of a surprise, and forced myself to relax. He was probably planning something elaborate and romantic, something that required privacy and seclusion.

The lighthouse came into view as we crested a small hill, its white tower stark against the gray sky. It had been beautiful once, a beacon for ships navigating the treacherous waters of Lake Michigan. Now it stood like a broken tooth, its windows dark and its paint peeling. The sight of it sent an inexplicable shiver through me.

"Here we are," the driver said, pulling to a stop on the gravel road that led to the lighthouse entrance.

I gathered my skirts and stepped out of the car, the lake wind immediately catching the delicate fabric of my dress. The air smelled of water and decay, of things long forgotten. The lighthouse loomed above me, more imposing up close than it had seemed from a distance.

"Peter?" I called out, my voice swallowed by the wind.

The driver was already pulling away, leaving me alone with the sound of waves crashing against the rocky shore. I watched the car disappear around a bend, my unease growing with each passing second. But Peter had asked me to meet him here, and I trusted him completely. Whatever he had planned, it would be worth the temporary discomfort.

I made my way to the lighthouse entrance, my heels clicking against the worn stone path. The door was heavy and old, its brass handle green with age. It opened with a groan that seemed to echo from the very bones of the building.

"Peter?" I called again, stepping into the musty interior.

The lighthouse was darker than I'd expected, shafts of dusty sunlight filtering through broken windows. My wedding dress seemed almost luminous in the gloom, the white fabric catching what little light there was. I could hear something below—footsteps, perhaps, or the sound of movement in the basement.

Following the sound, I found a narrow staircase leading down into the lighthouse's foundation. Each step creaked under my weight, and I had to lift my skirts to keep from tripping on the hem. The air grew colder as I descended, thick with the smell of dampness and something else—kerosene.

A warm glow emanated from the bottom of the stairs, and my heart lifted. Peter was here, waiting for me with candlelight and romance. I quickened my pace, eager to see what surprise he had prepared.

But when I reached the bottom of the stairs and stepped into the basement, my world tilted on its axis.

Kasha stood in the center of the room, illuminated by a single kerosene lamp. She was wearing a wedding dress—my wedding dress, or one identical to it in every detail except for the fit. It hugged her curves perfectly, as if it had been made specifically for her body.

Her smile was cold and triumphant as she turned to face me, the lamplight casting dancing shadows across her features.

"It looks better on me, don't you think?" she said, her voice dripping with malicious satisfaction. "You stole my place, Anna."

The words hit me like a physical blow, stealing the breath from my lungs. I stared at her in shock, my mind struggling to process what I was seeing. This had to be some kind of mistake, some elaborate joke that had gone too far.

"Kasha, what are you—where's Peter?" I managed to whisper.

As if summoned by his name, Peter emerged from the shadows behind her. But this wasn't the man who had kissed me at the altar just hours ago. His face was cold, emotionless, as if he were looking at a stranger rather than his new wife.

In his hands was a document that he held out to me with the same casual indifference he might show when passing someone the morning newspaper.

"You should read this," he said.

With trembling fingers, I took the papers. The words swam before my eyes, but gradually their meaning became clear. It was an insurance policy—a substantial one—with my name listed as the insured and Peter Novak as the sole beneficiary. The cause of death was listed as "accidental."

The document slipped from my numb fingers, fluttering to the damp basement floor like a dying bird.

"You can't be serious," I breathed.

But the rusted iron cage in the corner of the room, the heavy ship chains, and the smell of kerosene told me that they were deadly serious indeed.

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