My Ex-Husband's Regret, My Freedom Novel Cover

My Ex-Husband's Regret, My Freedom

8.1 / 10.0
I'd lived as a mafia queen, ruling with quiet strength, only to discover my entire life was a lie. My husband, Dante, secretly divorced me three years ago, then married our timid nanny. I wasn't just betrayed; I was a dead ex-wife walking, a ghost in my own home. A mafia daughter, I expected routine at Rossi's law firm. But Rossi, pale and sweating, handed me an envelope: Dante's divorce judgment, signed three years ago, and his marriage certificate to Gia, our nanny. Truth slammed me: Gia poisoned me for years, causing infertility, making her bastard son the sole heir. Hidden, I watched her force Dante, the Underboss, to kneel, drink hallucinogenic tea, and profess devotion. She smirked. This was calculated murder: my existence, my legacy. Rage burned, but clarity struck: disappear, or vanish into the Long Island Sound. From a hidden phone, I called Luca, the underworld's elite cleaner. "I need a top-tier scrub. Target is myself," I commanded. "Get me out of this hell. I'd rather die than be his taxidermy specimen."

My Ex-Husband's Regret, My Freedom Chapter 1

I'd lived as a mafia queen, ruling with quiet strength, only to discover my entire life was a lie. My husband, Dante, secretly divorced me three years ago, then married our timid nanny. I wasn't just betrayed; I was a dead ex-wife walking, a ghost in my own home.

A mafia daughter, I expected routine at Rossi’s law firm. But Rossi, pale and sweating, handed me an envelope: Dante's divorce judgment, signed three years ago, and his marriage certificate to Gia, our nanny.

Truth slammed me: Gia poisoned me for years, causing infertility, making her bastard son the sole heir. Hidden, I watched her force Dante, the Underboss, to kneel, drink hallucinogenic tea, and profess devotion. She smirked.

This was calculated murder: my existence, my legacy. Rage burned, but clarity struck: disappear, or vanish into the Long Island Sound.

From a hidden phone, I called Luca, the underworld’s elite cleaner. "I need a top-tier scrub. Target is myself," I commanded. "Get me out of this hell. I'd rather die than be his taxidermy specimen."

Chapter 1

Aria Vitiello POV:

I sat perfectly still on the genuine leather sofa in the VIP room of Rossi's Manhattan law firm, taking a slow sip of my black coffee. I kept my eyes on the New York skyline stretching out beyond the floor-to-ceiling windows. My posture was flawless, my spine straight, my breathing even. It was a physical discipline drilled into me since childhood as the eldest daughter of a mafia family. You never showed weakness, especially not in a room designed to intimidate.

The heavy oak door of the office groaned open. Rossi, the family’s exclusive attorney for thirty years, walked in. He was wiping cold sweat from his forehead with a crumpled handkerchief. I had known Rossi my entire life. He was a shark in a tailored suit, a man who had stared down federal prosecutors without blinking. Seeing him this rattled was wrong. It meant whatever he was bringing me was catastrophic.

Rossi couldn't even look me in the eye. He walked over to the marble table and slid a thick manila envelope across the polished surface. His breathing was shallow and erratic.

"Thank you, Rossi," I said, my voice calm and smooth. I reached out and began to untie the string closure of the envelope.

Suddenly, Rossi’s hand slammed down on top of the envelope. His fingers were trembling uncontrollably.

I stopped. I looked at his shaking hand, then up at his pale face. I frowned slightly. "Rossi, are you feeling unwell?"

He snatched his hand back as if the paper had burned him. "I... I apologize, Mrs. Vitiello," he stammered, his voice cracking. "Mr. Dante instructed that you must review these documents personally. Today."

I pulled the flap open and slid the papers out. The first document was standard. A departure permit for Paris. Dante and I were supposed to go on a trip next month. I reached for the gold pen on the table, flipping to the last page out of habit. But as I moved the permit aside, I saw a much thicker stack of paper beneath it.

The gold-foiled seal of the New York State Supreme Court stamped on the header pierced my eyes.

I stared at it. I had sworn on my life that I would never end up like my mother, trapped in a broken, miserable mafia marriage. Seeing that seal felt like a physical slap across the face.

My eyes dropped to the bold, capitalized title centered on the page: **FINAL JUDGMENT OF DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAGE**.

My lungs stopped working. A high-pitched ringing sound erupted in my ears, drowning out the ambient hum of the city outside.

I flipped frantically to the signature page. There it was. Dante's signature. The aggressive, sharp cursive that he used to sign death warrants and multi-million dollar shipping contracts.

I ran my fingertips over the ink. It was completely dry. It didn't smear. The edges of the heavy paper were even slightly yellowed. This wasn't printed this morning.

My eyes darted to the effective date printed below the judge's stamp. My pupils contracted violently.

*October 12th.* Three years ago.

My brain scrambled to process the date. October 12th. That was the day after we celebrated our fifth wedding anniversary. We had spent that night tangled in our silk sheets, and the very next morning, he had signed this.

I slammed the document down on the marble table. The sound cracked like a gunshot in the quiet room. "What kind of sick joke is this, Rossi?"

Rossi’s knees gave out. He collapsed into the leather chair opposite me, waving his hands defensively. "I am just following orders, Aria. I swear to God, I am just following orders."

I stood up. I didn't yell, but I let my presence fill the room. The oppressive aura of a mafia Don's wife forced Rossi to shrink back into his seat, terrified to even breathe.

"If I was divorced three years ago," I demanded, my voice dropping to a lethal whisper, "then what the hell is my status now?"

Rossi swallowed hard. His hands shook so violently he could barely open his briefcase. He pulled out a second, thinner document and pushed it toward me.

I snatched the single sheet of paper. It was a marriage registration certificate issued by New York City Hall.

Under the husband's name, it read clearly: *Dante Vitiello*.

I forced my eyes to move to the wife's column. The moment I read the name, an invisible hand reached into my chest and crushed my heart into pieces.

*Gia Russo.*

Gia. The timid, soft-spoken nanny who had been living in our estate for five years, taking care of our daily needs.

A violent wave of nausea hit my stomach. Bile rose in my throat. I bit down hard on the soft tissue inside my cheek. The sharp metallic taste of blood flooded my mouth, using the physical pain to force my brain to stay conscious.

I didn't scream. I didn't cry. Tears were worthless in the face of power. I coldly folded both documents and shoved them into my Hermes bag.

I shot one last, freezing glare at the pathetic lawyer slumped in the chair. I turned on my heel and walked out of the VIP room, my stilettos clicking sharply against the hardwood floor.

I got into the back of my armored SUV waiting at the curb. "Take me back to the Long Island estate. Now," I ordered the driver.

The drive was a blur of gray concrete and rain. When the car finally pulled through the massive iron gates of the estate, I got out and pushed open the heavy front doors of the main house. The foyer was usually dead silent at this hour. But today, a sound drifted out from the living room.

It was a soft, high-pitched giggle. A woman's laugh that made my skin crawl.

"Turns out the gates of hell have been open in my living room all along."

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My Ex-Husband's Regret, My Freedom of Contents

Ch. 1 Ch. 2 Ch. 3 Ch. 4 Ch. 5
Ch. 6
Ch. 7
Ch. 8
Ch. 9
Ch. 10
Ch. 11
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