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No Escape from His Gilded Cage Novel Cover

No Escape from His Gilded Cage

Becoming a bride to settle a debt was never part of my dreams. Yet, my stepbrother's betrayal and a trap party turned my life upside down, shattering my illusions of a joyful marriage. Now, I'm faced with the harsh reality of being married to a ruthless Mafia boss, Alessio Marino. Can I trust his promises, or will my situation be worse than the abuse I endured from my stepbrother? With love stripped from my wedding vows, all I can do is cling to hope for God's mercy and summon the strength to navigate this perilous new life.
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Chapter 1

Eleonora's POV

"Go to your room." My stepbrother Matteo appears in the kitchen doorway, a dress in his hand. He voice is laced with a false, casual air. "Put on this gown."

I set down the plate I was drying, wiping my hands on my apron. "Why?" The question is almost reflexive. Our outings are limited.

"Taking you to meet someone. Antonio Conti. An... influential friend."

Antonio Conti. The name sends a chill down my spine. An old man, fabulously wealthy by all accounts, with peculiar tastes and a certain... incapacity rumored to have resulted from an "accident" years ago. His interests have since turned to other forms of companionship-expensive, polished, and utterly subservient ornaments to display his wealth and power in social settings.

"I'm not going," I say, my voice firmer than I expect. "I don't feel well."

He finally looks up. There is no anger in his eyes, only a cold, calculating assessment, like a pawnbroker valuing a piece of collateral. "Eleonora," he says slowly, taking a step closer. "You know I have investments in the market. But that money is for the 'future.' Mr. Conti's 'friendship' solves the 'present.'" He pauses, the corner of his mouth lifting in a humorless smile. "It's just drinks, conversation. He's a 'gentleman.' You sit, you smile, you nod, you pour his wine occasionally. Easier than scrubbing plates here, right?"

He makes it sound so trivial, like a mundane tea party. But the light in his eyes betrays him-it is the relief of a debtor finding a scapegoat just as Antonio Conti's collector knocks. He isn't desperate; he is simply unwilling to dip into his own capital. My presence is his lowest-cost solution for the moment.

Humiliation burns like bile in my throat.

"Matteo," I try, "we're family..."

"Enough! I'm the head of the family! Just do as I say." he cuts me off, raising his hand to hit but then put it down. I know that's because he didn't my injuries to get in his way. "Listen, Nora. Put on the dress, a little makeup. We leave in twenty minutes. Don't make me repeat myself."

He turns and leaves. Thirty minutes later, I sit in his car wearing the sapphire blue silk dress I have never liked. A thick silence fills the space between us.

The interior smells only of leather and Matteo's cologne. I turn my head to watch the streetlights blur past the window, my fingers unconsciously tightening around the smooth silk of the skirt. The image from earlier in the bedroom mirror surfaces again-fading yellow-green bruises, like shameful stamps, scattered around my ribs and the inner parts of my arms. Under the stream of hot water, I finally break, burying my face in my wet palms, letting silent tears mix with the steam.

Seven years. Ever since Papa and my stepmother Paola died in that car crash and Matteo took over Papa's role in the Cosa Nostra, everything has changed. The stepbrother who was once kind seems swollen by the sudden power and the fear that fuels his bluster, growing crueler by the day. The initial shoves and insults escalated, at some unmarked point, into fists. He is always careful, avoiding visible areas-because he still needs me to appear "presentable" in public until he marries me off to someone in the Cosa Nostra. He hasn't done it only because of my inheritance, which he could only get when I turn twenty-five.

I fought back my tears when sitting in car. Father, I've been a good girl. I keep my nose clean. Please help me out of this miserable life. I'm begging you.

The car finally stops before a building. Two large men in black suits flank the entrance like iron towers. Even the neon glow of the city seems subdued here, holding its breath.

It was Elysian Reverie, a club and a playground for people to enjoy strippers and gambling. And I am about to be delivered into it by my stepbrother, like a finely wrapped package.

Matteo and I are led into a private room. I see a thin, impeccably groomed old man in the seat of honor: Antonio Conti. His gaze sweeps over like a searchlight, landing on me with assessment and possession of a collector eyeing a new artifact.

A wave of nausea hits me.

"I need the ladies' room," I mutter, not waiting for Matteo's response, and turn to walk quickly away. I need air, need temporary escape from that booth that feels poised to swallow me whole. But I know I'll have to come back or Matteo will definitely make me regret it.

I wander blindly through the club's labyrinthine corridors, wanting only distance. My heart hammers against my ribs, the silk of the dress suddenly feels abrasive against my skin. I decided to go back. Rounding a corner, I find a room's door similar to Antonio Conti's privare room. Without thinking, I push it open.

The room is large, a study or office furnished in a stark, modernist style. A man stands with his back to the door at a wide steel desk. He is tall, his posture erect, dressed in a perfectly fitted charcoal suit. He is bent slightly, his attention focused on several objects laid out on the desk's surface-under the bright light, I recognize them: the components of a pistol. A coldly gleaming barrel, the complex structure of the slide, springs, a magazine...

He is assembling a gun. His movements are fluid, practiced, with a ritualistic focus, as if it is not a weapon but a precision instrument.

I freeze in the doorway, my blood turning to ice.

The man seems to sense the intrusion. His hands still for a fraction of a second, but he doesn't turn immediately. Instead, he secures the final piece-likely the recoil spring guide-with a soft, definitive click. Then, he slowly turns around.

It is Alessio Marino. God, what have I done. This is his office.

I have seen him before, of course, from great distances on a handful of occasions. But this proximity is devastating. His eyes regard me now with a calm, utterly impenetrable scruLarry, showing no surprise, only deep assessment. "Joey, bring her in."

Just then, a man grabs my arm from behind, which almost scares the hell out of me. I'm too stunned to notice someone approaches form behind. He drags me into the room and closes the door behind him. I have no choice but stand right in front of Alessio Marino.

I can't breathe. This isn't mere attractiveness; it is a presence, oppressive and potent like standing near a dormant volcano. Fear seizes my heart. I have blundered into the private sanctum of one of the most dangerous men in Los Angeles-one of the five heads of the Cosa Nostra.

In this world we were born into, you learn the hierarchy young-the Five Families aren't just names, they're the law. Every Sicilian in Los Angeles knows it in their bones, that quiet, cold fear.

Matteo? He pisses himself at the mere thought of them. Plays the big man with me, but put him in front of one of Marino's boys and watch him shrink. All that bravado melts right off.

And every time he has to swallow his pride out there, you can bet I'm the one who pays for it later.

Joey realeas me and joins another man, Larry, behind Alessio Marino. They are built like two fortified walls, their muscles straining his suit jacket. They have gazes as sharp as a hawk's, constantly scanning the room and me. Their hands hang loosely at their sides, but I have no doubt any sudden move will bring a swift and brutal response.

"I... I'm sorry," my voice is a dry, rasping whisper, "I... I'm lost. The restroom..."

Alessio Marino doesn't speak at first. He looks back down at his hands, picking up the now mostly assembled pistol, racking the slide once to check the action with a smooth, unnervingly casual motion. The sound of metal sliding against metal seems deafening in the silent room.

"There are no public facilities in this wing," he finally says, his voice lower than I'd imagined, devoid of emotion yet carrying an undeniable weight. He speaks while still looking at the gun, polishing the frame with a soft cloth. "Who brought you here?"

"Matteo Greco." I manage to stammer my stepbrother's name.

The polishing motion halts minutely. His light hazel eyes lift again, settling on my face, this time with a touch of consideration. "Greco," he repeats, as if retrieving a minor file from memory. "Eleonora."

He knows my name. The realization makes me feel even colder.

"Y... yes, sir." I drop my gaze, unable to hold his, my heart pounding a frantic rhythm against my ribs. He holds my life in his hands, right here, right now.

Mr. Marino stands up and draws in a slow breath as he closes the distance between us. "I haven't seen you since your father's funeral."

Every instinct screams at me to retreat, but by some miracle, my feet stay rooted to the floor.

He halts just inches away, so close I have to crane my neck to meet his eyes. If I weren't shaking with fear, I might've noticed how striking he looks. He looks to be in his early thirties, his features handsome in a severe, almost brutal way-a straight nose, lips that are thin and sharply defined, a jawline that could cut glass. Most arresting are his eyes, a peculiar light hazel in the lamplight, like autumn amber. When Larry moves to stand behind him, their matching height becomes obvious-they tower over me by more than two heads.

Then his hand rises toward my face. I flinch backward, a small, choked sound escaping me. Eyes squeezed shut, fists clenched at my sides, I brace for impact. My skin pulls taut over bone, teeth locked-

But the blow never comes.

Seconds drag. Instead, I feel a gentle pull at my scalp. My eyes snap open.

Mr. Marino is watching me intently, a strand of my hair coiled loosely around his finger and he is smelling it.

I'm still frozen in confusion when Matteo's voice erupts from the hall. "For fuck's sake, Nora! Where are you? Mr. Conti is waiting for you!"

Joey moves to open the office door. His voice cuts through. "Your sister's with Mr. Marino."

"What?" Matteo sounds he couldn't believe his ears.

There's shuffling at my back, but I can't look away from the real danger in the room: Alessio Marino.

"What did you do?" Matteo hisses in my direction.

A faint crease appears between Mr. Marino's brows. He releases my curl. I smooth my hair with a trembling hand and stumble back a step, putting precious space between myself and him.

The words tumble out in a rush, tripping over my own panic. "I was just lost. I didn't mean to disturb Mr. Marino, I swear. I never meant to..." I trail off, my voice faltering.

Mr. Marino's gaze shifts toward Joey. "Take Miss Greco to a room. Get her some water. I'll speak with her brother."

Did I hear that right? "I can go?"

Mr. Marino's gaze drills back into me. "For now."

A wave of intense relief crashes over me.

Joey moves soundlessly, gesturing towards the door with a silent command that brooks no refusal.

I follow him like an automaton, out of the suffocating office and down the hall to a small, quiet room. It is comfortably furnished with a sofa, a low table, even an abstract painting on the wall. Joey pours a glass of water, sets it before me without a word, then retreats to the doorway, closing the door behind him. I don't hear a lock turn.

I sink onto the sofa, my fingers icy, clutching the glass without being able to still their trembling. My mind replays the scene: his profile as he focused on the gun parts, the severe perfection of his features, those calm, terrifying eyes. Fear still holds the largest part of me, but in the interstices of that primal terror, an incongruous thought wriggles free-he is the most strikingly handsome man I have ever seen, a kind of beauty fused with lethal danger and absolute control, like a diamond dipped in poison, dazzling even as it promises death.

God, what is wrong with me? I shake my head, trying to dislodge the absurd notion. Alessio Marino's "handsomeness" is like the velvet on a noose, the jewel on a dagger's hilt. And I, Eleonora Greco, have likely just placed my neck in that noose, or before that blade.

Now, all I can do is wait in this quiet room, for the man who calmly assembles pistols to decide my fate.

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