
Runaway Mistress: The Mafia Boss Begs On His Knees
The heavy steel door of the industrial meat locker slammed shut, sealing me in at four degrees below zero.
Ten minutes ago, I was the woman Dante Moretti promised to burn the world for.
Now, I was the rat accused of poisoning his heir.
Dante didn’t just lock me in. He looked at me with eyes devoid of warmth and said, "Evidence says otherwise."
He chose the lie of his arranged wife, Sofia, over my truth.
For months, I endured the price of loving the Underboss.
I watched him marry Sofia in a grand ceremony to secure a family alliance.
I let him force me onto a table to drain my blood to save her life when she was injured.
I took twenty lashes from his family’s enforcers, all while he stood by and watched, claiming it was necessary to "protect" me.
He told me to wait. He told me the marriage was a sham.
But when I finally escaped and he came chasing after me, revealing that Sofia was a fraud and he wanted me back, I didn't feel relief.
I felt nothing.
Even after he threw his body over mine to save me from a collapsing building, taking a jagged shard of timber through his chest, I couldn't forgive him.
In the hospital, his mother handed me his journal.
It was filled with entries about his undying love for me, written on the very same days he allowed me to be tortured.
"Tell him the debt is paid," I told his mother as I handed the book back.
"He saved my life. I saved his child. We are even."
I turned my back on the ICU and walked out into the rain.
Dante Moretti might have been willing to die for me, but he never knew how to live for me.
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Chapter 5
I spun around and fled back into the storm before the scream clawing at my throat could tear free.
The image of his hand claiming her skin seared itself onto the back of my eyelids.
I collapsed onto the cold stone bench in the garden, letting the rain hammer against me, hoping it would wash away the last of my pathetic illusions.
I remembered our first night together.
He had worshipped my body as if it were a holy temple.
Now, he knelt at another altar entirely.
I remained there until the lights in the villa flickered and died, and until my shivering escalated into violent, uncontrollable tremors.
Stumbling back to the servants' quarters, I collapsed onto the narrow mattress.
The fever didn't just hit me; it crushed me like a collapsing building.
I burned.
I hallucinated.
In the haze of my delirium, Dante's deep voice floated through the air.
He was reading.
"And the little rabbit ran all the way home..."
It was the story. The one he had promised to read to our children.
I dragged my heavy limbs to the door, cracking it open just an inch.
He was there in the hallway, standing outside Sofia's room, reading to the closed wood, or perhaps to the unborn life inside.
He turned, and his gaze landed on me.
He took in the sweat slicking my forehead, the glassy, fever-bright sheen of my eyes.
He crossed the distance, placing a hand on my forehead.
It was cool, professional, and utterly devoid of affection.
"You're sick," he stated, his tone clinical.
He offered no comfort. No softness.
Instead, he pulled a key from his pocket.
"I have to quarantine you," he said, stepping back.
"We can't risk the heir getting infected."
He pushed my door shut.
I heard the lock click.
It was the sound of a coffin lid sealing shut.
I screamed silently, my throat too raw and swollen to produce a sound.
I wasn't his love anymore. I was a biological threat.
Hours bled into days.
Sofia ordered the staff to stop bringing me food.
She claimed the trays were a "vector for disease."
I survived on tap water from the bathroom sink, fading in and out of a gray consciousness.
Through the thin walls, the sounds of life drifted in.
Laughter.
The delicate clinking of silverware against china.
I dragged myself to the window, bracing against the sill to look down into the courtyard.
They were having a candlelight dinner.
My favorite meal. Risotto with white truffles.
Dante was smiling.
He looked happy.
He looked... complete.
They were talking, their voices carrying clearly on the crisp night air.
"We need a name for the boy," Sofia said, idly twirling her wine glass by the stem.
Dante paused.
He looked up toward my dark window, though I knew he couldn't see me in the shadows.
"Luca," he said.
My heart stopped beating.
Luca.
That was the name we had chosen.
We had whispered it to each other between sheets, dreaming of a boy with his storm-gray eyes and my smile.
"He calls him Luca," Sofia repeated, testing the weight of it on her tongue. "I like it. A strong name."
She reached across the table, covering his hand with hers.
Dante didn't pull away.
He squeezed her fingers.
"To Luca," he toasted, lifting his glass.
I slid down the wall, curling into a tight, trembling ball on the floor.
He hadn't just stolen my freedom.
He hadn't just stolen my dignity.
He had stolen the future we built in our dreams and gifted it, wrapped in a bow, to the woman who destroyed us.
The gnawing hunger in my stomach was nothing compared to the vast, echoing emptiness in my soul.
I closed my eyes and whispered into the darkness.
"Goodbye, Dante."
And for the first time, I truly meant it.