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The Don’s Unwanted Bride Novel Cover

The Don’s Unwanted Bride

“You took her place. Now you’ll take her punishment.” “Then punish me, Don. Just remember — I never learned how to beg.” When I came home after graduating abroad, I didn’t expect to be sold off like property. But that’s exactly what my parents did — trading me to the city’s most feared mafia don to pay their debt. Only... I wasn’t supposed to be the bride. He wanted my twin sister — the beautiful, perfect one. I was just the mistake they shoved into a wedding dress. Now I’m trapped in a mansion of marble and blood, married to a man who hates the sight of me. He swore to make me pay for a crime I never committed, to break me until I begged for mercy. But what happens when the devil who was meant to destroy me starts falling for me instead? And when I finally rise to take revenge on my family… will he still choose to stand by the bride he never wanted?
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Chapter 2

The mansion looked like something out of a nightmare—beautiful, silent, and wrong.

Its iron gates opened without a sound, swallowing the car that carried me into the darkness. The road curved up through rows of cypress trees, their shadows cutting across the headlights like knives.

I sat in the backseat between two of Alessandro Romano’s men, my hands shaking inside the lace gloves my mother had shoved on me hours ago. I could still feel her perfume on my skin—sweet and heavy, the scent of guilt.

The car stopped before the entrance. Warm golden light spilled from the open doors, but it didn’t make the place any less terrifying. Inside, everything gleamed: marble floors, tall mirrors, flowers that looked too expensive to touch. But it was quiet. Too quiet.

I swallowed hard as one of the men opened the door. “This way, Mrs. Romano,” he said, like the name already belonged to me.

My knees nearly gave out at that. Mrs. Romano.

No, that wasn’t me. That was supposed to be my sister.

When I stepped inside, my parents were already there—standing at the far end of the grand hall, pale and stiff beside a man in a tailored black suit. Alessandro Romano.

He turned when he heard me.

The sight of him stole the air from my lungs. He was tall, broad-shouldered, and terrifyingly calm. His black hair gleamed under the chandelier, his sharp jaw clenched as his cold gray eyes scanned me from head to toe. There was something in his gaze that felt like being dissected.

My father cleared his throat, his voice too cheerful. “A-Alessandro, she’s here.”

Alessandro didn’t answer. He just kept staring. His expression didn’t change, but I could see something flicker there—confusion? Disbelief?

I couldn’t breathe.

He took a slow step toward me, and the air between us thickened. “You don’t look like her anymore.”

My heart stopped.

He said it so quietly that only I and my parents could have heard it. My mother’s eyes widened. My father’s hand tightened around hers.

“I—” My voice cracked. “The journey was long, I guess… I look tired.”

His gaze sharpened. For a moment, I thought he would call it out, expose everything. But instead, he looked away, as if the thought disgusted him.

“Let’s get this over with,” he said coldly.

His men moved into place. The officiant stepped forward, looking like he’d rather be anywhere else. My parents took their positions behind me. My mother’s hand brushed my shoulder briefly, but it wasn’t comfort—it was control.

My dress felt too tight. My heartbeat was loud enough to echo in my ears.

The ceremony began. The words floated around me, meaningless. I tried to focus, to remember how to breathe, but all I could think was—this isn’t real. It can’t be.

“Do you, Alessandro Romano, take this woman…”

His voice was low and firm when he said yes. Not a hint of hesitation.

Then came my turn. The officiant’s eyes met mine, almost pitying. “Do you, Lila Grant—”

I froze. My stomach dropped.

Alessandro’s head tilted slightly at the sound of the name.

My father coughed sharply. “She prefers just ‘Lila,’” he interrupted, his voice tight. “It’s fine, just continue.”

The officiant hesitated, then cleared his throat and went on.

I could feel Alessandro’s gaze burning into me. Every nerve in my body screamed that he knew. He knew something wasn’t right.

When it was time to sign, my fingers trembled so badly that the pen clattered against the table. My father reached to steady my hand, whispering, “Just do it.”

My chest tightened. I wanted to scream, to tell the truth, to run—but the image of those men outside, the money, my parents’ desperate eyes—all of it pinned me down.

I signed.

Alessandro took the pen next. His movements were slow, deliberate, controlled. When he finished, he didn’t hand it back right away. Instead, he looked up at me with that same unblinking stare.

His voice was quiet, but it sliced straight through me. “You’ve changed, Lila.”

I forced a shaky smile. “People change, Mr. Romano.”

The corner of his mouth twitched, not quite a smile, not quite anger. “Not like this.”

The officiant mumbled something about witnesses and blessings, but I barely heard him. My ears were ringing. My parents clapped awkwardly. Alessandro didn’t even move.

Then he leaned close enough that I could feel his breath brush my ear. “Tell your father his debt is paid,” he said softly, “but I don’t make deals twice.”

My blood ran cold.

He straightened and nodded at his men. “Take them home.”

My parents looked relieved. My father muttered a thank you before they were ushered away. My mother glanced back once, guilt flickering across her face before the door shut behind her.

Now it was just me and him.

The silence stretched. I stared at the floor, at the polished marble that reflected us like ghosts.

“Look at me,” he said.

I lifted my head slowly. His expression was unreadable, but his eyes… they were searching, cold but curious.

“You’re trembling,” he said.

“I’m cold,” I lied.

“No.” His voice softened, barely. “You’re scared.”

My throat tightened. I didn’t answer.

He stepped closer, close enough that I could smell his cologne—spice and smoke. “You should be,” he murmured. “A woman who hides something on her wedding night rarely survives long in my world.”

My breath caught.

Before I could speak, he turned and walked toward the grand staircase, his voice echoing off the marble. “Follow me, Mrs. Romano.”

The title hit me like a slap.

I hesitated, my heart pounding, then forced my feet to move. Each step felt heavier than the last as I followed him up into the darkness of the mansion.

At the top of the stairs, he stopped and turned slightly. The light caught his eyes, sharp and silver.

“Sleep in the east wing,” he said. “The room’s ready.”

I blinked, confused. “You’re not—”

He cut me off. “I don’t share my bed with liars.”

My chest tightened painfully.

He walked away without another word, disappearing down the hall.

When the door shut behind him, the silence hit me like thunder.

I stood there alone in my wedding dress, my hands still shaking, the ink from my forged name still wet on the paper.

I didn’t know whether to cry or run.

But as I looked at the door he’d vanished behind, a thought slipped through the fear—quiet, sharp, and dangerous.

He didn’t believe me.

He already knew.

And if I wanted to survive, I’d have to become the woman he thought he married—before he discovered who I really was.

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