
The Mafia King's Betrayed Wife
Chapter 1
The vintage Cartier watch gleamed in the moonlight filtering through the bedroom windows. I'd spent three months' allowance on it, carefully selecting the perfect gift for our third wedding anniversary. The salesman had assured me Dante would love it—classic, elegant, understated luxury. Just like him.
My fingers trembled slightly as I clutched the gift box wrapped in silver paper. Three years of marriage to Dante Moretti. Three years of trying to be the perfect wife. Three years of hoping that someday, he would look at me the way he used to when we first met.
I smoothed down my dress—a simple cream silk that Dante had once complimented—and took a deep breath before pushing open our bedroom door.
The sound hit me first.
Moans. The rhythmic creaking of our bed. Sophia's voice, high and breathless, calling out encouragements that made my cheeks burn.
"Harder, Dante... Yes, just like that..."
My body froze in the doorway, the gift box suddenly heavy in my hands. Through the partially drawn curtains, I could see them—Dante's powerful body moving over Sophia's, her long legs wrapped around his waist, her head thrown back in ecstasy.
I must have made a sound because Dante turned his head, his eyes meeting mine over Sophia's shoulder. There was no surprise there. No guilt. No shame.
Just cold boredom.
He paused mid-thrust, looking at me as if I were an annoying interruption. "See what you need to see, then get out," he snarled, not even bothering to disentangle himself from Sophia. "We're busy."
Sophia's laugh cut through me like a knife. "Oh look, it's the little wife," she purred, her eyes gleaming with malicious triumph. "Did you bring us something, Isabella? Maybe some champagne to celebrate?"
My fingers went numb. The gift box slipped from my grasp, falling to the marble floor with a sickening crash. The vintage watch inside shattered, its delicate mechanism scattering across the floor like my dreams.
Dante pulled out of Sophia with a grunt of irritation and reached for his pants. "Clean that up before you go," he ordered, not looking at me as he dressed. "And don't forget to lock the door on your way out."
I stood rooted to the spot, unable to move, unable to breathe. The broken watch lay at my feet—a perfect metaphor for my marriage.
Dante lit a Cuban cigar, the smoke curling around his face as he walked toward me. He was fully dressed now, his expensive suit immaculate, as if nothing had happened.
"Three years," he said, blowing smoke directly into my face. I coughed, tears stinging my eyes from the acrid smell. "Three years and you still don't get it."
He grabbed my chin roughly, forcing me to look up at him. His eyes were cold, empty pits where I had once thought I'd seen love.
"You were always just a placeholder, Isabella," he said, his voice soft but cruel. "A womb for the Moretti heir. Nothing more."
I trembled under his grip, my voice barely a whisper. "All those things you said to me... when we got married... were they all lies?"
Dante laughed, the sound echoing in the spacious bedroom. He released my chin only to pull Sophia into his arms, pressing a kiss to her temple.
"Every single one," he confirmed, his arm tightening around her waist. "You're boring, Isabella. A corpse in bed. No passion, no fire. Just... dull."
The next day came too quickly. The annual Moretti family gathering filled our mansion with Italy's most powerful mafia leaders. I stood in the shadows, wearing a simple white dress that felt like a mockery after last night's revelation.
Dante arrived late, making a grand entrance with Sophia on his arm. She wore a stunning red gown that clung to every curve, diamonds glittering at her throat.
"Gentlemen," Dante announced to the assembled Dons and their lieutenants, "may I introduce my special guest for this evening—Sophia."
No one even glanced in my direction. I was invisible.
"Isabella," Dante called out suddenly, his voice cutting through the murmur of conversation. "The guests' glasses need refilling."
I moved forward mechanically, the tray of wine glasses feeling like it weighed a thousand pounds. Each step brought me closer to Dante's table, where he sat with Sophia draped across him like a trophy.
As I approached, my eyes fixed on the floor in humiliation, I felt Dante's foot extend deliberately into my path. There was no time to react. I tripped, the tray tilting forward. Red wine cascaded down the front of my white dress, staining it like blood.
Laughter erupted around me—cruel, mocking sounds that seemed to come from everywhere at once.
"Oh dear," Sophia's voice cut through the laughter as she stood up. She smoothed her hands down the front of her red gown—a gown I recognized with a jolt of horror.
It was my wedding dress.
"Do you like it?" she asked loudly enough for everyone to hear. "Dante says this dress was wasted on a virgin. It needs a real woman to wear it."
I remained frozen on the floor, wine dripping from my ruined dress onto the marble beneath me.
Dante stood then, pulling Sophia into his arms for a deep, public kiss. His hand moved possessively to her hip—to the exact spot where he had once had my name tattooed.
The tattoo he'd had removed last year, claiming it was "a mistake."
As they kissed, Sophia's eyes remained open, fixed on me with undisguised triumph.
In that moment, something inside me changed—a tiny spark igniting in the darkness of my soul.
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