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The Underboss's Secret: A Mafia Bride's Escape

The Underboss's Secret: A Mafia Bride's Escape

For three years, I was Dante Moretti's secret. I was the Underboss's property, the cure for a violent curse that plagued him. He promised that if he wasn't married by his twenty-fifth birthday, I would be his bride. But on the eve of that birthday, he ended our arrangement. He brought home another woman, Sienna, and introduced me as "the help." Sienna, with feigned innocence, knocked a precious memento from my hand, shattering it. When I confronted her, Dante slapped me twice in public, the humiliation searing my soul. Later, I discovered Sienna had framed me for kidnapping her, a lie Dante readily believed. To force a confession, he had my mother tied in a sack and thrown into the freezing lake to drown. He left her there to die. That was the moment the girl who loved him died, too. I saved my mother, and we fled the country, seeking refuge with my childhood friend, Julian. I thought I had escaped. But then Dante appeared in Australia, begging for forgiveness. I rejected him, choosing a future with Julian. I thought it was over. Until a car, driven by a vengeful Sienna, barreled towards us. The last thing I saw was Dante throwing himself in front of me, taking the full impact.
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Chapter 3

Elara POV: Dante's soldiers were brutally efficient. Silent. They dragged me from my apartment and shoved me into the back of a black SUV without a word. The city lights blurred into streaks as we sped toward the industrial expanse of the Chicago docks. They pulled me out onto a private pier where a sleek Moretti yacht bobbed in the black, churning water. And there, on the deck, the world fell out from under me. My mother, Elena, was tied to a chair. A gag was stuffed in her mouth, her eyes wide with terror. Dante stood beside her, a silhouette against the dim lights of the distant city-the devil himself, cloaked in shadow and absolute power. "I asked you a question, Elara," he said, his voice deceptively calm. "Where is my fiancée?" "I don't know what you're talking about," I choked out, my eyes fixed on my mother. He laughed, a short, ugly sound. He pulled a phone from his pocket and shoved it in my face. On the screen, a string of text messages gleamed. Sent from a burner phone to Sienna, filled with threats. And signed with my name. "You're pathetic," he spat. "You couldn't stand being replaced, so you kidnapped her out of jealousy." He leaned in closer, his breath hot against my ear. "I told you. You were always just a convenience. You will never be my wife." Every word landed like a physical blow. "I didn't do it, Dante. I swear." My pleas were lost to the wind. He straightened and gave a curt nod to his Capo, a burly man named Rocco. Rocco and another soldier untied my mother from the chair. They forced her frail body into a heavy burlap sack. "No!" I screamed, lunging forward, but two soldiers grabbed my arms, their grips like vices. "Dante, please, her heart... she's not strong!" "Then you'd better start talking," he said, his face impassive. Rocco tied a weight to the bottom of the sack and, with a grunt, heaved it over the side of the yacht. It hit the freezing water with a sickening splash and began to sink. I thrashed against the men holding me, a raw, animal sound tearing from my throat. I could see the sack disappearing into the darkness. My mother. My whole world. Dante watched me, his expression unreadable. He was waiting for me to break. Just as I was about to scream out a confession to a crime I didn't commit, a phone rang. It was Dante's. He answered it, listened for a moment, a flicker of relief crossing his face. "Found? Where?" He listened again. "Good. I'm on my way." He hung up and turned to his men. "Let's go. They found her." They released me and followed him off the pier without a backward glance. They didn't cut the rope. They just left her there, sinking in the icy depths of Lake Michigan. For a heartbeat, I was paralyzed. Then, adrenaline surged through me. I scrambled onto the yacht, found a knife in a utility box, and hacked at the thick rope. It finally snapped. Without a second thought, I dove into the black, frigid water. The cold was a physical blow, a vise grip on my lungs, but I kicked frantically, my hands searching in the dark. My fingers brushed against the rough burlap. I grabbed it, pulling with all my strength, my lungs burning. I dragged her to the pier, hauling her dead weight out of the water. She was unconscious, her skin a deathly blue. I tore the gag from her mouth and started CPR, my movements clumsy and desperate. As I pressed on her chest, one thought burned with terrifying clarity: This was the line. He had tried to murder my mother to punish me. Her body convulsed, and she coughed up a lungful of water. She was breathing. Barely. My fingers shook so badly I could barely unlock my phone. There was an unspoken rule in Dante's world. A code. You don't call outsiders. You handle things internally. You call a Moretti doctor. But he had left her to die. I broke the code. My voice was a raw whisper when the operator answered. "9-1-1, what's your emergency?"