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Vincenzo's Girl: Avenging My Mafia Betrayal

Vincenzo's Girl: Avenging My Mafia Betrayal

I was eight months pregnant with the heir to my husband's criminal empire, a man I adored. Then I found his vasectomy certificate, dated a year ago—six months before he begged me for a son. Our entire marriage was a lie, a cruel game orchestrated for his obsessive sister. I overheard him admit he let his men defile me, turning my pregnancy into a public bet just to prove he could build me a throne and then watch me burn on it. My love, my life, my child—it was all a ritual sacrifice. But they forgot one thing about the woman they planned to destroy. As they plotted my final humiliation, I made a single call to the one man my husband truly fears. "Dad," I said quietly. "I'm ready to come home."
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Chapter 2

Alessia POV: There was a long silence on the other end of the line, so heavy I could feel the weight of three years of my defiance in it. Then, a voice that sounded like gravel and old whiskey rumbled through the speaker. "Alessia?" The sound of my father's voice, the voice of Vincenzo Moretti, patriarch of the formidable Moretti Group, was enough to make the dam inside me break. A single, hot tear escaped and traced a path down my cheek. "Yes, Dad. It's me." "Where are you?" The question wasn't a plea. It was a demand. The voice of a man used to the world rearranging itself to his will. "I'm in his city," I whispered, unable to say Dante's name. "I made a mistake. A terrible mistake." I could hear him breathing, a slow, controlled sound that did little to hide the fury simmering beneath it. "You ran from your duty. You ran from your family. You married that... upstart without my blessing." "I know," I choked out. "And I'm paying for it." I told him everything. The lies, the vasectomy, Elara. The rumors. The baby that wasn't an heir but a poker chip. I left nothing out. When I finished, the silence returned, but this time it was different. It was the calm before a hurricane. "He laid his hands on a Moretti," my father said, his voice dropping to a low, lethal growl. "He laid his hands on my daughter. And he used you in a game." "Yes," I whispered. "This young pretender," my father continued, a chilling note of dismissal in his tone, "is going to learn the difference between a fleeting name and a lasting legacy. He is going to learn the price of touching what is mine." A wave of relief so profound it almost buckled my knees washed over me. I was no longer Alessia Rinaldi, the clueless, betrayed wife. I was Alessia Moretti, and my father's wrath was coming. "I'm on my way," he said. "But New York is not next door. I need to gather my people. The right people. I will be there tomorrow evening. Can you last that long, little girl?" The question hung in the air. One more day. Twenty-four more hours in the house of the man who had systematically destroyed me. "Yes," I said, a shard of ice forming in my chest. "I can last." "Good," he said. "Don't let him see your fear. You are a Moretti. Remember that. Act the part you've been playing. The loving wife. Just for one more day. Tomorrow, we dismantle his empire, piece by piece." The line went dead. I stood there for a long moment, the phone still pressed to my ear, the cold glass a conduit for the steel flooding my veins. I wiped my face, smoothed my dress over my belly, and forced my lips into a serene smile. One more day. I could do that. I could play this part. After all, my entire marriage had been a performance. I was just taking over the lead role for the final act.