The Don's Unmarked Woman

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The Don's Unmarked Woman

Arianna POV

Just as Aunt Lucia descended the front steps of the brownstone to greet me, she paused mid-stride, her sharp gaze cutting between me and the pair standing on the sidewalk. I knew what was forming behind her eyes the question, the concern, the fury she would dress up as maternal worry. I cut her off before she could draw breath.

"Mom sent these supplies for you. Be sure to sort through them quickly some of it won't keep long."

I didn't spare Domin my so-called husband a glance. The man had made his choices loud and clear these past few weeks, parading them through every room of the Valente estate like declarations of war. But today, he surprised me by speaking up, his voice laced with a calm so practiced it could have fooled anyone who didn't know him the way I did.

"Arianna, don't misunderstand. Selena's old apartment was too close to the Southside unaffiliated territory. I couldn't leave her there unprotected. So I found her a safer place nearby. I didn't realize it was this close to your aunt's home." He paused, his dark eyes sweeping over the crates being hauled from the trunk. "By the way, why do you have so much stuff?"

I directed the driver to carry the crates through to Aunt Lucia's kitchen, my voice easy, unhurried. "You don't need to explain yourself to me, Dominic. My mother bought these things. We don't know when we'll be back, so she sent extra."

Dominic visibly relaxed at my indifference. His broad shoulders dropped a fraction, the tension in his jaw easing as though he'd been bracing for a fight he didn't have to have. His relief only deepened my irritation a slow, corrosive thing eating through the lining of my chest.

"No problem. The North Ridge safe house isn't far from here. Just let me know if you need anything," he said lightly, as if we were still close enough to share pleasantries. As if the last eight years hadn't ended with me packing my things in silence while he was across town, settling another woman into a furnished apartment.

He didn't know yet that I was staying here for good. And I had no intention of telling him.

Aunt Lucia, who had been watching the exchange with the stillness of a woman who had spent her whole life reading the silences between made men, finally spoke. "Dominic, you've known Arianna since she was barely twenty. Is this really how things are between you now? It would be a shame to let misunderstandings ruin what you've built."

Before Dominic could respond, I shook my head, my voice firm enough to close the subject like a door. "There's no misunderstanding, Aunt Lucia. Dominic doesn't let one linger. If he hasn't explained by now, then there's nothing left to say."

Selena shifted uncomfortably beside him, her expression arranged into something tired and fragile the kind of weariness that drew a man's eye and made him feel needed. It worked. Dominic's attention snapped to her immediately.

"You look pale," he murmured, concern softening his tone in a way that made something ancient and wounded twist behind my ribs.

He turned to the driver. "Hold off on the deliveries for now. We'll take the elevator first."

Watching him fuss over Selena, I stepped aside to let them pass. The hallway was narrow, and for a moment Dominic hesitated, his dark eyes flicking to mine searching, maybe, for permission or protest. When I offered neither, he placed his hand on the small of Selena's back and guided her toward the elevator.

As the doors slid shut, I caught a fleeting glimpse of their reflection in the polished brass. Selena's wide-eyed gratitude, tilted up at him like a flower turning toward light. Dominic's protective stance, his body angled between her and the world as though she were something precious that needed shielding.

The image stirred an unwelcome memory. A younger me, barely twenty-one, standing in the marble foyer of the Valente estate while Dominic carried my suitcases inside with a grin that split his face wide open. He'd been just as attentive then, his hand warm on my waist, his voice low and certain as he leaned close to my ear: "You're going to be the Lady of this Family, Arianna. Every man in this house will answer to you."

Eight years. No ring. No church wedding. No formal acknowledgment before the Families. Just promises spoken in bedrooms and hallways where no one else could hear.

Aunt Lucia sighed beside me, her expression tinged with a regret that ran deeper than the moment. "Are you really okay with this, Arianna?"

I turned to her with a tight smile that didn't reach my eyes. "I don't have a choice. If this is where his loyalty lies, then so be it."

After the supplies were sorted and stacked in Aunt Lucia's kitchen, I decided to leave before the last of my composure cracked. Yet as I stood outside on the curb waiting for the driver to bring the car around, Dominic and Selena were still upstairs, their absence gnawing at me like a wound I kept pressing my thumb against. Out of courtesy to what we once had or perhaps out of some stubborn refusal to be the one who stopped trying first I pulled out my phone and sent him a short message.

When are you heading back?

The response came almost immediately, though not in the way I'd expected. A voice message.

When I hit play, Selena's sweet, high-pitched voice filled my ears, intimate as a whisper shared between conspirators.

"Arianna, Dominic's helping me fix the wiring in the apartment. This place hasn't been lived in for a while, so there's a lot to sort out. You should head home don't let us hold you up."

I stared at the screen for a long moment, the glow of it harsh against the fading afternoon light. I could already feel the pity bubbling in my chest not for her, but for myself, for the woman who had waited eight years for a ring that never came and was now being dismissed by the woman who'd replaced her. I swallowed it down. The Castellano blood in my veins wouldn't let me break on a sidewalk.

I climbed into the waiting car, the leather seat cold against my back. Another message buzzed through before I could close the door.

By the way, Arianna, please don't take this the wrong way. Dominic's just helping me out because he feels sorry for me. It's hard living alone when you're new to a Family's territory and you don't know anyone.

The bitterness rose in my throat, sharp as bile. She wanted me to know. Every word was a carefully placed blade how closely she relied on him, how willingly he answered her calls, how naturally he'd stepped into the role of her protector. The role he'd once played for me.

I barely noticed when Dominic called moments later. I picked up, my hand steady even as something inside me trembled.

His voice was sharp with frustration, the kind of controlled anger that meant he'd been coached or provoked. "Arianna, why were you so cold to Selena earlier? She's one of my people, and it's my responsibility to make sure she's safe. Her situation's temporary until we find her proper accommodation. Isn't it normal for me to help her?"

I laughed bitterly, though there was no humor in it. The sound came out hollow, echoing against the car window. "Since when do you go out of your way for your people like this, Dominic? At the Christmas gathering last year, you sulked and left early because you claimed you weren't feeling well. I didn't even question it. But now you're going above and beyond for her?"

I could hear soft sobs in the background. Selena's sobs. Perfectly timed, perfectly pitched the kind of crying that made a man feel like a monster for standing still.

Her voice came through, muffled but clear enough, as carefully fragile as she could make it. "Dominic, maybe I should leave. I don't want to cause trouble between you and Arianna."

Dominic's voice dropped low, a visceral edge cutting through the phone that I felt in my sternum. "No one's leaving, Selena. Don't listen to her."

My chest tightened. He hadn't used that tone for me in years. That fierce, instinctive protectiveness the voice of a man drawing a line in the sand, daring the world to cross it. He'd used it once, a long time ago, when a Valente soldier had spoken to me with too much familiarity at a dinner. Dominic had gone quiet in that terrifying way of his, and the soldier had been reassigned to a warehouse in New Jersey by morning.

Now that same ferocity belonged to someone else.

I took a deep breath, forcing my emotions down into the place where Castellano women kept the things that could destroy them. "Fine, Dominic. You're right. My mistake for asking. Don't worry I've already left. You don't need to come back for me."

I ended the call, silencing the protests forming on his lips. The screen went dark. I set the phone face-down on the seat beside me and stared out the window as the driver pulled away from the curb, the brownstone shrinking in the side mirror until it was nothing at all.

Arianna's POV

Dominic's questioning tone dissolved into silence as my cool, indifferent response cut through him like a blade. His breath hitched on the other end of the line, but I didn't wait for a reply. I ended the call and leaned back in the passenger seat, watching the darkened streets blur past as the car sped toward Castellano territory.

The moment I stepped out onto the gravel drive, something deep inside me stirred with unease. The night was clear, the moon hanging high and full, its pale light washing over the iron gates and stone walls of the old estate like a silent witness. It felt as though the sky itself knew the turmoil churning in my chest. My phone buzzed in my coat pocket, pulling me back to earth. The Valente Family's private group chat had erupted. The unread message count had skyrocketed.

Curiosity got the better of me, and I opened it. The first thing I saw was a photograph Selena had posted a picture of Dominic crouched beneath her desk, sleeves rolled to the elbows, fixing the wiring on her office setup, his shirt taut across his shoulders from the effort. Something visceral tightened in my gut, a warning in my blood.

"Who else has a Boss this considerate?" Selena's caption read. "I'd devote my life to the Family's prosperity! Can I sign a lifetime contract?"

Below her message, a flood of replies from the Family's soldiers and capos.

"I've never seen Don Valente like this. The stories about him being a cold perfectionist don't hold up here!"

"Look at those arms. I bet he could handle a lot more than just wiring."

"Selena, quit rubbing it in. We all know you're the future Lady of the Family!"

I clenched my phone so hard the case creaked beneath my fingers. She was weaving her web so skillfully, tying Dominic to her in every visible way. When I had been by his side, Dominic had done the same posting little moments of us at the shooting range, walking through the vineyard at dusk, or sharing quiet laughter over espresso in the kitchen of the estate. Back then, it had felt like the bond between us was unshakable, forged in something deeper than arrangement or convenience. Now, I was just a shadow in his past, and Selena stood where I once had, basking in the glow of his attention.

I exited the chat and blocked the notifications. My decision to move forward felt right, even as a pang of loss clawed at the inside of my ribs. Shaking off the ache, I stepped into the quarters that had been my home for so long. Eight years a lifetime in this world was packed into this space. Memories clung to every corner, every scratch in the hardwood, every faint trace of cologne that still lingered in the curtains. But tonight, I would leave them behind.

A soft ache bloomed in my chest as I started packing my things, and my gaze landed on the large leather-bound book sitting on the coffee table. It was our album a tradition Dominic had insisted on. Each photograph inside captured a moment from the years we'd spent together, his promise to give me 9,999 memories before making me his wife. He'd said he wanted me to choose him, not because of the arrangement between our Families, but because of his devotion.

The album was nearly full, with only one blank page left. But all those promises now felt hollow, shattered by the way he had drifted into Selena's arms. The old blood inside me stirred again a mixture of sadness and anger that mirrored my own feelings, the Castellano instinct that knew when something was irreparably broken.

I picked up the album and carried it outside to the stone courtyard where the Family often gathered for celebrations. The moonlight illuminated the open space, casting long shadows across the flagstones as I crouched to build a small fire in the iron pit. When the flames took hold, I placed the album on the kindling and watched it burn, the edges curling and blackening, the leather cracking and splitting. Smoke rose into the night air, carrying away years of love, promises, and heartache.

Dominic arrived moments later. I sensed him before I saw him the weight of his presence, the familiar scent of his cologne cutting through the woodsmoke, something sharp and expensive and uniquely his. He froze at the edge of the courtyard, his dark eyes locking on the burning album. Panic was instantly etched across his face as he sprinted forward.

"What are you doing?" he roared, his voice carrying the full force of a Don's command, the kind that made soldiers snap to attention and conversations die in crowded rooms.

I didn't flinch. His authority had lost its hold on me.

He lunged toward the fire, trying to pull the album out, but the flames were too fierce. He hissed as the heat seared his hands, the skin reddening instantly. Despite the pain, he stomped on the remains, trying to extinguish the blaze that consumed our past. Pages scattered like ash across the courtyard stones fragments of photographs, half-burned smiles, moments that no longer meant anything.

"You're insane!" he shouted, turning on me, his dark eyes burning with a fury that would have made any soldier in his Family take a step back. "Do you even realize what you've done? Years of memories, gone! Why, Arianna? Why would you do this?"

I met his gaze, and something rose within me that deep, ancestral certainty, the Castellano blood that had survived generations of men exactly like him. "Because memories don't mean anything if the promises tied to them are broken. You wanted to give me 9,999 reasons to choose you, but you let Selena take over before we even reached the end."

His jaw clenched, something dangerous flickering behind his expression. "You don't understand. Selena"

"Selena," I interrupted, my voice steady as stone. "Has claimed what you've allowed her to. You think I don't see what she's doing? The photograph in the group chat, the comments, the way she clings to you it's all calculated. And you let it happen."

He took a step closer, and the firelight caught the hard line of his jaw, the tension in his shoulders. His voice softened, dropping to something almost private. "Ellie, it's not what you think. She's part of the Family, and as the head of this organization, I have a responsibility to"

"Don't." I raised a hand to stop him. The fire crackled between us, embers drifting upward into the dark. "Don't insult me by pretending this is just about Family business. You made your choice, Dominic. Now, I'm making mine."

Arianna's POV

The ash still smoldered faintly at my feet as Dominic's fury dissolved into something that might have been regret. His eyes so familiar, yet belonging to a man I no longer recognized dimmed beneath the cold glow of the estate's garden lanterns. He straightened his collar, tugged at his cuffs, trying to reassemble the composure of a Don who was never supposed to lose control. But I wasn't fooled. I could see the vein at his temple, the tight set of his jaw, the way his chest rose and fell too fast for a man accustomed to commanding rooms with a whisper.

I brushed the soot from my hands and stood, meeting his gaze. My voice was steady, stripped of any warmth. "It's fine. I saw bugs crawling in the album, maybe roaches, so I burned it."

Dominic's brows furrowed as he stepped closer, something dangerous shifting behind his expression, the way it always did before he made someone regret speaking. "You burned it? That was ten years' worth of memories. How could you" His words faltered as he realized his voice had risen, the raw edge of it cutting through the still night air like something he hadn't meant to reveal.

I held my ground, raising an eyebrow. "Are you done?"

The sheer indifference in my tone seemed to hit him harder than any insult. He exhaled sharply, running a hand through his dark hair. "I'm sorry. I overreacted," he said, his voice softer now, the practiced softness of a man who had learned early that gentleness could be a weapon too. "But that album meant a lot to us. Why didn't you wait for me?"

I let out a humorless laugh. Us. There was no "us" anymore. Not since he chose Selena Mancuso the nobody from nowhere with her sickly-sweet perfume and her crocodile tears, a woman with no family name, no bloodline, no one to vouch for her in any room that mattered.

"You've been too busy with Family matters or whatever it is you've been doing with her. I didn't want to bother you with something so trivial."

Something tightened in his expression at my words, a flicker of warning in those dark eyes, but I didn't flinch. Let him get angry. I was past caring.

Dominic stepped closer, his voice dropping to that low, persuasive register he used when he wanted something the same tone he used in sit-downs, the same tone that made men sign over their territories. "I've been neglecting you. I know that. But we can fix this, can't we? Once the Family stabilizes, we'll retake those photos. We'll fill another album."

There was a time those words would have melted my heart. I would have believed him, the way I'd believed every promise for eight years that the ring was coming, that the church wedding was coming, that he would stand before God and the Families and call me his wife. But not anymore. I couldn't unsee the way he looked at Selena, or forget the scent of her cheap perfume clinging to his shirt when he came to bed at three in the morning.

"Sure," I said, my tone flat. "If you really want to make it up to me, throw me a proper birthday party for once."

The request seemed to catch him off guard. For years, my allergies to dairy and certain ingredients meant I'd never been able to enjoy my own celebrations. And Dominic had always been too "busy" to arrange anything special too consumed with the operations, the deals, the endless meetings that somehow always included Selena at his side.

His eyes flickered with hesitation, but he nodded. "Of course. Whatever you want."

Before he could say more, his phone buzzed. The distinctive tone he used only for her. He glanced at the screen, his expression tightening in a way he thought I couldn't read. "It's something urgent from the Family. I'll be back soon. Don't wait up."

The lie was so blatant it almost made me laugh. Urgent Family business, at eleven o'clock at night, announced by the ringtone he'd assigned to his secretary. "Go ahead," I said, waving him off. "I'm used to it."

He hesitated for a moment, standing there in the garden with the last of the embers dying between us, as if he wanted to say something as if some part of him understood that the ash at my feet was more than paper and photographs. But instead, he turned and walked away, his footsteps crunching over the gravel path, leaving me alone with the dying glow of our past.

The next morning, the Valente estate buzzed with activity. Party planners filled the grand salon, arranging decorations that felt oddly familiar the same silk draping, the same crystal centerpieces, the same arrangement of white roses and gold accents. By midday, the truth was impossible to ignore. The setup was nearly identical to Selena's birthday party from two months ago. The one Dominic had personally overseen. The one where he'd toasted her in front of fifty associates and their wives while I stood in the back of the room like a ghost in my own home.

And then, as if summoned by my thoughts, she arrived.

Selena Mancuso walked into the salon dressed in a sleek red dress that clung to her like a declaration of war, her perfume preceding her that obnoxious blend of vanilla and floral notes that saturated every room she entered. Something deep in my gut recoiled, the old Castellano blood tightening in my chest the way it always did when danger wore a smile.

She sauntered over, a smug curve on her painted lips. "I hope you like the decorations," she said, her voice dripping with sweetness so false it could have poisoned the air. "I designed them myself. Thought they'd suit your style."

I stared at her. My gaze dropped to the necklace resting against her collarbone a crescent moon pendant encrusted with diamonds. My necklace. The Castellano heirloom that Dominic had presented to me on our fifth anniversary, the piece that had been passed through the women of my bloodline for three generations. It had gone "missing" from my jewelry case weeks ago.

The sight of it on her throat was not merely an insult. It was a desecration. That pendant carried the weight of my grandmother's name, my mother's hands, the Castellano legacy that Selena Mancuso a woman with no name, no family, no blood worth honoring had no right to touch, let alone wear.

My voice came out cold enough to frost glass. "A recycled setup for a recycled person. It suits you."

Her smile faltered. Anger flashed through her eyes real anger, the kind she usually kept hidden beneath her performance. Without another word, she grabbed a crystal ornament from a nearby table and smashed it against the marble floor. The sound cracked through the room like a gunshot. A shard nicked her foot, drawing a thin line of blood across her ankle. She gasped dramatically, clutching at it, her face crumpling into an expression of wounded innocence so rehearsed it could have been choreographed.

Before I could react, Dominic stormed into the salon.

The room changed the instant he entered. The party planners froze. The two soldiers stationed by the far door straightened like pulled strings. The air itself seemed to compress, the way it always did when the Don of the Valente Family walked into a space carrying fury.

His sharp gaze swept from Selena's bleeding foot to me. The calculation took less than a second.

"She she did this," Selena whimpered, tears spilling down her cheeks with practiced precision. "I was only trying to help, and she"

The slap came before I even registered his hand moving.

My head snapped to the side. A sharp, blooming sting spread across my cheek, hot and immediate, the sound of it ringing through the silent salon like a verdict. Every person in that room saw it. The party planners. The soldiers by the door. The staff who had paused in the hallway. Dominic Valente had struck the daughter of Don Castellano in front of witnesses an act that, in the world we lived in, demanded blood retribution.

Something deep inside me the old blood, the Castellano instinct that had kept my ancestors alive through generations of this life roared. It surged up through my chest, hot and feral, demanding that I strike back, that I remind him whose daughter he had just dared to touch. But I held it back. I pressed it down with every ounce of will I possessed, refusing to give him the satisfaction of a reaction. My hands remained at my sides. My expression remained stone.

"Enough!" Dominic's voice filled the room, absolute and terrible. "Selena took time out of her day to help with your party, and this is how you repay her? If you don't like it, then do it yourself!"

He didn't wait for a response. He bent and scooped Selena into his arms gently, tenderly, as if she were something precious and breakable and carried her out of the salon. Past the frozen staff. Past the soldiers who wouldn't meet my eyes. Past the wreckage of crystal and silk and white roses that was supposed to be my celebration.

The room emptied slowly after that. One by one, the planners gathered their things and left, none of them looking at me. I stood in the center of the grand salon with the sting still burning on my cheek and the Castellano blood screaming in my veins, and I understood with absolute, crystalline clarity that I was alone.

That evening, no one showed up for the party.

Not that I expected anyone to. Over the years, Dominic had systematically isolated me from every connection I'd built old friends, the wives of allied families, even the household staff who had once been loyal to me. He'd replaced them all with his people, his sycophants, associates who knew better than to cross the Don or show kindness to the woman he'd discarded. The Valente Family understood the hierarchy. And I was no longer at the top of it.

I opened the cake box on the dining table. The massive table that could seat thirty, empty now except for me. I cut a small slice despite the fact that I couldn't eat it the dairy, the ingredients I was allergic to, because no one had bothered to ask and no one had bothered to care. I stuck a single candle into the frosting and lit it with steady hands.

The flame wavered in the silence of the empty room.

I closed my eyes.

"I wish we never meet again," I whispered.

Then I blew out the flame, and the darkness settled around me like a burial shroud.

The next morning, I packed my things.

A single suitcase. That was all I needed to leave behind the life I'd once cherished, the eight years I'd poured into a man and a Family that had given me nothing in return no ring, no name, no place at the table. I moved through the bedroom we'd shared with the efficiency of a woman who had already grieved and come out the other side. Clothes. Documents. The few personal items that were truly mine. Everything else could stay. Everything else belonged to a ghost.

On the way to the airport, sitting in the back of a hired car with the Valente estate shrinking in the rearview mirror, I pulled out my phone and typed a single message to Dominic:

Let's end this here. Don't contact me again. Never in your miserable life.

I pressed send.

As the plane lifted off the tarmac and the city fell away beneath me, I turned off my phone. The screen had been lighting up relentlessly call after call after call from Dominic, the notifications stacking like the desperate hammering of a man who had just realized the door was locked from the other side.

I watched the screen go dark.

Then I leaned my head against the window, looked out at the clouds swallowing the world below, and let the silence take me.

Arianna's POV

How long had it been since he worried about me like that? Three years? Five? Or perhaps even longer. In my memories, Dominic had always been at my side my protector, the man I was supposed to spend my life with. We had understood each other better than anyone else in either Family. Sometimes we hadn't needed words at all; a single glance across a crowded room was enough for him to read every shifting current of my emotions.

Perhaps that certainty that I would always choose him, always forgive him had made him careless. It had given him the freedom to wound me, to parade another woman through his estate while assuming I would remain faithfully at his side, arranging his household, keeping his world in order. But even a Castellano woman has limits, and my loyalty had reached its end.

I stared at the countless missed calls flashing across my phone screen and blocked his number. My fingers hovered over his profile on the private messaging network the Families used. Eight years ago, his profile picture had been a sketch I had drawn of us his arm around my shoulders, both of us laughing, young and stupid with the belief that nothing could touch us. Now it was replaced by a polished photograph of him standing proudly beside Selena Mancuso, her hand resting on his arm with the casual possessiveness of a woman who believed she had already won.

A familiar ache tightened behind my ribs, but I swallowed it down. They looked like a married couple, even though no church had blessed them, no ring had been exchanged, no priest had spoken the words. With a deep breath, I pressed delete. A decade of memories erased with a single swipe.

A message from my aunt Lucia appeared just as I powered down my phone:

"Safe travels, Arianna. The estate isn't the same without you. We'll miss you."

I reassured her with a quick reply and boarded the flight. The three-hour journey felt like an eternity, my thoughts circling endlessly through regret, anger, and the dull, persistent ache of betrayal. I pressed my forehead against the cold window glass and watched the clouds drift past like smoke from a fire I had finally walked away from.

When the plane landed, I adjusted my scarf, ensuring it covered my bare neck the neck that bore no ring on the finger below it, no mark of any formal union. My parents waited for me at the terminal, arms full of gifts. They had insisted I come back to Castellano territory, leaving the chaos of the Valente compound and Dominic behind.

My father took my suitcase while my mother placed a delicate silver pendant around my neck, a tradition among the Castellano women when welcoming a daughter home. Her tears streamed down like stars falling from the night sky.

"Our daughter has grown into a stunning woman," she said, her voice trembling with emotion. "Promise us you won't leave again."

Papa smiled, his weathered face full of pride and concern. "We've already arranged a strong alliance for you. Don Ferrante's territory borders ours, so you'll never feel far from home."

I forced a smile, leaning into my mother's embrace. I had spent a decade believing Dominic was my forever, my husband in everything but name. I had sacrificed Family gatherings, holidays, and my parents' love all for a man who chose someone else. Guilt gnawed at me as I nodded.

"I won't run, Papa," I assured him. "If this union strengthens the Family and makes you proud, I'll honor it."

My parents visibly relaxed, though traces of worry lingered in the creases around their eyes.

"You've matured so much," Mamma said, brushing a lock of hair from my face. "Have you finished everything with... him?"

My stomach tightened at the mention of Dominic, but I nodded. "It's over. I'll never go back."

They exchanged a relieved glance before leading me to the car a black sedan with tinted windows, one of Papa's soldiers holding the door open with a respectful nod. As we drove through the familiar streets of Castellano territory, my phone buzzed. I ignored the unfamiliar number until it rang for the third time. Against my better judgment, I answered.

Dominic's furious voice exploded through the speaker.

"Arianna, what the hell are you doing? Blocking me? Running off without a word? Where are you?!"

He didn't wait for an answer, continuing in the same breath. "Selena's hurt because of you, and you can't even apologize? Do you realize how embarrassing you made me look in front of the Family?"

A bitter laugh escaped me. Of course. It wasn't about Selena's so-called injury or my absence. It was about his pride the pride of a Don who couldn't tolerate the thought that someone had walked away from him without permission. Before I could respond, I heard her soft, syrupy voice threading through the background like poison poured into honey.

"Don't be angry with her, Dominic. It's my fault for not understanding her preferences. Please, don't let this ruin what you had."

My grip tightened on the phone until my knuckles went white, nausea churning in my stomach. The performance was flawless the trembling voice, the self-sacrificing plea, all perfectly calibrated to make him protective and me the villain. I ended the call and blocked the number, cutting off his voice mid-sentence. The silence that followed felt like drawing a clean breath after years underwater.

"Sweetheart, is something wrong?" Mamma asked, sensing my distress from the front seat. Her eyes found mine in the rearview mirror.

I shook my head, forcing a smile. "Just a scam call."

"Good riddance," Papa muttered, his jaw tight. "Let's focus on happier things. How about stopping by the tailor to check on your wedding dress? It should be ready by now."

"That's a good idea," I said, grateful for the distraction.

The dress fitting took longer than expected, the staff meticulously ensuring every detail was perfect each seam, each fold of fabric, each hand-stitched bead. When I finally stepped into the gown, my reflection caught me off guard. The intricate lace hugged my frame, the silver embroidery glinting like candlelight in a cathedral. The bodice was structured and elegant, the train trailing behind me like a whispered promise. I looked every bit the Lady of a great Family that I was meant to be.

Mamma's eyes filled with tears as she snapped photographs, her excitement bubbling over. "You're breathtaking, Arianna. Every Family in the city will talk about this ceremony for years."

I bit back the lump in my throat, wishing I could share her joy. This wasn't the wedding I had dreamed of. The man I had spent a decade loving wouldn't be waiting at the altar. A different man would stand there one I barely knew, chosen by blood and strategy rather than by the heart.

"I'm proud of you," Papa said, placing a steady hand on my shoulder. His grip was firm, the grip of a man who had built an empire and was now trusting his daughter to carry part of its weight. "This marriage will bring peace and prosperity to both Families. You're doing the right thing."

I nodded, a practiced smile fixed on my face.

As we drove back to the Castellano estate, I gazed out the window, the tree-lined avenues blurring into a river of green and gold. Something restless stirred deep inside me that old Castellano instinct, that gut-deep awareness that had always been attuned to my emotions, mirroring every shift in my mood like a second heartbeat.

We'll be okay, I told myself silently. This is our fresh start.

But even as I tried to convince myself, doubt lingered like smoke that wouldn't clear.

When we arrived, my mother immediately began planning the ceremony details with the household staff seating arrangements, flowers, the menu for the reception. I retreated to my room, needing a moment to collect myself. The familiar scents of home surrounded me pine from the grounds, cedar from the old bookshelves, the faint trace of espresso and leather that had permeated these walls for generations. They comforted me in a way I hadn't expected.

I sat by the window, staring at the crescent moon hanging low over the estate. A feeling of calmness washed over me, settling into my bones like warmth from a fire I had forgotten existed. For the first time in years, I wasn't waiting for a call or an apology. I wasn't begging for scraps of affection from a man who kept me close enough to use but never close enough to honor. I was free.

The freedom tasted bittersweet, but it was mine.

The next morning, I rose with the sun, ready to embrace my new life. Something deep in my blood stirred, urging me forward that ancient Castellano resolve, the same steel that had carried the women of my family through decades of this world. Whatever lay ahead alliances, ceremonies, or challenges I would face it with my head held high.

I wasn't just a woman scorned. I was Arianna Castellano, daughter of Don Castellano, and my story was far from over.

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