He Left Me in the Basement, So I Married His Enemy

📖 Full Story Below! This is just a preview. Read the complete story at the bottom of this page via the official app link.

He Left Me in the Basement, So I Married His Enemy

The Fifth Canceled Wedding

Vance canceled our wedding for the fifth time on the day I planned to tell him I was pregnant.

The pregnancy report was folded inside my bridal clutch. Six weeks. His child. I had imagined telling him after the ceremony, when the vows were spoken and the church was empty. I imagined his hand resting over my stomach, his cold face softening for once, and his voice promising that this baby would never be treated like a debt.

But Vance did not come.

The wedding organizer stood beneath the cathedral window with her clipboard pressed to her chest. Around us, white roses filled the aisle, candles burned beside the altar, and Vance's capos stood in black suits without daring to meet my eyes.

"I'm sorry, Miss Sandra," she said. "Don Vance ordered the ceremony postponed."

Postponed. Such a gentle word for being abandoned.

"What reason did he give this time?" I asked.

"A security emergency. He said rival families were moving."

I almost laughed. Vance always used serious words when he lied. Rival families. Blood feud. Emergency council. Words heavy enough to make everyone lower their heads and stop asking questions.

My phone vibrated inside my clutch. Vance.

For one foolish second, my heart still moved toward him. I answered.

"Sandra," he said, cold and impatient. "The wedding has to wait."

"Where are you?"

There was a pause. Then he said, "Julia was surrounded by paparazzi at the airport. She called me crying. I couldn't leave her there."

Julia. His childhood sweetheart. His first love. The actress who claimed she wanted nothing to do with the Mafia, yet always needed Vance whenever I was supposed to have him.

I looked at the empty space beside me at the altar. "I'm standing here in a wedding dress."

"You'll survive," he replied. "Your family's debt is still unpaid. We'll marry when I return."

Before I could answer, Julia's soft voice came faintly through the phone. "Vance? The reporters are still outside..."

His tone changed at once. "I'm coming."

Then the call ended.

Outside the cathedral, a giant billboard lit up with breaking entertainment news. There was Vance, guiding Julia through a crowd of reporters with his black coat around her shoulders. The headline read: MAFIA HEIR VANCE MORETTI PROTECTS ACTRESS JULIA LORNE AFTER AIRPORT CHAOS.

No one mentioned the bride he had left behind. Of course they did not. I was not the woman Vance protected in public. I was the debt bride waiting in the shadows.

The penthouse was silent when I returned. It was supposed to become our marital home tonight. Champagne waited in a silver bucket. White lilies filled the bedroom. I took off the wedding dress myself and unfolded the pregnancy report again.

Six weeks. Vance's child. My child.

The front door opened after midnight. Vance came in with Julia under his arm. She wore his coat, and two of his men followed with her luggage. Her luggage. Into my home.

"Why are you still awake?" Vance asked.

I looked at Julia leaning into him. "You brought her here?"

"The press found her hotel. She needs somewhere safe." He glanced toward the master bedroom. "Clear your things from the room tomorrow. Julia needs to rest. She's used to a larger bed."

My whole body went cold. "That is our bedroom."

"It's a room. Don't be petty."

Petty. He had left me at the altar while I carried his child, and now I was petty for not offering our bed to another woman.

I pulled the engagement ring from my finger and placed it on the glass coffee table.

"I'm ending the engagement."

Vance stared at the ring. Then he laughed. "No."

"No?"

"Your father's debt is still unpaid. You don't get to end anything."

Before I could answer, a guard entered with a black briefcase. "Boss, an unmarked courier left this downstairs. It's addressed to Miss Sandra."

I opened it. Inside were syndicate bonds. Untraceable. Transferable. Real. Exactly enough to clear my family's debt.

"The debt is paid in full," I said. "So now I'm leaving."

Vance picked up one bond and saw the seal. Achilles. His enemy. The man he hated more than death.

"You called him?"

"I called someone who answered."

His face darkened. "You think Achilles can buy what belongs to me?"

"I don't belong to you."

He crossed the room and grabbed my wrist hard enough to make me gasp. "You belong to me until I say otherwise."

For the first time in five years, I did not lower my eyes. "Then say it. Say you don't love me, but you still won't let me go."

Something flickered across his face. Then Julia pressed into his arms and whispered, "Vance, she's scaring me."

Just like that, his attention shifted. He released me and looked over her shoulder at his men.

"Take her downstairs. Let her stay in the basement until she remembers who she belongs to."

The capos seized my arms. The pregnancy report slipped from my clutch and fluttered to the floor.

I screamed Vance's name once as they dragged me toward the basement door. He did not follow.

The last thing I saw before the steel door swallowed me was Julia lowering her gaze to the paper near her foot. She saw the word pregnant.

Then she looked up at me and smiled.

The Basement

The first shove sent me into the wall. The second sent me down the stairs.

I tried to catch the railing, but one of Vance's capos had already twisted my arms behind me. My fingers closed on air. Concrete struck my shoulder, my ribs, my hip, and finally the side of my head.

I landed at the bottom of the basement stairs with the breath knocked from my lungs.

The steel door above me shut. The lock slid into place.

At first, I could only hear my own breathing. Then the pain gathered low in my abdomen, deep and pulling, as if something inside me was being torn loose.

Warmth spread between my thighs.

My hand moved down. When I lifted my fingers, they were slick with blood.

"No," I whispered.

The word was too small. I pressed both hands over my stomach, as if I could hold the baby in place by force. Six weeks. A life so new I had barely learned how to believe in it, and already Vance's house was trying to take it from me.

I dragged myself toward the stairs.

The steel door had not shut perfectly; a line of light cut across the top step. Beyond it came music, low laughter, and the clink of glass. They were celebrating upstairs.

By the time I reached the door, my nails were broken and my lips tasted of iron.

"Help," I called.

Julia's voice floated through the crack. "Vance, maybe someone should check on her."

For one terrible second, hope hurt more than the fall.

Then Vance answered, bored and cold. "She is fine. Sandra always knows how to make a scene when she wants attention."

A guard opened the door just enough to look down. His eyes flicked from my face to the blood on the stairs.

"Boss," he called. "She's bleeding."

Vance did not come. "Throw her a blanket and lock it properly. I don't want her ruining the night for Julia."

The guard tossed down a dusty blanket. It landed over my face. Then the door slammed shut.

The cramps came in waves after that. I bit into the blanket to keep from screaming, not because I wanted to spare anyone upstairs, but because I refused to let Julia hear how deeply she had wounded me.

At some point the music stopped. At some point luggage rolled across the marble above. Through the pipes I heard Julia's soft, worried voice ask if Vance was sure they should leave.

"Leave her," Vance said. "It will fix her temper by the time we get back."

The front door closed.

He went to Paris with her. He left me in the basement with our dying child.

Near dawn, the lock opened again. Julia came down alone, wrapped in white silk. The Blood Oath Ruby glowed at her throat. She stopped just beyond the blood and sighed as if I had spilled wine on her carpet.

"Oh, Sandra," she murmured. "Look what you made them clean."

I could barely lift my head. "Get a doctor."

"For what? The report you dropped upstairs?"

My breath caught.

Julia crouched, careful not to touch the floor. "I found it. Six weeks. How touching. I almost told Vance."

"Almost?"

"He was so angry about Achilles that I decided it could wait." Her smile sharpened. "A baby would only make him hesitate, and I cannot have that."

So Vance had not seen the report. But Julia had. She had watched them drag me downstairs and said nothing.

"He will know," I whispered.

"Maybe. But by then, what will be left to save?"

She left me there.

Hours later, a guard shoved a phone through the metal slot. "Boss wants to talk."

I lifted it with numb fingers.

"Sandra," Vance said, crisp and impatient. Behind him, cameras shouted Julia's name. "Stay quiet in the basement and reflect on your disrespect. When I return, we will put this behind us. If you behave, I may still marry you."

I looked at the blood dried on my hand.

"Well," I whispered, "if I'm alive by then."

The line went silent. "What did you say?"

Before he could finish, the ground shook. A blast tore through the lower level. Dust rained from the ceiling, and the steel door screamed as if something had ripped it from its bones. A second explosion followed.

Through the smoke, black-clad men moved like shadows. At their center stood Achilles, taller and colder than the boy I remembered.

His eyes found me in the blood.

For one second, the monster the city feared looked murderous. Then he knelt in front of me and asked, quietly, "May I touch you?"

After all the hands that had dragged me, that question nearly broke me.

I nodded.

Achilles lifted me as if pain mattered. As he carried me out of Vance's basement, I looked once at the twisted door behind us.

The woman who had entered that room still loved Vance. The woman who left it did not.

The Blood on the Floor

Vance returned from Paris before dawn, furious that anyone had dared to touch what he still called his.

The penthouse smelled of smoke, bleach, and copper when he stepped out of the elevator. Men lowered their eyes as he passed. The steel basement door lay twisted against the wall, blown from its hinges like scrap.

At the bottom of the stairs, the blood waited for him.

It had soaked into the concrete in a dark pool. It marked the stairs where Sandra must have dragged herself upward. It stained the dusty blanket one of his men had thrown at her. The family doctor stood near the wall, pale and sweating, with a medical kit he had clearly arrived too late to use.

"Was she pregnant?" Vance asked.

The doctor's throat bobbed. "The bloodwork last week suggested early pregnancy. I sent the report to your private account."

Vance stared at him.

He had not seen that report. Sandra used to handle the endless stream of household medical files and security invoices because she was better at organizing his life than any assistant he had ever hired. After she began asking too many questions about Julia, he had locked her out of most of those accounts. He had not checked the private medical folder in weeks.

"How far along?"

"Around six weeks. Based on the blood loss and trauma, she miscarried here."

For one moment, all Vance could see was the blood. Then he hardened himself against it.

"She staged this," he said.

No one answered.

Their silence angered him because it sounded too much like doubt.

"She contacted Achilles. He breached my home to take her. She wanted me guilty." Vance turned from the blood. "Recover the footage."

Twenty minutes later, a technician brought up an alley camera. The image was grainy, black and white.

Smoke poured from the lower entrance. Men in black emerged first. Then Achilles appeared, carrying Sandra in his arms.

Vance had expected to see his enemy dragging a hostage. He had expected Sandra to fight, to scream, to look back toward the home she had never had the courage to leave.

Instead, she lay limp against Achilles' chest, wrapped in his coat. One of Achilles' hands supported the back of her head. The other held her against him with careful, deliberate gentleness.

Achilles looked down at her once before stepping into the SUV. Even through corrupted footage, the expression on his face was clear.

Not victory. Fury. Protective fury.

The screen went black.

For years, Sandra had been the one fixed point in Vance's violent world. Quiet. Useful. Waiting. He had mistaken patience for weakness, love for dependence, and obedience for ownership.

Now another man had carried her out of his house as if she were precious.

"Find her," he said.

Marco took a step back. "Boss, Achilles' estate is locked down. If we hit him openly, it becomes war."

"Then prepare for war."

Vance turned to leave, but something white near the ruined basement door caught his eye. A folded paper had been trapped beneath a chunk of twisted metal. He picked it up and smoothed it open.

The clinic seal stared back at him.

Pregnancy confirmed. Six weeks. Sandra Moretti.

His fingers tightened around the paper until it creased.

"Who found this?" he asked.

No one spoke.

Then one of the maids, trembling by the hall, whispered, "Miss Julia picked it up last night, Boss. I saw her. She said it was trash and dropped it near the basement door after you left."

The room went very still.

Vance slowly lifted his head toward the staircase where Julia had disappeared.

The first crack in his certainty widened.

Sandra had told him the debt was paid. She had told him she was leaving. She had told him she might not be alive.

He had not believed a single word.

Vance had always trusted rage more than doubt. Rage gave orders. Doubt asked questions, and questions had a way of making men look at the damage they preferred to step over. So he chose rage again, even while the paper shook in his hand. He told himself Sandra should have told him clearly, that she should have waited, that she should not have called Achilles. Each excuse sounded weaker than the one before it, but he kept stacking them because the alternative was too ugly to touch.

Still, when he looked at the stairs, he could not stop imagining her there. Not as a schemer, not as Achilles' weapon, but as a woman crawling upward through blood while music played above her head. For the first time, the silence of his own house felt less like obedience and more like accusation.

Now the proof was in his hand, stained at the corner with her blood.

The Child I Lost

I woke to warmth and hated it.

For one confused second, my body searched for the basement floor. It expected cold stone, rust, blood, and darkness. Instead, I lay beneath clean sheets in a room filled with pale morning light. A heart monitor beat beside me. IV lines ran into my hand.

Then memory returned.

The fall. The blood. Julia's smile. Vance's voice through the phone, telling me to reflect on my disrespect while our child slipped away in the dark.

My hand moved to my stomach. Empty.

A sound broke from me before I could stop it.

"Don't move too quickly."

Achilles sat in the chair beside the bed. He looked as if he had not slept. His black shirt was rolled to the elbows, and dried blood darkened one cuff, though I did not know whether it was mine or someone else's.

He stood and poured water, then stopped before touching me.

"May I help you sit up?"

The question undid me more thoroughly than pity would have.

I nodded.

He supported the back of my neck and helped me drink. His hand was steady, but his jaw was not.

"Where am I?" I asked.

"My estate. My territory. Vance cannot reach you here without starting a war he is not ready to win."

"The baby?"

Achilles did not lie. "I'm sorry, Sandra. By the time I reached you, there was too much blood. My doctors tried. They could not save the pregnancy."

The finality passed through my chest and left nothing standing.

I turned my face away because I had spent five years learning not to cry where men could see. Vance hated tears. He called them manipulation.

But Achilles did not leave.

The bed dipped as he sat beside me. He only held out his hand, palm open, and waited until I chose to take it.

When I did, his fingers closed around mine with careful strength.

"Mourn him," he said quietly. "No one in this house will tell you to be silent."

Him.

The child had been too small for anyone to know, but in my heart he had already been real enough to lose.

I cried until my ribs screamed and the monitors complained. Achilles stayed through all of it, saying nothing, anchoring me with one hand while I grieved for the baby I never held and the foolish woman who had believed Vance would change.

When the tears finally faded, Dr. Bell came in. He was older, silver-haired, and too serious to be one of the underworld butchers Vance kept for bullet wounds.

"During surgery, we ran complete blood panels," he said. "At first, we thought your weakness was only from blood loss. It isn't."

A strange calm settled over me. "What is it?"

"Acute myeloid leukemia. Aggressive. Advanced enough that we cannot delay treatment."

Cancer.

The word should have frightened me more. Perhaps it would have yesterday. But yesterday I still had a child. Yesterday time had still seemed ordinary.

"How long?" I asked.

"Without treatment, months. With immediate treatment, there is a chance of remission, but it will be difficult. There are no promises."

Achilles' hand tightened around mine.

A laugh rose in me, quiet and dry.

Achilles frowned. "Sandra."

"I'm not laughing because it's funny." I turned toward the window. "I'm laughing because I have nothing left to lose."

The doctor looked uncomfortable. Achilles understood.

"What do you want?" he asked.

"My briefcase," I said. "The one I brought to the penthouse. Did your men recover it?"

"Yes."

"Bring it to me."

Minutes later, the black briefcase sat beside me. I touched the bonds inside. Vance had laughed at the money because he thought I could not possibly hold anything real.

He had no idea what else I held.

"For five years, Vance thought I waited in his penthouse like a decorative prisoner. He never understood that every shipment route, every offshore account, every weak capo, every blind spot in his security passed through my hands. He called me a debt bride, but I was the one keeping his empire from falling apart."

Achilles went very still.

I pushed the briefcase toward him.

"You hate Vance. I know how to ruin him. Give me doctors, protection, and enough time to make him watch everything collapse."

"And in return?" he asked.

I met his eyes.

"Marry me."

The Marriage Deal

Achilles did not look surprised when I asked him to marry me.

That reminded me that he had known me before Vance taught me to lower my voice. The boy from my father's old bakery had always heard the decision beneath my fear, the blade hidden inside my softness. He did not mistake desperation for weakness now.

He closed the briefcase slowly. "A strategic marriage."

"Yes. Your name against his. Your protection around me. Your war room at my disposal."

"And what do you need from the war room?"

"Systems. Men who obey orders without asking whether a woman gave them. A doctor who tells me the truth even when it hurts."

A faint, dark smile touched his mouth. "You always did make precise demands."

"Do not make this sentimental, Achilles."

"I was trying not to."

For a moment, silence rested between us. The past stood there too: summer evenings on the fire escape behind my father's bakery, Achilles with split knuckles, me with antiseptic, scolding him for fighting every boy who looked at me twice. Back then, I had wanted a quiet house, a garden, a family with no guns by the door. I had thought Vance's offer, brutal as it was, might save my parents from debt and eventually give me some version of that life.

Instead, it had buried me.

Achilles leaned forward. "I will marry you, Sandra. But understand one thing before you bind your name to mine. I am not Vance. I will not call you property. I will not lock you in a room and tell myself it is protection. If you use my name, you use it by choice."

My throat tightened unexpectedly. "And if I choose to leave after the war?"

"Then I make sure you can."

"Even if you do not want me to?"

His eyes darkened. "Especially then."

That answer frightened me more than possession would have. Possession I understood. Men like Vance made cages and called them love. Achilles was offering a door.

"Then call your lawyer," I said.

By afternoon, papers covered the tray across my hospital bed. Medical proxy, security authorization, temporary transfer of the bonds, and a marriage contract written with brutal clarity. My assets remained mine. My medical decisions remained mine. Any future authority under Achilles' name required my consent, not my silence.

I read every line.

Achilles waited without complaint.

When I signed, my hand shook from weakness, not hesitation.

The wedding happened at midnight in the private chapel on Achilles' estate. I could barely stand, so he did not make me. The priest came to my room with two witnesses and a black velvet box holding a ring that looked less like jewelry than a weapon. A dark diamond. No delicate sparkle, no polished lie. It was heavy and clean against my skin.

"This is not a chain," Achilles said as he slid it onto my finger. "It is a key."

I looked at the ring, then at him. "Then don't be offended if I use it to open doors you would rather keep closed."

The corner of his mouth lifted. "I would be disappointed if you didn't."

After the vows, he did not kiss me until I nodded. That restraint did more damage to my heart than all of Vance's careless passion ever had.

At two in the morning, I entered Achilles' war room in a wheelchair with an IV pole beside me and a blanket over my knees.

His capos stood around the obsidian table. Some looked curious. Some looked doubtful. Achilles took his place at the head of the table, then moved aside.

The chair was mine.

I opened the laptop Nico, Achilles' right-hand man, placed before me. "Vance's Pier Four shipment leaves tomorrow at dawn. Fifty million in unregistered weapons, routed through an old port code. He changed the password last week, but he used Julia's birthday because arrogance makes men predictable."

Nico blinked. "How do you know that?"

"Because I changed the password for him every week before he decided I was useless." I entered the code. The screen unlocked.

The room shifted. Not dramatically. No one bowed. But attention sharpened.

I routed the shipment to Achilles' warehouse, drained the account Vance used for port bribes, and sent a single notification to the Moretti system.

Debt paid.

Then I closed the laptop.

Across the city, Vance Moretti would wake to the first missing piece of his empire. And by the time he realized who had taken it, I intended to be ready for the next.

NovelReader Pro
Enjoy this story and many more in our app
Use this code in the app to continue reading
649724
Story Code|Tap to copy
1

Download
NovelReader Pro

2

Copy
Story Code

3

Paste in
Search Box

4

Continue
Reading

Get the app and use the story code to continue where you left off

«
»
This is the last post.!

相关推荐

He Left Me in the Basement, So I Married His Enemy

2026/05/31

1Views

Give Birth to my Baby, Only to be Disregarded as His Mother

2026/05/31

1Views

48 Years of Lies,The Husband Who Never Came Home

2026/05/31

1Views

My Husband’s Mistress Had His Fake Heir

2026/05/31

1Views

The Billionaire's Forgotten Son,I Vanished and They Lost Everything

2026/05/31

1Views

He Killed My Mother,Now I Control His Fortune

2026/05/29

4Views