Gianna
It took less than twenty minutes to get the papers signed. Twenty minutes to erase the last three years of my life and replace them with a single name.
Gianna Russo.
The certificate felt heavier than paper should. My hand trembled as I held it, not from nerves, but from the reality that there was no undoing this.
“I’ll have my assistant follow you,” Dante said as he adjusted the cuff of his shirt, his voice as steady as stone. “Take whatever you need from your old apartment. You’ve nothing less than a day.”
I nodded stiffly, my phone buzzing in my palm. Luca’s name lit up the screen—again and again. Missed calls. Messages I didn’t need to read to know they were full of lies. I silenced it and slid the phone into my clutch.
Dante’s gaze flicked to me, sharp and unyielding. “And I need you to know something, Gianna.” He stepped closer, his presence demanding, his voice dropping to a low warning. “I do not condone cheating. Whatever way possible—I do not and will not do anything to tarnish my name. And I expect the same from you.”
The words stung more than they should have. Cheating. It had destroyed me just hours ago, yet here I was, married to a man who made fidelity sound like a business contract.
“I understand,” I whispered.
“Good.” His jaw tightened, as though the conversation was closed.
Daniel reappeared, a stack of envelopes in his hands, murmuring something to Dante. His assistant’s eyes flicked to me briefly, curiosity laced with pity, before returning to his boss.
“We leave in five minutes,” Dante said flatly.
I wanted to ask, Leave where? But the words stuck in my throat. Something told me questions were not things Dante Russo entertained.
Instead, I glanced down at the marriage certificate in my hands again. My name beside his. My future sealed to a man I barely knew.
And yet… for the first time since last night, I didn’t feel weak. Broken, yes. Scared, definitely. But standing next to Dante, with his shadow cast so large it seemed to swallow the world, I felt something else—something dangerous.
Protected.
Or maybe just trapped.
"I'll move in tomorrow, just the address of your place, I'll take care of the moving myself," I said, stepping two feet away from him.
"Mrs Russo," He called, closing the two feets I took away from him in one stride.
"Daniel will be at your apartment tomorrow morning," He cut, leaving no space for arguments.
"Your phone?" He demanded, his hands laid out to take them from me.
I watched him take my phone, thumbed his number in, then handed it back like he was returning something precious and dangerous all at once.
“You can call me with that,” he said. “Whenever. I’ll be your husband and you’ll be my wife.”
The words felt strange in my ears—mechanical, flat, but threaded with an unspoken promise. Protection, maybe. Ownership, definitely. I folded my hands around the marriage certificate as if it could steady me.
Daniel popped open the back of a sleek black car. Dante gestured for me to step in. Around us the registry’s courtyard thrummed with the low hum of traffic and the distant shutter of cameras. Someone had already sniffed a story—Luca’s no-show, the sudden Russo marriage—and the city smelled like gossip even this early.
Inside the car, Dante's presence was a quiet, heavy thing. He gave no small talk, only clipped instructions to Daniel over the phone. I watched his profile in the glass and tried to read him the way people read magazine covers—eyes, jawline, posture. What I found was a man used to being obeyed, and comfortable with it.
The ride to the estate was short; the Russo mansion sat on the edge of the river, imposing and calm, like a fortress that had learned how to smile. As we pulled up, a few photographers—opportunists—caught sight of us and raised their lenses. Dante’s face darkened, a slow, animal reaction, and he angled his body in front of me without hesitation.
“Stay close,” he murmured.
Inside, the house swallowed us with marble and hush. Portraits of dark-eyed men in expensive suits watched from the walls. It felt like stepping into someone else’s century. Daniel led me through rooms that smelled faintly of old wood and colder things—money, history, power. I kept my bouquet because I didn’t know what else to hold onto.
We were met in the study by a small, formidable woman who introduced herself as the house manager. She didn’t look surprised by anything; the Russo family had seen worse. A man in his late eighties, cane in hand and presence like winter, rose from his chair as Dante entered.
“Giovanni,” Dante said respectfully. “This is—”
“Your wife,” the old man finished, voice brittle but not unkind. His eyes pinched when they landed on me. “Make it quick. The papers are done. You have one day to move her items. Then a formal reception tonight. The press will want statements.”
I nodded. His tone held no permission, only terms. It was impossible not to feel like a commodity.
Later, as I stood in a sunlit guest room while movers shuffled through a few of my boxes—old magazines, perfume prototypes I’d been tinkering with, photographs of Dad and Amalfi—I realized how little of myself I’d left behind once. I had shelved my modeling dreams for Luca’s ambitions; now I packed them back up like a thing to be sorted.
One of the movers—a young man with kind eyes—handed me a small framed photo I hadn’t realized I’d kept. It showed me on a runway in Milan, hair wild, laughing in a way I remembered feeling. My fingers brushed the glass and for a second the laugh felt possible again.
“You okay, Miss?” he asked softly.
I looked at Dante in the doorway. He’d been quiet, standing like a sentinel. “Yes,” I lied. “I will be.”
Gianna's POV The phone felt like an animal in my hand — skittering, frantic. My thumbs moved on their own, opening notifications, reading each new barbed headline as if each one would contain a different story, a different truth. But the story was the same: scandal, seduction, salesmanship. Me dressed like a trophy. Me selling myself to a billionaire.The image that accompanied every tabloid post was grainy, taken from some camera in the crowd: Dante’s hand at the small of my back, my smile half-turned toward a flash. The caption treated it like evidence. The city had a new narrative, and it was hungry.Dante didn’t look at his phone for a long time. He moved through the penthouse with the kind of calm that makes people either admire him or resent him. I wanted to punch a wall. I wanted to scream. Instead, I watched him as if I were an outsider peeking at an animal I used to fear and now wanted to understand.He set his cup down and came to stand where I could see him properly. “You
Gianna’s POVThe next morning, sunlight flooded the Russo penthouse, too bright, too loud. I lay in bed staring at the ceiling, half-expecting to wake up back in my old apartment—half-expecting it to have all been a fever dream. The courthouse. The marriage. Dante’s cold, unreadable eyes.But when I turned, the black card sat on the bedside table. Reality, staring me in the face.I’d slept barely three hours. My mind had been replaying everything—his voice, his words, the challenge in them. Russo’s aren’t victims.A knock sounded at the door. Before I could answer, it opened.“Mrs. Russo?” A woman in her late thirties stepped in, wearing a sleek black suit and a disarming smile. “I’m Clara. Mr. Russo’s personal stylist. He said to tell you, and I quote, ‘it’s time she looked like one of us.’”I blinked. “Excuse me?”She gestured, and two more people wheeled in racks of designer clothes and cases of makeup. “The chairman and I agreed that your first appearance as Mrs. Russo can’t go un
"Are you not tired?" Dante asked, holding my jaws in his palms."Tired of what?" I replied,t eyes downward unable to meet his glare."Tired of being the victim, he cheated on you for three good years, dearest wife," He dragged, and I felt a shiver run down my spine at the word wife."I-I...""You're a Russo now, and Russo's aren't the victims, they're the prey, flip the tables on them, fo anything you want as long as you're my dutiful wife and not do anything to bein shame to my name, I'll be your husband, in every aspect you need, even if you need to kill someone in the long run," He said and I blinked, my body shuddering at the world kill."I don't want to kill him, I just want him to go through the pain of my wasted years and careers, him cheating on me, I want to ruin his mistress, ruin his company and make him regret ever doing everything he did to me," I said resolutely, earning a smile from Russo."Now that's a Russo, get to bed, I'll assign an assistant to you tomorrow," he sa
Gianna I had no idea what was going on in the outside world until I pulled my phone out from the room Dante had put me inside yesternight.Almost a thousand notifications buzzed on my phone."Whore... bitch, shameless..." They all read."I've always known she was a slut, good that he cancelled the wedding and Is finally getting married to someone who's good, no wonder she's nothing now," the insults dragged on.Beneath the post was his wedding invitation paper of Luca and Sophia.For a second, I couldn’t breathe. My fingers tightened on the phone until my knuckles whitened, and I thought the glass might crack. My chest squeezed like someone had dropped a stone inside me.Not because I loved him—God, no. Love had died months before the engagement ring ever touched my finger. What burned me alive was the humiliation. The audacity. He hadn’t just replaced me, he’d paraded it—fed me to the wolves of the internet, knowing they’d devour me whole.I scrolled lower, my thumb trembling, despe
Dante “White dress, a bouquet, and the woman of my fuckin’ dreams,” I muttered under my breath, my eyes locked on her from the moment I stepped out of the car.She stood there like a statue, pale, fragile—or maybe just playing the part. But I knew better. I’d seen that fire in her eyes long before she ever walked into a runway, long before she became Luca Vitale’s little trophy.“You know her, sir. She’s Gianna, the model you wanted to sign as the company’s face three years ago,” Marcus said quietly, following my gaze, noticing the intensity in my stare.“I know,” I muttered, clenching my jaw. “Too bad she’s already getting married.”I flipped through my phone, waiting for one of the women I was supposed to meet, a bride my grandfather demanded, to show up. But something about her made me pause. The way she held herself, the way her shoulders trembled ever so slightly despite the mask she wore—it was… fascinating.Then, she looked up. Her hazel eyes met mine for a fleeting second, an
Gianna That evening the estate held a reception—an arrangement more for appearance than celebration. The press circled like vultures, darting questions I didn’t answer. Dante intercepted some, his baritone voice firm and smooth. When one reporter asked, bluntly, “Is this a merger of convenience?” Dante’s jaw hardened. “It’s a union,” he said. “And unions are private.” His words came like a shield, and suddenly the pressing, hungry crowd fell back.My chest was throbbing with the thought of one question, and just one thing I dreaded them asking."Mrs Russo, weren't you just engaged to Luca Vitale, the owner of a modeling agency?"The words sliced through the noise like glass shattering on marble. My stomach sank, and for a second, I forgot how to breathe. Cameras flashed in my face, dozens of them, capturing every twitch of my expression.Dante didn’t flinch. He shifted slightly, his arm brushing mine—not affection, but possession. His presence loomed, commanding silence without even