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𝐏𝐎𝐕 𝐇𝐄𝐋𝐄𝐍𝐀
Some women are born to be loved.
Others, to be used.
And some… to be traded.
I was traded.
No one asked if I agreed. No one asked if I was afraid. Or if I wanted it. Or if I was ready.
Important decisions are never explained to women like me. They happen. Delivered in short sentences, cold looks, and silences that leave no room for questions.
That’s how I learned my future didn’t belong to me.
From a very young age, I understood that there were invisible rules inside my home. They were never written down, but they were followed with absolute discipline. My father spoke little, yet his presence filled every space. My mother spoke even less; she learned early on that survival was the same as obedience.
I watched them both for years.
I watched fear live in her gestures.
I watched control live in his posture.
By watching, I understood something simple and cruel: no one there was free—some just wore heavier chains than others.
Some people commanded.
Others obeyed.
And those who served neither purpose… were used as currency.
I learned that my world ran on agreements that were never broken. That promise didn’t need to be spoken aloud to be enforced. And that everything—absolutely everything—had a price.
Including people.
I learned this too early ever to forget. I learned it by noticing how conversations shifted when certain names were mentioned. How decisions were treated as routine, even when they involved entire lives. Nothing ever seemed heavy to those who decided. The weight always belonged to those who had to comply.
In my house, silence was never empty. It carried unspoken orders, implied threats, and promises made far from the wrong ears. I learned that hearing too much was dangerous—but hearing too little was worse. Balance meant pretending indifference while absorbing everything.
The mafia was never distant from me. It was never a rumor or a story whispered in the dark. It was always there, breathing inside the house, sitting at the table, walking the halls. A constant, absolute presence.
It lived in the exchanged glances between men who never had to explain themselves. The doors closed without warning. In the scent of gunpowder that sometimes seemed to cling to the air—even when nothing had happened.
Men came and went without asking permission. They didn’t need to. That house belonged to them too. They spoke little and observed a lot. Every word was calculated, every gesture deliberate.
I grew up understanding that this world wasn’t sustained by violence alone. Violence was only the final step. Before it came fear. Tradition. Obedience passed down through generations like an unavoidable inheritance.
That was how everything worked. No one needed to shout. No one needed to explain. It was enough to remember who was in charge.
And at the center of it all, there were men.
They decided.
They commanded.
Likewise, they owned.
Women merely existed within the permitted limits.
We weren’t raised to lead or to question. We were molded to serve very specific purposes: preserve the family’s image, bear children, seal alliances, uphold male pride, and swallow humiliation in silence.
From early on, we learned that a woman’s opinion was tolerated only when convenient. That having a will of our own was seen as a flaw. That obedience was praised as virtue.
Misogyny was never debated because it was never considered a problem. It was the rule. The structure.
The older woman already knew this. They walked with lowered shoulders, measured voices, and ever-watchful eyes. They knew exactly when to speak—and, more importantly, when to stay silent. Not only that, but they survived by slowly disappearing.
The younger ones learned early. They learned by example. They learned through implied threats. Not only that, but they learned because there was no alternative.
I saw girls promised while still teenagers. I saw marriages treated like transactions.
Likewise, I saw female bodies assessed like merchandise: beauty, youth, and fertility—all calculated as part of a larger deal.
Love never entered the equation.
Neither did Choice.
My mother was the truest reflection of that system. She wasn’t weak. She was broken slowly. Day after day. Year after year. Every time she swallowed her fear. Every time she accepted an order. Every time she pretended not to hear, not to see, not to feel.
She learned to survive by shrinking. And she tried to teach me the same—not out of cruelty, but desperation. Because in that world, protecting a daughter meant teaching her not to draw attention.
She never cried out loud. She cried inwardly. And I learned to recognize that silent crying—that deep exhaustion that never finds rest.
I grew up knowing that a woman’s fate in that world was never written by her. It was decided at tables we were never invited to sit at.
Tables surrounded by men who spoke of honor while negotiating lives.
As I grew older, my body began to be watched differently. Not with open desire—but with assessment. As if I were being prepared for something that hadn’t yet been spoken aloud.
My name started to circulate in conversations that didn’t include me. My future was discussed without my knowledge. My existence acquired a value that had nothing to do with who I was.
I stopped being just a daughter.
I became a possibility.
And in that world, possibilities don’t belong to themselves.
The mafia works this way: everything must serve something greater. No one is an individual. Everyone is a piece. And some pieces are disposable.
Women have always been the easiest to move.
Because we were taught not to resist. Because we were trained to accept. Because we learned early that fighting only made things worse.
I felt it in my body.
A constant tension, as if something were about to happen. As if my life were being slowly pushed toward a point of no return.
Nothing was announced.
Nothing needed to be.
Normalcy was just a carefully maintained illusion, meant to keep me docile. Ignorant. Ready to accept it when the time comes.
And I knew it would come.
Because in that world, nothing remains undefined for long. Everything is planned. Everything is collected. Furthermore, everything is fulfilled.
Including agreements that involve people.
Including women.
Including me.
And when they finally said my fate was decided, no one asked if I was ready.
After all, merchandise doesn’t need to be ready.
It only needs to be delivered.
𝐏𝐎𝐕 𝐇𝐄𝐋𝐄𝐍𝐀I was lying down, but I knew I wouldn’t sleep.The room was dark.The silence should have been comforting, but my mind wouldn’t obey. It raced in circles, jumping from memory to memory, unable to settle. Every moment from a few hours ago came back, insistent.The event… Alessandro… the punch. The blood. The body is falling. The man who didn’t move anymore.I had never seen anyone die. Not like that. Not that way. Every detail etched itself into my mind, painfully vivid: the impact of the blow, the blood spreading, the stunned looks around, and the heavy breathing of those who had just witnessed the violence.And yet… it wasn’t the death that disturbed me the most.It was him.The expression on Alessandro’s face. The rage erupting from within him, the control dissolving completely. The Alessandro people knew, cold and calculating, always methodical and confident, had disappeared for a few seconds, replaced by something more primal, more human… and at the same time,
𝐏𝐎𝐕 𝐇𝐄𝐋𝐄𝐍𝐀I was tired.Tired of smiling.Tired of pretending.Tired of being introduced as if I were an object.“My wife.”“Helena.”“Newly married.”The words were repeated.Like a rehearsed script.As if I weren’t there.As if I were just another accessory displayed beside Dom Vittorio.People smiling.Evaluating me.Watching me.Some with curiosity.Others have too much interest.Lingering stares.Fake smiles.Overly polite greetings.And Dom Vittorio’s hand never left my waist.Heavy.Possessive.His fingers pressed into my skin, as if making it clear to everyone that I belonged to him.I felt nauseous.But I kept smiling.Because I knew…If I stopped, I would pay for it later.I tried to keep my breathing calm.Tried to ignore the discomfort.I tried not to think about how exposed I felt in that dress.I tried not to think about how much I wanted to leave.My mind, involuntarily, searched for him.Alessandro.Even without meaning to, my eyes scanned the room.Searching.
𝐏𝐎𝐕 𝐀𝐋𝐄𝐒𝐒𝐀𝐍𝐃𝐑𝐎Bruno grabbed my arm hard.I didn’t resist.I could still feel the blood pulsing through my veins.The adrenaline.The anger.Her image.Always her.We entered an empty room, and Bruno shut the door forcefully.“What the hell was that, Alessandro?”I ran my hands over my face.Blood.There was still blood on my fingers.The red contrasted with my skin, with the sleeve of my suit, and with the coldness I always carried.I ran a hand through my hair, trying to calm down.But my breathing was still heavy.My entire body is tense.The violence still vibrates in my muscles.“You killed a man in the middle of a mafia event!” Bruno continued, incredulous. “You never do that! You never lose control like that!”I didn’t answer.My mind was still in the hall.In her gaze.Frightened.Eyes wide.Short breaths.That image hit me harder than anything else.The last thing I wanted in the world…Was to frighten Helena.My jaw tightened.I would rather she feared anyone.A
𝐏𝐎𝐕 𝐀𝐋𝐄𝐒𝐒𝐀𝐍𝐃𝐑𝐎I could still feel her warmth.Even hours later.Even there, in the middle of that event filled with voices, fake laughter, and dangerous stares… my mind kept returning to her room.To the moment I almost kissed her.My jaw tightened at the memory.Her eyes.Her faltering breath.The closeness.I had been just a few centimeters away.Very few.If someone hadn’t passed through the hallway…I would have crossed that line.And I knew.I knew exactly what would happen afterward.If I kissed her…I wouldn’t be able to control myself anymore.I wouldn’t be able to keep my distance.I wouldn’t be able to pretend it was only protection.It would become something bigger.More intense.More dangerous.And Helena was already in too much danger.Crossing that line meant war.With my father.With the mafia.With everything.And even so…Part of me wished I had crossed it.I took a deep breath and brought the glass of whiskey to my lips.The liquid burned as it went down
𝐏𝐎𝐕 𝐇𝐄𝐋𝐄𝐍𝐀The day passed slowly.Dragging.Heavy.I tried to read.Tried to rest.I tried to distract myself.But my mind always returned to the same place.Alessandro.To the warmth of his body.To the safety I felt.To the way he watched me.To the way he protected me.I sighed, sitting in the armchair near the window.It was strange.I barely knew him.And yet, he was the one I kept thinking about.He was where my mind found some kind of comfort.I closed my eyes for a moment.But I was interrupted by a soft knock on the door.My body immediately tensed.“Come in…” I murmured.The housekeeper opened the door and entered with her usual neutral posture. In her hands, there was an elegant black box.My stomach twisted.I already knew.“Orders from the Don,” she said, placing the box on the bed. “You must be ready at eight o’clock.”My heart tightened.“Are we going out?”“A large event will take place tonight.”My breathing grew shorter.An event.That meant…People.Mafia.
𝐏𝐎𝐕 𝐇𝐄𝐋𝐄𝐍𝐀The door closed silently behind Alessandro.I remained still on the bed.The room still seemed filled with his presence.The pillow still held his warmth.My skin still remembered his touch.My heart… was still beating fast.The noises in the hallway continued.Footsteps.Voices.Movement throughout the house.He had left just in time.If someone had seen him there… everything would have been lost.But still…When I realized he had truly gone…I felt a strange emptiness.As if something had been pulled away from me.I took a deep breath and ran a hand over my face.My heart took a while to slow down.Then I leaned back against the headboard.And, for the first time since waking up…I allowed myself to think.To think about him.To think about everything.It was strange.Very strange.Because I felt safe.Safe beside a man I barely knew.Safe beside the son of the man I feared the most.My throat tightened.How was that possible?How could father and son be so diffe







