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Mafia Ex-Wife: I Bought His Death with His Own Hundred Grand
Mafia Ex-Wife: I Bought His Death with His Own Hundred Grand
Author: Aria Salvatore

Chapter 1

Author: Aria Salvatore
Ten years of marriage, and my husband slid the divorce papers across his mahogany desk.

"You contributed nothing to this family. Under the prenup, you walk away with nothing."

"Consider this a courtesy. Ten thousand a year. A hundred grand for a decade of your youth."

"Don't even think about touching a cent of family money."

I smiled and signed. I'm the kind of woman who's already died once.

The next day, I took that hundred-thousand-dollar check and walked straight into the territory of his most dangerous enemy—Dominic Salucci.

The man who controls half the East Coast underworld looked at me like I was inventory he hadn't ordered.

"Why should I help you?"

I leaned in close.

"Because I know every decision Vincent Moretti is going to make for the next ten years. Every property. Every shipping route. And I know about the son he's hiding in Zurich."

He studied me for a long moment. Then he smiled.

"Interesting."

What he doesn't know—what Vincent doesn't know—is that in my last life, men like them buried me without a second thought.

This time, I'm going to watch every last one of them kneel.

...

The pen felt cold between my fingers.

Vincent Moretti tapped the divorce agreement with two fingers, sliding it across the polished mahogany of his desk like he was dealing a losing hand at poker.

My eyes caught on his left hand. The pale band of skin where his wedding ring used to sit. He'd stopped wearing it months ago. I'd noticed. He hadn't noticed me noticing.

"Adriana. Sign."

Ten years of marriage. Ten years of keeping his books clean, his schedule managed, his dinner parties flawless, his secrets buried. And this was the severance package. A hundred thousand dollars. Ten thousand per year of service.

I looked up at him, my voice level. "A decade buys me this?"

Vincent laughed—that particular laugh he reserved for people he considered beneath him, which was almost everyone. He loosened the top button of his shirt, settling back into his chair with the lazy confidence of a man who'd never been told no.

"What did you think you were worth?"

He gestured vaguely at me.

"You can't even tell the difference between balsamic and red wine vinegar, Adriana. You think that commands a premium?"

The contempt in his voice was identical to the first time I'd lived this moment. Last time, I'd begged. I'd cried. I'd been escorted out by two of his security detail while his new girlfriend watched from the hallway, already measuring the curtains. I'd ended up in a rental in Queens, dead from a faulty heating system before the year was out.

But that was the last life. This one, I'd been given back for a reason.

I picked up the pen and signed my name in three clean strokes.

"Adriana." Vincent's eyes narrowed at my signature, a flicker of something unreadable crossing his face. He'd expected resistance. Tears. The satisfaction of watching me break.

I stood, pocketing the cashier's check.

"Remember," I said. "You're the one who let me go."

I heard crystal shatter against the door as it closed behind me.

...

The next morning, I stood in the lobby of Salucci Capital, forty-seven floors above Park Avenue.

This was Dominic Salucci's territory—Vincent's most dangerous competitor, the only man in the city Vincent genuinely feared. The Moretti family had been bleeding market share to Salucci for three years, and Vincent's response had been increasingly desperate. I'd watched him drink through too many nights, muttering about "that Sicilian bastard" while I pretended not to hear.

The receptionist looked at me like I'd wandered in from a homeless shelter.

"I'm here to see Dominic Salucci."

"Do you have an appointment?"

"Tell him Vincent Moretti's ex-wife has a gift for him. A significant one."

Five minutes later, I was seated across from the man himself.

Dominic Salucci occupied his leather sofa like it was a throne. Legs crossed at the ankle. Eyes doing inventory on everything I was worth. He had the kind of face that revealed nothing unless he wanted it to, and right now, it revealed mild, predatory curiosity.

"Vincent Moretti's ex-wife." His voice was gravel and smoke. "This is unexpected."

I placed the cashier's check on the low table between us. A hundred thousand dollars. My walking-away money. Every cent Vincent had decided my years of service were worth.

"Consider this a down payment on a partnership."

Something shifted in his expression. Interest, maybe. Or the recognition of a fellow predator.

"And why," he said slowly, "would I want a partnership with you?"

I leaned forward. Close enough to see the fine lines around his eyes. Close enough that my voice wouldn't carry.

"Because I know every decision Vincent Moretti's going to make for the next decade. Every acquisition. Every backroom deal. Every weakness he thinks he's hidden."

I paused. Let the next words land.

"And I know he has a secret heir hidden in Zurich."

Dominic's eyes changed. The lazy assessment vanished, replaced by something sharper. More alert. He straightened, his posture shifting from casual to coiled.

"Go on."

I didn't answer immediately. I was back in the last life, floating above my own dead body, watching Vincent throw a birthday party for a child I'd never known existed. Watching him wrap his arm around a Swiss model, telling her I'd been the biggest mistake of his career. Watching him use my father's remaining connections to gut the company my brother had inherited, driving Leo to the roof of a parking garage and over the edge.

The hatred was a physical thing. A weight in my chest. A taste like copper.

Dominic's eyes narrowed. "Words are cheap, Mrs. Moretti."

"Next week, Vincent's meeting with the CEO of Harbinger Technologies. He's going to offer two hundred million for a controlling stake. It'll fall apart at the last minute over a patent dispute neither side will compromise on."

I sat back.

"Verify that. Then we'll talk about what else I know."

His fingers drummed once on the armrest. Twice. He was calculating.

Three days later, his assistant called.

"Mr. Salucci would like to meet. He says you were right about the patent issue."

When I walked back into his office, the dynamic had shifted. He wasn't assessing me anymore. He was waiting for instructions.

"Now," he said, "tell me about the South Ward development."
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  • Mafia Ex-Wife: I Bought His Death with His Own Hundred Grand   Chapter 10

    Three months later, Hale Enterprises opened its doors.The office was modest by Manhattan standards—a converted loft in a building that had once been a textile factory, now filled with startups and boutique firms. Exposed brick, tall windows, the constant hum of the city filtering up from the street below. I'd chosen it deliberately. Nothing about this operation would suggest excess or ego. We would be judged by results, not appearances.Leo stood in the doorway of my new office, a coffee cup in each hand. He looked better than he had in months—the tension gone from his shoulders, color back in his face. The company was his again, fully exonerated, its accounts unfrozen and its reputation slowly healing. It would take years to fully recover, but we had years now."Delivery for the CEO," he said, handing me one of the cups."I'm not the CEO yet. I'm the founder. CEO implies there's a board.""There will be. Give it time."I took the coffee and gestured at the chair across from my desk.

  • Mafia Ex-Wife: I Bought His Death with His Own Hundred Grand   Chapter 9

    The River Club dinner stretched late into the evening. By the time we walked out onto the street, the city had shifted into its nighttime rhythm—fewer cars, more cabs, the glow of streetlights reflecting off wet pavement from an earlier rain. The air smelled like ozone and exhaust and possibility.Dominic walked beside me, his hands in the pockets of his overcoat. We didn't speak at first. The silence between us had become comfortable somewhere along the way, no longer something to fill but something to inhabit."You never answered my question," he said eventually."Which one?""At the office. Before you left for London. I asked why you came back." He glanced at me. "Vincent was destroyed. Your brother was safe. You could have disappeared—taken the money, started over somewhere no one knew your name. Most people would have."I considered the question. The honest answer was complicated. It had to do with the memory of floating above my own dead body, watching the world continue without

  • Mafia Ex-Wife: I Bought His Death with His Own Hundred Grand   Chapter 8

    The morning after Elena Moretti's birthday party, the front page of every newspaper in the city carried the same photograph: Vincent Moretti in handcuffs, his face a mask of stunned disbelief, being led from his mother's estate by federal agents.The headlines wrote themselves. MORETTI EMPIRE COLLAPSES. HEIR TO CRIME FAMILY ARRESTED IN FBI RAID. DIVORCÉE'S REVENGE: HOW A DISCARDED WIFE BROUGHT DOWN A KINGPIN.I read them all from a booth in a diner in Queens, drinking coffee that was too bitter and eating toast I didn't taste. The coverage was thorough, merciless, and exactly what I'd wanted. Every detail of Vincent's crimes laid bare. Every shell company exposed. Every dirty dollar traced back to its source.My phone buzzed. Leo."It's done." His voice was hoarse, like he hadn't slept. "The charges were dropped this morning. My lawyer says the evidence was 'procedurally compromised.' The IRS is issuing a formal apology.""Good.""Adriana." He paused. "What did you do?""Made a deal wi

  • Mafia Ex-Wife: I Bought His Death with His Own Hundred Grand   Chapter 7

    The Moretti estate in Westchester was a monument to old money pretending to be older than it was.Vincent's father had bought the property in the eighties from a railroad heir who'd gambled away his inheritance. Twenty acres of manicured lawn, a thirty-room mansion modeled after an Italian villa, and a ballroom that had hosted everyone from senators to crime bosses without anyone acknowledging the contradiction. Elena Moretti had spent three decades perfecting every detail—the frescoed ceilings, the imported marble, the gardens that required a staff of twelve to maintain. It was her kingdom, and she ruled it with the same iron efficiency her husband had once applied to his less legitimate enterprises.Tonight, the kingdom was celebrating its queen's sixty-fifth birthday.I arrived alone, in a black dress I'd bought that afternoon with Dominic's money. Simple. Elegant. The kind of dress that said I belong here without screaming for attention. The valet took my car—Dominic had insisted I

  • Mafia Ex-Wife: I Bought His Death with His Own Hundred Grand   Chapter 6

    I dressed in black. Not for drama—for practicality.The Moretti Holdings parking garage was beneath the corporate tower on Lexington, a concrete labyrinth I'd navigated a thousand times as Vincent's wife. I knew where the cameras were. I knew the blind spots. I knew that the security team changed shifts at 3:00 AM, leaving a twelve-minute window when the monitoring station was manned by a single guard who spent most of his time watching soccer highlights on his phone.I also knew it was probably a trap.But the trap was the point.Vincent kept a backup set of documents in his Bentley—not the real ones, not anymore. I'd already given Dominic the actual evidence weeks ago, the digital trails and account numbers that would eventually hang him. What I needed now was the performance. The version of me Vincent expected: desperate, reckless, willing to risk everything to retrieve what she thought were the originals.I'd spent ten years learning how Vincent Moretti thought. He believed everyon

  • Mafia Ex-Wife: I Bought His Death with His Own Hundred Grand   Chapter 5

    "According to preliminary surveys, the site contains a colonial-era burial ground. Human remains have been identified. As of this moment, all commercial development on that land is suspended indefinitely, pending full archaeological review."The room erupted.Vincent's voice cut through the noise. "That's impossible. We did due diligence. There's nothing on that land.""Your due diligence appears to have been incomplete, Mr. Moretti." Dr. Vance's expression didn't change. "The suspension is effective immediately. You'll receive formal documentation within the hour."She turned and left, her officers falling in behind her.Three hundred million dollars. Frozen. Untouchable. A hole in Vincent Moretti's balance sheet that would take years to fill—years he didn't have, because his other investments were leveraged against this one, his entire structure built on the assumption that he was too smart to fail.I watched his face cycle through shock, fury, calculation. Watched him realize, in re

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