Diana hailed a taxi and collapsed into the back seat, slamming the door harder than she meant to.
Her body still buzzed from last night—the kind of buzz that wasn't just alcohol. It was the kind that came from touch. From surrendering herself to someone she didn’t even know. The kind that left her aching in the morning in places she didn't even realize could ache. But even worse than the ache… was the guilt. The shame. The chaos in her chest. God. His hands on her hips. His mouth on her neck. The heat, the way he whispered things that made her toes curl and her brain short-circuit. The way he looked at her like he could see through all the good-girl lies and straight into the mess she was underneath. She pressed her thighs together, shame rushing through her like a second wave of heat. “Stop it,” she muttered to herself, leaning her forehead against the cool glass window. “Just stop.” It was one night. One stupid, reckless night with a stranger. A stranger who might’ve killed two people right in front of her. What the hell was wrong with her? She clenched her fists in her lap. No more thinking about it. No more thinking about him. About Andrea. About Sara. Especially not Sara. The taxi smelled like cheap air freshener and the faint trace of cigarette smoke. A song was playing in the cab and she was trying to tune out the spinning in her head when her phone buzzed. Unknown number. She frowned. Her fingers hovered over the screen. Should she answer? Curiosity won. “Hello?” “Is this Diana?” a soft, worn-out voice asked. She froze. “…Mom?” “Yes.” Her mother sounded cautious, like she wasn’t sure Diana would pick up. “It’s me.” Diana sat up straighter, heart lurching. They hadn’t talked in months. Not since she stopped sending her money. Not since she stopped begging for her love. “I need to ask you something,” her mother continued, and Diana’s heart dropped at the tone in her voice. “Why is your sister with your boyfriend?” Her chest tightened. “What?” “They posted a picture,” her mother said. “Sara and Andrea. Holding hands. Smiling. Is it true?” Diana’s throat burned. She didn’t want to answer. Didn’t want to say it out loud, like somehow it would make it more real. But she whispered anyway, “Yeah. It’s true.” There was a pause on the line. For a split second, Diana thought maybe—just maybe—her mother would say something comforting. Something motherly. Maybe even cry for her. But no. She sighed, long and tired. “Then maybe you just weren’t enough.” Diana’s mouth fell open. “What?” “If you were, Andrea wouldn’t have left you,” her mother continued, like it was the most obvious thing in the world. “Maybe Sara gives him something you don’t.” Diana felt like she’d been slapped. “Are you really blaming me right now?” Her voice cracked. “You’re defending them?” “She’s your sister,” her mother snapped. “And she deserves to be happy too.” Diana’s chest caved in. “She’s seventeen,” she said, nearly shouting. “He’s twenty-three. That’s not love. That’s sick.” “You’ve always been dramatic,” her mother said coldly. “Don’t go disturbing them. If being with Andrea makes your sister happy, then maybe you should be happy for her too.” Diana blinked in disbelief. “What does that even mean?” But her mother had already hung up. She stared at the phone, frozen in place, the sting of her mother’s words slicing straight through her chest. Why did she even answer? She’d spent her whole life trying to please her. Trying to be perfect. She cleaned the house. Skipped parties. Kept her grades up. Helped pay rent when Dad drank away their savings. Got a job the second she turned sixteen. None of it mattered. Because to her mother, Diana was the mistake. The pregnancy that ruined her life. The reason she married a man who drank, gambled, and wasted away any future they might’ve had. The reason she had to quit school. The reason she never smiled. She hated Diana for it. She always had. After years of pretending, her mother finally got tired. Tired of the fights, the debt, the endless cycle of shouting and slammed doors. So, she threw him out. Divorced him. Wiped her hands clean and walked away. But guess who he moved in with? Diana. Because despite everything—despite him wasting their lives on liquor, women, and poker chips—she was still the one who let him sleep on her couch. Still the one paying the bills while he sat around, chain-smoking and blaming the world. Because that’s just what she did. She picked up the messes other people made. Her hands were trembling as she opened I*******m. Big mistake. There it was. The post. Fresh, only an hour old. A picture of Andrea and Sara at a café. He had his arm around her. She had her head on his shoulder like she belonged there. Like Diana never existed. The caption? “She gets me in ways Diana never could. Real love isn’t about the past, it’s about who’s beside you now. 💙 #Grateful #RealQueen #NoDrama” She could barely breathe. Her seventeen-year-old sister. A child. Smiling like she just won the goddamn lottery. And Andrea—grinning like he’d found the love of his life, completely ignoring the fact that just days ago, he was still sleeping in Diana’s bed. Her hands itched to throw the phone out the taxi window. Instead, she stared out at the passing streets. The shops. The stoplights. The people. None of them knew what she’d been through. That she was just another girl—dumped, betrayed, discarded by her own family. And in that silence, one thought cut through everything: She was done. Done being the girl who always apologized. The girl who waited. The girl who gave more than she ever got. Done being the good girl. Let them see what a bad one looked like.Diana dragged the mop lazily across the marble floor, sweat on her brow and zero energy in her bones.“Huh… rich people and their shiny-ass floors,” she muttered, twisting the mop. “Do they even walk on this thing or just glide?”She puffed out air, wiped her forehead with her sleeve, and muttered again, “Phew… my whole body is crying. This is not cleaning. This is suffering with extra steps.”Just as she bent down to wring the mop again, her ears perked up.Voices then Whispers.Coming from one of the rooms down the hall.“Hmm?” she stood upright slowly, narrowing her eyes like a suspicious raccoon. “Who’s talking…?”Her curiosity took over.Like a cartoon character sneaking up to a cookie jar, she tiptoed toward the door, holding her breath. She leaned in and peeked through the tiny keyhole.Inside, she saw Raffaele and one of the guards. They were whispering intensely.“…The shooting really messed things up,” Raffaele said, his voice low. “The drugs were supposed to be out of the c
Vincenzo walked into the room and quietly shut the door behind him. His movements were quick, almost impatient, as he made his way over to where Alessia sat. He dropped beside her with a deep exhale, running a hand through his hair.“Mom,” he began, his voice heavy, “this is getting too much.”Alessia blinked at him, calm as ever.“Even though the maids don’t know you’re my mother,” he continued, “you brought them in here thinking—what? That I’d fall for one of them or something?”He shook his head in disbelief.“But as you can see,” he added, motioning loosely toward the door, “I don’t like any of them.”Alessia smiled softly, almost knowingly, and reached for his hand. “Son,” she said gently, “it’s fine.”Then her eyes gleamed with something mischievous. “Besides… I think I already have a daughter-in-law.”Vincenzo frowned instantly. “Mom… you’re talking about Diana?”Alessia raised her brows, as if to say what do you think?“You made me bring her in,” he muttered, his voice dipping
Alessia knelt gently beside Diana, her touch soft as she reached for her arm.“Come now, dear. Let’s get you cleaned up.”Diana blinked at her. Huh? She wasn’t expecting... this kind of welcome. Especially not after being offered like livestock ten minutes ago.The woman helped her up, and that’s when Diana noticed—she wasn’t just older... she was maybe in her late 50s. The gentle kind of woman you’d imagine bringing soup when you’re sick. Not working in a mafia mansion.“Um... thank you,” Diana said softly.Alessia smiled. “Aww, poor child,” she whispered. “Hmm... have you eaten yet?”Diana’s stomach twisted so loud it answered for her.She shook her head. “No... I haven’t.”“Ah, I thought so,” Alessia nodded knowingly. “Come on, let’s get some food in you.”As they walked, Diana glanced sideways at her. “…Ma’am?”Alessia paused. “You can just call me Alessia, sweet one. I’m a maid. Just like you now.”Diana chuckled a little. “Well... nope. You’re old enough to be my mom. I can’t ju
Diana stumbled forward as one of the guards gave her a push. Her hands were still cuffed, the cold metal digging into her wrists. The masked man—her buyer—sat calmly in his seat, his legs crossed, fingers laced together. On either side of him, two guards stood like statues, waiting for his next command.His eyes, dark and unreadable behind the velvet mask, scanned her from head to toe. Slowly. Deliberately.Then, with a slight tilt of his head, he gave a lazy order.“Cuff her properly.”The guards moved instantly. They adjusted her cuffs, locking them together at the front instead of behind her back. A small mercy. Then, without a word, he stood, adjusted his gloves, and began walking toward the exit.“Take her to the car,” he said, voice cold and quiet. “Now.”She was pulled along like cargo. Her feet stumbled as they guided her outside. The crowd from the auction was gone. The halls were eerily silent. The moment the doors opened, she was shoved into the backseat of a long, black ca
“LET ME GO!” she yelled, struggling against his grip. “THIS IS KIDNAPPING! YOU CAN’T DO THIS TO ME!”A sharp slap cut across her cheek.“Shut the hell up,” he snapped. “You think anyone’s coming for you?”She bit down on her lip, tears stinging her eyes, but she didn’t let them fall.Another man walked in. “She’s a mess. Get her cleaned up. Change her into something decent. Boss wants her in Room Three.”“I’m not going anywhere,” she hissed, even though her voice trembled.The second blow hit her in the ribs. She folded over, gasping.“You don’t get to say no,” the first man muttered. “Your daddy made sure of that.”His words sent a chill through her. “What are you talking about?” she asked shakily. “What does my father have to do with this?”The man looked at her, then laughed bitterly. “Oh, you don’t know?”He took a step closer. “Your father—Alessandro Corsetti—borrowed two hundred million dollars from our boss. He said he’d pay it back in a year.”Her mouth went dry.“That’s not p
Diana frowned slightly as she unlocked the front door. The house was silent.Dad wasn’t home?She stepped inside, kicked off her heels, and let her purse drop onto the hook by the door. Her feet were sore, and her brain still ached from everything—last night, this morning, and her mother’s voice still echoing in her head.She walked barefoot into the kitchen, grabbed a bottle of cold mineral water from the fridge, and drank half of it in one breath.It chilled her from the inside out, cooling the lingering heat from everything Vincenzo had done to her body. She exhaled and made her way upstairs.“Dad?” she knocked on the study door on the second floor. “Are you home?”Nothing.The door was shut, as usual. Probably out gambling again.She let out a bitter laugh.Of course he was. What else did he ever do?When his company collapsed and the debts mounted, he didn’t get help. He just started gambling more. Smoking more. Drinking more. Like running from his failures was the only thing he