LOGINIsabella Romano is drowning in her dead father's $250,000 debt to the Valentino crime family. When the city's most feared Don comes to collect, he doesn't want money, all he wanted was a wife. One year. Play the perfect mafia queen. In exchange, her debt vanishes and her sister's future is secured. Dante Valentino built his empire on fear and control. He needs a contract wife to maintain independence from rival families, nothing more. But the defiant woman who refuses to break awakens a dangerous obsession he can't control. As their arrangement ignites into real passion, enemies close in and a deadly conspiracy surfaces: Isabella's father was murdered for discovering a traitor in Dante's organization. Now the couple must decide—honor the contract's end or fight for a love that could destroy them both. Some debts are paid in blood. Some obsessions are worth dying
View MoreIsabella
The last customer finally left at 1:47 AM.
Isabella Romano locked the front door of Bella Notte with shaking hands, flipping the weathered "OPEN" sign to "CLOSED." Her reflection stared back at her in the glass dark chestnut hair escaping its bun in wild strands, brown eyes ringed with exhaustion, a sauce stain on her white blouse she hadn't noticed until now. She looked exactly how she felt: completely wrung out.
"Another wonderful night in paradise," she muttered, turning back to survey the empty restaurant.
The dining room that had once been her mother's pride looked tired in the harsh overhead lights. Scuffed floors. Faded paint on the walls. Tables that wobbled no matter how many times she tried to fix them. But it was hers or at least, it was supposed to be. The "Romano's Trattoria" sign outside still bore her family name, even if the bank owned more of it than she did.
Isabella grabbed a rag and started wiping down tables, her mind automatically calculating tonight's earnings. Maybe three hundred dollars after costs. Pathetic. She needed ten times that just to catch up on what she owed.
Her phone buzzed in her apron pocket. She pulled it out, seeing Sofia's name flash across the screen with a text message.
"Bella! My roommate and I are going to that new sushi place tomorrow. Want to come? My treat! "
Isabella's heart clenched. Her nineteen-year-old sister had no idea they could barely afford groceries, let alone eating out. Sofia thought the "family scholarship" paying her Columbia tuition was legitimate. She thought their parents had left them secure. She thought Isabella worked at the restaurant because she loved it, not because she was drowning.
"Can't tomorrow, sweetheart. Inventory day. Have fun though! Love you."
Another lie. She was getting so good at lying.
Isabella shoved the phone back in her pocket and attacked the tables with renewed vigor, scrubbing at a stubborn red wine stain. The physical work felt good. It kept her from thinking about the envelope that had arrived this morning—the one currently burning a hole in her office desk drawer.
She'd seen the return address and known immediately what it was. Another payment notice. Another reminder that she was three months behind on the debt her father had left like a curse when he died.
"Damn you, Papa," she whispered, her voice cracking. "Damn you for gambling. Damn you for lying. Damn you for leaving us with this."
Three years since the "accident" that killed him. Three years since she'd discovered the truth: her father hadn't died a hero. He'd died owing $250,000 to the Valentino crime family. And when her mother's heart gave out six months later broken by grief and stress the debt had fallen entirely on Isabella's shoulders.
She'd been making payments through a nameless intermediary, scraping together whatever she could. But her mother's medical bills had destroyed their savings. The restaurant needed repairs she couldn't afford. And now Sofia's second-year tuition is due in two weeks.
The numbers didn't work. They hadn't worked for months.
Isabella moved to the bar, organizing bottles with mechanical precision. Her hands were scarred from years of kitchen work—burns from hot pans, cuts from knives, the permanent calluses of someone who worked with their hands. Her mother used to say those scars were badges of honor.
Right now, they just felt like proof she was fighting a losing battle.
The envelope in her office wasn't just a payment notice. It was a warning. The message had been clear, typed in cold, impersonal letters:
"Three months overdue. Payment in full required within 30 days or alternative arrangements will be made. This is your final notice."
Alternative arrangements. She knew what that meant in the world of organized crime. They'd take the restaurant. They'd expose her father's shame to Sofia. They'd destroy everything she'd sacrificed three years protecting.
Or worse.
Isabella's phone buzzed again. This time it was a notification from the bank. She opened it with dread, already knowing what she'd see.
Account balance: $247.32
Sofia's tuition: $28,500
Payment due to the Valentinos this month: $5,000
She wanted to laugh. Or cry. Or scream. Maybe all three.
Instead, she poured herself two fingers of whiskey from the bar—the cheap stuff they used for cooking—and downed it in one burning gulp. Her mother would have been horrified. Good Italian girls didn't drink alone at two in the morning.
But good Italian girls also didn't inherit gambling debts from dead fathers and lie to their baby sisters every single day.
"I don't know what to do, Mama," Isabella whispered to the empty restaurant. "I've sold everything. I've worked every hour I can. There's nothing left."
The whiskey settled warm in her stomach, but it did nothing for the cold fear wrapped around her heart.
She was out of options. Out of time. Out of.....
Headlights swept across the front windows.
Isabella froze, rag still in hand. It was almost two in the morning. Little Italy's streets were dead at this hour. Nobody had any reason to be stopping outside her restaurant.
The headlights cut out.
Through the window, she could make out a black SUV parked directly in front of Bella Notte. Expensive. Sleek. The kind of vehicle that cost more than her entire year's revenue.
Her pulse started hammering.
A car door opened. Then another. Dark figures emerged, their shapes backlit by the streetlights. Three men, all wearing suits despite the late hour. All moving with the kind of casual confidence that came from never being told "no."
The lead figure was tall over six feet with broad shoulders that filled out his custom-tailored jacket like he was born wearing it. Even from this distance, even through the window, Isabella could feel the weight of his presence.
They were walking toward her door.
"No," she breathed. "No, no, no. Not tonight. Not now."
But she knew. Deep in her gut, where fear lived, she knew exactly who this was.
The Valentino's had come to collect.
The lead man reached her door and stopped. He didn't knock. Didn't call out. He just stood there, waiting, his face hidden in shadow.
Isabella's hands trembled so hard she dropped the rag.
She could pretend she wasn't here. Hide in the back. Refuse to answer.
But that would only delay the inevitable. These weren't the kind of men you hid from. These were the kind of men who always got what they came for.
So Isabella straightened her spine, smoothed down her stained blouse, and walked to the door on legs that felt like water.
She could see him clearly now through the glass. Dark hair styled perfectly. A face carved from stone sharp jaw, aristocratic nose, features that would've been beautiful if they weren't so cold. And his eyes...
God, his eyes.
Steel-gray and absolutely merciless. They tracked her movement like a predator watching prey.
This was Dante Valentino. It had to be. She'd seen his picture in the newspapers when he'd taken over the family business seven years ago. The articles had called it a "power transition." The streets had called it what it was: patricide. He'd killed his own father to claim the throne.
And now he was standing at her door at two in the morning.
Isabella unlocked the deadbolt with shaking fingers. She opened the door but didn't step aside.
"We're closed," she said, proud that her voice came out steady.
Dante Valentino smiled. It didn't reach his eyes.
"I know, Ms.
Romano." His voice was deep, cultured, with the faintest hint of an Italian accent. "That's exactly why I'm here.”
IsabellaMarco left after an hour of detailed security protocols, leaving Isabella and Dante alone in the vast penthouse. The silence was suffocating.Isabella stood by the windows, staring out at Manhattan, her arms wrapped around herself. Behind her, she could hear Dante pouring himself a drink of whiskey, from the sound of it. The clink of glass on crystal was the only noise in the room."Are you going to say something?" Dante finally asked. "Or just sulk?"Isabella whirled around, her brown eyes flashing gold with anger. "Sulk? You think I'm sulking?""What would you call it?""I'd call it processing the fact that my husband just threatened to lock me in this penthouse like a prisoner!" Her voice rose despite her attempts to control it. "You stood there and told me I have no freedom, no independence, no say in my own life!""I told you the rules….""Your rules! Everything is about your rules, your world, your control!" Isabella's hands clenched into fists. "I'm not your property,
IsabellaIsabella woke to an empty bed and a note on Dante's pillow, written in his precise handwriting:Meeting until noon. Viktor and another guard are outside if you need anything. Stay in the penthouse. Stay in the penthouse. Like she was a child who needed to be told what to do.Isabella crumpled the note and threw it across the room.She'd been Mrs. Dante Valentino for exactly three days, and she was already suffocating. The penthouse was beautiful—stunning, even—but it felt like a gilded cage. She couldn't go anywhere without permission. Couldn't make plans without clearing them first. Couldn't even step outside for fresh air without an armed escort.Her phone buzzed with a text from Sofia."Lunch today? Please? I miss you!"Isabella's chest tightened. She missed Sofia too. Missed their easy conversations, their spontaneous coffee dates, the normalcy of being sisters without the weight of lies between them.But Dante's rules were clear: no solo outings. No unscheduled meetings
IsabellaIsabella lay on her side, staring at the city lights through the floor-to-ceiling windows, acutely aware of every sound Dante made behind her. The rustle of sheets. His steady breathing. The subtle shift of weight on the mattress.They were in the same bed. Actually in the same bed. With only about two feet of expensive Egyptian cotton between them.Her heart wouldn't stop racing."You're not going to sleep like that," Dante said, his voice cutting through the darkness.Isabella jumped. "Like what?""Like you're waiting for me to attack you. I can feel how tense you are from here.""I'm fine.""You're a terrible liar." There was a pause, then, "Turn over. Look at me.""Why?""Because I'm asking you to."Isabella squeezed her eyes shut. This was ridiculous. They were both adults. They'd made an arrangement. She needed to stop acting like a terrified virgin on her wedding night.Slowly, she rolled over to face him.Dante was propped up on one elbow, his steel-gray eyes catching
IsabellaThe reception had been a blur of champagne toasts, elaborate courses, and three hundred pairs of eyes watching Isabella's every move. She'd smiled until her face hurt, danced with Dante under crystal chandeliers, and played the role of blissfully happy bride while her heart hammered with anxiety.Now, as the Town Car pulled up to a gleaming tower on the Upper East Side, reality crashed down like a wave.This was it. Her new home. Her prison for the next twelve months."Welcome home, Mrs. Valentino," the driver said, opening her door.Mrs. Valentino. The name still felt foreign.Dante exited from the other side, his wedding tuxedo somehow still perfect despite hours of wear. He came around the car and offered his hand, his steel-gray eyes unreadable in the dim light."Ready?" he asked."No," Isabella admitted, but she took his hand anyway.The lobby was all marble and gold, with doormen in pristine uniforms who nodded respectfully as Dante passed. He led her to a private eleva






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