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Chapter 3

Author: Anna Smith
After returning from the vineyard, I went straight upstairs into the walk-in closet and began to pack my suitcase.

That was when I realized how little I actually owned.

A handful of dresses Vincent’s mother had pressed into my hands when I first married into the Bonanno family. Not once in five years had my husband chosen something for me—no dress, no scarf, not even the smallest trinket.

When I finished packing, I looked at the gifts I had once chosen so carefully for him—watches, cufflinks, leather-bound journals. All unopened, untouched, stacked in the corner like relics of a one-sided devotion. I boxed them up, not with tears, but with a steady hand, and sent them away with the scrap dealer.

Every effort, every quiet smile, every moment I had tried to bridge the distance between us—it had all dissolved into dust.

Just as I turned to go back inside the villa, a sharp car horn pierced the quiet.

A sleek black Maybach rolled to a stop. The door swung open, and out stepped Bianca, Vincent’s younger sister, draped in red silk and disdain.

Her eyes flicked to the truck rumbling away, then back to me. Her laugh was sharp, practiced.

“Figures. A girl from nowhere, selling her husband’s junk just to make pocket money. Pathetic.”

Once, I might have bitten my tongue, telling myself family peace mattered more than my pride. But not today.

I looked at her calmly, my voice even.

“Not everything in this house belongs to your brother, Bianca. Some of it was mine to give. And I don’t keep what isn’t wanted.”

Her smirk faltered for a fraction of a second before hardening again. She stepped closer, lowering her voice with venom.

“You should stop pretending. Alessia’s back. The woman he truly cares about. You were only ever temporary.”

My breath stilled, but I held her gaze. And then another figure stepped gracefully from the car.

It was her. Alessia.

She wore white, simple and unadorned, her beauty effortless. The kind of beauty that didn’t need diamonds or gowns to command a room. I understood then why Vincent’s eyes had always wandered elsewhere.

“Bianca,” Alessia’s soft voice interrupted, uneasy. She touched Bianca’s arm gently. “Please, don’t say such things. Valentina is still your sister-in-law.”

But Bianca only scoffed.

“Sister-in-law? Don’t insult her. My brother flew across oceans for you, not her. Every gift, every trip—it was all for you. She knows it too.”

Bianca turned on me again, her tone cutting like glass.

“Well? Don’t just stand there. Bring Alessia’s bags inside. My brother said she’s staying here.”

I glanced at the suitcases, then back at Bianca. With quiet dignity, I stepped aside and pushed open the villa doors. “The staff will take care of them.”

Her heels clattered furiously against the marble floor, but before another word could spark, the heavy doors opened again.

Vincent walked in. His eyes scanned the room, and when they found Alessia sitting on the sofa, his entire expression shifted—relief softening into something dangerously close to tenderness.

He crossed the hall, ignoring me entirely. His voice was low, calm, almost protective.

“Your apartment hasn’t been lived in for years. It’s not fit for you. Stay here until it’s renovated.”

The air tightened around me.

Alessia bit her lip, hesitant. “Vincent… maybe I shouldn’t. This is your home with Valentina. I don’t want to intrude.”

Before she could rise, he reached out, firm, steady, stopping her.

“No. You’ll stay. Don’t worry—Valentina won’t mind. She’s… gracious.”

His words cut deep, though he hadn’t meant them that way. To him, I was accommodating, forgiving, endlessly patient. To me, it sounded like erasure.

I forced a small smile. My voice came out softer than I intended.

“Of course I don’t mind. Alessia, make yourself at home. This house is yours as much as it is mine.”

Because in truth, I knew what I had always refused to admit.

This house had always been hers.

This man had always been hers.

And I… had never truly belonged.

But this time, I wouldn’t beg.

I wouldn’t cry, or cling, or compete. Let them have their love, their family, their empire built on blood and loyalty.

I would leave with nothing.

Because nothing was still better than living as a shadow.
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