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The Faceless Ballerina
The Faceless Ballerina
Penulis: TP

Chapter 1

Penulis: TP
The invitation card bore no signature. Only a single line of gold-embossed text gleamed across the front: [Three days from now. See you at the theater.]

I stared at the elegant cardstock as a chill crept up my spine.

My sister, Anna Rossi, snatched the card from my hand and turned it over repeatedly. "No name?"

My mother, Antonia Rossi, stepped out of the kitchen, drying her hands. She looked past us at the man standing in the doorway.

"Which one of my daughters does the Don want to take to the ballet?" she asked.

Then, as if the answer were obvious, she added, "Is he inviting Isabella?"

I was Isabella Rossi. My mother asked because Lorenzo Falcone and I had known each other since childhood. People called us childhood sweethearts, as though the label itself proved something. I once believed we loved each other.

After everything I had endured, I understood one truth with absolute clarity. Lorenzo did not love me.

The messenger stood beneath the porch awning, his expression flat. Sunlight cast a long shadow behind him.

"Ma'am, the Don did not specify a particular person." he said.

My mother's brows drew together. The response clearly displeased her. "Sir, an invitation from the Don should include a name."

The man raised his eyes. His gaze shifted from me to Anna and back again, as if weighing two identical objects.

"The Don's meaning was simple," he said. "Anyone from the Rossi family will do. Either one."

The words closed around my throat like a familiar grip.

Memories from my first life surged forward so sharply I tasted iron. The recollection of bones snapping in my legs jolted me fully awake.

I stepped back and spoke plainly, leaving no room for argument. "I'm not accepting the invitation."

In my first life, I had heard those same words—anyone will do—and mistaken them for a private signal from Lorenzo. I dressed without hesitation and went to the theater.

After the ballet performance, Lorenzo proposed. I received what I believed I wanted and became the Donna.

Once we married, he told me he was obsessed with my dancing. He purchased the theater and required me to perform onstage every day to satisfy that obsession.

At first, it felt almost normal. Then the demands tightened. He corrected the curve of my skirt, the angle of each turn, and the exact placement of my hair. He demanded perfection in increments too small to measure and treated rest as a privilege I had not earned.

For five years, I danced for him day and night. In every other aspect of our lives, Lorenzo remained gentle and patient, almost tender.

When it came to dancing, however, I had no right to refuse.

People in Cesielle envied our love story. They spoke of us as proof that God still showed mercy.

They never saw the cost.

In the fifth winter, I collapsed during practice from exhaustion and strain. I struck the floor hard enough to rattle my teeth.

Lorenzo forced the doctor out. Then he broke my legs himself. As pain climbed high enough to nearly steal my consciousness, he leaned close and said, "I'm sick of this dance. You're worthless now. Go on and die quietly."

I sobbed and begged for an answer. I needed to know why. I needed to know what I had done wrong.

He seized my chin and forced my face upward.

"Fine," he said. "I'll tell you. The one I truly loved was—"

I never heard the rest. I died.

The memory of that first life left my hands trembling, but it sharpened my mind.

I met the messenger's gaze and steadied my voice. "Tell the Don I fell while practicing a few days ago and scrambled my brain. I hate ballet now."

Anna caught my wrist, panic flickering in her eyes. She leaned close and whispered, "Are you insane? Refusing the Don like that…"

My mother knew what I had sacrificed to become the Donna. When Lorenzo was injured, I cared for him myself. When he needed to assume control of family business, I abandoned my own ambitions to remain at his side. I loved him with a heat that should have burned out long before it did.

When my mother looked at me, confusion and worry clouded her eyes. "Isabella, you used to care for the Don more than anything. Why would you suddenly—"

I shook my head once, firm and final.

My mother studied me a moment longer, and her expression shifted. She understood. Not my words, but the weight behind them.

She drew a steadying breath, turned to the messenger, and forced a thin smile. "Sir, then I will send my other daughter, Anna Rossi. She enjoys watching ballet."

Anna's face drained of color. Her body jolted, and the protest escaped before she could stop it. "Mom, I'm not going either!"

My mother's brows snapped down, and her voice sharpened. "And what is your reason? The Rossi family cannot afford to offend the Don."

Anna shot me a quick glance, then searched for any excuse to raise as a shield. "I hurt my eyes recently. I can't see clearly. I can't appreciate art."
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  • The Faceless Ballerina   Chapter 9

    Lorenzo did not die. That was intentional. Dante and I agreed on that point. Death would have been a mercy.The Capone family assumed control of Lorenzo's territory in Cesielle. A Don who could not move was nothing more than livestock awaiting slaughter.I placed him in a private facility on the edge of a cliff. The view was spectacular.His room was not. Mirrors covered every wall. At the center, directly in front of his wheelchair, stood a statue: a faceless ballerina.Each day, the attendants forced him upright and positioned him before it. He remained there from morning until night. He could not close his eyes. A special adhesive held his eyelids open.If Lorenzo loved to watch, he could watch forever.As for Sophia, when our mother went to retrieve her, she found her crouched beneath a table in Lorenzo's estate, clutching half a slice of red velvet cake.Sophia screamed when she saw us and even tried to bite.But when her gaze fell on Lorenzo, slumped in his wheelchair, dr

  • The Faceless Ballerina   Chapter 8

    A week later, news broke out of Cesielle: the Don, Lorenzo Falcone, had lost control in public.At a major family banquet, Sophia overturned the table in front of everyone and drove a fork through the back of Lorenzo's hand.The girl who had grown up locked in an attic, denied education and refinement, was not the graceful goddess Lorenzo had imagined.She was feral, and she would not be controlled."Lorenzo is in a difficult position," Dante said from across the table.He flicked his lighter open and shut with a soft metallic click. "Members of his own family are questioning his judgment."I cut into my steak without looking up.In my first life, I obsessed over table manners to please Lorenzo. If my fork so much as scraped the plate, he would fix me with a look sharp enough to draw blood.Now I understood. The disgust in his eyes had never been about elegance. It was because I was not Sophia."He won't give up," I said. "Lorenzo is a fanatic. The more flawed something is, th

  • The Faceless Ballerina   Chapter 7

    "Because she is that ballerina's daughter. Her name is Sophia. She and Lorenzo share the same mother."The moment I spoke, our mother covered her face and broke down.Dante stared at the photograph in stunned silence.I kept my voice steady and exposed the rot at the center of our family. "The dancer first attached herself to the old Don and gave birth to Lorenzo. Later, she met our father. He fell for her beauty, betrayed our mother, and fathered Sophia."The dancer died after Sophia was born. Our father had no choice but to bring the baby home. But our mother agreed to one condition: Sophia would never be acknowledged as a Rossi daughter."Our mother's sobs grew louder. Anna crossed the room and wrapped an arm around her shoulders."So Sophia grew up in the attic," I continued. "She did not eat at our table. She did not appear at public events. To the outside world, she was a stain we pretended did not exist."Dante's jaw tightened."But she carries Rossi blood," he said."Y

  • The Faceless Ballerina   Chapter 6

    Neapolis felt different from Cesielle. The sunlight held a lazy warmth, softer and less harsh.The Capone family owned a seaside villa there, with mountains guarding three sides and open water stretching wide before it.Vito arranged the guards himself. Armed men rotated in shifts along the perimeter.For the first time in days, I slept through the night without jolting awake at every faint sound.The next morning, Dante arrived. He was younger than I had expected, perhaps 25. Dark brown hair framed unusual gray-green eyes. Where Lorenzo's handsomeness carried a shadow, Dante's features were clean and direct."Isabella." He inclined his head with measured politeness. "My father asked me to bring you the latest updates."I invited him to sit.Anna and our mother joined us at the table. Dante opened his briefcase and spread several photographs before us."After what happened at the theater last night, the Don made no unusual public moves," he said. "He returned to the main estate

  • The Faceless Ballerina   Chapter 5

    My car headed north toward Port Cesielle, where a representative of the Capone family waited.A broad-shouldered, middle-aged man stood by the dock: Vito Capone.Our mother and Anna arrived shortly after I did.Vito gave us a curt nod. "The boat is ready."Our mother urged us forward at a brisk pace. The wind off the water cut through my collar, heavy with salt and rot.I glanced back at Cesielle Island. Scattered lights shimmered across its surface. In the distance, the curve of the theater dome rose faintly against the night sky.By now, the masked figure should have reached the entrance. Lorenzo would greet her himself, and when he removed the mask, what would his expression reveal?A quiet laugh escaped me."Let's go," I told Anna.She did not move. She stood still and looked at me with an expression I could not read."Isabella, I suddenly regret it," she said softly."Regret what?""Regret fighting you all these years." She lowered her gaze. "If we had worked together

  • The Faceless Ballerina   Chapter 4

    Anna froze."So what are you saying?" she asked, unease sharpening her voice. "We send a maid in your place?"I shook my head. "If we send just anyone, Lorenzo will know immediately. It has to be the person he truly loves."Anna sagged back, frustration flashing across her face. "Only God knows who that is. Besides us and the maids, who else could he possibly love in this house?"My mother spoke at once. "Could it be…"Her voice faltered. The color drained from her face.In the same instant, the answer settled in my mind.I met her gaze. "Mom, I think I know who Lorenzo loves."At first, I had no idea. Lorenzo had acted so devoted that part of me still questioned whether any of it had been real.But he slipped in the gallery.It was the red velvet cake. I despised red velvet cake. Only one person in this house loved it obsessively. Only one person here bore a cross-shaped scar on her ankle.Once I noticed it, everything fell into place. Rather than prolong a bloody standoff

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