LOGINI spent five years as Dominic Santoro’s wife in name only. Five years hidden behind closed doors, buried under his sheets, erased from his world. When he finally agreed to take me back to Chicago—to stand beside him, to be seen—I thought I had won. I bought a new dress. Soft. Elegant. Worthy of a Don’s woman. The night before we left, he looked at me through the mirror and said calmly, “Take the makeup off. Change into pants.” I asked why. He adjusted his cufflinks like I was nothing more than background noise. “Juliana Lancaster is back. Tonight is our engagement.” Russian Bratva. Lancaster blood. A marriage alliance. Seeing my silence, he laughed—careless, cruel. “What’s with that look? Didn’t we agree on this when we married? Brotherhood. Loyalty. No love.” Then he turned, eyes sharp and mocking. “Victoria Miller… you didn’t actually fall in love with me, did you?” I stood there, frozen. Because inside the inner pocket of his tailored suit— was my pregnancy report. And the Don of Chicago had no idea the woman he was about to sacrifice was carrying his heir.
View MoreElena POVBy the time the email finished circulating through the channels that mattered, the fallout arrived faster than I expected.I heard first, not from any source I trusted, but from a fixer who enjoyed gossip too much to keep his voice neutral.“He called off the wedding,” he said. “Walked out before the vows. Didn’t even bother with an excuse.”I acknowledged it without comment, because whether Dominic married or didn’t had already stopped being my concern, but two days later, reality tested that certainty.I was returning from the market with one of the housekeepers when I saw him at the gate.He was arguing with security, his voice hoarse, his composure frayed in a way I had never allowed myself to see before. His hair was unkempt, his eyes red-rimmed as if he hadn’t slept, and when he turned at the sound of my footsteps, his gaze dropped instinctively—to my abdomen.Not large. Just enough.Enough to confirm what uncertainty had been eating at him.I lifted my hand slightly. “
Dominic POVVictoria vanished the way only someone who knew my systems could vanish—cleanly, without noise, without residue.For the first week, I told myself she was angry, that this was her version of silence, sharp and theatrical, meant to punish me just long enough to make a point. She had always understood pressure, always known how to apply it without fracturing the structure. I assumed she would return once the message had landed, once I had time to cool, once the balance between us reset the way it always had.After all, she was pregnant.That fact anchored my patience more than anything else. Victoria didn’t run when there was something to protect. She never had.Two weeks passed. Then four. By the end of the second month, there was still nothing—no sightings, no financial movement, no hospital records, no border triggers. It was as if she had been edited out of the world.That was when I stopped waiting and started searching.“Still nothing?” I asked, my voice even as I re
They found me because they assumed I was still alone, and because men like that always confuse being cut loose with being unguarded.The first crack in Dominic’s empire came quietly, not with gunfire or threats, but with paperwork and timing, because the shipping lane through the Adriatic had never truly belonged to him;I had designed it, optimized it, insulated it, and when I severed myself from his world, the route should have collapsed with me. It didn’t—because I took it back.The buyers were cautious at first. They always were when a name changed hands too quickly.“This cargo is Santoro-registered,” one of them said over the encrypted line, his tone careful rather than accusatory. “We can’t afford to be caught between families.”“It was Santoro-registered,” I corrected calmly. “It’s Valenti now.”There was a pause, the kind that meant someone was checking records they already knew would confirm what I’d said.“Valenti?” another voice cut in, sharper. “Victoria Valenti was expell
Victoria POVI didn’t disappear into the city.I left it from above.The helicopter rose before dawn, rotors tearing Chicago into shrinking grids of light, and I didn’t look back as we crossed the lake and turned east, because what I was carrying no longer belonged to that skyline. My father’s men said nothing during the flight, not out of obedience but certainty, because they had been waiting five years for this call and had never truly believed I would not make it.Italy received me without questions.The private clinic sat outside Genoa, buried behind vineyards and old stone walls that predated modern records.And when the stretcher rolled through the doors, the staff already knew what not to ask, which was the first sign that my father’s arrangements had not decayed with time.I woke to white ceilings and the disciplined silence of expensive medicine.The wound in my leg pulsed where the bullet had torn through, my back burned where fragments had scraped flesh during the explosion


















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