INICIAR SESIÓN
Katrina
The smack came fast—no warning, no words. Just Liam’s palm cracking against my cheek, sending my head sideways and the taste of blood rushing in like a tide.
“Ungrateful bitch,” he snarled, grabbing the plate from the counter and hurling it at me. It hit the wall just beside my shoulder, splattering hot pasta and ceramic shards across the floor. One piece nicked my arm. I didn’t flinch.
That pissed him off more.
“You think you’re still the Don’s daughter?” he spat, stepping closer, chest heaving. “You’re nothing now. Just a pretty toy in a town nobody gives a damn about.”
I stared at the mess on the floor. Tomato sauce bleeding into the grout like a crime scene. My cheek throbbed. My arm stung. But inside, I was ice.
He wanted a reaction. Wanted me to scream, cry, beg. I used to. I don’t anymore.
Two years ago, I told my family to go to hell. Told my father his rules were suffocating. Told my brothers they didn’t understand love. I chose Liam. I chose wrong.
Now I live in a house that smells like smoke and sweat and secrets. Liam’s uncle runs this town like a kingdom built on fear. The women here disappear. The men look the other way. And me? I’m the broken princess they whisper about. The Ricci girl who fell.
But I’m not broken. Not really.
I smile when Liam calls me his. I nod when he brags about taming me. I play the part. Because while he’s busy showing off his prize, I’m busy remembering who I am.
I’m Katrina Ricci. Daughter of a Don. Sister to wolves. And I’m done being caged.
Flashback: The Fight
I still hear the echo of that night.
The study smelled like cigars and fury. My father stood behind his desk, fists clenched. Matteo paced like a caged animal. Salvatore leaned against the wall, arms crossed, jaw tight. And me? I stood in the middle, nineteen and stupidly sure I was right.
“He’s not like that,” I said. “You don’t know him.”
Matteo snapped first. “We don’t have to know him. We see how he looks at you. Like he owns you.”
“He loves me,” I shot back. “He listens. He doesn’t treat me like some fragile little thing.”
My father’s voice was low, dangerous. “You think that’s love? You think a man who isolates you, who pulls you away from your family, is love?”
“He’s not isolating me. You are. You’re all trying to control me.”
Salvatore stepped forward, eyes blazing. “We’re trying to protect you, Kat. You’re our sister. You don’t see what we see.”
“I see enough,” I said. “I see a man who treats me like I matter. Not like a pawn in your empire.”
Matteo slammed his hand against the bookshelf. “You’re not thinking straight.”
“I’m thinking clearer than I ever have,” I lied.
My father’s voice cracked. “If you walk out that door, you walk out alone.”
I looked at him—the man who taught me how to fight, how to read people, how to survive—and I said the one thing I knew would cut deepest.
“Then maybe I was never really part of this family.”
The silence that followed was worse than shouting. Worse than slamming doors. It was the sound of something breaking.
I left that night with Liam waiting outside, smirking like he’d won. I thought I was choosing love. Freedom. A future.
I chose wrong.
Present
“Kat!”
His voice cracked through the silence like a whip. “Get in here and clean this shit up!”
I blinked, the study fading from memory, the scent of cigars replaced by scorched tomato and broken ceramic. My cheek still throbbed from the slap. The pasta was congealing on the tile like blood. Liam’s boots scraped against the floor as he paced, waiting.
I moved slowly. Not because I was afraid—though I was—but because I’d learned that moving too fast made him suspicious. He liked control. He liked obedience. I gave him just enough to keep breathing.
I knelt beside the mess, fingers brushing shards of plate. One sliced my palm. I didn’t flinch.
Behind me, Liam lit a cigarette. “You used to be fire, you know. Now look at you. Tamed.”
I didn’t answer. I never did when he was like this.
But inside, I was counting.
Not bruises. Not insults.
Steps. Seconds. Weaknesses.
I knew the schedule. I knew when his uncle left for the warehouse. I knew which burner phone Liam kept in the drawer by the liquor cabinet. I knew the name of the girl who disappeared last month—and the one who came back long enough to whisper run before vanishing again.
I wasn’t tamed. I was waiting.
Because when I leave, I won’t just escape.
I’ll burn this place down behind me.
Five Years LaterThe clubhouse smelled of pine and cinnamon, the tree glittering in the corner with ornaments the kids had hung themselves. Wrapping paper crinkled underfoot, laughter echoing off the walls, and for a moment I just stood there, soaking it all in. My family. My home. My miracle.The door swung open, letting in a rush of cold air and snowflakes. Jace stepped inside, taller now, his shoulders broader, his stride confident. College had changed him — MSSU had given him independence, maturity — but when Koda barreled into him, squealing, “Bubba!” he laughed the same boyish laugh I remembered from years ago.Rollo bounded after them, tail wagging, barking like he’d been waiting all semester for this reunion. Jace crouched, ruffling Koda’s hair, then scooped Liviana into his arms as she clung to his leg.“Bubba!” Liviana squealed, her curls bouncing, her little voice full of joy. At four, she was all mischief and sweetness, her Viking‑Italian spirit shining in every grin. Her
The mall was buzzing with Christmas lights and the hum of carols, but all I could hear was Koda’s little laugh as Wolf lifted him onto Santa’s lap. His eyes were wide, not scared, just curious — the kind of look only a child who’s seen too much but still believes in magic can carry.Santa leaned down, his voice gentle. “What would you like for Christmas, young man?”Koda froze. His small hands twisted in his shirt, and he looked back at me, then at Wolf, then at Jace standing proudly beside us. Finally, he whispered, “I already got everything I want. My mama. My daddy. My bubba. They saved me from the bad man.”My heart clenched. Wolf’s arm slid around my waist, grounding me. Santa smiled, but pressed softly, “Is there something else? Something special?”Koda thought hard, his brow furrowed in that way that made him look so much like Wolf. Then, with a spark of mischief, he said, “A real wolf.”Wolf chuckled low, the sound rumbling through me. Santa laughed too, promising to see what
The Clubhouse had never smelled like this before. Usually it was leather, smoke, and steel—our kind of perfume. Tonight, though, it was roasted turkey, garlic, and the faint sweetness of pumpkin pie. The kind of smells that made even the hardest men soften, if only for a night.I leaned against the doorway, arms crossed, watching the chaos unfold. Kat was in the middle of it, her laugh carrying over the clatter of dishes as she tried to wrangle Jace into helping. At fifteen, he was all attitude, rolling his eyes as he stacked plates, but I caught the grin he tried to hide when his nonna praised him.Koda, though—he was the real show. Three years old, wide-eyed, darting between legs like a pup who hadn’t learned his place yet. He stopped every few minutes to tug at someone’s sleeve, asking questions in that curious voice of his.“What’s Thanksgiving, NoNo?” he asked, staring up at Kat’s father as if the man held all the answers.Kat’s father crouched down, his voice warm. “It’s a day w
Mama’s laughter filled the common room before I even saw her. She’d been fussing over the pumpkin centerpiece all day, insisting it needed “just a little more sparkle.” Papa, of course, had already claimed the recliner like he owned the place, muttering in Italian about how American holidays were “too noisy” but smiling all the same.It was Koda’s first real Halloween, and he’d been buzzing about it for weeks. He didn’t just want candy — he wanted tradition. Costumes, decorations, the whole thing. And apparently, he wanted me and Wolf to play along.So here I was, tugging at the red hood draped over my shoulders, trying not to laugh at Wolf. My Huntsman. He’d grumbled about dressing up, but Koda’s big brown eyes had been too much for him. He looked rugged, axe strapped to his belt, but the way he kept adjusting his shirt told me he’d rather be anywhere else.“Don’t pout,” I teased, brushing my hood back. “You’re supposed to save me from the big bad wolf.”Wolf gave me that look — the
The house was quiet now. Too quiet. The laughter, the voices, the warmth of my family had faded into the distance with their departure. I stood at the window, watching the taillights disappear, my chest aching with the familiar weight of goodbye.Mama had held me tight before she left, whispering, “We’ll be back for Halloween. We can’t miss Koda’s first one.” Papa had echoed her promise, his hand firm on my shoulder, his eyes steady. I believed them. I had to.Nonna had kissed my cheeks, both of them, her voice soft but certain. “You will be hosting Thanksgiving and Christmas this year. You will not be alone, Kat. Family is not only near — it is always.”Their words stitched hope into the ache, but still, the silence pressed heavy.I turned, and there they were — my new family. Wolf, steady as ever, watching me with eyes that said he understood. Jace, leaning against the doorway, his grin crooked but comforting. And Koda, bouncing on his toes, already asking if he could wear his costu
I’d spent days making sure this night would feel like more than goodbye. Kat deserved that. Koda deserved that. And her family — Matteo, Salvatore, her mother, her father, they deserved to leave knowing they were loved, not mourned.The backyard glowed under strings of lanterns, tables heavy with food that carried pieces of Italy and Missouri both. Laughter spilled out before Kat even stepped through the door.When she did, her hand tightened around mine, her eyes widening at the sight of everyone gathered. Matteo stood tall, commanding even here, his presence impossible to ignore. Salvatore leaned against the bar, easy grin in place, already teasing cousins. And Kat froze, tears filling her eyes.“This is for you,” I whispered, pulling her close. “For them. For us.”She shook her head, laughing through the tears. “Nick… you didn’t have to—”“I did,” I said simply. “Because I know how hard this is. You just got them back. And now you have to let them go again. But tonight, you don’t l







