LOGINI went to try on my wedding gown with Lorenzo—my fiancé, the Don of the Morretti family. My younger sister, Serafina, begged to come along. I stepped out from behind the velvet curtain. There she was, pinning a brooch to his lapel. I opened my mouth to say, “Let me do that,” but the photographer had already turned to her with a grin. “Newlyweds, look this way.” They both turned. The camera clicked twice, and the photographer brushed past me. Ninety-nine shots. Every single one of Serafina and Lorenzo. Not one of me—the actual bride. I stood there, hollow. When we were children, they always played bride and groom. I clapped on cue. When we grew up, they sat at the head of family councils; I made their coffee and kept the kitchen running. “Vittoria, hand me the veil.” Lorenzo saw I hadn’t moved, walked over, and gently pulled the tulle from my stiff fingers. “Why are you standing there like that? Go check the seating chart with the butler. I’ll join you after we finish Serafina’s shots.” The photographer lifted one eye from behind his camera. “Miss Vittoria, would you step back a little? You’re blocking the light.” I stepped all the way back to the heavy drapes by the window. And right there, it hit me—how absurd this all was. If this political marriage didn’t actually need me, then I didn’t need to show up for it either.
View More(Lorenzo’s POV)After a long moment, she lifted her head and smiled. “Lorenzo, I don’t blame you anymore. Truly.”“These eight years, I thought a lot,” she said slowly. “I used to believe I wasn’t good enough—not smart enough, pretty enough, interesting enough—so you turned away. But I realized: that wasn’t my fault. You didn’t put me first. That wasn’t my failing.”He could only nod. He couldn’t deny it.“So from now on,” she said, “let’s not see each other again.”She took her suitcase and walked past him.“Vittoria—” He stumbled after her. “I didn’t come to ask for forgiveness. I’ve been asking myself where I lost you...”She stopped and looked back, wind blowing hair across her face.“Lorenzo,” she said quietly. “I left because I realized that no matter how hard I tried—how much I gave, how much I accommodated—you didn’t see me. I was right beside you, but your eyes were on someone else. That made me feel like I was optional.”She took a breath. “I don’t want to be optional anymore
(Lorenzo’s POV)Vittoria had been gone eight years. Lorenzo had waited eight.He didn’t know if she’d ever come back, or if she’d even look at him. But he waited, stubbornly.He turned down six political matches. The family council pressed; he traded assets for freedom. No one understood, but he knew who he was waiting for.Then his assistant called: “Don Lorenzo—airport security thinks they spotted Miss Vittoria.”Lorenzo shot up from his chair. The elevator was too slow; he ran down fifteen flights of stairs, legs shaking by the bottom. He was terrified she’d leave again.On the highway, forty minutes to go—too long. His mind raced.He rehearsed first words: You’re back? I’m sorry? I missed you? No. What he owed couldn’t be summed up.He remembered how, after their engagement, he’d gradually lost interest in her, drawn to Serafina’s vivacity. He’d stopped asking Vittoria, “Do you want this?” And yet she’d still managed his household, faced the council, remembered every date he forgot
(Lorenzo’s POV)Serafina’s smile faltered.“First, we find her,” Lorenzo said. “Search everywhere.”They called everyone: Vittoria’s lawyer said she’d terminated all family legal mandates—signed last week. The landlord confirmed her lease was closed. Friends searched all over—no one had seen her.She’d vanished. No note, no word.Lorenzo sat in his car, screen brightening and dimming. He’d called every contact, every possible place. She didn’t want to be found.The thought hit like ice water—worse than a fight, worse than silence. She hadn’t even bothered to say “I’m ending this.” She simply erased herself from his life.Eight years later.Vittoria came back on a winter evening.She dragged one suitcase out of the airport and looked up at the leaden sky. A few snowflakes drifted lazily.She smiled.Eight years—she’d seen the Northern Lights in Iceland, the stars in New Zealand, rode hotair balloons in Turkey, trekked the African savanna. Learned to dive, got certified. Skied, surfed.
(Lorenzo’s POV)The hallway went silent.Lorenzo stood frozen, a sour, swelling pressure in his chest. “Did she say where she was going?”“No.” The man shrugged. “Place was empty when I arrived.”Lorenzo’s mind buzzed. Serafina tugged his sleeve. He shook her off and strode out.He dialed Vittoria again. Still off. Earlier he’d assumed it was tradition; now panic set in.He stared at her name on the screen—strange, foreign. He didn’t know where she was, when she’d moved, why she’d sublet. Nothing.She’d always been so accommodating—never made him feel lost.Serafina followed. “Maybe she went back to the old house. Let’s check there.”Lorenzo didn’t reply. He called the butler. “Has Vittoria been to the estate?”The butler hesitated. “Yes—last Thursday afternoon. She left something for you, but you were so busy...”Lorenzo hung up, jumped in the car, and sped off, leaving Serafina behind.At the Morretti villa, the butler handed him a parcel.Lorenzo tore it open: credit card, keys, clo


















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