Greedy Kitty
When I married mafia don Paul Garcia, I was twenty-two, and he was thirty-two.
By day, he was the cold, dangerous king of the underworld. By night, he was my daddy.
Everyone in New Haven knew how much he loved me.
I casually mentioned I disliked the ballerina competing with me for the principal role. The next day, she “accidentally” broke her leg and never returned to the stage.
One night, I craved pasta from a specific restaurant. Without a word, he led his men into the kitchen, pressed a gun to the chef’s head, and forced him to recreate the dish overnight.
I once joked about wanting to sleep among the clouds. He turned around, had the building of a rival family blown up, then bought the tallest one in the city and engraved my name on the top floor.
However, in bed, he would exhaust me completely and refuse to let me go.
Even when the doctor warned that I was in early pregnancy and needed restraint, he ignored my cries, tied my wrists with his tie, and went on until dawn.
The next day, I started bleeding.
I called him ninety-nine times, yet he rejected every single call.
In my panic, I suddenly received a video from my best friend.
“Emily, your don is pinning a woman down and kissing her at the bar of the Four Seasons in Moscovia.”
When I opened the video, my heart stopped.
The man was Paul, and the woman was my aunt.
In that case, I’ll give him two gifts when he comes back: an abortion report and a divorce agreement.