BLOOD AND VOWS
The morning was cold and I was currency.
My father handed me to Dimitri Volkov, Bratva, like I was a contract clause.
I said no at the altar.
Loud enough for everyone to hear.
The priest kept going.
Dimitri didn’t even blink.
That was fact one: I was married without consent, in Chicago, to a man who accepted silence as agreement.
I left him later.
Not in rage.
In clarity, after I saw another girl get caught in his world with no choice, just like me.
Then I went to war.
Law school had taught me precision, so I used it.
Civil suits.
Asset forfeiture.
Anonymous tips to the right agencies.
I took apart everything legitimate he’d built, piece by piece, until he bled territories and pride.
He showed up bruised once, signed over forty percent of his clean empire to my name, brought therapy receipts.
That was fact two: I dismantled the man who caged me, on paper, without firing a shot.
I still have the necklace.
The one he left in my lap that first night.
I wore it through the worst, through the year I rebuilt alone, through every hearing.
Last month I was pregnant in a courtroom, arguing a case I won.
He was in the gallery.
The diamonds sat above my collar.
No one asked.
I never explained.
That was fact three: I took something from that night and made it mine.
It doesn’t belong to him anymore.
It doesn’t belong to what he did.
It belongs to me.