Your Regret Doesn’t Bring Us Back, Don
I am the wife of Anthony Caster, don of the mafia family in New York.
When I was nine months pregnant, he brought a woman named Evelyn Graves into the manor, claiming she’d saved his life. That was the day my nightmare began.
She put something in my food. Next thing I knew, I was doubled over in pain. And she had the nerve to blame it on me—said I was being reckless with what I ate.
She lost her footing and fell down the stairs, but she told everyone I was the one who shoved her.
Every day, she’d cry in front of Anthony about how saving him had left her wounded and unable to bear children, how seeing a pregnant woman broke her heart.
But the moment she turned to me, the tears were gone, replaced by a cold smile. “As long as I’m here,” she whispered, “your babies will never be born.”
Anthony was convinced I was jealous of her. He locked me away in the abandoned attic of the manor and said, “Reflect on your actions and stop bullying Evelyn.”
On the first day they shut me in, the contractions began.
I screamed, I begged, I banged on the door.
The butler heard me and went to inform Anthony.
He said, “Amelia, your due date is three days away. Stop putting on an act. Three days in a snowstorm and you came out fine. This? You can handle this.”
On the second day, my water broke.
I screamed at the top of my lungs, my fingernails digging into the cracks of the wall, blood spilling all over the floor.
The butler went to Anthony again.
Evelyn said, “Anthony, she’s making all that noise because she wants you to feel sorry for her and let her out. If you give in now, she’ll only grow more reckless later.”
He believed her.
On the third day, I stopped screaming.
Anthony thought I had finally learned my lesson, unaware that I had already died from the difficult labor.
When he finally opened that door, all he would find was my rotting, putrid body.