Pregnant With the Don’s Heirs, I Disappeared
I hid behind the study curtains, heart racing with a fragile, trembling joy. In my hands: an ultrasound photo—two heartbeats—and a no-limit black card. Alessandro had given it to me last night, his lips on my neck, calling me his Donna, his queen.
Tonight, I was going to tell him about the twins.
"The Petrov family needs to see my good faith," his voice drifted in, smooth as velvet. "Vittoria arrives Thursday. I’ll announce the engagement then."
My blood froze.
"What about Elena?" someone asked. "She’s been with you three years. She manages the books, dug that slug out of your side herself. Is this fair to her?"
"Elena?" He leaned back in the leather chair, cigar smoke curling around his jaw. "She’s like a trained hound, Salvatore. After the Rossi family got wiped out, I pulled her from the gutter, gave her a gun and a bed. Have you ever seen a hound leave its master? I could kick her, and she would lick my boot and ask for another."
My nails sank into my palms, crumpling the ultrasound.
"Aren’t you afraid she’ll leave?" Marco, his Capo, asked.
Alessandro paused. Then he said: "She would die for me without question. How could she ever leave?"
Those words struck my chest like two 9mm rounds.
I didn't wait. I ran through the cemetery, past the tombs of dead Dons, and hurled that card into the Hudson. I vanished into the night with his heirs in my womb and three years of lies in my throat.
"I'm sorry, my babies," I whispered to my belly. "Mommy was a fool."
But I wouldn't be a fool anymore.