Betrayed By The Don: Rising From Ashes

Betrayed By The Don: Rising From Ashes

Gu Chen

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I was guiding the blade through a slab of A5 Wagyu for our seven-year anniversary when a burner phone vibrated against my knee. It was a photo of a manicured hand resting on the tuxedo I had bought for Dante three weeks ago. On the finger sat a massive diamond ring. The caption read: Mrs. Isabella Gallo. Finally legal. For seven years, I wasn't just his lover. I was the architect of his legitimacy, the woman who wrote the code that cleaned his dirty money. Yet, while I was here cooking his favorite steak, he had married a mob princess to secure her father's territory. When Dante walked in smelling of expensive scotch and another woman's perfume, he didn't apologize. "It's just politics," he said, loosening his tie. "You keep your allowance, your position. You just stay in the shadows a little longer." He looked at me like I was a piece of high-end furniture. When I told him I was leaving, his face darkened. "You can't resign from the Mafia, Seraphina," he sneered, blocking the door. "If you leave, I will burn everything you have." He truly believed he was the King on the chessboard. He forgot that I was the one who built the board. I didn't scream. I didn't cry. I simply walked out, opened my encrypted laptop, and dialed the number of the one man Dante feared most. "I'm cashing out," I said. "And I'm bringing the entire Gallo empire with me."

Chapter 1

I was guiding the blade through a slab of A5 Wagyu for our seven-year anniversary when a burner phone vibrated against my knee.

It was a photo of a manicured hand resting on the tuxedo I had bought for Dante three weeks ago. On the finger sat a massive diamond ring.

The caption read: Mrs. Isabella Gallo. Finally legal.

For seven years, I wasn't just his lover. I was the architect of his legitimacy, the woman who wrote the code that cleaned his dirty money. Yet, while I was here cooking his favorite steak, he had married a mob princess to secure her father's territory.

When Dante walked in smelling of expensive scotch and another woman's perfume, he didn't apologize.

"It's just politics," he said, loosening his tie. "You keep your allowance, your position. You just stay in the shadows a little longer."

He looked at me like I was a piece of high-end furniture. When I told him I was leaving, his face darkened.

"You can't resign from the Mafia, Seraphina," he sneered, blocking the door. "If you leave, I will burn everything you have."

He truly believed he was the King on the chessboard. He forgot that I was the one who built the board.

I didn't scream. I didn't cry.

I simply walked out, opened my encrypted laptop, and dialed the number of the one man Dante feared most.

"I'm cashing out," I said. "And I'm bringing the entire Gallo empire with me."

Chapter 1

Seraphina Caruso POV

I was guiding the blade through the A5 Wagyu for our seven-year anniversary dinner when the burner phone taped under the marble island vibrated against my knee.

It was a violent, buzzing intrusion that shattered the illusion of the life I had built with blood and code.

It was a device that shouldn't exist.

My hands frozen. The knife hovered over the crimson marbling of the raw meat.

I reached under the cold stone lip of the counter and peeled away the black electrical tape.

The screen lit up with a single, encrypted image.

It was a photo of a hand. A woman's manicured hand, resting on the lapel of a tuxedo I had personally commissioned from Milan three weeks ago.

On her finger sat a massive, emerald-cut diamond ring. The platinum band was engraved on the side, just visible enough to catch the light.

D.I.

I looked down at my own left hand.

I wore a copy of that ring. A perfect replica Dante gave me four years ago. It bore the exact same engraving.

He told me D.I. stood for Dante and I.

I zoomed in on the photo. The timestamp was from this morning. The location was the Cathedral of Saint Mary, the place where the Five Families sanctified their unions.

The caption read: Mrs. Isabella Gallo. Finally legal.

The oxygen was sucked out of the penthouse.

D.I. did not stand for Dante and I. It stood for Dante and Isabella.

For seven years, I wasn't just his lover. I was the architect of his legitimacy. I sanitized the Gallo family's dirty money through shell shipping conglomerates I designed. I negotiated truces he was too hot-headed to manage. I was his Consigliere in everything but name, hiding in the shadows because the Commission wouldn't accept a woman at the table.

He promised me a ring. He promised me that once the old Don died, we would marry.

Instead, he married Isabella Falcone this morning to secure her father's territory, while I was here, prepping his favorite steak like a glorified servant.

The front door beeped.

Heavy, confident footsteps echoed on the hardwood.

Dante walked into the kitchen. He looked devastatingly handsome, loosening the tie of the tuxedo from the photo. The scent of expensive scotch and another woman's floral perfume clung to him like a second skin.

"Smells good, tesoro," he said, coming up behind me. He tried to kiss my neck.

I didn't flinch. I didn't tremble. I felt my heart calcify into a block of dry ice.

I slid the burner phone across the smooth marble.

Dante paused. He looked at the phone. Then he looked at me.

The color drained from his face, leaving him looking less like a Don and more like a child caught stealing from the collection plate.

"Seraphina," he started, his voice dropping to that low, persuasive rumble that usually made my knees weak. "It's politics. Just politics. Her father insisted. It means nothing."

"Seven years," I said. My voice sounded strange to my own ears. Flat. Metallic.

"You know how this world works," he snapped, his arrogance returning as the initial panic faded. "She is a Falcone. She breeds heirs and sits at galas. You... you are my partner. My brain. You have the real power. Nothing changes."

"Everything changes."

"Don't be dramatic," he scoffed, reaching for the wine bottle I had opened to let breathe. "I did this for us. For the empire. You keep your apartment, your allowance, your position. You just stay in the shadows a little longer."

He honestly believed that was a generous offer.

He thought I was a fixture. A piece of high-end furniture that planned logistics and warmed his bed.

"I am not a mistress, Dante," I said. "And I am certainly not a secret."

"You are what I say you are!" He slammed his hand on the counter. "I am the Don of this city. You belong to me."

I looked at him. Really looked at him.

I didn't see the powerful leader I thought I was serving. I saw a man standing on a pedestal I had built for him, terrified of falling off.

"I resign," I said.

Dante laughed. It was a cruel, barking sound. "You can't resign from the Mafia, Seraphina. You know too much."

"And that," I said, picking up the knife again, "is exactly why you should let me walk out that door."

His eyes narrowed. The threat hung in the air, heavy and suffocating.

"If you leave," he whispered, stepping closer, looming over me with the menace that made grown men weep, "I will burn everything you have."

"You don't own anything I have, Dante," I said, meeting his gaze dead-on. "I bought it all with money I cleaned for you. And I kept the receipts."

He stared at me, his chest heaving. He wanted to hit me. I could see the violence twitching in his fingers. But he knew. He knew that without my passwords, my routing numbers, and my algorithms, Gallo Imports was just a warehouse full of illegal drugs waiting for the FBI.

He sneered, turning his back on me. "Go cool off. You'll realize you're nothing without the Gallo name."

He stormed out of the penthouse, the elevator doors dinging shut behind him.

The silence rushed back in.

I looked down at the wagyu beef.

I picked up the knife and finished slicing it. I seared it to a perfect medium-rare. I plated it.

I sat at the island, alone in the apartment I had curated for him.

I took a bite. It tasted like ash.

But as I swallowed, I realized it was the first meal in seven years that I didn't have to share.

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