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The day my husband, a Mafia Underboss, told me I was genetically unfit to carry his heir, he brought home my replacement—a surrogate with my eyes and a working womb.
He called her a "vessel" but paraded her as his mistress, abandoning me while I bled on the floor at a party to protect her and planning their secret future in the villa he once promised me.
But in our world, wives don't just walk away—they disappear, and I decided to orchestrate my own vanishing act, leaving him to the ruin he so carefully built for himself.
Chapter 1
Katarina POV:
The day my husband told me I was genetically unfit to carry his heir, he also introduced me to my replacement—a woman with my eyes, my hair, but a womb that worked.
It was a Tuesday. The sky over Manhattan was a bruised purple, threatening a storm that mirrored the one brewing in our penthouse apartment. Alessandro stood by the floor-to-ceiling windows, a silhouette of power and cold control against the city lights. He hadn't touched me since the final test results came back from the family’s private clinic.
"It's a mitochondrial defect, Katarina," he’d said, his voice flat, devoid of the comfort I desperately needed. "A clean lineage is everything. You know this."
I did know. I had known it the day I, Katarina Jensen, married into the De Luca family and became the wife of the Underboss. My purpose was singular: to produce an heir and secure Alex’s position. For five years, I had failed.
Now, his father, Don Donato De Luca, was dying. His final decree had echoed through the family like a death knell: an heir, born within the next year, or Alessandro would be stripped of his title. The leadership of the Cosa Nostra’s most powerful New York family would pass to his cousin. It was a fate worse than death.
“So, I’ve found a solution,” Alex said, turning from the window. The words hung in the air, heavy with unspoken finality. He gestured toward the door, and a moment later, she walked in.
Her name was Aria Diaz. She was a ghost of me, a cheaper, rougher version. Same dark hair, same blue eyes, but where my posture was straight from years of ballet, hers was a defiant slouch. A hunger, a raw and desperate ambition, swam in her gaze. She looked at our home not with awe, but with calculation.
"She will carry the child," Alex stated, not asked. "It's a family matter. A transaction. She is merely a vessel."
A vessel. A container for the heir I couldn't provide. Hope, sharp and painful, pierced through my numbness. Maybe this was the only way. For the family. For Alex.
"Once the child is born," he continued, his eyes fixed on me, ignoring the woman standing beside him, "she will be gone. Everything will go back to normal."
But normal had already fractured. He started staying out late, claiming he needed to monitor Aria for her safety, to ensure the "asset" was protected. Our fifth wedding anniversary came and went. I spent it alone, staring at the diamond necklace he’d given me years ago, a symbol of a promise that now felt like a lie. I was becoming a ghost in my own life, a placeholder queen for a kingdom that was slipping away.
The first crack became a chasm a week later. I was driving back from a charity function when a black sedan slammed into my passenger side. It wasn't an accident. It was a message from a rival family, a test of De Luca strength. Shaken, bleeding from a cut on my forehead, I called Alex. No answer. His phone went straight to voicemail.
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