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You Said Die Quietly, So I Did

Chapter 5 

Word Count: 742    |    Released on: 05/01/2026

na

rived the n

m taking

mall, white house with blue shut

art s

afe H

dier. It was where we hid when the feds were raiding the city. It was where we had painted t

y place that w

breaking ever

to the driveway,

of drywall.

o

contractors was tearing down the walls. The living room was gutted. The window

screamed.

ored. "Orders from the Don,

He answered on

he phone. "Why the house

," he said calmly. "It's s

use! It's o

g, Elena. And i

hun

hours. I watched the shadow

pt across the driveway. Da

contrasted sharply with the dust and debris. Sienna f

house and smiled. It wa

delicately over a piece of broken trim. "But the n

ll of the room that w

watching me sitting

e, Elena," he s

g me," I said,

a property," he

er to Sienna. She flinc

old her. "You are li

. "Dante, she

chest hitting mine. He wa

lena. Or I will hav

looked for the boy I l

t trash to you?"

ins of our first ho

k," he said. "Stop being

a checkbook

ture we threw out," she offe

ung

twisted my arm behind my ba

h!" he

me towar

Wait for the divorce pap

hecking her face, treating her like fine china

l be erased, Sienna te

n estate, where the s

a removal

he clothes. The furniture. The photos

By dawn, the master bedroom w

fe. Our wedding. Our trips to Italy

em into th

the

ory curl up, black

was as empty as my marriage. The pain in my b

nothing le

. I was simply waiting

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You Said Die Quietly, So I Did
You Said Die Quietly, So I Did
“The doctor told me I had thirty days to live. Exactly ten minutes later, my husband told me his mistress was pregnant. I sat in the cold marble living room of the Vitiello estate, watching Dante pace. He was the Capo of Chicago, the man I used to stitch up in a bathroom when we had nothing. Now, he looked at me with dead eyes. "Sienna is moving in," he said casually. "She carries the heir. You will raise him." He treated the destruction of our marriage like a business arrangement. I tried to tell him about the pain eating my insides, the Stage IV cancer that made standing agony. But he just rolled his eyes, calling my weakness "jealousy" and my silence "theatrics." He even gutted our first home-the safe house where we fell in love-to build a nursery for her. When I finally asked him, "What if I'm dying?" he didn't even pause on his way out the door. "Then do it quietly," he said. "I have enough headaches today." So I did. I burned every photo of us. I signed the divorce papers. And I went to a civilian cemetery to buy a plot under my maiden name, far away from his family mausoleum. I died alone on a cold stone bench, just as he asked. It wasn't until he stood in the morgue, holding my skeletal hand and realizing I weighed nothing but bones and grief, that the King of Chicago finally broke. He found my journal in the trash, where I had written my final entry: "I wish I never met Dante Vitiello." Now, he is on his knees in the dirt, begging a headstone for forgiveness that will never come.”
1 Chapter 12 Chapter 23 Chapter 34 Chapter 45 Chapter 56 Chapter 67 Chapter 78 Chapter 89 Chapter 910 Chapter 1011 Chapter 1112 Chapter 1213 Chapter 1314 Chapter 1415 Chapter 1516 Chapter 1617 Chapter 1718 Chapter 1819 Chapter 1920 Chapter 20