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He Faked Death, I Married The Don

Chapter 2 

Word Count: 612    |    Released on: 19/01/2026

na

smelled of roast beef and stagn

had to drag Leo across town to sit at a table wi

e the restroom. Instead, I

or was cracked o

er-in-law-a man I had respec

eing reckl

n the air, heav

e of the man prete

oman, Papa. She does what she is told. She

st the wall, flattening

usea that had nothing to do with the heavy

mp

e doll to be placed on a shelf, dusted

is the Queen of Sicily. If the Commission finds out you are impersonat

Gina is happy. I am ha

y? What abo

She doesn't need a husband. She needs

uth to stifle the scream cl

e the Family. He hadn

faked h

had died of a drug overdose. And Dante,

y. He took his twin's sala

rty and grief so he could play

hands. They were t

orn for three years. The cheap fabric

I thought about the humiliating jobs I took-scrubbing floors, sewing

hed to the D

A toy train for Leo. A heater for the apa

terrified of owing

such a

eps approach

g into the bathroom and

myself in

s pale, her eyes rimmed w

c, beneath the layers of gr

is hot, volatile. This

ing water. I didn't put on

cked t

to run. I wasn'

to that table. I was

to watch them ch

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He Faked Death, I Married The Don
He Faked Death, I Married The Don
“I was arranging white lilies on the cold marble of my husband's grave when I saw a ghost. Walking through the cemetery gates was a man who looked exactly like my dead husband, Dante. Logic said it was his twin brother, Matteo. But a wife knows the slope of a man's shoulders. She knows the arrogant tilt of his chin. My husband hadn't been blown up in a car bomb three years ago. He had faked his death to steal his brother's rank, his fortune, and his mistress. For three years, I had forced our son, Leo, to kiss a photograph goodnight. We lived in a damp, peeling apartment, surviving on the "charity" of the Family. Meanwhile, Dante was living in a mansion, driving cars that cost more than my life, playing house with another woman. When he came to our cramped apartment to drop off the monthly "pension" money, pretending to be Uncle Matteo, he didn't look at me with love. He looked at his watch. When Leo ran to hug him, shouting "Papa," Dante peeled the boy's small arms off his expensive suit like he was removing a piece of lint. "Don't call me that," he snapped. "I am your Uncle." My grief turned into ice. He chose another woman's comfort over his own son's hunger. I grabbed Leo's hand and walked out the door. "You walk away, and you get nothing!" Dante shouted after me. "You'll be on the street!" I didn't stop. I walked straight to the black SUV idling at the curb. The window rolled down, revealing Salvatore Vitiello. The Don. The most lethal man in the city. "Get in, Elena," he commanded. I opened the door and slid onto the leather seat next to the devil himself. As we drove away, leaving my husband in the dust, I realized I had just traded a liar for a killer. And I didn't regret it for a second.”
1 Chapter 12 Chapter 23 Chapter 34 Chapter 45 Chapter 56 Chapter 67 Chapter 78 Chapter 89 Chapter 9