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The Broken Don: Losing My Only Queen

Chapter 3 Chapter 3

Word Count: 435    |    Released on: Today at 15:00

n's

the click of th

eet vendor on the West Side-the same one we'd lived on during our safe house years, when we were

ring. Calcul

c dipped under his weight. His hand rose, slow and deli

hen I sm

Cloying. Woven into the very fibe

led lik

stop it. I jerked my head away so s

froze i

ollowed was louder

in his composure. Then he did something u

he said, voice tig

at the

the perfume invaded my lungs again. "This is the vendetta

ing

ts fried golden shell still steaming. Brought it towar

rancini from

ief flickered i

And dropped the arancini into the sta

choed through t

it with precise, methodical movements. Wiped t

my voice entirely f

raised

acked-like ice under too much pressure. The gri

he scent of her

," he whispered. A bl

hammered across the floor. Th

op the used napkin

on top of his rui

be rewarmed once

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The Broken Don: Losing My Only Queen
The Broken Don: Losing My Only Queen
“For five years, I was the shadow of the city's most ruthless Mafia Don-stitching his gunshot wounds, surviving gang wars, and believing every promise he whispered in the dark. I thought our love was forged in blood and unbreakable. Until his childhood flame crawled back to the city with nothing but debt. Suddenly, the man who once sprinted through a blizzard to bring me medicine had no time for me. He secretly wired fifty million dollars of syndicate money to buy back her ancestral estate. He abandoned me in a bridal boutique for twelve hours-just to go hang a vintage chandelier for her. When I brought him homemade soup, he shoved me violently against a doorframe to protect her from a tiny, fake scratch. He never noticed the blood pooling down my legs. I lost our two-month-old baby on an operating table that night. Alone. I signed the surgical consent forms myself while he drove off into the rain because she was scared of a thunderstorm. When he finally returned, weeping on his knees and clutching my bloodied consent form, my heart was already dead. I walked away. Left the penthouse keys. Moved into a studio on the East Side. Started designing dresses instead of stitching wounds. Now he stands in the rain outside my office, the former king of the underworld reduced to a ghost with ruined shoes. He thinks I'll soften. He thinks a few tears can erase five years of betrayal. He's wrong. Because I'm standing on a stage at Paris Fashion Week, a crystal trophy in my hand and a good man on one knee. And when I catch a glimpse of his hollow face in the shadows, I feel nothing but relief. This is not a story of forgiveness. This is a story of what happens when a queen remembers she doesn't need a king.”