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The Billionaire Who Lost His Sun

Chapter 4 

Word Count: 808    |    Released on: 10/10/2025

"Ria" Ro

ays were about

noticeable. Salvatore hated public displays of emotion. Instead, I methodically went through my fr

feed. The noise of their perfect lives-the charity galas, the European vacations, the christenings

popped up. The profile picture was a g

you shoul

am story. A close-up of Sofia Ricci's hand, a massive canary diamond on her r

had the plumbers retrieve it. Or, more likely, he'd

, no pain. It was like looking at a p

my phone. Evidence. Then I blocked the user

old woman who had known my mother for

said, her eyes sharp and knowing as she set the he

ore's car parked outside

, Adriana. And stars don't orbit

She had seen his coldness, his selfishness, and she had

ispered, more to myself than

n, child," she said softly, pattin

he scent of her perfume now faint, a ghostly whisper. I lay d

elieved him to be. In the dream, he was holding me, telling me

ause I missed him. It was because I was mourning the

t a drawer in my mother's desk, my fingers brushed against a

an emergency visit for an unprovoked attack on another dog at a park. The vet's notes were chillingly clear

ring. He had known. He had been there with her that day. He knew the do

my veins. It wasn't grief anym

blocked number. I

re's voice said, tight with frustration. "I

ant do it," I sai

hat diamond necklace I gave you for our

He'd told me he had it commiss

't hav

e it? It's worth more than that

ave taken better care of

red to life, chewing the evidence of his betrayal into meaningless strip

e justification I

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The Billionaire Who Lost His Sun
The Billionaire Who Lost His Sun
“I was arranging lilies for my engagement party when the hospital called. A dog bite, they said. My fiancé, Salvatore Moretti, was supposed to be in Chicago on business. But he answered my frantic call from a ski slope in Aspen, with the sound of my best friend, Sofia, laughing in the background. He told me not to worry, that my mother's injury was just a scratch. But when I got to the hospital, I learned it was Sofia's unvaccinated Doberman that had attacked my diabetic mother. I texted Sal that her kidneys were failing, that they might have to amputate. His only reply: "Sofia is hysterical. She feels terrible. Calm her down for me, okay?" Hours later, Sofia posted a photo of Sal kissing her on a ski lift. The next call I got was from the doctor, telling me my mother's heart had stopped. She died alone, while the man who swore to protect me was on a romantic vacation with the woman whose dog killed her. The rage inside me wasn't hot; it turned into a block of ice. I didn't drive back to the penthouse he gave me. I went to my mother's empty house and made a call I hadn't made in fifteen years. To my estranged father, a man whose name was a ghost story in Salvatore's world: Don Matteo Costello. "I'm coming home," I told him. My vendetta wouldn't be one of blood. It would be one of erasure. I would dismantle my life here and disappear so completely, it would be as if I had never existed.”
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