After Her Divorce, She Inherited the Mafia Empire
My husband's courier had been bleeding my family accounts dry like they were her personal tribute, and she'd had the audacity to call me a useless ornamental bride right there in the private dining room of La Maschera Nerathe most exclusive establishment in Cresthaven's territory.
The disrespect was so brazen it stole the breath from my lungs.
So I made a single phone call. Had her access revoked on the spot. Left her without a cent of clean cash to settle the bill. The managera man who understood exactly whose territory he operated inheld her there for an entire day and night. By morning, every made man and associate from here to the harbor knew Silvana Ferro had been kept like a common debtor, weeping mascara onto white linen.
When Enzo found out, he merely traced a finger down the bridge of my nose, his touch deceptively gentle.
"You." His voice carried that particular warmth he reserved for moments when he thought himself clever. "A grown woman, jealous over a little courier? And now the whole organization is laughing at her."
He didn't blame me. Acted as though the incident had never occurred.
Until my birthday.
When he escorted me to La Maschera Nera himself, his hand possessive at the small of my back.
He ordered dozens of coursesthe kind of excess that announced power to anyone watching. Bottles of wine older than our marriage. He mentioned that associates from allied families would be joining us to pay their respects.
"Tesoro mio," he murmured against my temple, his lips brushing my hairline. "I need to step out for a moment. Family business. I'll return before the first toast."
I waited.
The candles burned down to pools of wax. The kitchen staff began their closing rituals, the distant clatter of copper pots echoing through the emptying restaurant. His associates never arrived. His chair remained cold.
When I finally reached for the card he'd given methe one linked to the Gambetti family accountsthe manager's face shifted like clouds sliding across the moon.
"Signora Gambetti." His voice had lost its earlier deference. "This account has been frozen."
"Frozen?"
Enzo had pressed that card into my palm himself before we'd left the compound. He'd even taken my personal funds, claiming that a husband should provide for his wife on her birthday. That it was a matter of honor.
I'd been moved by the gesture. Quietly proud of myself for securing such a thoughtful matcha man who, despite his brutality in business, showed tenderness in private.
Now the leather seat across from me sat empty. I'd called his private line seventeen times. Each call rang into the void.
If this account was dead, I was exposed.
The manager's expression completed its transformationfrom polished courtesy to barely concealed contempt. In this world, an unpaid debt was more than an inconvenience. It was a crack in the armor. A sign of weakness that invited predators.
"Signora." His tone had hardened. "Do you have another means of payment?"
"I should remind youLa Maschera Nera does not extend credit. You of all people should understand this, given what occurred here last month."
Oh, I remembered.
Last month, Silvana Ferro had swept through this very establishment with Enzo's blessing, spending tribute money like water, draped in silk she hadn't earned. And when I'd arrived to collect my husband for a sit-down with the Marchetti family, she'd looked me up and down with those calculating eyes and laughed.
"The ornamental bride," she'd called me. "Pretty enough for photographs. Useless for everything else."
A cold understanding settled into my bones like frost creeping across glass.
This was Enzo's revenge. His payment for the humiliation I'd dealt his precious goomah.
The sharp percussion of stilettos echoed from the entrancea rhythm I recognized. Deliberate. Theatrical.
I turned.
Enzo stood in the doorway, his arm wrapped around Silvana Ferro's waist with the proprietary ease of a man displaying a new acquisition. Her face was a mask of triumph, lips curved in a smile that belonged on a cat watching a mouse realize the trap had already sprung.
Behind them filed a procession of familiar facescapos, associates, men who had toasted my health at family gatherings. Every single one of them watched me with the anticipation of spectators at an execution.
"Celestina Valente." Silvana's voice cut through the silence like a blade drawn from silk. She used my maiden name deliberatelya reminder that in this room, tonight, I was no longer under Gambetti protection. "You do so enjoy watching people squirm when they cannot pay their debts. Let us see how you handle the shame."
The whispers erupted like brushfire.
"I heard she came from nothingsome minor family barely worth mentioning. Only caught the Boss's eye because of that face. And now her own husband brings his woman to watch her crawl."
"This is what happens when you try to climb the hierarchy on beauty alone."
"Exactly. How long does a pretty face buy loyalty? The moment a powerful man finds someone younger, someone usefulyour protection evaporates like morning fog."
My nails bit crescents into my palms. Humiliation seared through my veins like acid.
Just as I'd suspected. Enzo had orchestrated this entire eveningthe romantic dinner, the promises, the carefully frozen accountsall of it staged for his courier's satisfaction.
He guided Silvana to the most prominent table in the room, pulled out her chair with exaggerated gallantry, and settled beside her like a king taking his throne. His hand rested on her thigh, visible to everyone.
"Don't trouble yourself, bella." His voice carried deliberately, pitched for the audience. "However she humiliated you that day, I will repay her double. This I swear on my name."
Silvana's face illuminated with vicious joy. She turned and pressed her painted lips to his mouth in a kiss that lasted long enough to make a statement.
"Thank you, Enzo." Her voice was honey poured over broken glass. "Mio protettore."
Then her gaze found mine, sharp as a stiletto.
"Celestina." She rose from her seat, wine glass in hand. "You are nothing but a pretty face. An ornament. A waste of the family's resources. What gave you the right to freeze my access? To humiliate me in front of men who matter?"
She lifted one of the bottles from the tablea vintage worth more than most men earned in a yearand hurled it at my feet.
The crystal shattered against marble with the sound of a gunshot.
Crimson wine erupted upward, splashing across my white silk dress, my face, my carefully styled hair. I stood there, dripping, looking every bit as pathetic and powerless as they wanted me to look.
"Che patetica." Silvana's laughter rang through the room like a death knell. "Worthless. I have Enzo to cover whatever I break, whatever I take, whatever I desire." Her smile widened, showing teeth. "But you?"
She stepped closer, close enough that I could smell her perfumesomething expensive that Enzo had undoubtedly purchased.
"You are finished, Celestina. The walk of shame awaits. Perhaps you can crawl back to whatever forgotten corner of the city spawned you."
Enzo watched me with that same mocking smile carved into his face like a death mask. "Stop looking at me like you're planning where to bury the body, cara mia. If you've got the cash, settle up and walk out of here with whatever's left of your dignity."
"Ha! What cash? She couldn't cover this tab if her life hung in the balance."
"The food, the wine they've already openedshe'd choke on the number before she could speak it."
"She's been living off the Gambetti family's tribute this whole time. Without the Boss, she's nothing but a pretty face with empty pockets."
To ensure my degradation was absolute, Enzo rose from his chair with a cold laugh that echoed off the private room's mahogany walls. His gaze swept across the assembled guests like a blade across throats.
"Anyone who helps Celestina out of this mess becomes my enemyand an enemy of the Gambetti Family."
The words hung in the air like gunsmoke. Everyone in Cresthaven knew the Gambettis controlled half the city's territory. No one with a survival instinct would dare cross the Acting Boss in his own domain.
A few associates I'd cultivated relationships with over the years shifted in their seats, hands moving toward their breast pocketsready to step forward, to show respect where respect was owed.
But the moment Enzo's threat landed, they froze. Their hands retreated. Their eyes dropped to their plates. Terrified he might remember their faces.
"See? The Boss doesn't make idle threats."
"He's protecting his little courier harder than he ever protected his own wife."
"Exactly. I thought being his legitimate bride would count for somethingthat this was just a message, a warning. But this? This is a severance."
"After that declaration, who's going to risk their standing for her?"
I lost control. I crossed the room in three strides and seized Enzo's arm, my fingers digging into the fine wool of his suit. "Enzo, are you really going to humiliate me like thisin front of everyonefor some scheming puttana who climbed out of the gutter and into your bed?"
Enzo's lip curled. His hand moved faster than I could track.
Crack.
The backhand sent me stumbling. My cheek burned like he'd pressed a lit cigarette to my skin.
"Yes."
I turned back to face him, my vision swimming, barely able to comprehend what had just happened.
Three years of marriage. Three years of playing the devoted wife while the Gambetti name rose from street-level enforcers to one of Cresthaven's most feared families. We were famous for being the perfect couplethe ruthless young Boss and his elegant bride.
He was the one who pursued me when I first arrived in Cresthaven. Relentless. Obsessive. He'd sent flowers every day for six months. Had his men shadow me "for protection." Showed up at my door with a ring and a promise that felt like a blood oath.
At our wedding, surrounded by capos and consiglieri from a dozen allied families, he'd made vowsswore on his mother's grave that he'd be faithful until they put him in the ground beside her. That I was his and he was mine until the end of all things.
And now? Three years later, every promise, every whispered devotion, every memory of the man I thought I'd marriedshattered by the cold cruelty in his eyes.
Just like the old wives always warned: marry into a Family with nothing but beauty and a false name, and you'll never have true standing. The moment someone younger and hungrier crawls into his bed, your life as a Boss's wife is finished.
But Enzo had no idea. When I married into the Gambetti clan, I wasn't after their territory or their tribute. I married him because I loved himthe man I thought existed beneath the violence.
Facing my bloodshot eyes, Enzo pulled a silk handkerchief from his breast pocket and turned away with deliberate dismissal. He wiped the hand that had struck me as though cleaning off something distasteful.
"You knew I valued that courier. You knew she was under my protection. And you still had to push."
He tucked the handkerchief away and met my gaze with eyes as cold as the obsidian floors of his father's study.
"Celestina, if you can't settle this bill, I'll have the manager strip you bare and throw you into the street like a common sgualdrina. Let all of Cresthaven see what becomes of a woman who forgets her place."
The room erupted in murmurs. Every eye fixed on mesome filled with mockery, others with a darker hunger.
"The Boss is really going all outmaking his own wife crawl out naked for the new girl."
"Can you believe it? A public degradation. This is a message."
"She won't be his wife by sunrise. After tonight, she's nobody. Less than nobody."
"Silenzio. Let's just watch."
The older capos leaned back in their chairs, amusement playing across their weathered faces. One of thema man who controlled the docks and had shaken my hand at a dozen family dinnerslet his gaze travel down my body with undisguised interest.
"I want to see if she's got the curves to match all that pride."
My face burned with humiliation so complete it felt like drowning.
Enzo had taken my spending rights before we left the estate, catching me completely off guard. A casual request to "hold onto" my access to the family accounts. I'd thought nothing of it.
All I had was the designer gown on my backsilk and lace worth more than most people earned in a month, but utterly worthless as currency. I had no way to pay.
And my phone was dead. The battery had been full when we left. That's when the final piece clicked into placeEnzo had planned every moment of this evening. The dinner. The guests. The timing. Even the dead phone.
This wasn't a lover's quarrel. This was an execution.
Silvana's painted lips curved into a smile of pure triumph from her place at Enzo's side.
"It's getting late, Celestina." Enzo's voice carried the bored finality of a man pronouncing sentence. "The restaurant is waiting for you to settle your debt so they can close for the evening. Unless you'd prefer the alternative."
"Don't tell me you can't even scrape together enough to settle the tab."
"What a beautiful disgrace that would be." Silvana's lips curled around the words like a snake savoring venom. "Detained by the Feds for skipping out on a billisn't that exactly the kind of public humiliation you once arranged for me?"
She withdrew a slender cigarette from a silver case, placed it between her painted lips, and struck a match. The flame illuminated the cruel satisfaction in her eyes before she extinguished it with a flick of her wrist. She exhaled slowly, deliberately, sending a plume of Turkish tobacco smoke directly into my face.
Her expression dripped with the arrogance of a woman who believed herself untouchable.
I couldn't stop myself. My hand shot up and connected with her cheeka crack that echoed through the private dining room like a gunshot.
The table went flying. Crystal shattered against marble. Chaos erupted.
Enzo rushed to Silvana's side, cradling her face with a tenderness he'd never shown me. Then his eyes found mine, cold as obsidian, and he snapped his fingers at his enforcers. Before I could react, two men in dark suits grabbed me by the arms and threw me to the ground.
The impact drove the air from my lungs. The cold floor bit through the silk of my dress.
"Celestina, that's enough!"
"Oh, so your goomah can torment people all she wants, but no one's allowed to fight back?"
I glared up at Enzo, my eyes burning with a fury I'd suppressed for three long years. The Gambetti Family's meteoric rise from small-time operators to one of Cresthaven's most respected syndicates? That was me. I'd leveraged every connection my bloodline commanded to clear their path. The rival clans who wanted to carve up Gambetti territory backed off. The Feds who sniffed too close suddenly found themselves reassigned. The protection agreements that should have taken decades to secure fell into place within months.
All because of who I was.
Tonight, on my birthday, I'd planned to finally tell Enzo the truth. That I wasn't some orphaned nobody he'd taken as a trophy bride. That I was the hidden heir to the Valente thronethe most feared of Northport's Four Founding Families.
I was going to bring him home to meet my parents. To formally unite our bloodlines.
I never imagined his loyalty could rot this fast.
I'd misjudged him. Overestimated his honor.
"Enzo." My voice was steady despite the enforcer's grip bruising my arms. "Are you really going to make me walk out of here humiliated? On the anniversary of our blood pact?"
Enzo let out a cold laugh that held no warmth, no recognition of the woman who had built his empire from the shadows. "What else? You think I arranged all this just for show?"
Silvana, emboldened by the wall of muscle surrounding her, stepped forward and swung her fist into my face. The copper taste of blood bloomed across my tongue.
"You worthless kept woman." She crouched down to my level, her perfume sickeningly sweet. "Here are your options: get hauled off by the Feds for failing to pay, or strip naked, hold this steak in your teeth, and crawl out of here on all fours like a dog begging for scraps."
She grinned, revealing teeth too white, too perfect. "Oh, and the difference? Option one, you keep your clothes. Option two, you lose your clothes and every shred of dignity you've ever possessed." She checked her diamond-encrusted watch with theatrical impatience. "So hurry up and pickI'm getting bored."
Dozens of eyes watched me from the shadows of the private roommade men, capos from allied families, their wives dripping in blood money jewels. I was tonight's entertainment. The fall of the Gambetti Don's ornamental bride.
I clenched my fists until my knuckles went white, my gaze fixed on Enzo without a shred of emotion.
"Fine." My voice cut through the silence like a blade. "If this is the path you've chosen, then when the Gambetti Family loses its protectionwhen your territories are seized and your alliances crumble to ashthat's on you."
The moment the words left my mouth, Silvana burst out laughing. The sound was shrill, mocking.
"Ha! Did you hear that?"
Murmurs rippled through the assembled guests.
"Does she think she's living in some fairy tale? Playing the secret Donna?"
"She's clearly lost her mind."
"Three years as a trophy wife and she thinks she has power?"
Enzo's eyes flashed with cold fury. He thought I was bluffing tooa desperate woman grasping at phantom leverage.
He grabbed a plate of braised veal and hurled it at me. The porcelain shattered against my shoulder, sauce streaking down my ruined dress like blood. "Stop talking nonsense. You're going to bring down the Gambettis? Who do you think you are?"
I wiped the sauce from my cheek with deliberate calm. "Worry about your own problems first."
Enzo's jaw tightened. "Manager!"
The restaurant's manager materialized from the shadows, flanked by security in crisp black suits. His tone was cold but professionally neutralthe voice of a man who knew better than to take sides in Family business.
"Signora Gambetti, will you be settling the account in clean cash, or is someone coming to cover the tribute?"
I scanned the room, my gaze cutting through the sea of hostile faces until it landed on a woman I'd worked with beforea minor player in the shipping business I'd helped negotiate on behalf of the Gambettis.
I started walking toward her, my heels clicking against the marble like a countdown.
The second she saw me coming, she scrambled out of her velvet chair and backed away, nearly knocking over a waiter.
"Celestina, stay backI can't pay for youI don't have that kind of access"
"Relax." I kept my voice low, controlled. "I'm not asking you to pay. I just need to borrow your phone."
She hesitated, fear warring with something else in her eyesperhaps a distant memory of the respect my presence once commanded.
"Please. I'm calling a friend to bring the money."
Silvana's laughter cut through the room like breaking glass. "Oh, this is rich! Who in all of Cresthaven would dare come to your rescue now?"
She waved dismissively, settling back into her chair like a queen on a stolen throne. "Fine, let her make her little call. We'll give her thirty minutes." Her eyes swept across the room, landing on a cluster of heavyset capos who'd been watching the spectacle with undisguised hunger. "If nobody shows up with the tribute by then"
She gestured at them with a lazy flick of her cigarette.
"these gentlemen can strip her themselves. A woman who's shared the bed of Cresthaven's most powerful Don must be worth sampling, wouldn't you say?"
The men's laughter was low and predatory.
I took the phone from the trembling woman's hand, my fingers steady as I dialed a number I'd memorized years ago but never thought I'd need.
Thirty minutes.
That was all the time in the world.
Silvana turned toward the cluster of heavy-set men who had been watching me throughout the eveningtheir eyes crawling over my skin like rats in a cellar.
At her signal, the business associate slid her phone across the table toward me.
The moment the cold metal touched my palm, I dialed. My voice was steady, but beneath the surface, desperation coiled like a viper. Thirty minutes. I needed someone here with tribute in thirty minutes.
The seconds bled into one another, thick and slow as spilled wine. Ten minutes remained.
Silvana could contain herself no longer. She rose from her seat, silk dress whispering against her thighs, her painted lips curling with theatrical disgust.
"Madonna mia, I'm such a fool. I actually believed this puttana? Like her pathetic little friend is going to walk through those doors with clean cash?"
"She's stalling," one of the Capos agreed, his gold pinky ring catching the chandelier light. "Playing us for time."
Silvana snapped her fingers at the managera thin man with the hollow eyes of someone who had seen too much and said too little. "Have your men break her arms and legs first. No one in this city is stupid enough to cross the Gambetti Family by helping her. Stop wasting everyone's time."
The manager nodded once. His security detailmen with scarred knuckles and dead expressionsmoved toward me like shadows detaching from the walls. Their faces promised violence without pleasure, simply business.
I raised my hand, palm outward. "Hold."
My voice cut through the tension like a blade through silk.
"I still have ten minutes."
"When those ten minutes are up, someone will walk through that door with the money."
Silvana's laughter rang outsharp, cruel, the sound of a woman who believed herself untouchable. "That's stronzate and you know it. When those ten minutes are uphell, I'll give you an extra ten on top of thatif nobody shows up with cash in hand?" She spread her arms wide, playing to her audience. "I'll get on all fours and crawl out of this restaurant like a dog with my tail between my legs."
Something flickered in my chest. Not hopesomething colder. Certainty.
"You said it." My eyes locked onto hers. "Remember those words, Silvana. Remember them well."
"Yeah, I said it. E allora? Everyone in this room is my witness."
The private dining room erupted with the sounds of men who smelled blood in the water.
"Che spettacolo! I'm not going home tonight."
"Who knew a simple dinner would come with entertainment?"
The minutes bled away. One of the heavy Caposa man whose neck spilled over his collar like risen doughcouldn't contain himself any longer. His thick fingers reached toward me, grazing the bare skin of my shoulder.
"Non mi toccare." I slapped his hand away with enough force to make his rings clatter. "Don't touch me."
His laugh was wet, obscene. "Heh heh heh. Those curves, that bodyI don't even need to touch to know it's bellissima."
He turned toward the head of the table, toward the man who had once sworn to protect me before God and the Family.
"Don Gambetti, why don't you just give her to me? Consider it a gift between friends."
Enzo drained his wine in one smooth motion, the crystal catching light like frozen blood. His other hand toyed with a silver lighterflicking it open, closed, open, closedthe rhythm of a man utterly bored by the proceedings.
"Why not?" His voice was casual, dismissive. "If she can't pay the tribute she owes, you can do whatever you want with her."
"Ha! Then I'm claiming first rights."
The room shifted. The pretense of civility evaporated like morning fog over the harbor. These menmade men, Capos from allied families, men who had kissed Enzo's ring and sworn Omertstopped caring whether I consented. They began closing in, a circle of expensive suits and predatory intent.
My voice dropped to a temperature that could freeze blood in veins. "You think this is amusing? I'm about to make every single one of you the punchline."
I memorized each face. The shape of their jaws. The pattern of their scars. The greed gleaming in their eyes.
"And you." I turned to Silvana, letting her see something in my expression that made her smile falter for just a heartbeat.
She recovered quickly, spitting at my feet. "Rip her dress off. Time's up. No more stalling"
Silvana snapped her fingers at Enzo's personal enforcers, her smirk returning. "Hold her down. Pin her so these maiali can have their fun."
"S, signora." The bodyguards surged forward, surrounding me completelya wall of muscle and violence.
I looked at Enzo. My husband. The man I had elevated from a street-level associate's son to the Acting Boss of a respected Family. The man whose empire was built on foundations he couldn't even see.
My heart didn't break. It simply... froze. Turned to obsidian in my chest.
We were still boundby blood oath, by the sacred vows spoken before the old Dons. And he was letting other men put their hands on me. This was his honor being dragged through the gutter. His rispetto being trampled.
But he didn't care.
"Don't look at me like that." He lit a cigarette, the flame illuminating the cruel beauty of his face. "I'm not helping you."
"I just want Silvana to feel better. She's been so stressed lately."
With the Boss's blessing given, the pigs began their chorus.
"Come with me, bella! I'll treat you right."
"I've got tributeI can pay your debt!"
"No, no, come with me. I've got more territory than him, and I'm easier on the eyes too."
They ordered the enforcers to hold me down. Rough hands gripped my arms, my shoulders. Thick fingers began tearing at the fabric of my dressthe sound of ripping silk obscenely loud in the charged air.
I fought. Dio, I fought. Every self-defense lesson, every moment of training, every ounce of strength I possessed. But there were too many of them, and they only laughed harder at my resistance.
"Feisty! I like that."
"Makes it more fun when they struggle."
I stopped fighting. Instead, I looked at each of them in turnslowly, deliberatelyburning their faces into my memory like brands.
"You think this is funny?" My voice was quiet now. Deadly calm. "I'm about to make every single one of you the joke that Northport tells for the next hundred years."
"And you." I turned to Silvana, who was watching with bright, hungry eyes. "Don't forget what you promised."
She rolled her eyes. "Rip her dress off. Time's up. No more stall"
The words died in her throat.
The doors didn't open. They exploded inward.
Men in black suits poured into the private dining roomnot the cheap muscle that passed for security in this establishment, but professionals. Their movements were precise, economical, brutal. Military. The kind of men who had been forged in wars that never made the newspapers.
They cut through Enzo's bodyguards like scythes through wheat. One by one, the enforcers fellnot killed, but neutralized with surgical efficiency. Wrists snapped. Knees shattered. Throats struck just hard enough to silence.
The Capos who had been pawing at me scrambled backward, their bravado evaporating like spit on a hot stove.
And then she walked in.
Carlotta Marchetti.
The Consigliere. The Clean Hand. The woman who controlled the flow of laundered money for all Four Founding Families of Cresthaven. She answered to no oneexcept, as the whispers said, to old blood. True blood.
She strode into the room carrying a leather briefcase, her silver hair swept back from a face that had negotiated with presidents and ordered the deaths of men who crossed her. Her expression was carved from graniteabsolute, immovable, terrifying in its gravity.
The room fell silent. Even Enzo's cigarette had frozen halfway to his lips.
Carlotta stopped before me. Her eyes swept over my torn dress, the red marks on my arms where the enforcers had gripped me, the circle of stunned men who moments ago had thought themselves untouchable.
Then she inclined her headjust slightly, but unmistakablyin a gesture of rispetto.
"Miss Valente." Her voice carried through the silent room like a funeral bell. "I've brought the tribute. I trust I'm not late?"
Download
NovelReader Pro
Copy
Story Code
Paste in
Search Box
Continue
Reading
