To him, my brother's life wasn't even worth as much as a cat.
Worse, when I tried to file for divorce, the lawyer told me there was no record of our marriage.
The lavish wedding, the judge, the vows-it was all a meticulously constructed sham.
I was never his legal wife, just a disposable plaything he kept around for obedience.
I had endured three years of his coldness and control, believing his promise to protect my family.
Instead, his lies cost my brother his life, and he later left me trapped in a burning car to save his mistress.
After surviving the wreckage, the gentle, obedient Elara died completely.
I calmly dialed the number of his greatest rival.
"I need extraction."
This time, I will become the fire that burns his entire empire to the ground.
Chapter 1
Elara Moretti POV:
The whisper-quiet hiss of the ICU door sliding open was the only sound that broke through the buzzing in my ears. Dr. Evans stepped out, his shoulders slumped with a weariness that went deeper than a long shift. He pulled his mask down, and the pity in his eyes was a physical thing, a needle-sharp point aimed directly at the last bit of hope I had left.
I'd known that look my whole life. It was the look teachers gave me when Luca had to miss another month of school, the look neighbors gave us when another ambulance screamed to a stop in front of our tiny apartment. Pity. I was drowning in it.
"Elara." His voice was low, gravelly. "His heart is failing. The equipment we have here... we've reached our limit."
My gaze shot past him, through the thick glass of the door. Luca was so pale against the white sheets, a ghost tangled in a web of tubes and wires. On the monitor beside his bed, the numbers flashed, a frantic, desperate dance on the edge of a cliff. Each spike, each dip, was a hammer blow against my ribs.
"What about a transfer?" My voice was a dry rasp, like sandpaper. "You said if we could get him on ECMO..."
He cut me off, his expression tightening with a helplessness I knew all too well. "The nearest hospitals with an available machine are full. And in his current state, the risk of transport is... extreme."
The sterile hallway tilted. I braced myself against the cold wall, the scent of antiseptic flooding my nose, thick and cloying. It made my stomach turn.
"There has to be another way," I whispered, more to myself than to him. "My husband... he has a private medical team."
Dr. Evans's expression didn't change. The pity was still there. "They would need to be here immediately, Elara. We might have less than an hour."
An hour. The word hit me like a stray bullet.
I took a shaky breath, forcing the panic down. My nails dug into my palms, the small, sharp pain a welcome anchor in the swirling chaos. I nodded, managing a smile that felt more like a grimace.
"I'll make the call," I said, my voice surprisingly steady. "They'll come."
He gave me one last, sympathetic look before turning and disappearing back into the ICU. The door hissed shut, sealing Luca in one world, and leaving me alone in another. The only sound was the faint, weakening beep of the monitor, a lifeline fraying with every second.
I pulled out my old iPhone, the screen spiderwebbed with a fine crack across the top. The wallpaper was a photo of Luca and me from last summer. He was laughing, head thrown back, the sun catching the life in his eyes. Now he was in there, dying.
My thumb trembled as I swiped the screen open and went to my contacts. The name at the very top, pinned and permanent, was a mockery.
Dante .
I could still hear his voice from when he was trying to win me over, smooth and confident, a balm to my frayed nerves. *"Your family is my family, Elara. I'll get Luca the best treatment in the world. You'll never have to worry about anything again."* That promise, that intoxicating illusion of safety, was what had made me fall. He was the man who could solve any problem, and my life was full of them.
I squeezed my eyes shut. His handsome face materialized in my mind, the dark, intense eyes that had promised me forever. The words had been so beautiful, so convincing.
A tiny, fragile flicker of hope ignited in the frozen cavern of my chest. He was Dante Volkov. A king in a city of wolves. This was nothing to him. A phone call. A snap of his fingers.
I had to believe that. It was the only chance Luca had.
My finger hovered over the green call icon, hesitating. What was I afraid of? That he'd say no? He wouldn't. He promised.
No. I was afraid of hearing the truth in his voice. I was afraid that if he, my rock, my savior, let me down, there would be nothing left to catch me. The whole world would simply fall away.
A new sound ripped through the hallway, sharp and frantic, nothing like the steady beep before. It wasn't a warning. It was a siren.
My hesitation shattered. My thumb slammed down on the screen.
The call began to ring, its rhythmic pulse echoing in the empty corridor, each beep a judgment on my fate.