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Swapped at Birth, Claimed by the Mafia King

Swapped at Birth, Claimed by the Mafia King

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8 Chapters
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In our family, my sister Isabella was the prized mafia princess, while I was the secret daughter kept in the basement and treated like a stray dog. After I accidentally scalded my hand with boiling espresso from sheer exhaustion, my mother didn't even look at my severe burns. Instead, she violently shoved me into a plaster wall just to make sure Isabella's silk dress was clean. To make matters worse, my parents calmly announced they were selling me as a cheap bride to an old Chicago boss to pay off my father's gambling debts. The buyer was a ruthless wolf who had already collected life insurance on three dead wives. Isabella faked delicate tears in front of the syndicate guests, but gave me a venomous smirk the moment they looked away. I was thrown back into the dark storage closet to wait for my doom, my blistered hand throbbing in pure agony. I didn't understand why my own flesh and blood hated me so deeply, casting me to a murderer while giving Isabella the entire world. I was absolutely terrified of dying slowly at the hands of a monster who bought me just to settle a debt. With a cold certainty pressing in, my trembling fingers pulled out a mysterious burner phone I had found in the trash. I pressed the call button, dialing Dante Falcone, the deadliest Don in New York. "Are you truly looking for me?" I whispered into the receiver, praying he would claim me before my family could destroy me.

Contents

Swapped at Birth, Claimed by the Mafia King Chapter 1

In our family, my sister Isabella was the prized mafia princess, while I was the secret daughter kept in the basement and treated like a stray dog.

After I accidentally scalded my hand with boiling espresso from sheer exhaustion, my mother didn't even look at my severe burns.

Instead, she violently shoved me into a plaster wall just to make sure Isabella's silk dress was clean.

To make matters worse, my parents calmly announced they were selling me as a cheap bride to an old Chicago boss to pay off my father's gambling debts.

The buyer was a ruthless wolf who had already collected life insurance on three dead wives.

Isabella faked delicate tears in front of the syndicate guests, but gave me a venomous smirk the moment they looked away.

I was thrown back into the dark storage closet to wait for my doom, my blistered hand throbbing in pure agony.

I didn't understand why my own flesh and blood hated me so deeply, casting me to a murderer while giving Isabella the entire world.

I was absolutely terrified of dying slowly at the hands of a monster who bought me just to settle a debt.

With a cold certainty pressing in, my trembling fingers pulled out a mysterious burner phone I had found in the trash.

I pressed the call button, dialing Dante Falcone, the deadliest Don in New York.

"Are you truly looking for me?"

I whispered into the receiver, praying he would claim me before my family could destroy me.

Chapter 1

Seraphina POV

The words settled like a stone in my gut: my mother would sell me to pay my father's gambling debts. The buyer was a Chicago boss, an old wolf who had already collected life insurance on three dead wives. I had nowhere to run and no one to turn to-except a mysterious burner phone I'd found three days ago, half-buried in a bag of trash someone had tossed into the storage closet.

I sat on the cold concrete of the storage closet, deep in the Rossi estate's underbelly. The air smelled of bleach and old dust. I drew my knees to my chest, a futile gesture against the chill that did nothing for the fire consuming my right hand.

The skin on the back of my hand was an angry, blistered red. I stared at it, the throbbing pain dragging my mind back to what had happened four hours ago in the parlor upstairs.

My parents, Marco and Elena Rossi, had hosted a gathering of powerful syndicate associates. The goal was to secure an arranged marriage for my sister, Isabella. Isabella was the prized mafia princess; she wore haute couture and smiled with practiced perfection. I, by contrast, was the secret they kept buried-the daughter raised in a provincial safe house, brought forth only when a servant was needed.

Sleep had been a stranger for more than a day. It began when Isabella declared a maid had ruined a silk gown, and ended with Elena dragging me to the basement, forcing my hands into a basin of bloody, wine-stained water. I scrubbed until four in the morning. My fingers had pruned and my wrists had begun to tremble, but I could not stop. To stop meant I would not eat.

During the meeting this afternoon, exhaustion had settled behind my eyes, making the edges of the room swim and soften. Elena ordered me to serve espresso to the dangerous men sitting on our velvet sofas. My hand trembled, and the heavy porcelain cup tipped. Boiling espresso spilled directly over my right hand.

A white-hot agony erased all thought. The skin scalded instantly, but my survival instinct was stronger than the pain. I bit my tongue, bowed my head, and gathered the fragments of porcelain, murmuring apologies to the assembled men.

Elena rushed over. She did not look at my hand; instead, she checked Isabella for stains. When she saw Isabella was clean, Elena turned a vicious glare on me. Her palm struck my shoulder, the force of it sending me stumbling back until my head cracked against the plaster wall.

She called me a low-class embarrassment. She told the associates I was unfit for the Family, announcing they would just sell me as a cheap bride to the Chicago boss to pay off Marco's gambling debts. Marco agreed. Isabella faked sympathy, but when our parents looked away, she gave me a venomous smirk.

I retreated to the basement. I ran ice water over my burn and applied a cheap, expired ointment I kept hidden under my mattress. No tears came. I had learned long ago that crying was an invitation for a harder blow.

Now, hiding in the dark storage closet, I accepted the plain truth: my own blood was casting me to the old wolf in Chicago.

I dug through a pile of discarded items, looking for a clean rag to wrap my hand. My fingers brushed against something hard. It was a heavy black-and-gold token attached to a cheap burner phone-the same phone I'd found three days ago and hidden under a loose floorboard, too afraid to use it until now.

I held the token up to the dim light slipping under the door.

Words were engraved on the metal: I am looking for a girl named Seraphina. If you are her, call me.

A frantic pulse beat against the cold metal of the token in my palm. I stared at the screen of the phone. There was only one number saved in the contacts, and the name attached to the number was Dante Falcone.

The Ghost. The undisputed Don of the New York Falcone Family. He was a myth in the underworld-a man who had survived a bloody succession war as a teenager and returned to slaughter everyone who betrayed him. His name was a synonym for authority, his legend built on the bones of those who betrayed him.

I didn't know how the phone had ended up in the trash. I didn't know if it was a trap or a miracle. But I did know one thing: my hand throbbed, and the memory of Elena shoving me flashed in my mind. Nothing could be worse than the Chicago boss. Nothing could be worse than dying slowly at the hands of a man who bought me to settle a debt.

I pressed the call button.

As I brought the cheap plastic to my ear, my throat constricted as if stuffed with dry cotton; the simple act of swallowing was a painful scrape. The line rang once. Twice.

It connected.

The connection opened not to a voice, but to a profound stillness-a heavy, airless silence that raised the fine hairs on my arms.

I swallowed hard. My voice came out as a fractured whisper. "Are you truly looking for me?"

The silence stretched. Then, a voice came through the speaker, low and resonant, like the tolling of a distant, iron bell.

"Tell me your name."

I closed my eyes. "Seraphina."

Through the line, I heard a sharp, controlled intake of breath, a sound abruptly cut off. A few seconds of static-filled quiet passed, no longer empty, but charged, as if the air itself had grown dense and combustible.

"Don't be afraid," he commanded softly. "Don't hang up. I am coming to claim you."

His words wrapped around me like a promise-or a threat. I couldn't tell which. But as I clutched the phone to my ear, my burned hand trembling in my lap, I realized I had just invited the most dangerous man in New York into my life.

And there was no going back.

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