When I refused to play the part of his obedient, blind wife, he publicly humiliated me and orchestrated rumors to isolate me.
He thought I was just collateral, a powerless figurehead he could control and eventually discard to settle his debts.
I had endured this loveless marriage to survive in the family, yet he treated me worse than dirt while elevating a mistress who knew nothing of our world.
I was suffocating in a cage of neglect, enraged by the audacity of a coward who broke every sacred vow.
So, I took off my vulgar wedding ring and left it on his bathroom sink.
I picked up my phone and sent a message to Dante Falcone, the exiled heir who had stitched my flesh back together in secret.
This time, I chose to burn my husband's empire to the ground.
Chapter 1
Sienna POV
Sitting in the passenger seat of my husband's armored SUV, listening to him book a luxury suite in Tokyo for his mistress, I felt a sour heat rise from my stomach, coating the back of my tongue. I fixed my gaze on the dashboard's green numerals, tracing their shapes until they blurred into meaningless light. My throat constricted around an unswallowed breath as he discussed champagne vintages with the concierge. This man, the Capo of the Chicago Syndicate, was a man whose name made soldiers of the family step into the gutter. He was also the man who had left me to bleed out on the cold floor of a car six months ago.
I pressed my thumbnails into the soft flesh of my palms, leaving four perfect, bloodless crescents in the skin just as Julian ended his call.
He adjusted the cuffs of his tailored suit, not bothering to hide the smirk on his face.
"Mia is an asset," he said, his voice a polished surface. "The Tokyo run requires a delicate hand to finalize the new shipping manifests. Her attention to detail is... perfect for the task."
I kept my face turned to the tinted window, consciously relaxing the muscles around my mouth and eyes until they felt like a plaster mask.
"Your shipping manifests are of no concern to me, Julian."
He gripped the steering wheel tighter, the skin stretched taut over his knuckles, turning them the color of old bone against the black leather of the wheel.
"That tone," he bit off each word, "is not for you to use with me, Sienna. I am the Capo. This life you have-it is a gift from my hand."
He jammed the gearshift into park with a violent crack of plastic. The heavy vehicle lurched, its tires groaning against the curb at the foot of the main entrance of the Syndicate charity foundation.
This tower of granite and reinforced glass was my cage, its every camera and pressure-plated floor measuring the limits of my breath.
I serve as the public face of his legitimate enterprises, smiling for the blinding strobes of the press cameras while he breaks every vow he made to me before the Boss.
Julian leaned across the center console, his shadow swallowing the faint light from the gearshift. The sharp, metallic scent of his cologne was a net thrown over my head.
"A kiss," he commanded, his voice low. "The photographers are waiting."
I turn my head away.
That particular scent-a cloying mix of sandalwood and something bitter-was the same one that clung to Mia's hair. The sour heat in my stomach churned again.
"The agreement was to keep this filth private," I said, the words barely audible.
Julian lets out a harsh breath.
He wrenched the SUV into park, the chassis groaning against the curb.
Syndicate guards and foundation staff turned their heads at the grating sound.
He is breaking our one rule just to punish me for refusing him.
"Get out," he snapped.
I opened the heavy, armored door and stepped onto the pavement, the brisk morning air stinging my cheeks like a slap.
I walk up the marble steps of the foundation without looking back.
Whispers started among the associates lingering in the lobby.
They were looking at my left hand.
On my left hand, where a great weight of diamond and platinum used to be.
I left the vulgar diamond sitting on the marble edge of his bathroom sink this morning.
I walk straight into my private office and shot the bolt home.
I sat at the great mahogany desk, the silence of the office a physical weight. After a moment, a low hum emanated from my bag. My secure phone, vibrating against a leather wallet. I drew it out. The screen glowed with a single message from the one man whose name was a blade in the dark.
"He takes her to Japan. You will file for Syndicate dissolution by noon. If you fail, I will butcher them both and claim what is mine. Eight o'clock."
Dante Falcone. The Syndicate's exiled heir, the city's phantom surgeon who had stitched my flesh back together in secret.
The Don's only son, who had walked away from his birthright a decade ago to become a surgeon-but who had saved so many lives in the underworld that he now commanded an army of the indebted. A man who needed no title to wield power.
The words on the screen were not a promise; they were a statement of fact, and my mind pulled me back to the night we met.
Six months ago.
A rival cartel's convoy ambushed mine.
Bullets tore through the reinforced windows, spraying the backseat with chips of glass that bit into my shoulder.
I was bleeding onto the leather upholstery while Julian, on the phone with Mia, was instructing her to bolt her apartment door.
He never asked if I was alive.
My driver, loyal to the last, got me to an underground clinic.
That was where I met Dante.
He stood under the white, humming light of a surgical lamp, a figure of ink and quiet menace, his hands unnervingly steady as he sewed my skin together without the mercy of anesthesia.
He did not ask for my name.
He told me I was married to a coward.
When I confessed I was a Capo's wife, Dante merely looked at me, his eyes holding the flat, final darkness of an open grave.
"I know whose mark you bear," he had said, his voice a low resonance that seemed to emanate from the concrete floor. "It will not be on you for long."
The memory receded, leaving the chill of my marriage and the insistent hum of the phone in my hand.
I type a single letter back to Dante.
"Y."
For dinner. For the coming fire. For the beginning of the end.