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About

She walked the aisle in black. Not as a woman in love, but as a woman handed over. Lucia Montrelli never chose this life. She was assigned to it-offered as the final piece in a bloody deal between rival mafia empires. Her new husband? Vincenzo Moretti, the most feared Don in Italy. A man with cold eyes, a darker past, and one rule: Disobey, and bleed. He doesn't want a wife. He wants control. A queen who knows her place. A body to mark. A name to own. But Lucia isn't the submissive bride they promised him. She's fire in silk. Sharp-tongued. Defiant. Beautiful enough to ruin and dangerous enough to tempt. In his mansion of secrets, the war begins-not with bullets, but with whispers in the dark, stolen glances, and a touch that blurs the line between hate and hunger. She was never supposed to matter. Now she's the only thing he can't control. Obsession. Betrayal. A marriage that was never meant to survive. Enter "The Mafia Don's Assigned Bride"-a heart-pounding forced marriage mafia romance for readers who crave danger laced with heat, and a love story that was doomed from the moment she said "I do."

Chapter 1 One

Lucia Montrelli didn't wear white.

She wore black silk. Heavy, expensive, suffocating. It clung to her skin like mourning, swallowing the curves her mother once told her were her greatest asset. The veil draped over her face wasn't for tradition-it was a mask. Something to hide behind. Because shame had to be dressed in something.

She stood alone at the grand doors of San Pellegrino Cathedral, her hands cold around a bouquet of deep red roses, each one sharp with thorns she wasn't allowed to remove.

The church was too quiet.

Inside, candle flames swayed in silence. They flickered in the stained glass above the altar like fire licking at the edge of something holy-but nothing about this day was sacred.

No laughter. No music. No love.

The air smelled of roses and wax, but beneath it... iron.

Lucia shifted on her heels, the sound echoing. A string quartet sat stiff in a corner, playing something slow and sharp that sounded more like a requiem than a wedding. Every note dragged like something dying.

A tall man in a grey suit stepped up beside her. He wasn't family. He wasn't even a friend. He was one of them. Moretti's men.

He didn't say anything. Just nodded once toward the aisle.

She didn't move.

She thought maybe, just maybe, someone would stop it. Maybe her mother would come crashing through the door, or her father would grow a spine and call it off. Maybe Lorenzo-her sweet, loud, infuriating little brother-would be sitting in a pew, arms wide, laughing like it was all a joke.

But no.

Nothing.

Her father appeared at her side. Not from behind. He hadn't walked her in. He hadn't offered his arm. He'd simply stood in the shadows, letting her believe she'd go alone.

"Let's get this over with," he muttered.

Lucia turned her head to him, the veil brushing her cheek. "You don't even have the decency to pretend I matter?"

His jaw clenched. "This is bigger than you."

She didn't reply.

He took her arm roughly, his fingers digging into her elbow as if she might run.

The doors opened. The music didn't swell-it dragged.

And Lucia Montrelli, mafia princess and political pawn, walked down the aisle on the arm of the man who signed her life away.

The pews were full, but the silence was louder than any crowd. Men in dark suits, clean-shaven, cold-eyed. Women stiff beside them, too afraid to whisper. No one smiled. No one clapped.

Her mother's seat in the second row sat empty.

Lucia's chest tightened.

She glanced at the altar.

And there he was.

Vincenzo Moretti.

They called him the Butcher of Palermo. The Cold Don. The Shadow King.

He wore black, of course. No tie. Just a blood-red pocket square against the smooth cut of his suit. His hands were behind his back. His stance was straight. His expression unreadable.

But his eyes...

They didn't just watch her.

They claimed her.

Every step she took closer, she felt more of herself being peeled away. Her breath shortened. The roses in her hand trembled. The veil itched against her skin, but she didn't dare reach up to fix it.

When she reached him, her father let go of her arm like she was someone else's burden now.

Vincenzo didn't offer his hand.

He only spoke.

"Late," he said.

Lucia kept her voice flat. "You're lucky I showed up."

There was a flicker-barely there-but she caught it. Amusement, maybe. Or something darker.

The priest stepped forward. Old. Bald. A bead of sweat rolled down his temple, even in the cool air of the church.

He opened his Bible with shaking hands.

"We are gathered here today..." he began, his voice cracking. "To join together this man and this woman in the holy covenant of matrimony."

Lucia's heart pounded.

The priest continued, "This union, though it be forged between powerful houses, is not merely a political bond. It is a spiritual one... born of mutual agreement."

Her lips twitched.

Mutual agreement? What a joke.

She looked to her father-he wouldn't even meet her eyes. His hands were folded, knuckles white, mouth set like stone.

"And so," the priest said, "before these witnesses and under God's grace, I ask: Do you, Vincenzo Moretti, take Lucia Montrelli to be your lawfully wedded wife, to have and to hold, in wealth and war, in dark and light, until death-"

"I do," Vincenzo said, cutting him off.

Sharp. Clean. Without hesitation.

Lucia flinched.

The priest turned to her.

"And do you, Lucia Montrelli, take Vincenzo Moretti to be your husband, to honor and obey-"

She froze.

The words turned to mud in her throat.

Say it.

Her father's voice echoed from earlier, whispered and biting.

"Say your vows... or your brother's body washes up tonight."

Her hands trembled.

She looked up at Vincenzo.

He wasn't smiling. But his eyes said it all.

I dare you to refuse me.

Her lips parted. Her voice barely came out.

"I..." she swallowed. "I do."

The priest closed the book. "Then by the power vested in me, I now pronounce you-"

Vincenzo moved before he could finish.

One hand snatched her waist. The other tilted her chin. And he kissed her.

Not a kiss meant for celebration.

A kiss meant for dominance.

A kiss that bruised.

Gasps rang out from the pews. Some heads turned away. But no one said a word.

Lucia pushed at his chest, but he held her firm. His lips moved against hers like they were burning her name into him. When he finally pulled away, her breath was gone.

He looked into her eyes.

"Good girl."

She turned her face away.

He didn't care.

The fake applause started. Hollow claps. Empty cheers.

A camera flashed. Another.

The press had been let in. This marriage needed to be seen. To be feared.

Vincenzo took her hand. Cold fingers closing over hers like cuffs.

"Let's go," he said.

She didn't answer.

Her legs felt heavy. Each step down the aisle was harder than the one before.

At the door, she looked back-once. Her father stood. Still not watching.

And she stepped into the storm.

Outside, the sky wept. Raindrops hit the pavement like tears that dared to fall.

A black car waited.

A man held an umbrella. Another opened the door.

Vincenzo didn't look at her. He only nodded to the car.

She climbed in.

The door shut with a finality that made her chest tighten.

The marriage had begun.

But the war... was just starting.

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