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Rising From Ashes: The Architect's Comeback
img img Rising From Ashes: The Architect's Comeback img Chapter 5
5 Chapters
Chapter 11 img
Chapter 12 img
Chapter 13 img
Chapter 14 img
Chapter 15 img
Chapter 16 img
Chapter 17 img
Chapter 18 img
Chapter 19 img
Chapter 20 img
Chapter 21 img
Chapter 22 img
Chapter 23 img
Chapter 24 img
Chapter 25 img
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Chapter 5

Sienna Vitiello POV

The silence in the VIP booth was deafening, louder than the heavy bass thumping against the floorboards beneath our feet.

Dante stared at me.

His jaw worked, a muscle feathering tight under the skin. He wasn't used to being the regret; he was used to being the prize.

He stood up abruptly, the movement sharp with frustration.

"Let's go," he said to Valeria.

But he didn't look at her. He was glaring at me.

Valeria scrambled to follow him, shooting me a look of pure venom as she gathered her things.

Dante stopped at our table.

He placed his hands on the surface, leaning in until he loomed over me.

"You're drunk, Sienna," he said, his voice low and warning.

"I'm sober, Dante," I replied, leaning back into the plush booth to put distance between us. "That's the problem."

He scoffed, shaking his head.

"You owe me your life. If I hadn't pulled the car over-"

"You pulled the car over to save her," I interrupted, my voice cutting through his defense.

I pointed a trembling finger at Valeria.

"And you left me to burn. We both know it. Stop pretending it was strategy."

Giulia stood up, slamming her hand on the table hard enough to rattle the glasses.

"Get out, Dante!" she screamed, her face flushed. "You are dishonoring us! You are dishonoring the Vitiello name!"

Dante straightened up, buttoning his jacket with deliberate slowness.

He looked at his sister, then turned his cold gaze back to me.

"I would choose her a hundred times," he said, his voice devoid of warmth as he nodded toward Valeria. "I owe her husband a blood debt. Sienna is just... a contract."

He said it.

He finally said it out loud.

I waited for the pain, but instead, I felt a strange sense of relief wash over me.

It was like the final shackle had snapped.

"Good," I said.

I stood up and walked past him.

I didn't touch him. I didn't brush against him. I treated him like a ghost.

I walked out of the club, hailed a cab, and went straight to the penthouse we were supposed to share after the wedding.

The moment I stepped inside, I went into the master bedroom.

I marched to the kitchen and pulled a heavy black trash bag from under the sink.

Returning to the bedroom, I threw the closet doors open.

I took the custom shirts I had bought him, the fabric cool under my fingers. The watch I had engraved with a promise that now meant nothing. The framed photos of us that sat mocking me on the dresser.

I swept them all into the bag.

I went to the bathroom next.

His cologne. His razor. The expensive moisturizer he pretended he didn't use.

Into the bag.

I dragged the heavy plastic sack to the trash chute in the hallway.

I yanked the hatch open.

With a shove, I sent the bag into the void.

I listened to it slide down, down, down, until it hit the bottom with a distant, final thud.

I went back into the apartment, the silence now feeling different. Cleansed.

I sat at the desk and pulled out a sheet of heavy, cream-colored stationery.

It bore the letterhead of the Moretti Art Foundation.

I picked up a pen.

To the Board of Directors,

Effective immediately, I resign from my position as Director.

I wish you luck. You're going to need it.

Sincerely,

Sienna Vitiello

I signed it with a flourish.

I placed the pen down and looked around the empty apartment.

It didn't feel like home.

It felt like a cage I had finally found the key to.

I walked to the window and looked out at the Chicago skyline.

The city was burning with lights, a sprawling ocean of electricity.

"Let it burn," I whispered.

I was done playing the firefighter.

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