I stood in the back room alone, staring at myself in a full-length mirror that had probably seen better, happier brides. The dress Rosa had arranged for me was simple. Black, because apparently wearing white twice in one week when your first husband died on your wedding night was too much even for this world. The fabric was nice, expensive, but it hung on me wrong. Everything felt wrong.
My hands wouldn't stop shaking. I pressed them flat against my thighs, tried to steady myself, but it didn't work. Three days ago I'd married Rafael. Three days ago I'd watched him die. And now I was about to marry his twin brother, who hated me so much he could barely stand to be in the same room as me.
This was my life now.
The door opened without a knock. Rosa stood there in a dark green dress, her face carefully composed in that way people do when they're trying not to show you how much they pity you.
"It's time," she said softly.
I nodded because what else was I supposed to do? Argue? Run? I'd already agreed to this nightmare.
Rosa walked me down the short hallway to the chapel doors. There was no music, no processional, nothing that made this feel like an actual wedding. Just Rosa's hand on my arm and the sound of our heels clicking against marble floors that echoed too loud in the silence.
"He'll come around," Rosa whispered just before we reached the doors. "Dante isn't as hard as he pretends to be."
I didn't believe her but I appreciated the lie anyway.
The doors opened and I saw him.
Dante stood at the altar next to a priest who looked about as thrilled to be here as I felt. Dante wore a black suit, perfectly tailored, and he stared straight ahead like I wasn't even walking toward him. His jaw was set so tight I could see the muscle jumping. The scar through his eyebrow looked even more pronounced in the candlelight, making him look dangerous and unapproachable and nothing like Rafael.
Rafael had smiled at me during our wedding. Nervous but genuine. Like maybe we could make this work.
Dante looked like he was attending an execution. Maybe his own.
I walked down the aisle with Rosa beside me because my father had refused to give me away twice. Said once was enough, said this second marriage was Torrisi business and he'd already done his part. So Rosa played the role, delivered me to Dante like a package nobody wanted.
When we reached the altar, Rosa stepped back. I stood next to Dante, close enough that I could feel the heat coming off him, and he still wouldn't look at me. Just kept his eyes fixed on some point above the priest's head.
Salvatore sat in the front pew. He'd aged ten years in three days. The man who'd buried his son was now marrying off his remaining son to that same son's widow, and there was something deeply wrong about all of it that nobody wanted to acknowledge out loud.
The priest started talking. I didn't hear most of it. Something about marriage and duty and family. The words ran together into white noise. I was too focused on Dante's complete stillness beside me, the way he held himself like he was carved from stone.
We got to the vows. The priest asked Dante if he took me as his wife.
Silence.
It stretched out for three seconds too long. Long enough that people started shifting in their seats. Long enough that I felt my face go hot with humiliation.
Finally Dante said, "I do." Flat. Emotionless. Like he was confirming a business transaction.
The priest turned to me. Asked if I took Dante as my husband.
I looked at Dante's profile, this man who blamed me for his brother's death, this man I was about to legally bind myself to, and I wanted to scream. Wanted to run. Wanted to do anything except say the words that would trap me here.
But I'd already made my choice. I was staying. I was going to find out who killed Rafael.
"I do," I said.
My voice came out steadier than I felt. Small victory.
The priest blessed our union with all the enthusiasm of someone reading a grocery list. Then came the part I'd been dreading. The rings.
Marco stepped forward with a small box. Opened it. Inside were two plain gold bands, nothing like the ornate rings Rafael and I had exchanged. These were simple, functional, cold.
Dante took my hand without looking at me. His fingers were warm and calloused and they wrapped around mine with clinical efficiency. He slid the ring onto my finger like he was checking off a box on a to-do list. The metal was cold. It felt like a shackle. I guess it is in a way.
I took his ring with shaking hands. His hand dwarfed mine, scarred knuckles and long fingers that had definitely killed people. I slid the band on and it fit perfectly. Of course it did. Someone had measured, had planned this, had made sure everything would go smoothly even though nothing about this was smooth.
"You may kiss the bride," the priest said.
Dante finally looked at me. For the first time since I'd walked down the aisle, his eyes met mine. They were the same brown as Rafael's but completely different. Cold where Rafael's had been warm. Empty where Rafael's had shown kindness.
He leaned in. I held my breath.
His lips brushed mine for maybe half a second. Barely even contact. So fast I almost thought I'd imagined it. Then he pulled back, jaw still tight, and turned away from me to face the sparse crowd.
"Ladies and gentlemen," the priest said with obvious relief that this was almost over, "I present Mr. and Mrs. Dante Torrisi."
No applause. Just silence and the sound of people standing up, ready to leave as fast as possible.
I stood there next to my new husband who was already walking away from me, heading down the aisle without waiting, without offering his arm, without acknowledging I existed. I watched him go, watched him shake hands with Salvatore, watched him head straight for the exit.
Rosa appeared at my side again. "Come on, cara. There's a small reception."
"He left."
"I know."
"He just married me and walked away."
Rosa's hand tightened on my arm. "He's grieving. Give him time."
Time. Right. Like time would make Dante stop hating me. Like time would make this marriage anything other than a prison sentence we were both serving.
The reception was held in one of the compound's dining rooms. Salvatore had set out food and wine like this was a normal celebration and not the saddest thing I'd ever been part of. My family clustered on one side, the Torrisis on the other, and nobody mixed. Nobody talked. We all just stood there with drinks we weren't drinking and food we weren't eating.
Dante wasn't even there.
I'd been married to him for twenty minutes and he'd already disappeared. I wanted to laugh. Or cry. Maybe both.
Nico found me standing alone near the windows. "You okay?"
"Does it matter?"
He studied my face. "Dad wants to know if you need anything."
"A time machine would be nice."
Nico almost smiled. "Fresh out of those."
Across the room, Salvatore was talking to Marco in low, intense tones. They kept glancing at me. I was definitely the topic of conversation. Probably discussing how to handle their new daughter-in-law who was clearly not welcome but couldn't be gotten rid of without destroying the alliance.
"Where did Dante go?" I asked.
Nico shrugged. "Dante does what Dante wants. Always has."
"That's comforting."
"Look, I'm not going to pretend this situation doesn't suck. It does. But you knew what you were signing up for." Nico's voice was matter of fact, not unkind but not particularly sympathetic either. "You wanted to stay, to.... investigate. This is the price. Though honestly I don't know if you had much of a choice and dad wasn't forthcoming with his thoughts."
He was right. I had chosen this. Didn't make it easier.
The reception lasted maybe an hour before people started making excuses to leave. My father shook Salvatore's hand with the enthusiasm of someone touching a dead fish. My brothers each hugged me, told me to call if I needed anything, and left looking relieved to be escaping. Even my own family couldn't wait to get away from me.
Eventually it was just me, Rosa, Salvatore, and Marco in that too-big dining room with barely touched food and full wine glasses.
"Rosa will show you to your room," Salvatore said and then left.
Rosa led me through the compound's winding hallways. We climbed stairs, turned corners, walked past closed doors and family photos that felt like they were judging me. Finally she stopped at a door at the far end of a long corridor.
"This is you," she said, opening it.
The room was nice. Bigger than the room I had at my father's house. Queen bed with expensive linens, furniture that matched, windows overlooking the gardens. It was also completely impersonal, like a hotel room. Nothing in here suggested anyone actually lived here.
"Dante's room is at the other end of the hall," Rosa continued. "You'll have privacy."
Privacy. That was one word for it. Isolation was another.
"Thank you," I managed.
Rosa hesitated in the doorway. "I know this isn't what you wanted. But you're part of this family now. We take care of our own."
She left before I could point out that Dante clearly didn't see me as family. Didn't see me as anything except an obligation.
I sat on the edge of the bed and looked at the ring on my finger. Mrs. Dante Torrisi. The name felt foreign. Wrong.
Someone had brought my things from my father's house. My clothes hung in the closet, my toiletries arranged in the bathroom. Someone had unpacked for me, made this space ready, and I hadn't even been here to see it happen.
I changed out of the black dress into pajamas even though it was only seven in the evening. Washed my face. Braided my hair. Went through all the motions of normal life while feeling completely numb.
The room had a lock on the door. I used it.
Then I lay down on the bed and stared at the ceiling and tried to process the fact that I'd just married a man who hated me, who'd left me standing alone at our wedding reception, who couldn't even look at me during our vows.
This was going to be so much worse than I'd thought.
My phone buzzed. Text from Nico: Security is tight. You're safe there.
I texted back: Safe from who?
Three dots appeared, then disappeared. No response.
Great. Even my brother wouldn't tell me who I needed to be afraid of.
I thought about getting up, about exploring the compound, about trying to start my investigation into Rafael's murder. But exhaustion pulled at me like a weight. I'd been running on adrenaline for days and it was finally catching up.
Tomorrow. I'd start tomorrow.
I closed my eyes and tried not to think about Dante somewhere in this massive house, probably relieved to be away from me. Tried not to think about Rafael, about how different this should have been. Tried not to think about the fact that someone had tried to kill me and I was now living in a house full of possible suspects.
Sleep didn't come easy but eventually it came.
I dreamed about gunshots and blood and shadows in doorways. Woke up twice gasping, heart pounding, convinced someone was in the room with me. But the door was still locked. I was alone.
Around three in the morning I gave up on sleep entirely. Got out of bed and went to the window. The compound grounds were lit up, security lights everywhere. I could see guards patrolling, pairs of men walking the perimeter. All this protection and Rafael had still died.
A movement caught my eye. Someone was walking across the lawn toward the main gate. Even from this distance I recognized the build, the way he moved. Dante.
I watched him get into a car and drive away into the night. He'd been my husband for less than twelve hours and he was already running.
I pressed my forehead against the cool glass and wondered what the hell I'd gotten myself into. Wondered if I'd survive long enough to find Rafael's killer. Wondered if Dante would ever stop hating me or if this cold distance was all I had to look forward to. To be honest I hate him too for all the reasons he hates me and more
The ring on my finger caught the light from outside. Gold band, simple and plain, binding me to a man who couldn't stand to be in the same room as me.
This was my life now.
And I had no idea how to survive it.