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Elara POV:
The divorce papers felt heavy in my leather portfolio, a solid, tangible weight of rebellion. The document was disguised, buried beneath a sheaf of papers titled "Gallery Consignment & Asset Transfer Agreement." It looked excruciatingly boring. It was perfect.
I walked into the lobby of Sovrano Tower, the building a steel and glass monument to Dante's power. The air hummed with quiet efficiency and fear. Everyone knew who I was. I was Mrs. Sovrano, a ghost who haunted the penthouse but rarely descended into the heart of the beast.
"Mrs. Sovrano," the receptionist said, her eyes flickering with a mixture of practiced deference and something softer. Pity. It was everywhere. "Mr. Sovrano is in a meeting."
"I know," I said, my voice even. "I won't be long. I just need his signature on a document for the gallery."
I rode the private elevator up to the top floor. The ride was silent, a smooth, swift ascent into the sky. This place was designed to make a person feel small, to remind them of the sheer scale of Dante's dominion. He wasn't just a crime boss; he was a king in his castle, ruling over the city spread out below. His soldiers were men in sharp suits who carried guns and spreadsheets with equal proficiency.
His executive assistant, a woman named Maria who had been with his family for decades, greeted me with a tight, sad smile.
"He's with Ms. Romano," she said, her voice low. "They're finalizing the coastal shipping routes."
Her words confirmed everything. Isabella wasn't just a dalliance. She was his partner. In business, in power, and in every way that mattered.
"It will only take a moment," I said, my resolve hardening.
I heard it before I saw it. Laughter. Dante's laughter. It was a deep, unguarded sound I hadn't heard directed at me in years. It echoed from behind the imposing oak doors of his office, a casual, happy sound that felt like a punch to the gut.
I didn't knock.
I pushed the door open and walked in.
They were standing over a large map of the city's coastline spread across his massive desk. Isabella was pointing to a location, her expression animated. Dante was leaning over her shoulder, his hand resting casually on the back of her chair. They looked like a power couple. A team.
The laughter died on his lips when he saw me. His eyes, usually a cold, calculating gray, hardened into flint. Annoyance flickered across his face. Not guilt. Never guilt.
"Elara. I'm busy."
"I can see that," I said, my voice a cool, level tone that betrayed none of the turmoil inside me.
Isabella straightened up, a small, knowing smile playing on her lips. "Don't be so harsh, Dante. Your wife just had her big night. I'm sure she's just tying up loose ends." Her words were laced with a sweet venom, a subtle reminder that while I was dealing with paint and canvas, she was here, in the war room, helping him conquer the world.
"I just need a signature," I said, walking directly to his desk and ignoring her completely. I placed the portfolio down and opened it to the signature page of the asset transfer agreement. The divorce settlement was the page tucked directly underneath.
His eyes narrowed. A flicker of suspicion. For a heart-stopping moment, I thought he'd see through it. Dante Sovrano didn't get to where he was by being careless. His entire empire was built on a foundation of paranoia and brutal attention to detail.
"It's for the gallery's insurance policy," I said, the lie tasting like ash in my mouth. "They need the primary asset holder to sign off before they'll insure the new collection for transport to the New York exhibit."
I met his gaze, holding it steady. I channeled all the pain, all the humiliation from the night before into a single point of cold, unreadable calm. I would not flinch. I would not let him see the terror and triumph warring inside me.
He held my gaze for a moment longer, searching for something. A crack in the facade.
"Dante, we need to call our contact in the port authority before they leave for the day," Isabella said, her voice a sharp, impatient knife cutting through the tension. She had inadvertently saved me. She had reminded him of what was truly important. Power. Money. Not his insignificant wife and her little art hobby.
He grunted, his attention shifting back to the map. The moment was broken. I was a nuisance, a distraction from his real work.
"Just give it here," he said, snatching a pen from a holder on his desk.
He didn't even read the header. His eyes scanned for the signature line, the same way they always did. With impatient dismissal.
His signature was a sharp, angry scrawl of black ink. An indictment. A branding. And now, a release.
He signed the first page. Then, without looking, he flipped to the next page-the real page-and signed again on the line I had marked with a small, neat 'X'.
I slid the papers back into the portfolio before he could blink. My movements were quick, precise.
"Thank you," I said, the words formal and empty.
I turned to leave. As I reached the door, I glanced back. Isabella was smiling, a smug, triumphant look in her eyes. She thought she had won. She thought she was replacing me.
She had no idea that I had just taken the king, and she was welcome to his empty castle.
I didn't look back again. I walked out of the office, past Maria's pitying gaze, and into the elevator. The doors slid shut, encasing me in a mirrored box.
Only then did I let myself breathe. I opened the portfolio and stared at his signature on the bottom of the divorce decree.
He had just signed away four years of marriage.
He had just signed away his wife.
And he had no idea.