I stood at the altar with the most ruthless mafia boss in New York, Salvatore Romano.
But when he lifted my wedding veil, his eyes filled with pure murderous intent.
He realized I was not the woman he loved. My own father stepped forward and publicly declared me a deranged imposter, claiming my half-sister Camilla was the true bride.
I was dragged away, locked in a holding room, and threatened with a bullet to the head.
My father slapped me across the face, ordering me to take a hush-money check and sign away my birthright.
Meanwhile, Camilla gloated in front of me, wearing my dead mother's antique ruby necklace.
She had stolen my identity, my tragic childhood scars, and my position, feeding Salvatore a fabricated fairy tale that he swallowed completely.
For twenty years, I survived the bloody streets of Chicago alone while they pampered a fraud.
It was pathetic how the supposedly terrifying Don was entirely blind to the fact that his beloved fake bride was secretly embezzling millions to fund his worst enemy.
When the truth finally came to light and Salvatore desperately begged me to take the crown as his true wife, I just smiled.
"I have no interest in the Romano billions."
I didn't come here to marry him. I came to burn their entire empire to the ground.
Chapter 1
The instant the most ruthless mafia boss in New York lifted my wedding veil and realized I was not the woman he loved, I had precisely three seconds to establish my legal standing as his bride before his household guard put a bullet in my head.
I stood perfectly still at the altar of the grand Romano estate.
The air in the nave was thick with the funereal scent of lilies and an unspoken expectation of violence.
Salvatore Romano was not a man you tricked.
As the Don of the Romano Syndicate, he held dominion over the smuggling routes of seven eastern seaboard ports and the weekend cash flow of every gambling den in Queens.
His reputation was built on a mountain of bodies and a total lack of mercy.
Right now, his dark eyes were locked onto my face.
The delicate chalice of ceremonial wine resting on the altar fractured under the sudden pressure of his grip, the sound a single, sharp report that travelled up to the cathedral's vaulted ribs.
Shards of glass rained down onto the pristine white marble floor.
He did not even flinch as the sacramental red wine mixed with a drop of blood on his thumb.
He stared at me with a hostility so pure it seemed to draw the warmth from the very air around my skin.
"Who the hell are you?" His voice was not loud, but the vibration of it seemed to stir the dust motes in the candlelight.
The great hall behind us fell so profoundly quiet that the ticking of a pocket watch in the front pew became an intrusion.
Dozens of armed soldiers shifted in the shadows, their hands moving to the weapons hidden under their tailored suits.
"I am Penelope Russo," I said, my voice a calibrated, steady thing.
"And I am exactly who you are supposed to marry."
Salvatore took a single step forward, his polished leather shoe grinding a shard of glass into the marble with a grating screech.
His presence radiated a raw, terrifying energy that made my ribs feel fused to my spine; each attempt to draw breath brought the taste of rust and old blood to the back of my throat.
"You are an imposter," he stated, his tone leaving no room for debate. "You infiltrated my territory. You are wearing Camilla's dress."
I looked up at his handsome, furious face.
"Are you entirely certain you were meant to marry Camilla?" I asked with measured calm.
He let out a dark, mocking laugh.
"Do you think I don't know the name of the woman I have been with for two years?"
"I think you don't read your own contracts," I replied.
I reached into a hidden pocket of my heavy silk gown. The movement was slight, but it was enough to make three of his closest guards draw their pistols.
Salvatore raised a single, dismissive finger, and the men froze as if turned to stone.
I produced a folio bound in heavy, scarred leather, from which I extracted two distinct documents. I unfolded the first-a piece of thick, watermarked paper-and held it out to him.
"The Blood Oath drafted by your late grandfather explicitly demands the union between the Romano heir and the Eldest Russo Daughter."
Salvatore did not take the paper.
He looked at me like I was a rat caught in a trap.
"Camilla is the eldest," he said.
"Camilla is the second daughter," I corrected him, drawing the second document from the folio and unfurling it to reveal a notarized Syndicate bloodline registry.
"I am the firstborn. My mother was Elena Russo, the first wife of Boss Pietro Russo. Camilla is the daughter of his second wife."
A woman in a sharp black dress stepped onto the altar.
It was Mrs. Romano, Salvatore's mother, the cords in her neck standing out against her skin.
"This is absurd," she snapped. "The alliance was negotiated directly with Sofia Russo for Camilla. We know nothing about you."
"The Blood Oath bears my father's personal Boss seal," I pointed out. "Not Sofia's. A wife cannot sign away Syndicate assets."
Salvatore's jaw tightened.
He produced a sleek black telephone from his jacket, depressed a number, and activated the speaker.
The silence in the room was a physical weight as the line rang.
"Don Romano," my father's voice echoed through the ballroom.
Pietro Russo sounded nervous.
"Pietro," Salvatore said, his voice dripping with lethal calm. "There is a woman at my altar claiming to be your eldest daughter. Care to explain why Camilla is not here?"
There was a heavy pause on the other end.
"She is a deranged, disowned child," Pietro said coldly. "Penelope was sent away twenty years ago. She is dead to this Family. Camilla is your bride. My men are tracking Camilla down now. Penelope must have ambushed her."
Salvatore terminated the call, his gaze descending upon me with an expression of pure disgust.
"Your own Don refuses to claim you," he mocked. "You come into my home, ruin my wedding, and your own father calls you a stray."
"He failed to explain why the contract specifies 'Eldest'," I said, my composure a perfect, cold mask, for I had anticipated this betrayal.
"A clerical error," Salvatore brushed it off.
"A dangerous oversight for a Don," I countered.
Footsteps hurried up the aisle as Sofia Russo, my stepmother, glided toward the altar, her features arranged into a mask of frantic maternal concern.
"Penelope, you poor sick girl," Sofia gasped, reaching out to grab my arm. "Come with me. Let us not embarrass the Don any further."
I stepped out of her reach.
"Tell me, Sofia," I said loudly. "Did you read the specifics of the contract before you helped Camilla steal my identity?"
Sofia's eyes flashed with panic.
"Take her out the back," Mrs. Romano ordered the guards. "Clean up this mess."
Two immense soldiers stepped toward me, but I held my ground.
"If you remove me from this altar," I announced, my voice carrying to the very back of the room, "you are officially breaching the Blood Oath."
Salvatore scoffed. "Throw her out."
"I am invoking Clause Seven," I said.
The Consigliere, an older man standing near the priest, suddenly went rigid.
"What did you say?" the Consigliere asked, stepping forward.
I kept my eyes on Salvatore.
"Clause Seven of the Blood Oath," I recited clearly. "The breaching Family must forfeit thirty percent of their Syndicate assets to the offended party."
A collective gasp rippled through the grand ballroom.
The Capos and underbosses seated in the front rows began to murmur amongst themselves, the sound like dry leaves skittering across pavement.
Thirty percent of the Romano holdings was not merely money.
It was territory, shipping routes, casinos, and blood.
It was enough to shift the balance of power in the entire American underworld.
Salvatore's dark eyes narrowed, his gaze a dispassionate instrument that measured the distance from my hairline to my collarbone as if calculating the path of a blade.
He stepped so close that the air between us grew thin and hot, charged with the heat of his body.
"You have a lot of nerve coming into my house and demanding a Vendetta payout," he growled.
"I am not demanding anything," I replied, my gaze unwavering. "I am simply reading the rules your grandfather wrote."
Mrs. Romano turned to the Consigliere.
"Tell me she is lying," she demanded.
The older man looked as though he had swallowed poison.
He pulled a leather-bound folder from his briefcase and flipped through the heavy parchment pages.
His finger stopped near the bottom of the third page.
All the color drained from his face.
"The clause is there," the Consigliere murmured, his voice strained. "It is ironclad. Don Vincenzo drafted it himself. It is secured by the High Council."
Mrs. Romano swayed on her feet, one hand flying to her throat.
Salvatore did not look at his mother.
His focus was entirely on me.
It was like standing in the shadow of some great, unthinking beast, an entity that displaced the very oxygen in the room by its mere presence.
"Lock her in the VIP holding room," Salvatore ordered his soldiers.
His voice had dropped to a quiet register that made the guards at the door flinch.
"No one goes in. No one comes out. I will deal with her interrogation after I handle the guests."
Two soldiers grabbed my arms.
Their grips were impersonal and absolute, like manacles, but I did not struggle.
I let them march me down the long aisle.
I could feel the weight of a hundred hostile stares on my back, a physical pressure.
They led me through a maze of opulent corridors.
We stopped at a heavy oak door guarded by two more men.
They propelled me inside, and the door locked behind me with a definitive, metallic thud.
The room was dim, lit only by a few wall sconces.
It was designed for private meetings and quiet threats.
A massive mahogany table, polished to a dark mirror, dominated the center, surrounded by plush leather chairs.
I walked over to the table.
There was a small, silver-wrapped wedding favor sitting near a crystal ashtray.
I calmly untied the silk ribbon and popped a dark chocolate truffle into my mouth.
I remained entirely untroubled by the sentence of death hanging over my head.
I had survived the unforgiving, blood-soaked streets of Chicago.
I had built my own quiet dominion in the shadows.
A locked room was nothing.
Suddenly, a soft chime cut through the heavy silence.
I looked down at the small clutch purse I had managed to keep hidden in the voluminous folds of my dress.
I pulled out my phone.
It was a FaceTime request from an unknown number.
I accepted the call and propped the phone against the crystal ashtray.
Camilla's face appeared on the screen.
She was sitting in what appeared to be a lavishly decorated guest suite somewhere within the estate, wearing a silk robe.
Her face was perfectly painted, but her eyes held a familiar, toxic gleam.
"Well, well," Camilla purred. "I see you made it to the altar."
"And you are hiding in a gilded cage," I replied.
Camilla let out a high, mocking laugh.
"I orchestrated this whole thing, Penny. I knew exactly what I was doing."
"You knew the contract demanded the Eldest," I stated.
"Of course I did." A cruel smile touched her lips. "But Dad was always going to let me take the crown. You were just a forgotten stain in Chicago."
She leaned closer to the camera.
Her tone dripped with fake sympathy.
"I set you up as the sacrificial lamb. I knew Sal would be furious when he lifted that veil. I honestly expected him to put a bullet in your head right there."
"He seems to prefer locking me in rooms," I said flatly.
"He is going to destroy you," Camilla hissed, her mask of sweetness beginning to crack.
"You need to sign away your birthright right now. Tell them you renounce the claim."
"Why would I do that?"
"Because Sal only loves me," she snapped. "And I already control all the Russo resources. You have nothing."
I watched her through the screen.
My eye caught a sudden flash of green light around her wrist as she gestured.
It was an emerald bracelet.
My chest grew tight, a sudden, cold compression around my heart.
That bracelet belonged to my mother.
"Where did you get that?" I asked, my voice had become a hollow, toneless thing.
Camilla noticed where I was looking and held her wrist up to the camera.
She smirked.
"Dad gave it to me. He said the Family has no eldest daughter anymore, so the heirlooms go to the true princess."
A cold, familiar numbness washed over me.
"Did you also steal my stories?" I asked.
Camilla paused.
"Did you feed Salvatore the accounts of my childhood?" I pressed, the design of her sick game finally revealing itself. "The warehouse explosion? The scars on my shoulder?"
Camilla laughed again, a cruel, ringing sound.
"Sal loves a tragic history," she mocked. "I just borrowed your little misfortunes to make him protective. He fell in love with a fabricated story, Penny. And he hates you for trying to ruin it."
The heavy oak door swung open before Camilla could speak another word.
I tapped the screen, ending the transmission and returning the telephone to my clutch as Salvatore stalked into the room.
He moved with a deliberate, unnerving grace, each step eating up the distance between us without a sound.
He threw a thick manila folder onto the mahogany table; it landed with a sharp crack of authority next to my hand.
"Sign it," he ordered.
I lowered my gaze to the document. It was a hush-money contract, a formal offer of one million dollars and a luxury penthouse in Miami in exchange for my permanent silence and exile.
I looked back up at him. "Did you even read Clause Seven?" I asked, my voice retaining its steady cadence.
"It is an order, Penelope," he growled. "Not a negotiation."
He stepped into my space, his shadow falling over me and plunging my side of the table into twilight.
He smelled of expensive cologne and the faint, metallic tang of gunpowder.
"You lack the soldiers, the money, and the power to survive a war with my Family," he warned, his voice a low vibration that I felt in the floorboards more than heard.
"You take the money. You vanish. Or I will make sure you disappear without a dime."
He withdrew his telephone, tapped the screen, and held the device inches from my face.
"I am loyal to Camilla," he stated. "This is my reality. Not some ancient piece of paper."
I looked at the screen. It was a photo of Salvatore and Camilla on a yacht; he was kissing her cheek, and she was smiling brightly at the camera.
But my eyes did not focus on their faces. My gaze locked onto the necklace resting against Camilla's collarbone.
It was a heavy, antique blood-ruby pendant set in tarnished gold. It was my mother's necklace-the very one she was wearing the day she died.
A sensation like ice water poured through my veins, chilling me to the marrow.
"Where did she get that necklace?" I demanded, my pulse beginning to hammer against my ribs.
Salvatore frowned, pulling the phone back slightly. "She inherited it from her grandmother," he said defensively.
I let out a short, humorless laugh. "Sofia's mother was a cocktail waitress in Atlantic City," I countered, my tone sharp with disdain. "She died with a mountain of casino debt. She did not own a seventeenth-century Sicilian blood-ruby."
Salvatore's jaw clenched as his patience snapped. His possessive fury flared, and the air in the room seemed to thicken, becoming heavy and hard to breathe.
"You are deranged," he accused, his voice rising. "You are so consumed by jealousy that you are making up lies about jewelry to ruin her."
Before I could answer, a disturbance broke out in the corridor. The door was thrown open, not by a guard, but by Camilla herself, who pushed her way into the room.
She looked entirely different from the venomous woman on the video call moments ago. She was trembling, with artfully placed tears coursing down her perfectly contoured face. And resting against her collarbone, catching the dim light of the room, was the very same blood-ruby pendant I had just seen in the photo.
She rushed straight into Salvatore's arms. "Sal," she sobbed, burying her face in his chest. "I was so scared. My father's men just found me. She locked me in a closet at the estate."
Salvatore wrapped his massive arms around her, his glare fixed on me over her head. "It's over," he whispered to her.
Camilla turned her head slightly to look at me. Where Salvatore couldn't see, her tears vanished.
She shot me a venomous glare and mouthed a word: Sign.
"I need to speak to my Capos," Salvatore said softly to Camilla. "Stay here. Do not let her near you."
He kissed the top of her head and stepped out of the room, leaving the door cracked open.
The second his shadow disappeared into the hallway, Camilla dropped the act completely.
She wiped her miraculously dry cheeks and sneered at me.
"You see that?" she gloated. "He eats out of my hand. Boss Pietro is arriving right now. He is going to clean up this mess and bury you."
She walked over to the table, tapping a perfectly manicured fingernail against the million-dollar contract.
"In the eyes of our Don, your existence is nothing but a nuisance. Sign it before they decide to just shoot you."
She reached into her designer clutch to pull out a compact mirror.
She examined her reflection, checking that the false tears had not disturbed her mascara, before snapping the compact shut with a sharp, definitive click.
"You have exactly ten minutes before my father officially erases you from this Syndicate," she whispered, her eyes gleaming with a toxic, triumphant joy.
"Enjoy your final moments as a Russo, Penelope. Because after today, you are nothing."
She turned on her heel and walked back toward the door, abandoning me to the cloying stillness of the room.
But I merely smiled, a cold, hollow expression that did not reach my eyes. I knew the truth about her fragile dominion, and it was only a matter of time before it all burned down.