Chapter 2 ·2 of 11
Chapter 2

He thought I was finally learning. I was finally leaving Chapter 02

He thought I was finally learning. I was finally leaving Chapter 02

Trying to get money through Viviana had been harder than getting past Adriano’s security.

She looked over the clinic request, then set it aside. “Two hundred and eighty thousand for emergency fetal surgery?” she asked. “Do you understand what that is?”

“I understand my baby still has a heartbeat,” I said. “They need the deposit now.”

Viviana gave me the patient expression Adriano mistook for competence. “I’m not refusing you. I’m asking for the documents that justify moving that much from family reserves.”

I told her the doctors were still stabilizing me and couldn’t finish the plan until I was in surgery. She nodded as if that proved her point.

“Then you see the problem. No full plan, no itemized breakdown. If I force this through and the clinic exaggerated the risk, Adriano will answer for it.”

When I said there wasn’t time, she lowered her voice. “I know you’re frightened. But being frightened doesn’t change procedure.”

Then came the conditions: a written recommendation, a second doctor’s signature, a finance release form, confirmation from the family accountant. Every time I met one, she came up with another, all while reassuring Adriano she had everything under control.

That was the cruelest part. He did care—but he had already decided I was panicking, that the doctors had frightened me, that I was making it worse. Viviana only had to feed that belief.

By the time the money reached the hospital, the operating room no longer needed my answer. The child was already gone.

I remember lying in recovery, one hand over my stomach, waiting to feel something sharp enough to break me. Instead, what came was silence.

So when I saw the photo Viviana posted that night, I barely reacted. Her account was private, but Adriano’s circle all followed it. She was standing beside him at the shooting range, his hand over hers as he corrected her grip from behind. The caption was harmless. The image was not.

I saved it and liked it.

Adriano texted almost immediately.

[What are you doing?]

Before I could answer, another:

[It was training. Don’t turn it into something it isn’t.]

[Viviana told me what happened at the clinic. The doctor never said it was as final as you made it sound.]

I stared until the words blurred. He cared. He still thought I was lying.

Another:

[You’re upset, I understand. But don’t do this online. Since you already liked it, leave it there. Removing it now will only make people talk. Say something gracious.]

That was Adriano all over—concern wrapped around command, affection like a bandage over damage he wouldn’t face.

So I did what he asked.

Viviana is extraordinary,I typed. She manages the money, the schedule, the house, and apparently Adriano’s private training. At this point, she may as well take over the rest of my role too.

I posted it, set my phone down, and went into the dressing room.

Packing took almost no time. I had lived in Adriano’s penthouse for three years, but almost everything belonged to the Morelli family. The jewelry was logged, the gowns assigned, the safe codes not mine. Even the monthly cash was controlled by the office downstairs.

In the end, the only things I could take without questions were a few clothes from before my marriage, my passport, and the folder of personal papers Adriano had never asked about.

My phone began vibrating.

Adriano.

Then a voice note.

I listened once.

“Serafina.” His voice was tight, controlled. “Delete the comment. Then answer me.”

A pause, then: “I’m trying to help you, but I can’t if you keep shutting me out.”

I turned the phone off and dropped it into the suitcase.

At last, the room was quiet.

I stood in the middle of the bedroom and looked around. For years, I had called that place home. Now I saw it: a polished cage full of beautiful things that were never mine, a life arranged by other hands, a marriage where another woman approved what I could touch, spend, wear, and ask for.

Only then did I understand how completely I had disappeared.

Once I understood, leaving no longer felt impossible.

It felt overdue.

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