He thought I was finally learning. I was finally leaving. Chapter 06
I turned and saw Viviana standing just inside the gate, one hand resting on the chain-link fence as if the whole dockyard amused her.She looked absurd there in a pale coat and narrow heels, all perfume and polish in a place that smelled of diesel, rain, and rust. Her gaze moved over me slowly, taking in the dust on my jeans, the clipboard in my hand, and the team behind me eating takeout beside stacked crates.
“So this is where you ended up,” she said lightly. “I was wondering how long you’d last before finding somewhere more suited to you.”
I looked at her shoes sinking into the gravel. “You always did look more comfortable in my life than I ever was.”
Her smile tightened.
Before she could answer, I added, “Watching you take over my schedule, my home, and my husband was educational. It’s impressive how far ambition can go when it calls itself loyalty.”
A car door shut behind her.
Adriano stepped out of a black sedan and crossed the yard.
“What’s going on?” he asked.
Viviana changed instantly. Her shoulders drew in, and her voice softened.
“Nothing. I only told her you were worried. I thought if she saw you came all this way, she might stop being angry.” Then she lowered her eyes. “I didn’t mean to upset her.”
My grip tightened on the clipboard.
Adriano looked at me, and for a second something unreadable crossed his face. My hair was tied back badly, my hands were rough with paper cuts and dust, and there was nothing polished left about me.
“Serafina,” he said, quieter now, “what are you doing here?”
I almost laughed.
He came closer. “You’ve barely recovered, and you’re working in a freight yard.”
He reached for my arm, determined to yank me from the scene and force me back to the place he deemed rightfully mine.
“Come home,” he said. “Whatever point you were trying to make, it’s enough.”
I stepped away before he could touch me.
The yard had gone quiet around us.
Adriano lowered his voice. “Viviana was trying to help. You don’t need to keep punishing everyone because you’re hurting.”
“Help?” I said. “If this is what help looks like, you should both be proud.”
His expression tightened.
He glanced over the floodlit yard, taking in the portable office, trucks and dust, his gaze sharpening in obvious distaste.
“This is not where you belong,” he said. “Get your things. I’ll have the car brought around.”
One of the women from the audit team leaned toward me and whispered, “Your husband?”
I kept my eyes on Adriano. “My ex. He’s just behind on the paperwork.”
Even Viviana’s face changed at that.
Adriano stepped in front of me.
“Don’t do that,” he said quietly. “Don’t talk about us like that in front of strangers.”
“Then stop acting like I’m still yours to collect.”
His jaw set.
“I came because you walked out while you were still under post-op care,” he said. “You’re exhausted, emotional, and standing in the middle of a freight yard like this is normal. You don’t leave my protection in this condition and expect me not to come after you.”
“There it is again,” I said. “You always are.”
Something in my tone must have unsettled him, because his patience thinned.
“Fine,” he said, pulling out his phone. “If you insist on acting like none of this matters, maybe you need to understand what life looks like without me fixing things behind you.”
I knew exactly what he meant before he started dialing: the clinic, the specialists, the money he still thought gave him the final word.
He put the call on speaker.
“Dr. Salerno,” Adriano said, his gaze never leaving mine, “scale back the emergency interventions on Serafina’s file unless there’s an actual medical need. My child is not so fragile that every bout of anxiety becomes a crisis, and letting her spiral like this is worse for the baby than anything else.”
He paused, waiting for fear.
What came back was silence.
Then the doctor spoke, his voice strained. “Mr. Morelli… what are you talking about?”
Adriano’s expression sharpened. “Her treatment.”
Dr. Salerno took a breath.
“I assumed you’d been told. After the delay, there was no way to save the pregnancy…”