After Her Divorce, She Inherited the Mafia Empire Novel – My husband’s courier had been bleeding my family accounts dry like they were her personal tribute, and she’d had the audacity to call me a useless ornamental bride right there in the private dining room of La Maschera Nera—the most exclusive establishment in Cresthaven’s territory. The disrespect was so brazen it stole the breath from my lungs. So I made a single phone call. Had her access revoked on the spot. Left her without a cent of clean cash to settle the bill. The manager—a man who understood exactly whose territory he operated in—held her there for an entire day and night.
By morning, every made man and associate from here to the harbor knew Silvana Ferro had been kept like a common debtor, weeping mascara onto white linen. When Enzo found out, he merely traced a finger down the bridge of my nose, his touch deceptively gentle. “You.” His voice carried that particular warmth he reserved for moments when he thought himself clever. “A grown woman, jealous over a little courier? And now the whole organization is laughing at her.” He didn’t blame me. Acted as though the incident had never occurred. Until my birthday.
When he escorted me to La Maschera Nera himself, his hand possessive at the small of my back. He ordered dozens of courses—the kind of excess that announced power to anyone watching. Bottles of wine older than our marriage. He mentioned that associates from allied families would be joining us to pay their respects. “Tesoro mio,” he murmured against my temple, his lips brushing my hairline. “I need to step out for a moment. Family business. I’ll return before the first toast.” I waited. The candles burned down to pools of wax.
The kitchen staff began their closing rituals, the distant clatter of copper pots echoing through the emptying restaurant. His associates never arrived. His chair remained cold. When I finally reached for the card he’d given me—the one linked to the Gambetti family accounts—the manager’s face shifted like clouds sliding across the moon. “Signora Gambetti.” His voice had lost its earlier deference. “This account has been frozen.” —— “Frozen?” Enzo had pressed that card into my palm himself before we’d left the compound. He’d even taken my personal funds, claiming that a husband should provide for his wife on her birthday.
That it was a matter of honor. I’d been moved by the gesture. Quietly proud of myself for securing such a thoughtful match—a man who, despite his brutality in business, showed tenderness in private. Now the leather seat across from me sat empty. I’d called his private line seventeen times. Each call rang into the void. If this account was dead, I was exposed. The manager’s expression completed its transformation—from polished courtesy to barely concealed contempt. In this world, an unpaid debt was more than an inconvenience. It was a crack in the armor. A sign of weakness that invited predators. “Signora.” His tone had hardened. “Do you have another means of payment?” “I should remind you—La Maschera Nera does not extend credit.
You of all people should understand this, given what occurred here last month.” Oh, I remembered. Last month, Silvana Ferro had swept through this very establishment with Enzo’s blessing, spending tribute money like water, draped in silk she hadn’t earned. And when I’d arrived to collect my husband for a sit-down with the Marchetti family, she’d looked me up and down with those calculating eyes and laughed. “The ornamental bride,” she’d called me. “Pretty enough for photographs. Useless for everything else.” A cold understanding settled into my bones like frost creeping across glass. This was Enzo’s revenge. His payment for the humiliation I’d dealt his precious goomah.
The sharp percussion of stilettos echoed from the entrance—a rhythm I recognized. Deliberate. Theatrical. I turned. Enzo stood in the doorway, his arm wrapped around Silvana Ferro’s waist with the proprietary ease of a man displaying a new acquisition. Her face was a mask of triumph, lips curved in a smile that belonged on a cat watching a mouse realize the trap had already sprung. Behind them filed a procession of familiar faces—capos, associates, men who had toasted my health at family gatherings.
Every single one of them watched me with the anticipation of spectators at an execution. “Celestina Valente.” Silvana’s voice cut through the silence like a blade drawn from silk. She used my maiden name deliberately—a reminder that in this room, tonight, I was no longer under Gambetti protection. “You do so enjoy watching people squirm when they cannot pay their debts. Let us see how you handle the shame.” The whispers erupted like brushfire. “I heard she came from nothing—some minor family barely worth mentioning. Only caught the Boss’s eye because of that face. And now her own husband brings his woman to watch her crawl.” “This is what happens when you try to climb the hierarchy on beauty alone.” “Exactly. How long does a pretty