The Wife He Called Cheap Walked Away Forever Novel – Chapter 1 When I was eighteen, I gave myself to Dominic Moretti like a gift, wrapped in blind devotion and ribboned in a loyalty I thought would buy me a place at his table forever. That night, tipsy and remote, he slid my clothes off without hesitation, the way a man handles something already promised to him. There was no tenderness in it, only certainty. The certainty of a man who had never once been told no. The next morning, he looked utterly composed, knotting his tie before the tall windows of the estate while the early light came gray and cold off the marble floor. “Eva, I’ll take responsibility for you.” And he did exactly that. Dominic kept his word, because in our world a man’s word is the only currency that does not burn.
He kept me close, treated me well in the measured way one tends a valued asset, and eventually married me before the bloodline’s elders, the union sealed with the weight of the Family behind it. I became Eva Moretti, wife of the Don. Everyone envied me for it. I had risen out of nothing, an orphan taken in at ten, and climbed all the way to the head of the long table. The darling of the Moretti name. Wife to the most feared man in the territory, the man whose silence could empty a room and whose nod could end a life. I believed in the dream, too. God help me, I believed it. Until that night, at the Family’s feast. Dominic lost his composure in public, in front of capos and made men and the quiet enforcers who lined the walls. He threw punches across the private dining room to defend his new associate from a guest who had pressed too close to her. He made a scene before the whole table.
The Feds came. They took him. I went down to the holding cell and used the Moretti name to make it quiet, the way I had been raised to do, the way a wife is supposed to smooth the rough edges off her husband’s mistakes so the bloodline’s name stays clean. Outside the iron door, in the cold corridor that smelled of bleach and old cigarettes, I overheard him laughing low with his sworn brother, still half-drunk, still unaware I had come. His brother joked, voice easy with wine, “If you want her that badly, keep her on the side. Eva worships the ground you walk on. Even if it all blew up, she’d never dare walk out on you. She hasn’t got the spine for it, and she hasn’t got anywhere to go.” Dominic let out a soft, helpless chuckle, the sound of a man indulging a private fondness. “She’s different,” he said. “She’s not like Eva. Not that low. She didn’t throw herself into my bed.” He went on, and every word landed like a coin dropped into still water. “There’s nothing tying her to me on paper.
No oath, no name. I couldn’t make her look cheap.” So that was what I was to him. Cheap. The low one. The one who had thrown herself down. From eighteen to twenty-eight. Ten years of my life. Ten years as his wife, his woman, the one who learned his moods and kept his secrets and carried the Family’s honor on my back through every sit-down and every feast. And in his eyes I had only ever been the desperate orphan girl who had crawled into his bed to earn her place. …… My fingers found the thin wedding band on my left hand, and I turned it once, slowly, around and around, the way I always did when the cold got into my chest and I needed something to hold. It was such a small thing, that ring. It had never weighed anything at all. I understood now that it never would. A draft moved down the corridor outside the holding cell, carrying the chill of the concrete walls. I had been trembling before, from the long night and the noise and the shame of bailing the Don out like a common drunk.
But now I felt something colder settle into me, deeper than the air. I felt truly frozen, the way water goes still and hard before it breaks. So this was what I had become in Dominic’s world. The pitiful, low-born wife. The one taken in out of charity and bedded out of obligation. The snake that had slithered up the table leg, in his telling, while she, the new one, sat clean and untouched and worthy. They always said the darling of the Moretti name was distant, refined, expertly masked, a woman who gave nothing away across a crowded room. I had never believed it of myself. I had thought I was warm, that I loved openly, that he could see it. But standing in that bleach-stung corridor, I saw the truth of it all too clearly. I had been masked so long I had forgotten what was underneath. And underneath was nothing he had ever wanted. I steadied myself against the wall, swallowed the pain down where it would not show on my face, and pushed open the heavy door. The conversation inside stopped dead, the way every conversation stops when a Moretti enters a room, except this time the silence was for me, and it was not respect that made it.
Dominic and his sworn brother both turned to look at me. The single bulb threw hard shadows across the Don’s face. Even drunk, even slumped on the steel bench of a holding cell, he wore his authority like a coat that never came off, and the air in the small room seemed to thin around him. Dominic met my eyes without a flicker of shame. His thumb moved once over the heavy signet ring on his finger, the gold catching the dirty light, and his voice came out flat and even, the voice he used for men who had cost him an evening. “Sorry for the trouble.”