Chapter 3

The next morning, Dante announced a change: I was to attend all family council meetings.

"No," I said.

"Not a request."

"I'm your wife, not your soldier."

"You're a Valesi by blood, a Moretti by marriage." He buttoned his jacket, not looking at me. "That makes you the most valuable intelligence asset I have. Your father hides things from me. Your brother confides in you. Your sister—"

"Don't." My voice came out harder than I intended. "Don't drag Sofia into this."

"Sofia turns eighteen next month. Your father is already negotiating with the Bianchi family."

The Bianchis. Traffickers. Worse than traffickers. The kind of men who sold children to the highest bidder.

"Over my dead body."

"Then sit in the damn meetings, Elena. Learn the chessboard. Because if you want to protect your sister, you need power. And right now, you have none."

I sat in the meetings.

Every Tuesday at 2 PM. The back room of La Rosa Nera, an Italian restaurant that served as Moretti family headquarters. Dante at the head of the table. His consigliere, an aging viper named Arturo Costa, at his right. Six capos spread around like wolves waiting for their share of the kill.

They talked about territory disputes with the Ukrainian outfit in Brighton Beach, money laundering through construction contracts in Manhattan, a mole in the DA's office who needed a payment bump.

I said nothing.

For six months, I said nothing.

I learned.

I learned that Arturo resented my presence. I learned that Sal, the enforcer, had a sister with cancer. I learned that the Ukrainian conflict was escalating because one of our men had shot their lieutenant's nephew over a card game.

And I learned something else.

Someone in that room was feeding information to my father.

The discovery came by accident. I'd stayed late after a meeting, gathering my notes, when I heard Arturo's voice from the side corridor.

".can't let her keep attending these meetings. She's sharp. She notices things."

"Relax." The other voice was muffled. "She's a housewife playing gangster. Dante indulges her because she's pretty and he likes the chase. She's not a threat."

"Enzo doesn't think so."

"He's the one paying you to report on her. Not the other way around."

I froze. Arturo was taking money from my father. Spying on me. Spying for me? No—that phrasing. Reporting on her.

My father didn't trust me. He had a man inside Dante's inner circle watching my every move.

I should've confronted Arturo. Should've told Dante. Should've done something righteous and dramatic.

Instead, I waited until the corridor was empty, then calmly walked to the bathroom and vomited.

That evening, Dante found me in the garden, staring at nothing.

"You're quiet tonight."

"Aren't I always quiet?"

"Not like this." He sat beside me on the stone bench. "What happened?"

Could I trust him? The question looped in my mind like a funeral dirge. My father spied on me. My husband used me as an asset. Every man in my life saw me as a tool.

Nothing new. Nothing surprising. And yet.

"My father has a mole in your council," I said. "Arturo."

I expected rage. Accusations. Maybe even gratitude for my honesty.

Dante just nodded. "I know."

"You—what?"

"Arturo's been on my payroll for three years. He feeds your father whatever I tell him to feed him." Dante met my eyes, calm as still water. "Did you think I would let a snake like Arturo near my wife without knowing exactly where his loyalties stood?"

Cold spread through my chest. "You've been using me this whole time."

"I've been protecting you."

"Those are the same thing to you, aren't they?"

"No." He reached for my hand. I pulled back. "Elena—"

"Don't touch me."

Silence stretched between us, heavy as the humid August air. The garden smelled of roses and decay. Everything beautiful in this world was rotting from the inside out.

"How long have you known?" My voice came out steady, but just barely.

"Since before we married. Your father approached Arturo the day the engagement was announced."

"You knew he was a traitor and you let him stay?"

"Arturo isn't a traitor. He's a double agent. His loyalty is to me. Your father thinks he has an ear in my council. What he really has is a muzzle with a leash attached. Everything he hears, I control."

"And where do I fit in this master plan?"

Dante turned to face me fully. In the twilight, his features softened into something almost human. Almost.

"You're the variable I never accounted for," he said quietly. "The one piece on this board I can't predict. It's infuriating." A pause. "And fascinating."

I stood up. "I'm going to bed. Alone. And tomorrow, you're going to tell me everything. Every scheme. Every manipulation. Every plan you've made that involves me or my family."

"Or what?"

"Or I'll become the wildcard you're so afraid of."

I walked away, heart pounding, not looking back.

That night, I didn't sleep.

At 2 AM, a soft knock on my door. Dante's voice, low and rough: "Tomorrow. After the meeting. The whole truth. You have my word."

I didn't answer.

But I believed him.

Read the Full Story Now
Support the author and inspire more amazing stories Goodnovel
Unlock All Chapters
Search for “A34531” on goodnovel to read the full book.
Copy the code and search in the NovelShort app to continue reading.
A34531
copy

My Marriage Was a Trap,So I Burned the Whole Table Down

Chapter 3
Chapters
Customize
Next Chapter