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Debt Bound Bride of the Mafia King

Oreva_Othihiwa
28
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 28 chs / week.
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Synopsis
He owns her debt. He owns her body. But he cannot own her mind. When Alessia De Campo is summoned to the villa of the most feared mafia family in Naples, she expects to beg for more time to pay her father's €25 million debt. Instead, she walks through a door left ajar and witnesses a man executed for owing less than her father did. Enzo Moretti does not kill liabilities without first understanding their value. When Alessia catalogs the room—his ring, his guards' tells, the question he asked the dying man—instead of screaming, he decides she is not ordinary. He decides to keep her. The contract is simple: marry him for one year, and her younger brother will be protected. Refuse, and the debt will be called in full—and her brother will suffer the consequences. Trapped in his gilded cage, Alessia does not fight. She studies. She learns his tells. She becomes his weapon. She makes him crave her laugh. Then she discovers she is carrying his child. Enzo has one unbroken rule: no children. He decrees she will terminate. She refuses. And the most dangerous man in Naples kneels. "Teach me to survive your war. Because I am not giving you this child. And I am not running." The cage is no longer just around her. It is inside her. And she is learning to hold the key. Debt-Bound Bride of the Mafia King is a dark mafia contract romance where survival is a strategy, obsession is a currency, and the woman who watches becomes the one who rules.
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Chapter 1 - the black envelope

The last twenty euros in Alessia De Campo's pocket had been meant for Nico's inhaler. Instead, she watched the worn bill slide across the bakery counter for a small white cake she had not ordered. Signora Bianchi had looked at Alessia's hands, at the flour caked deep under her fingernails, and pushed the cake toward her without a word. Her eyes were trying to tell Alessia something. She did not want to know what.

 

"For the boy," Signora Bianchi said. "His audition."

 

Alessia opened her mouth to refuse. The words died. Nico's conservatory audition was in six weeks, and travel cost two hundred euros they did not have. But refusing felt like refusing hope. She took it.

 

The walk home wound through the Quartieri Spagnoli, laundry hanging like flags between the buildings. Alessia climbed the groaning stairs to the fourth floor. Inside, Nico sat at the damaged upright piano, his long fingers moving across the keys in silence, practicing fingering so the neighbors would not complain. The small gold cross around his neck caught the dim light.

 

"Signora Bianchi sent this," Alessia said.

 

Nico's eyes lit up. "For the audition?" he asked.

 

"For you," Alessia replied.

 

She did not tell him about the twenty euros or the inhaler refill due in four days. Some weights were hers alone to carry.

 

The black envelope was on the floor inside the door. Thick cream paper. No postage. No address. Just her name in sharp, elegant script. The seal stopped her breath: black wax stamped with a crown wrapped in thorns. The Moretti crest. Her hand trembled. She shoved it into her apron pocket before Nico could look up.

 

"I am going to practice with sound tonight," Nico said. "Signora Greco said she does not mind."

 

Alessia nodded. Her voice took effort. "I have a night job. Cleaning at a villa. Good pay," she said.

 

Nico frowned. "You already work doubles."

 

"Temporary," Alessia replied. She crossed to him and pressed a kiss to his forehead. His hair smelled like cheap soap. "Spare inhaler in the drawer. Use it if you need to."

 

"I know, Alessia," Nico said.

 

She made herself smile. Then she went to the tiny bedroom and closed the door. The envelope was heavy. She broke the seal. The message inside was brief: her presence was required at the Villa Moretti to discuss the debt of Marco De Campo. Tomorrow. Eight in the evening. No other words were needed.

 

Twenty-five million euros. The number her father had left behind when he vanished three months ago, along with a note that said only Forgive me. Alessia had not forgiven him. She had kept moving, kept working, kept pretending the debt was a ghost that would not demand flesh. The ghost had arrived.

 

She pulled a piece of paper from the drawer and wrote quickly. Her father's name. The Moretti family. The debt. The villa's address. Instructions for Renata Greco, their seventy-one-year-old neighbor who had known Alessia's mother and who watched everything from her window.

 

If I am not back in forty-eight hours, open this. Protect Nico. Go to the police. Make noise.

 

She sealed the letter and wrote Renata's name on the front. Nico was playing now. Chopin's Nocturne in E-flat major, the piece he had chosen for his audition. The notes floated through the thin walls. Alessia closed her eyes. She did not know if she would hear him play again.

 

She waited until he was deep in the second movement before slipping out of the bedroom. She pressed the spare inhaler into his free hand as she passed. He did not stop playing. He did not look up.

 

Renata Greco opened her door before Alessia could knock, her worn rosary beads clicking through her fingers. Her sharp dark eyes took in Alessia's face in a single glance.

 

"They came for you," Renata said. It was not a question.

 

"Tomorrow." Alessia held out the envelope. "If I am not back in forty-eight hours."

 

Renata took it. Her gnarled hands did not shake. "Your mother knew this day would come," Renata said. "She told me once that the Moretti family never forgets a debt."

 

"My mother is dead," Alessia said.

 

"And you are alive." Renata reached up and touched Alessia's cheek with papery fingers. "Stay that way."

 

Alessia walked back up the stairs. She stood in the doorway and watched Nico play one last time. His eyes were closed. His fingers moved with a certainty she had never felt. She memorized the image: the curve of his shoulders, the gold cross catching light, his lips moving silently with the rhythm.

 

Then she turned and walked out into the Naples night, the flour still under her nails, twenty-five million euros pressing down on her spine.

 

The Villa Moretti gates were black iron, three meters high. They opened without sound as she approached, as though she had been expected for years. Alessia walked through. The gates closed behind her with a soft, final click. A sound that meant there was no turning back.

 

A man in a dark suit stood in the courtyard. He had been watching her since she turned onto the villa road. His face was blank, but his eyes tracked her like she was already a problem to be solved.

 

"This way," the man said.

 

Alessia followed. She did not look back. And somewhere behind her, the gates remained closed, swallowing the last trace of the street she had come from.