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I Left the Mafia Boss, and He Lost His Mind

I Left the Mafia Boss, and He Lost His Mind

최종 업데이트: 2026-06-15 10:31:16
By: Willowisp
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개요

Sienna Vale spent years as Dante Moretti’s most loyal weapon, lover, and underboss. She cleaned up his wars, guarded his secrets, and waited for the man she loved to finally choose her. Instead, Dante humiliated her, protected another woman, and destroyed the last pieces of the life they built together.


So Sienna leaves.


But walking away from the Moretti family is not simple. A traitor is hunting her, a rival mafia family smells weakness, and Dante’s regret arrives too late to be trusted. In a quiet coastal town, Sienna begins to rebuild herself with new allies, a stubborn turtle, and Elias Ward, a steady doctor who never touches without asking.


Dante wants her back. Marco wants to drag her home. Elias only wants her free.


And for the first time, Sienna chooses herself.


장1


Dante Moretti chose me while another woman wore his crown.


That was the part I remembered first. Not the guns. Not the cold shine of the marble table in the council room. Not the way every man in the Moretti compound stopped breathing when Adrian Russo's message came through the old secure line.


I remembered the tiara.


It sat on Isabella Voss's dark hair like a dare, all hard white diamonds and delicate silver teeth. She kept touching it with two fingers, careful and shy, as if she had not asked three maids to adjust it for half an hour before dinner. Her eyes were wet, but not from fear. Isabella could cry on command. I had seen her do it over a broken glass, a bruised wrist she gave herself, a nightmare she described in a voice soft enough to make grown men feel cruel.


Dante stood behind her chair.


His hand rested on the carved wood near her shoulder, close enough to claim, not close enough to be accused. He was dressed in black, as always, his shirt open at the throat, his signet ring catching the light every time his fingers moved. Ten years ago, that ring had been too big for him. We had laughed about it in a rented room above a closed butcher shop, back when the Moretti name meant blood on our shoes and debt in our pockets. He had put it on and told me, One day they will all lower their eyes when I enter.


I had believed him.


Worse, I had helped make it true.


The council room was full. Capos along the walls. Two old cousins by the liquor cabinet. Marco Bell near the door with his hands folded in front of him, pretending not to look at me. My men from South Dock stood behind him, but not behind me. That was new. I noticed because noticing small shifts had kept me alive.


On the wall screen, Adrian Russo smiled from a dim room I recognized too well. Bare concrete. Rusted pipes. A single drain in the floor.


My stomach turned before he spoke.


"Dante," Adrian said. "Your girl looks pretty tonight. The little one, I mean. The one with the crown. Bring her to North Pier by midnight, and your missing shipment leaves my hands untouched. Refuse, and I start mailing your men back in pieces."


Nobody moved.


Isabella made a small sound and reached back for Dante's wrist. He let her take it.


I watched his face. I always watched his face first. Dante could lie with his mouth, his hands, even his silence, but there was a muscle by his jaw that tightened when a choice cost him something.


Tonight it did not move.


Adrian leaned closer to the camera. "No soldiers. No tricks. One girl for one route. You know the old rule. Blood for passage."


The screen went black.


For three seconds, the room belonged to the hum of the lights.


Then everyone started talking.


"It's a trap."


"Russo won't stop at one hostage."


"We hit North Pier now."


"We can't move blind."


"The girl can't go. The boss just presented her to the family."


The girl.


Not Isabella. Not Miss Voss. The girl. A soft thing with a diamond crown and Dante's hand above her shoulder.


I looked down at my own hands. The skin across my knuckles was split from last night's work at South Dock. One nail had torn low enough to bleed. There was powder burn near my thumb where a gun had kicked wrong. I had not had time to clean it before being summoned to dinner.


Isabella had smelled like roses when I passed her in the hall.


Dante lifted one hand.


The room went silent.


That was his power. Not volume. Not rage. Just the expectation that when he stopped the air, the rest of us would stop with it.


"Russo asked for a woman from my house," he said.


My neck went cold.


I knew before he turned.


Love, if it had ever been love, trained the body in stupid ways. I knew the weight of Dante's attention before his eyes touched me. I knew the decision before his mouth shaped it. I even knew the excuse he would use, because I had written half his excuses for him over the years and called them strategy.


"Sienna will go."


Nobody spoke.


Isabella's fingers slipped from his wrist. Her mouth opened in surprise, but her eyes found mine first. There it was, quick and bright under all that false fear.


Relief.


I heard a chair scrape. Maybe mine. Maybe someone else's. The room tilted once, then steadied. My body understood danger better than humiliation. It locked itself upright.


"No," I said.


A few heads turned. Not because they agreed. Because they wanted to see how far I would fall.


Dante's gaze sharpened. "No?"


One word. Low. Warning.


I had heard him use that voice on men who did not survive the night.


"Russo asked for Isabella." My own voice sounded calm. That surprised me. "He named her. He described her. He wants what you just showed the whole city you favor. Sending me won't satisfy him."


"You know Russo's rules better than anyone," Dante said.


That landed where he aimed it.


Yes. I knew Russo's rules. I knew how his men zip-tied wrists with the knot turned inward so panic did half their work for them. I knew the taste of water swallowed wrong. I knew the sound a person made when they tried not to beg in front of enemies.


Three years ago, I had gone into a Russo warehouse with five men and come out with two. That was when Dante started calling me his underboss in public.


His weapon in private.


"I know he doesn't forgive substitutions," I said.


"He wants leverage," Dante replied. "You are leverage."


A small laugh left me before I could stop it.


It was not loud. It was not pretty. It cut through the room anyway.


"Am I?"


Dante's expression did not change, but the men near the wall shifted.


I stepped away from the table. My chair legs dragged over the floor. "Last week you let Marco brief South Dock without me. Yesterday you moved my men to the east gate. Tonight you seated Isabella at your right hand wearing a crown you had delivered under family guard. If Russo has eyes, and we both know he does, he knows exactly how much leverage I am."


Isabella looked down. Her lashes trembled. "Sienna, please don't make this about me. I didn't ask him to do any of this."


I turned my head slowly.


She folded under my stare, but only on the surface. Her lips shook. Her fingers rose to the tiara again.


"Take it off," I said.


The room changed.


Isabella blinked. "What?"


"If you're afraid, take it off. If you don't want to be the message Dante sent to every family in Port Haven, take off the crown."


Her hand froze.


Dante moved before she had to answer. "Enough."


I looked back at him. "You put diamonds on her head in a house built by dead men, then act surprised when wolves smell blood."


"Careful," he said.


"I was careful for ten years."


The words came out flat. That made them worse.


Something passed over his face then, too fast for most people to catch. Not guilt. Dante did not like guilt. Guilt required admitting the wound belonged to someone else. This was irritation, maybe, or the discomfort of hearing a locked door shift in its frame.


He came around the table.


Every step he took brought back another memory I did not want. Dante at nineteen with blood in his teeth, laughing because we had lived. Dante at twenty-three pressing his forehead to mine after I took a bullet meant for him. Dante at twenty-six promising me South Dock would be ours, not his, ours, because I had earned every inch of it.


Dante tonight, stopping in front of me like I was a problem on his floor.


"You are the only person in this room who can walk into Russo territory and walk out," he said.


There it was. The softer knife. He always reached for it after the hard one.


I met his eyes. "You mean I'm the only person you're willing to risk."


His jaw moved.


There. At last.


"I mean you are trained," he said. "You are known. You are not some unarmed girl who would break in the first hour."


Behind him, Isabella made a hurt sound.


Dante did not turn, but his shoulders tightened as if her pain had touched him.


Mine never did that anymore.


"I came back from South Dock with three cracked ribs this morning," I said. "You knew that?"


His silence answered first.


Marco looked away.


It was a small movement. A coward's movement. I saw it anyway.


Dante's eyes flicked to my side, then back to my face. "You didn't report injuries."


"You didn't ask."


No one breathed.


For a second, the room was not the council room. It was the old apartment above the butcher shop. Rain in the ceiling. One mattress. Dante cleaning a knife by the sink while I wrapped gauze around his ribs and called him an idiot. He had caught my wrist and kissed the blood off my thumb. I had thought that meant something permanent.


I had been young enough to mistake hunger for devotion.


Dante lowered his voice. "Sienna."


My name in his mouth still knew where I was weak. I hated that most of all.


"If you send Isabella," he said, "Russo parades her. He hurts her because she cannot stop him. He uses her fear to make me reckless."


"And if you send me?"


"You survive."


Simple. Cruel. Almost admiring.


I should have felt proud once. Dante Moretti believed I could survive anything. Men had called that respect. I had called it love when I was too tired to know better.


Now I understood. Some people only believe in your strength because it gives them permission to keep breaking you.


I looked past him at Isabella. "Do you want me to go for you?"


Her face drained.


"Sienna," Dante warned.


"No," I said. "Let her answer. She has a voice when she wants gifts. She can have one now."


Isabella's eyes filled. She looked at Dante, not me. "I don't want anyone hurt."


A few of the older men softened. Of course they did. Pretty mercy was easy to love when someone else paid for it.


"That wasn't an answer," I said.


She flinched.


Dante stepped between us. "Enough. The decision is made."


Those five words closed around my throat.


The decision is made.


I had heard them when we burned our first safe house. When we chose which traitor to hand over. When I asked him to spare a dock boy too young to know what he had carried. Dante said those words when he wanted obedience without the burden of explanation.


For years, I had given it to him.


Maybe that was why everyone waited for me to lower my head.


I did not.


"On what authority?" I asked.


Dante's eyes went dark.


Someone near the liquor cabinet muttered my name like a prayer and a warning.


I touched the South Dock signet at my belt. Heavy brass. Scarred edge. I had taken it from a dead man in a warehouse full of smoke and earned the crew by walking out last. Dante had placed it in my hand himself.


Underboss, he had said. Mine.


The word had warmed me then.


Now I heard the chain in it.


"On mine," Dante said. "As boss."


"Then say it as boss. Not as the man who shared my bed."


His face hardened.


Good. Let it harden. Let everyone see the thing we had been pretending was not rotting between us.


Dante turned slightly toward the room. "Sienna Vale will present herself at North Pier before midnight as representative of the Moretti Family. She will carry no visible weapon. She will negotiate the release of our route and our men. If Russo takes her inside, she will hold until extraction."


Extraction.


A clean word. A soldier's word. It made fear sound temporary.


I almost laughed again.


"And if no extraction comes?" I asked.


His eyes returned to mine. "It will."


"Swear it."


He held my gaze.


The old Dante would have crossed the room. The old Dante would have cut his palm and pressed it to mine like two street kids playing at sacred vows. The old Dante would have said, If they touch you, I burn the north side down.


This Dante said nothing.


That silence did what Russo's threats had not. It opened something clean and final inside me.


I nodded once.


Isabella exhaled behind him. Too soon.


I turned toward her and held out my hand. "The crown."


She recoiled. "Dante?"


Dante looked tired then, as if I was the one making the night difficult. "Leave it, Sienna."


"No. If I go in her place, I go as the thing Russo asked for. He asked for the crowned girl. Give me the crown."


A low murmur moved through the men.


It was strategy. Everyone knew it. It was also humiliation, and everyone knew that too.


Dante's mouth tightened. "You don't need it."


"You don't get to strip me down and call it trust."


For a moment, I thought he would refuse just to prove he could.


Then he turned. "Isabella."


Her face collapsed. "But you gave it to me."


"Now."


One word from him. That was all it took.


She reached up with shaking hands and lifted the tiara from her hair. A strand caught in the setting. She winced, and Dante almost moved to help her.


Almost.


I took it before he could.


The diamonds were cold. Heavier than they looked. I set it on my own head without asking for a mirror. A few men looked away. Marco did not. His face had gone pale.


Maybe he remembered me younger, standing on a dock in the rain, teaching him how to keep his hands steady when a gun jammed. Maybe he remembered calling me boss before Dante made it official.


Remembering did not make him loyal.


I removed the South Dock signet from my belt and placed it on the table.


Dante's eyes dropped to it. "What are you doing?"


"Traveling light."


"Pick it up."


"No."


His hand closed around my wrist before I finished the word.


Pain shot up my arm. I did not show it. Dante knew my bones too well. He loosened his grip half an inch, not from mercy, from memory.


"Do not turn this into theater," he said.


I leaned close enough that only he could hear me. "You did that when you put a crown on your mistress and sent your underboss to die."


His eyes flashed.


There it was. The word he deserved and hated.


Mistress.


The room did not hear it, but Isabella saw it land. Her tears stopped for one clean second.


Dante released me.


I picked up my coat from the back of the chair. My ribs screamed when I lifted my arm. I kept my face still. Under the coat, tucked into the lining, was the rusted switchblade I had carried since we were poor enough to share one loaded gun between us. Dante had never asked me to give that up. Maybe he had forgotten it existed.


I had not.


At the door, Bullet rose from his place near the hallway. The old dog had slept through half the meeting, gray muzzle on his paws, but now he limped toward me. His nails clicked over marble. He pressed his head against my thigh.


My throat tightened so fast it hurt.


"Stay," I whispered.


He whined.


Dante's voice came from behind me. "Sienna."


I stopped but did not turn.


For one stupid second, some ruined part of me waited. It waited for apology. For command reversed. For any proof that the man who had once held my shaking hands after my first kill still lived somewhere under the boss, the ring, the cold black shirt.


"Come back alive," he said.


Not I will come for you.


Not I am sorry.


Come back alive, as if survival was another task he could assign.


I looked down at Bullet and scratched behind his ear once. Then I opened the council room door.


The hall outside was lined with guards who suddenly found the walls interesting. Word traveled fast in that house. Shame traveled faster.


I walked past them with Isabella's diamonds cutting into my scalp and my own signet left behind on Dante's table.


At the end of the corridor, my phone buzzed.


Unknown number.


One message.


Wear the crown, Sienna. I want him to watch what he threw away.


Below the words was a photo of the Russo water room.


In the corner of the photo, chained to a pipe, was one of my South Dock boys.


Still alive.


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