His mother openly called me damaged goods, and Silas threatened to give my entire dowry and family territories to Serena if I didn't bow down and apologize to her.
For a decade, I endured his emotional abuse, only to realize I was just a convenient shield for his sick obsession with his sister.
My heart finally went completely dead.
I dropped his blood‑ruby engagement crest into the trash and burned eleven years of memories to ash.
Then, I invoked the ancient laws of severance right to his face.
"I'm breaking the arrangement."
When Alessandro, the lethal Warden of the North, arrived with an armored motorcade to claim me as his Queen, Silas finally panicked.
He chased my car, pounding on the glass with bloodshot eyes, begging me to come back.
I just looked at him with flat, dead calm and rolled up the window.
Chapter 1
Isla's POV
The blood‑ruby engagement crest dug a sharp, circular impression into my palm, its metal edge carrying the distinct chill of a frost‑covered blade.
I froze before the towering oak doors of Silas's office, the very breath seeming to thicken and die in my throat.
From within, the muffled timbre of his laughter bled through the dense wood. He was telling his Capos that he was never going to claim me. Tomorrow, he bragged, he would elevate his adopted sister to his side instead. Elevate her. The word landed in my stomach like a gut‑shot-cold, leaden, final.
The acrid scent of cigar smoke seeping from beneath the doorframe coated my tongue like a film of ash.
I stood paralyzed in the gloom of the Central Estate's main corridor. My fingers trembled around the smooth, cold stone of the crest. Tonight was the final night of the Old Ways. Within the electrified concrete walls of the Central Estate, the rules were harder than bone: an unclaimed woman who presented her loyalty token for over a decade without securing a betrothal was handed over to the Family Enforcers to maintain the bloodlines. A broodmare for the ranks. That was the Old Law's mercy.
I was twenty‑eight. The fact of it settled in my stomach like a lump of swallowed lead, making each breath taste of rust.
I had knelt and presented my token to Silas every single year since my eighteenth birthday. And every year, he had manufactured a new, convenient excuse to delay the formal claiming ceremony. A shipment delayed. A sit‑down that ran long. Serena needed him.
The thrumming against my own ribs was a frantic, caged thing. I pressed my ear closer to the wood. A Capo's gravelly voice drifted out over the sharp clink of crystal against crystal.
"Are you finally going to put the ring on her finger at the Syndicate Gala tomorrow, Boss?"
Silas let out a low, arrogant chuckle that sent a tremor of pure dread down my spine.
"She's waited eleven years like a loyal dog," Silas sneered. "She won't mind waiting a twelfth. Besides, her desperation keeps her obedient."
He went on to detail his actual plan to his men: tomorrow night, he would formally initiate Serena into the inner circle instead. Serena, he claimed, needed the protection far more than I ever did. She had "suffered," he said. What had I ever suffered, standing silently at his side?
My stomach plummeted, the sensation akin to stepping blindly off a jagged ledge. I stared down at the blood‑ruby crest resting in my palm. I had driven three grueling days through hostile territory just to deliver this to his fortified penthouse. Now, my time had officially run out.
But as despair threatened to choke me, a darker thought surfaced. I knew exactly who was waiting in the shadows of the city.
Alessandro.
He was the Warden of the Northern Estate, a lethal myth who existed only in the hushed whispers of underground clinics-the man who, armed with nothing but a grooved skinning blade, had painted the boardroom of a rival cartel a deep, uniform crimson. They called him the Silent Butcher. Alessandro was pure, unchecked violence-and rumor had it, he had just returned to the city.
Numbness spread through my veins as I finally turned away from Silas's door.
My feet carried me down the hall toward the ornate metal trash receptacle, each step an automatic, disconnected motion. Without a second thought, I opened my hand and let the blood‑ruby crest slip from my fingers.
It struck the bottom of the bin with a dull, hollow clank. It sounded exactly like a lock snapping shut on my past.
I retreated down the long, shadowed corridor, returning to my own suite to prepare for the annual Syndicate Gala. I knew with absolute certainty that I would be standing at the ceremonial altar alone tonight.
Even now, through the sheer curtains of my window, I could see the Made Men and Associates gathering in the courtyard below. They were already whispering. Whenever their gazes flicked up to my balcony, their eyes were brimming with a sickening, vulture‑like pity.
Inside my room, my mother, Maria, stood quietly by the vanity mirror. She studied my pale, ghost‑like reflection. Her own eyes were dry, but I saw what lived behind them-the guilt of a woman who had watched her daughter wither for eleven years and could do nothing but witness it.
Reaching out with trembling fingers, she smoothed the rich fabric of my gown. She didn't speak a single word; the silence between us was a physical weight, thick with all the things we could not say.
Suddenly, the door to the suite swung open.
Silas finally appeared. Clad in a razor‑sharp, custom black suit, he looked every inch the ruthless, rising Underboss. Sergio Valente, tailored in Milan. I had ordered that suit for him six months ago. He hadn't thanked me.
He stepped into the room, but his dark eyes didn't even flicker in my direction. Instead, he immediately pivoted toward the adjacent doorway-the one that connected directly to Serena's suite.
Serena stood in the threshold, draped in a delicate silk robe. She gazed up at Silas with wide, impossibly sweet eyes. Eyes like a doll's. Flat and gleaming.
"You've never seen me prepare for a Gala before," she murmured softly, pouting her lips. "I want your help picking out my jewelry."
Silas's harsh features instantly softened. He smiled at her-a warm, breathtakingly gentle smile that he hadn't bestowed upon me in years.
Without hesitation, he stepped toward her room.
I stood frozen, staring blankly at his broad back. In that instant, a vivid, nauseating memory flashed behind my eyes.
I remembered the freezing bite of the iron bars in the underground holding cage. I remembered the damp, metallic stench of blood and sweat from the fighting ring in his VIP club.
Silas had locked me in that literal cage, leaving me there for his Soldiers to gawk and jeer at. He had called it a fair punishment. "She needs to learn control," he'd told his men, one hand resting on Serena's trembling shoulder.
My crime? I had torn Serena's designer dress in a blind rage after discovering a Polaroid photo of the two of them sleeping in the same bed. Just sleeping, she'd sworn. Fully clothed. I had been meant to apologize for my "dirty mind."
Now, staring at them, the muscles between my ribs gave a slight, twitching spasm. I had expected a tearing sensation, but all that rose in my throat was a dry, dusty numbness.
I bent down and calmly picked up my ceremonial mantle from the velvet chair. My heart was completely, irrevocably dead to the prospect of ever marrying him.
Just as he reached Serena's door, Silas paused and tossed a careless glance over his shoulder.
"Hurry up," he ordered flatly. "And wait for me in the courtyard."
I did not answer. For the first time in eleven years, I had nothing left to say.