Chapter 12: A Coastal Sanctuary
The next forty-eight hours were a masterclass in organized chaos.
Dante’s mother was safely transferred to a beautiful, private memory-care facility three states away, far beyond Salvatore’s toxic reach. Antonio and his daughter were given new identities and relocated to the Pacific Northwest with enough untraceable cash to start a fresh, safe life.
Dante rapidly liquidated his legitimate assets—the few businesses that weren’t inherently tied to Salvatore’s violent empire. It was enough money to set us up comfortably for decades.
We left the city on a rainy Tuesday morning, driving out before dawn like thieves in the night.
Three days later, we arrived in a small, quiet coastal town six hundred miles away. We rented a beautiful house overlooking the crashing ocean waves. It wasn’t a heavily guarded penthouse or a fortified mansion. It was just a house. Clean, safe, and entirely ours.
I stood on the wooden deck that first night, watching the sun set over the water. Dante came up behind me, wrapping his strong arms securely around my waist.
“Any regrets?” Dante asked softly, resting his chin on my shoulder.
“Not one,” I promised, leaning back into his embrace. “Only that we didn’t do this years ago.”
“You weren’t ready years ago,” Dante reasoned. “Sometimes the right thing only becomes possible when the right person finally shows up.”
We spent the next six months building an actual life.
We opened a community boxing gym downtown. I spent my afternoons teaching local kids how to throw proper jabs, keeping them off the streets just like my father had done. Dante took to cooking with an enthusiasm that never failed to make me smile, discovering a quiet, domestic peace he had never known.
One evening, after we had closed up the gym, we were standing in our kitchen washing the dinner dishes. The sound of the ocean rolled gently through the open windows.
Dante dried his hands on a towel and turned to face me. His dark eyes were incredibly serious.
“I have been thinking about the future,” Dante said quietly.
“Okay,” I smiled, leaning against the counter.
“We have been living day-to-day since we got here,” Dante continued, stepping closer. “Which was necessary at first. But I think we are finally past just surviving.”
“What are you saying?”
He reached across the space and took my soapy hands in his.
“I am saying I want to plan a real future with you,” Dante murmured, his voice thick with emotion. “Not just hoping we make it through each day, but actually building something permanent.”
My throat suddenly felt very tight. “What kind of something?”
“Marriage, if you want that,” Dante offered nervously. “Kids, maybe. I don’t care about the specifics, Claire. I just care that it is with you.”
I smiled, my eyes filling with happy tears. “Are you asking me a question, Dante?”
He cupped my face in his warm, calloused hands, his thumbs gently wiping away a stray tear.
“Claire Dalton. Will you marry me? Will you build a life with me? Fight beside me. Wake up next to me for as many days as we get on this earth?”
“Yes,” I breathed.
The kiss that followed was soft, sweet, and full of absolute promise. We were finally, truly safe.
Later that night, as we curled up on the couch watching the waves, my cell phone buzzed on the coffee table. I picked it up. It was an unknown number.
“Congratulations are in order, I hear. Dante’s mother mentioned an engagement. Consider this my wedding gift: I have permanently erased all records of your previous life. As far as anyone knows, you are just two normal people who moved to the coast. Live well. You earned it.”
It wasn’t signed, but I knew exactly who had sent it.
I showed the screen to Dante. He read it twice, a small, relieved sigh escaping his chest.
“Do you trust it?” I asked.
“As much as I trust anything from Salvatore,” Dante admitted. “But it means we can finally move forward. We don’t let the past hold us hostage anymore.”