The Woman Who Tried To Leave A Mafia Boss Woke Up In His Penthouse With A Black Phone And Three Days To Choose Her Fate – Part 1

Chapter 1: The Text That Changed Everything

The rain tapped against her apartment window like impatient fingers.

Each droplet racing down the glass in jagged patterns.

Eleanor Sullivan stared at her phone screen, the blue light illuminating her face in the darkened room. Her heart hammered against her ribs as she typed those two simple words.

We’re done.

Her finger hovered over the send button.

Three months of secret meetings, whispered promises, and a growing sense of suffocation had led to this moment.

She closed her eyes.

Inhaled deeply.

The scent of chamomile tea filled her nostrils.

She pressed send.

The message whooshed away, and immediately three dots appeared. He was typing already. Of course he was.

Allesio Moretti never kept anyone waiting.

His response came seconds later.

You don’t decide that.

Four words. No emotion. No question mark. Just a statement of fact, as if he were commenting on the weather or stating his coffee preference.

A chill crawled up her spine despite the warmth of her oversized sweater.

Her hands trembled as she set the phone face down on her coffee table, as if that small act of defiance could somehow shield her from what she knew was coming.

She had met Allesio three months ago at Bellini’s, the upscale Italian restaurant where she worked as a hostess. It was a rainy Tuesday evening, much like tonight, when he walked in surrounded by three men in dark suits.

Even before she knew who he was, something about him commanded attention.

He moved with purpose. His tailored charcoal suit accentuated broad shoulders. His presence immediately altered the energy of the room.

The restaurant manager practically sprinted across the dining room to greet him personally, leaving Ellie standing awkwardly with menus in hand.

“This is Ellie,” her manager said, gesturing toward her with a nervous smile. “She’ll take excellent care of you tonight, Mr. Moretti.”

Allesio’s dark eyes locked with hers.

She felt as if he could see through her. Past the professional smile. Beyond the carefully applied makeup covering the exhaustion of working double shifts to make rent.

His gaze lingered a moment too long before he offered a slight nod.

“A pleasure,” he said, his voice carrying the faintest trace of an Italian accent.

She hadn’t known then who he was.

She didn’t know that Allesio Moretti controlled half the city’s imports. That politicians and police captains were on his payroll. That his family name inspired both fear and respect depending on which circles you traveled in.

She just knew that something about him made her skin prickle with awareness.

He returned to Bellini’s three nights later.

This time alone, except for his driver who remained outside. He requested her section specifically, though she rarely served tables. The manager nearly fell over himself accommodating the request, assigning another hostess to the front while Ellie nervously took Allesio’s order.

“You’re working two jobs,” he stated while scanning the menu.

Not a question.

She froze. Wine decanter in hand.

“I’m sorry.”

“The bags under your eyes. The way you check your watch. You’re exhausted.”

His eyes lifted to hers.

“Why?”

Something about his directness disarmed her.

“Art school isn’t cheap,” she admitted.

“Neither is rent.”

He nodded as if confirming something to himself. “Bring me whatever the chef recommends. And join me, if you would.”

That night had been the beginning of everything.

After her shift, his driver appeared with an envelope. Inside was exactly the amount of her monthly rent in cash, along with a business card bearing only a phone number.

“No pressure to call,” Allesio had said. “Just an offer to make your life easier.”

She didn’t call for two weeks.

But when her roommate suddenly moved out, leaving her with double the rent and a looming tuition payment, her fingers dialed that number before she could talk herself out of it.

Now, three months later, she knew the truth about the man whose bed she’d shared.

Whose world she’d glimpsed.

The import business was a front for moving everything from illegal weapons to drugs. The respect she’d witnessed in public was fear poorly disguised. The generosity he’d shown her came with invisible strings that tightened a little more each day.

The final straw had come yesterday.

She’d run into an old friend from art school at a cafe.

Michael had hugged her hello. They chatted for all of five minutes before she noticed one of Allesio’s men watching from a corner table, phone in hand.

Three hours later, Allesio called, asking pointed questions about her friend, as if she’d committed some terrible betrayal.

“You’re having me followed,” she whispered into the phone.

“I’m keeping you safe,” he corrected, his tone gentle but leaving no room for argument.

That’s when she knew.

She had to end it.

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