The car climbed onto the overpass, neon lights flashing by outside the window. The city spread below us, glittering and indifferent. In a daze, my nails dug into the window frame until they split, the sharp pain snapping me back to reality. I put my bleeding fingers into my mouth and bit down hard.

As the car wove through the city streets, I repeated to myself, over and over, "Olivia, endure it. The pain will pass."

I was a Ferraro before I was ever a Moretti wife. And Ferraros did not break. Not where anyone could see.

When we arrived at Riverside General Hospital, I scanned the payment code and settled the fare.

As I stepped out of the car, the usually quiet driver turned to me and said, with unexpected kindness, "Miss, take care of yourself. For the baby's sake, don't hurt yourself."

Since discovering Dante's affair, I hadn't told a soul. Not my mother. Not a single friend. The secret felt like poison, slowly eating away at me from the inside. In the world I'd married into, silence was survival. Omertà wasn't just for the men. It was for the women too, the wives who smiled at Sunday dinners and pretended they didn't know where the money came from or where their husbands went at night. But the kindness of a stranger, a man with no Family connections, no angle, no loyalty owed to anyone, felt like a fresh breath of air, pulling me back from the abyss.

I gently closed the car door, offering him a small smile. "Don't worry, Sir. No one can hurt me anymore."

I rested my hand on my belly, where my daughter shifted and turned.

"Because I'm ready to throw the trash where it belongs."

I hid behind a pillar in the hospital lobby, watching my husband.

Nine months. Nine months of carrying his child, and Dante Moretti had not attended a single prenatal appointment. Not one. There was always a sit-down he couldn't miss, a shipment that needed overseeing, a call from the Don that pulled him out the door before I could finish asking. I had learned to stop asking. A Moretti wife learns that quickly, or she learns it slowly and painfully. Either way, she learns.

But here he was.

Here he was, running around Riverside General like a man possessed. Registering at the front desk. Picking up medication from the pharmacy window. Holding another woman's elbow as she stepped down from the examination hallway, guiding her with the kind of care I hadn't felt from his hands in years. Maybe ever.