Escaping The Mafia Don's Golden Cage

Harper POV

It had been six months.

Casey told me I had been in a car accident. He said the head trauma caused retrograde amnesia. He said my name was Avery, and that we were partners in a research firm.

I believed him. Why wouldn't I? He was kind. He was protective. He made me feel safe in a way that wrapped around me like a warm blanket on a cold night.

But sometimes, I would wake up with a phantom pain in my chest. A feeling of missing something vital, like a limb that had been severed but never cauterized.

Today, the sun was shining. We were at a small cafe near the docks, the smell of roasting beans filling the air. I was laughing at a joke Casey made about his terrible cooking skills.

"I promise, I'll never attempt a soufflé again," he said, his grey eyes crinkling at the corners.

I reached across the table to squeeze his hand. "Stick to toast, Casey."

The bell above the cafe door chimed.

The air in the room changed instantly. It didn't just shift; it curdled, growing heavy and charged with static. The chatter at the other tables died down, though I didn't know why.

I looked up.

A man stood in the doorway.

He was tall, dressed in a black suit that cost more than this entire building. He had dark hair and a jawline that looked like it was hewn from granite. But it was his eyes that stopped my breath. They were dark, intense, and fixed entirely on me.

He looked like a wolf who had just found a lost lamb.

My stomach twisted. Not with recognition, but with a primal, instinctive fear. My body wanted to run.

He started walking toward our table. His strides were long, purposeful, and predatory.

"Avery," Casey said, his voice sharp. He stood up, placing himself between me and the stranger.

The man stopped a few feet away. He ignored Casey completely. He looked over Casey's shoulder, locking eyes with me.

"Harper," he said.

The name meant nothing to me. But the way he said it-like a prayer and a curse twisted into one-sent a shiver down my spine.

"I think you have the wrong person," I said, my voice trembling slightly.

The man's face twitched. A flash of pain? Anger? It was gone too fast to tell.

"Don't play games with me," he growled. He stepped around Casey, reaching for me. "Come home. Now."

I flinched back, pressing myself into the booth. "Don't touch me!"

Casey shoved the man back. "She said don't touch her."

The man looked at Casey then, and I saw death in his eyes. "You have three seconds to move, or I will remove you. Permanently."

"She doesn't know you," Casey said, standing his ground. He looked smaller than the stranger, but he didn't waver. "Look at her, Eli. Look at her eyes."

The man-Eli-looked back at me. He searched my face, looking for a crack, a sign, a flicker of the past.

I stared back at him with nothing but confusion and fear.

"Who are you?" I whispered. "Why are you looking at me like that?"

The color drained from Eli's face. He looked like he had been punched in the gut. He took a step back, his hand hovering in the air as if he wanted to grab me but couldn't bridge the gap.

"You..." he choked out. "You really don't remember."

"Remember what?" I asked. "I've never met you."

He looked at the empty chair beside me. He looked at my hand resting on the table, devoid of any rings.

"You're my wife," he said. The words were heavy, desperate.

I shook my head. "No. I'm not. You're mistaken."

Casey put a hand on my shoulder. "Leave, Eli. She's free. She's happy. Don't drag her back into your hell."

Eli's gaze snapped to Casey. "You did this," he hissed. "You stole her mind."

"I saved her life," Casey retorted quietly.

Eli looked back at me one last time. The arrogance was gone, replaced by a raw, bleeding wound. But beneath the pain, I saw something else rising. Obsession.

"This isn't over," Eli said. His voice was low, resonating through the floorboards beneath my feet. "You are mine, Harper. Mind, body, and soul. If you don't remember, I will make you remember. I will burn this whole town to the ground until you say my name again."

He turned and walked out.

I watched him go, my heart pounding against my ribs like a trapped bird.

"Who was that?" I asked Casey, my hands shaking.

Casey sat down and took my hands in his. His grip was tight.

"A ghost," Casey said. "Just a ghost from a bad dream."

But as I looked out the window at the black car speeding away, I knew Casey was wrong. Ghosts don't look at you with that kind of hunger.

That was a hunter. And I was his prey.

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