Sienna Vitiello POV
The hospital garden was a manicured lie—an oasis of vibrant green in the middle of the concrete city.
There was a large decorative pool in the center, deep enough for koi fish and lined with slippery marble.
I sat on a stone bench, watching the water ripple.
My head was still aching, a constant, throbbing reminder of the windshield I had become intimate with.
Footsteps crunched on the gravel path.
I didn't need to turn around to know who it was.
The scent of cloying, overly sweet perfume announced her arrival before she even spoke.
"It’s peaceful here, isn't it?" Valeria asked.
She stood next to the pool, examining her manicured nails.
She looked pristine. Untouched. A porcelain doll in a world of broken glass.
I didn't answer.
"Dante is so worried about me," she continued, her voice dripping with faux concern. "He hasn't left my side. He even changed my bandages himself."
"That’s nice," I said, watching a fish swim in lazy circles.
"He feels responsible for me," she said, turning to face me. "Because of my husband. Because he couldn't save him."
I looked at her then.
"And he saved you this time," I said. "To balance the ledger."
She smiled, a sharp, predatory thing.
"He will always save me, Sienna. You’re just... the obligation. The Vitiello contract."
She pulled her phone out of her pocket.
"I was going to take a selfie for him," she said, holding it over the water. "To show him I’m feeling better."
She fumbled.
Her fingers opened. It wasn’t a slip; it was a release. It was a clumsy, theatrical fumble.
"Oops," she said.
The phone splashed into the water and sank to the bottom.
"Oh no! My photos!"
She looked at me, her eyes gleaming with malice.
Then, she stepped onto the slick marble edge.
I watched, fascinated by the performance.
She bent down, pretending to reach for the phone, and then threw her weight forward.
Splash.
She hit the water with a shriek that could shatter glass.
"Help! I can't swim! Help!"
She was standing in waist-deep water, flapping her arms like a dying bird.
"Dante!" she screamed.
He appeared instantly, bursting from the patio doors like a demon summoned by a blood ritual.
He didn't register the depth of the water.
He didn't see the fact that she was clearly buoyant.
He saw her in distress, and logic was extinguished.
He dove in, ruining his bespoke suit, and scooped her up in his arms.
He carried her to the edge, dripping wet, his face a mask of panic.
"Are you okay? Did you swallow water?" he demanded, brushing wet hair from her face.
Valeria coughed, a delicate, staged sound.
"She... she pushed me," she sobbed, pointing a shaking finger at me.
I sat on the bench, unmoving.
Dante’s head snapped toward me.
The look in his eyes wasn't just anger. It was hatred.
"You pushed her?" he growled, his voice low and dangerous.
I stood up, wincing as my ribs protested.
"She jumped, Dante. The water is three feet deep."
"Liar!" he roared.
He set Valeria down gently on the grass and marched toward me.
He was a storm of violence, soaking wet and terrifying.
"You violated the peace," he spat. "You tried to harm a protected guest."
"I didn't touch her."
He didn't listen.
He grabbed my arm, his fingers digging into my existing bruise.
"You want to see what drowning feels like?"
He shoved me.
Hard.
I flew backward, the air leaving my lungs before I even hit the water.
I crashed into the pool, my side slamming against the marble rim on the way down.
Pain exploded in my torso like a grenade.
The cold water rushed over my head.
I thrashed, trying to find the surface, but my heavy hospital gown dragged me down.
My wound tore open. I felt the warm seep of blood mixing with the chlorine.
I broke the surface, gasping, choking.
Dante stood on the edge, looking down at me with cold indifference.
His bodyguards moved to help me.
"Don't touch her!" he ordered. "Let her learn her lesson."
I struggled to the edge, my vision blurring.
I watched him turn his back on me.
He picked up Valeria, cooing to her, and carried her away toward the warmth of the hospital.
He left his fiancée bleeding in a pool of decorative fish.
And in that cold merciless water, as I shivered uncontrollably, the last remnant of the old Sienna drowned.





