LOGINIf there were a hell specifically designed for women like me, it would look exactly like Bella Sposa Bridal Boutique.
All white silk and champagne flutes and mirrors that reflected back a version of myself I barely recognized. The air smelled like expensive perfume and desperation, and every surface gleamed with the kind of polish that screamed old money and tradition and know your place.
I hated every inch of it.
"Catarina, tesoro, you must try this one." My mother, Rosa Vitale, held up what could only be described as a wedding cake masquerading as a dress. Layers upon layers of tulle and lace, with a train that probably required its own zip code. "It's Vera Wang. The designer herself recommended it for you."
"It looks like I'd need a forklift to walk down the aisle," I said flatly.
"It's elegant." Rosa's voice had that edge to it—the one that said I was being difficult again, disappointing her again, failing to be the daughter she'd always wanted. "It's what a Vitale bride should wear. What the families will expect."
What the families will expect. The story of my entire goddamn life.
I was standing on a raised platform in the center of the boutique, wearing dress number seven—a monstrosity of satin and crystals that weighed approximately as much as a small car. The bodice was so tight I could barely breathe, and the skirt was so voluminous I couldn't see my own feet.
Perfect for a princess.
Useless for anything else.
"Mrs. Vitale, your daughter looks absolutely stunning," one of the consultants—a blonde woman named Ashley or Amber or something equally forgettable—gushed as she circled me like a shark. "This dress is made for her figure. So romantic. So timeless."
"It's suffocating," I muttered.
"It's traditional," my mother corrected, her dark eyes meeting mine in the mirror. There was a plea in them, buried beneath the steel. Please, Catarina. Just this once, be the daughter I raised you to be.
Except she hadn't raised me. Not really. My father had raised me. Marco had raised me. The training room and the blade masters and the endless hours of conditioning had raised me.
Rosa had just dressed me up and paraded me around at charity galas, hoping no one would notice the calluses on my hands or the muscle beneath the designer gowns.
"I think something more modern would suit me better," I said, gesturing to a sleek, form-fitting dress on a nearby mannequin. It had clean lines, a daring neckline, and a slit up the thigh that would actually allow me to move. "That one."
Rosa's expression could have frozen Lake Michigan.
"Absolutely not. That dress is... it's too revealing. Too bold. What would people think?"
"That I have a spine?" I suggested sweetly.
"Catarina—"
"Oh my God, is that Catarina Vitale?" Another consultant—this one a brunette with too much makeup and not enough sense—appeared at my elbow, practically vibrating with excitement. "I heard you were coming in today! You're marrying Jameson Connelly, right? That's so amazing. He's so gorgeous. And powerful. You're so lucky."
I felt my jaw tighten.
Lucky. Right. Because being sold off to a man who looked at me like I was a particularly annoying piece of furniture was every girl's dream.
"Lucky," I repeated, my voice flat. "That's one word for it."
"I mean, every woman in Chicago would kill to be in your position," the brunette continued, oblivious to the warning signs. "Jameson Connelly is like... he's the catch. Rich, connected, and those eyes? God, I'd let him—"
"If you think he's so impressive," I interrupted, turning to face her with a smile that was all teeth and no warmth, "I'd be happy to hand him off to you. Save us both the trouble."
The boutique went silent.
The brunette's face flushed red. "I... I didn't mean—"
"Oh, I think you meant exactly what you said." I stepped down from the platform, the ridiculous dress rustling around me like a storm. "But let me be clear: I'm not lucky to be marrying Jameson Connelly. He's not some prize I won in a raffle. This is a business arrangement, nothing more. So if you want to keep fantasizing about him, be my guest. Just do it somewhere I don't have to hear about it."
"Catarina!" Rosa's voice was sharp. Mortified. "Apologize."
"For what? Telling the truth?"
Before my mother could respond, the boutique door opened with a cheerful chime, and a new voice cut through the tension like a knife.
"Well, well. If it isn't the blushing bride."
I turned, and there she was.
Fiona Fitzpatrick.
Tall, willowy, with red hair that fell in perfect waves and a smile that didn't reach her eyes. She was wearing a designer dress that probably cost more than most people's rent, and she carried herself with the kind of confidence that came from never being told no.
I knew exactly who she was. Daughter of Patrick Fitzpatrick, a mid-level associate in the Connelly organization. The kind of family that was useful but not essential. Connected but not powerful.
And she'd been chasing after Jameson Connelly for years.
"Fiona," I said, my voice dripping with false sweetness. "What a surprise. I didn't realize you were shopping for a wedding dress. Did someone finally propose?"
Her smile turned brittle. "I'm not here for a dress. I'm here to see you."
"How thoughtful." I crossed my arms, which was difficult given the amount of fabric I was currently drowning in. "And what exactly can I do for you?"
"You can explain," Fiona said, stepping closer, "why you're marrying Jameson when everyone knows I'd be a much better match for him."
The audacity.
I actually laughed. Couldn't help it. The sound echoed through the boutique, sharp and incredulous.
"You think you'd be a better match for Jameson Connelly?" I repeated, making sure everyone in the room could hear. "You? Fiona Fitzpatrick, whose father is barely a footnote in the Connelly organization?"
Her face flushed. "My family has been loyal to the Connellys for generations—"
"Loyalty doesn't equal status, sweetheart." I took a step toward her, and I saw her instinctively take a step back. Good. "The Vitale family controls half of Chicago's underworld. We have connections, territory, and power that your family couldn't dream of. This marriage is a strategic alliance between equals. You? You're not even in the same league."
"Jameson doesn't care about that," Fiona said, but her voice wavered. "He cares about—"
"About what? You?" I laughed again. "If Jameson Connelly cared about you, he'd be marrying you. But he's not. He's marrying me. And do you know why? Because my family brings something to the table. What does yours bring? Mid-level muscle and misplaced ambition?"
"You bitch—"
"Careful," I said softly, and there was nothing soft about my tone. "You're in a room full of witnesses, and I'm about to become a Connelly. Do you really want to make an enemy of me?"
Fiona's hands clenched into fists. For a moment, I thought she might actually try to hit me, which would have been entertaining. I could disarm her in three moves and have her on the ground in five.
But she didn't. Instead, she pulled out her phone.
"I'm calling Jameson," she announced, her voice shaking with anger. "I'm going to tell him exactly how you're acting. How disrespectful you are. How you're not fit to be his wife."
"Go ahead," I said, gesturing to the phone. "Call him. I'm sure he'll be thrilled to hear from you."
She dialed. Put the phone to her ear. Waited.
And waited.
And waited.
I watched her face shift from confident to uncertain to humiliated as the call went to voicemail.
"Huh," I said, examining my nails. "Looks like he's not picking up. Maybe he's busy. Or maybe he just doesn't want to talk to you."
Fiona lowered the phone, her face pale with rage and embarrassment.
"You think you're so special," she hissed. "But you're not. You're just a transaction. A business deal. He doesn't want you. He doesn't even like you."
"You're absolutely right," I agreed, and the honesty of it seemed to throw her off balance. "This is a transaction. But at least I'm honest about it. You, on the other hand, are delusional enough to think you ever had a chance."
"Catarina, that's enough," Rosa said, finally stepping in. But there was something in her voice—not quite approval, but not quite disapproval either. Maybe even a hint of pride.
I ignored her. Kept my eyes on Fiona.
"Here's what's going to happen," I said, my voice calm and cold. "You're going to leave this boutique. You're going to go home. And you're going to accept that Jameson Connelly is marrying me, not you. And if you ever show up somewhere I am again, trying to cause trouble, I will make sure your father's position in the Connelly organization becomes... tenuous. Do we understand each other?"
Fiona's mouth opened. Closed. Opened again.
"You can't—"
"I can." I smiled. "And I will. Now get out."
She didn't move. Just stood there, shaking with impotent rage.
I turned to the boutique manager, a middle-aged woman who'd been watching the entire exchange with wide eyes.
"Excuse me," I said pleasantly. "This woman isn't here to shop. She's here to harass me. I'd appreciate it if you'd have her removed from the premises."
The manager hesitated for only a second before nodding. "Of course, Miss Vitale. Right away."
She gestured to the security guard stationed near the door—a large man who looked like he'd been hired specifically for situations like this.
Fiona's eyes darted between me, the manager, and the approaching guard. Then, with a final glare that promised retribution, she turned on her heel and stormed out of the boutique.
The door chimed cheerfully behind her.
Silence settled over the room like a blanket.
I stood there, still wearing the ridiculous dress, feeling the weight of everyone's stares. The consultants looked scandalized. My mother looked... complicated. Disappointed and impressed in equal measure.
And I was done.
Done with the dresses and the expectations and the performance. Done with being treated like a prize to be won or a doll to be dressed up. Done with all of it.
"You know what?" I said, turning to my mother. "Pick whichever dress you want me to wear. You clearly know better than I do what a Vitale bride should look like. I'm sure whatever you choose will be appropriately traditional and suffocating and exactly what the families expect."
"Catarina—"
"I have better things to do than stand around playing dress-up," I continued, already reaching for the zipper on the back of the dress. "I have training. I have work. I have an entire life that doesn't revolve around what shade of white I'm supposed to wear while I'm being handed off to a man who thinks I'm an idiot."
"Tesoro, please—"
"I'll be at the wedding," I said, finally getting the zipper down and stepping out of the dress. I stood there in my slip, not caring who saw, not caring what they thought. "I'll smile for the cameras. I'll play the perfect principessa. But right now? Right now I'm leaving."
I grabbed my clothes from the dressing room, changed in record time, and headed for the door.
"Catarina!" Rosa called after me, her voice a mix of anger and desperation. "We're not finished!"
"Yes," I said without turning around. "We are."
I pushed through the door and out into the Chicago afternoon, breathing in the cold air like it was oxygen after drowning.
Marco was waiting by the car, and he took one look at my face before opening the door without a word.
"The compound," I said as I slid into the backseat. "And if anyone tries to stop me, run them over."
He almost smiled. "Rough morning?"
"You have no idea."
As we pulled away from the boutique, I caught a glimpse of my mother through the window. She was standing in the middle of all those white dresses, looking small and lost and disappointed.
Part of me felt guilty.
The rest of me didn't care.
I had one week until I became Mrs. Jameson Connelly. One week until I stepped into a role I'd never wanted, married a man I didn't know, and became a target for every rival family in Chicago.
One week to prepare for a war that was coming whether I was ready or not.
I wasn't going to waste it picking out the perfect shade of ivory.
"That's what I need to find out," Jameson said. "The Colluccis don't have the resources to pull off something this sophisticated on their own. Someone had to finance this operation, coordinate the logistics, brief them on the restaurant layout.""You think they have backing?""I think it's possible. Which is why we need to get back to the compound and interrogate those Collucci men. They'll know who's pulling the strings, who's funding them, whether this is part of something bigger.""And if they don't know?""Then we figure out who benefits from destabilizing the Connelly-Vitale alliance. Who has the resources and the motivation to orchestrate something like this." He paused, his expression hardening. "And we find out if this is just the beginning.""One problem," I said."What?""You're still half-drugged. You're not interrogating anyone in this state. You need at least another hour of rest, some food in your stomach, and probably a shower to help your body process the chemicals fas
JAMESON The bedroom was tense as I dressed for the lunch meeting. Cat sat on the edge of the bed, still in her tank top and shorts, arms crossed over her chest. She hadn't spoken to me all morning. Not when I'd kissed her forehead. Not when I'd invited her to shower with me. Not even now, as I buttoned my shirt. "You're sure about this?" I asked, trying one more time. "I'm sure you're leaving me behind," she said flatly. "Because you're just getting your strength back. Because I need to know you're safe.""Mmhmm." I crossed the room and tilted her chin up so she'd look at me. "Cat, I'm coming back. This is just a business lunch." "With a family that wants to take over my father's territory." "Which is why I'm meeting with them. To see what they really want. To assess the threat level." S
JAMESONPatrick Fitzpatrick looked small in the interrogation room.That was my first thought when Declan hauled him in, zip-tied and terrified. The mid-level associate who I'd thought was solid, loyal, was now looking at the cold steel table like it might bite him."Leave us," I said to Declan."Sir—""I said leave."Once he was gone, I pulled out the chair across from Patrick and sat down slowly. Deliberately. I let the silence stretch between us, watching the way his eyes darted around the room like a cornered animal."Patrick," I said finally. "We need to talk about your Russian friends.""I don't know what you're talking about," he said, but his voice cracked."Really?" I leaned back in the chair. "Because we have evidence suggesting otherwise."He started sweating. Actual beads of sweat forming on his forehead."I swear, Mr. Connelly, I'
JAMESON"We'll find him," Declan said, studying the surveillance footage. "Give us a few hours."I wanted to argue, wanted to push forward, but I was exhausted. More than that, I was done. Done with Patrick, done with threats, done with everything except the woman standing quietly in the corner of the war room."No," I said, surprising myself. "Call it for the night. Send teams to his known locations, but nothing aggressive until morning. If he runs, we track him. We have time."Declan looked at me like I'd grown a second head. "You sure?"I glanced at Cat. She was watching me with an unreadable expression, but there was a slight curve to her lips that suggested she knew exactly what I was thinking."Yeah," I confirmed. "I'm sure. Get some rest. We reconvene at 0600."The team filed out quietly, sensing that their boss had reached his limit. I waited until the last man left b
JAMESONWe settled on the couch, and I pulled her close, needing to understand what had shifted during that meeting."Tell me everything," I said.Cat took a breath and laid it out: Viktor Volkov, the new Russian leader. More vicious. More vengeful. A direct threat not just to me, but to both families."Your father's not wrong," I said when she finished. "We do have a problem with loyalty. I've been discussing it with Declan. We've identified at least six men who were close to Isaac. Patrick Fitzpatrick is flagged as a priority suspect.""Fiona's father?" Cat's eyes narrowed."He has grievances," I confirmed. "And opportunity. Someone fed Isaac information about your schedule that day, Cat. Someone knew when you'd be on that road."She was quiet for a moment, processing."So we have external threats and internal ones," she said finally."And the two are
JAMESONThe study felt too quiet as I paced, my mind churning through the list Declan had compiled."Six men," I said, stopping at the desk. "Six men we know had contact with Isaac in the weeks before the attack."Declan nodded from his position by the window. "At minimum. There could be more we haven't identified yet.""Patrick Fitzpatrick," I said, the name tasting bitter. "Fiona's father. He was close to Isaac.""He was," Declan confirmed. "And he's not happy about his daughter's rejection by you. Grievance plus opportunity."I ran a hand through my hair. "Isaac didn't act alone. I know he didn't. Someone fed him information about Cat's schedule that day. Someone told him when she'd be on that road.""The drivers," Declan said quietly. "One of them has to have been compromised. They knew the route. They knew the timing."I nodded slowly. The drivers. Of course. The most obvious vulnerability, and Isaac had exploited it perfectly. Or rather, whoever had put Isaac up to it had exploit
CATARINAA few days had passed, and I looked less like I'd been hit by a truck and more like I'd merely been in a serious bar fight.Progress.The swelling around my eyes had finally gone down enough that I could see out of both again—a small
JAMESONTrue to my word, I returned forty-five minutes later with two bags from Portillo's and a determination to finally have the conversation we'd been dancing around for weeks.Cat was exactly where I'd left her—propped up against the pillows in my be
CATARINATwo days later, the doctor finally cleared me for discharge."Strict bed rest," he said for what felt like the hundredth time. "No strenuous activity. Keep the arm elevated. Follow up in one week.""I understand," I said, resisting the urge
JAMESONThe warehouse on the south side smelled like rust, old oil, and fear.Perfect.Declan led me through the main floor to a back room where two men sat zip-tied to metal chairs. Both were bloodied—noses broken, lips split, eyes swollen. M







