The Divorce Changed Everything

I never asked for diamonds. Never wished for bouquets. I wanted only one thing. One promise. One single, damn promise.

A cruise.

Marcello had whispered it once, back when his soul still felt alive. “One day,” he murmured into my hair, “when we’re rich… just the two of us, we’ll sail the world together.”

That was before the empire, before the money, before I became his wife in title but his servant in practice.

Now it was my forty-eighth birthday. No greetings. No balloons. No cake. No flickering candles. Yet, somehow, I had allowed myself the tiniest hope that maybe—just maybe—today could be different.

The twins’ laughter echoed behind me, my grandchildren unbothered by any sense of respect.

“Ma, you look like some skeleton in a dusty gown,” Enzo teased, smirking.

“Yeah, smells like old mop water mixed with cat piss,” Nico added, wrinkling his nose.

And Antonio, leaning against the fridge, hollered over their laughter: “Hey, Ma! Wash my clothes, alright? My wife’s busy. And make sure you bleach the whites this time, unless you want another disaster!”

I swallowed, trying to keep the rising heat from my chest from spilling into my voice. “I’m not your maid.”

“What was that?” he barked.

“I said I’m not—”

He slammed a half-empty soda can onto the floor. “Then what the hell are you doing here? Because you sure as hell aren’t contributing! You don’t earn a dime.”

My blood boiled. “I raised you. Fed you. Stayed awake when you burned with fevers. I’ve worked since before you were even born.”

“Well, maybe you should’ve worked on smelling better,” one of the twins shot back.

“Yeah,” Nico laughed, “it’s horrifying seeing you. People at school said you scare them, like some extra from The Walking Dead.”

Their laughter bounced around the kitchen. Marcello didn’t even look at me. He returned to polishing his pistol on the mantel, examining it as though it mattered more than I ever did.

“We’ve got money, Bianca,” he muttered. “But I’m not wasting it on useless help. You’re here. You’ve got two hands. Why hire a maid when you’re the so-called woman of the house?”

“The woman of the house.” His title for me. Yet I had nothing—no car, no credit card, no independence. Every cent I needed, I had to beg for. And asking for more? He demanded receipts. Line by line. Penny by penny.

I spoke up after dinner. He was still seated in the same chair, pistol in hand, the TV flickering with an old Western no one cared about. My chest tightened with nervous rhythm.

“Do you remember what you promised me… on my eighteenth birthday?” I asked softly, voice barely above a whisper.

He didn’t glance at me. “Which promise?”

“That we’d travel together. You said that after the business stabilized, once our son was grown, we’d go on a cruise. Just us.”

“You’re insane,” Marcello scoffed, dark laughter threading his words. “A cruise? Look at yourself. You’re like a stick of dry bamboo—one gust of wind and you’d snap. You think the captain’s gonna roll out a red carpet for you? Bianca, he’d probably assume you’re bringing some walking bacteria aboard.”

“But today is—”

“Today is what?” He finally looked up. The weight of years pressed into his face, carving lines I hadn’t noticed before. “You’re not young anymore. The world won’t be kind to someone like you. You’re not Vivienne.”

Vivienne. My sister-in-law. His brother’s widow. Tall, blonde, perfect, like she stepped straight out of a magazine. Always poised, always judging, and Marcello never corrected her.

“She’s young,” he continued, voice clinical, almost bored. “Travels for business, attends every family function. Fits the image. But you—you’ve always been behind the scenes. That’s where you belong. The household. The family. Keeping it all running.”

And behind me, the twins laughed again. Innocent, cruel, oblivious.

I closed my eyes for a moment, breathing in the sharp reality of it all. The cruise, the promise, the life that should have been mine—already belonged to someone else.



That night, after the clamor died and the family vanished into their rooms, I went to the bedroom. From the closet, I pulled out the old red suitcase—the one he had given me in Naples before our wedding.

Before everything twisted into what it had become.

I stared at my hands. They didn’t feel like mine anymore. Worn, tired, lined with years of unnoticed labor.

I had once been someone. A Conti. Daughter of a mafia king. Born with fire in my spine and gold on my tongue. I gave it all up for love. I renounced my own blood, believing Marcello’s love would be enough.

Now?

I was nothing but a ghost in this house.

No kingdom, no crown, no freedom. I already had enough. Maybe walking away from this family—leaving everything behind—was the only birthday gift I could truly give myself.

The following morning…

I first heard about the dinner from Enzo—he practically shoved the news out between mouthfuls of potato chips.

“Vivienne booked the entire top floor of the Luciana Hotel! Fancy, huh? Dad says it’s just for us. A huge celebration.”

I froze mid-mop. “Us?”

Nico answered before I could speak. “You’re not invited, Ma. Grandpa said… you’re not up for it. I mean, look at you.”

Not up for it. As if I were frail, or ill, or a figure to be pitied.

By sunset, the house had emptied. Marcello was freshly shaved, wearing the cologne reserved for boardroom meetings and funerals, standing tall in his navy suit as he straightened Enzo’s and Nico’s collars like a proud patriarch. Antonio was dressed in his finest suit, looking the part of an heir.

“Remember,” Marcello said to them, “Vivienne is doing this because she loves us. She’s family.”

“We know, Grandpa. That’s why we love Vivienne more than Grandma Bianca,” the boys chorused.

Then… nothing. No goodbye, no ‘we’ll bring you something.’ Just the front door clicking shut, echoing like a coffin lid.

The silence afterward was brutal. A hollow that screamed louder than any insult ever could.

I stood in the hallway, slippers on, clutching a basket of unfolded laundry. My stomach growled. I hadn’t cooked for anyone. Why would I?

Out of spite, I turned on the TV. And there they were.

A live broadcast from the Luciana Hotel. Cameras sweeping over crystal chandeliers, the soft music of violins floating across the screen. There was Vivienne, draped in a fur shawl, Marcello by her side. My son and his wife smiled like seasoned politicians. Enzo and Nico, tiny tuxedos and soda cups in hand, looked like miniature guests of honor.

The reporter said: “A private Moroccan gathering—Vivienne’s grand homecoming. The family behind one of the nation’s largest shipping fortunes.”

I wasn’t there. Not in the frame. Not in the whispers. Not in the applause.

They toasted champagne. I sipped stale coffee.

Then the camera caught it—a single, unbearable moment. Vivienne leaned toward Marcello, whispered something. They laughed. My son laughed too. I didn’t hear the words, but I knew it was about me.

I felt it in my teeth.



Hours passed. Just after midnight, the door opened again. I turned, foolishly hoping it might be my son. It wasn’t.

Vivienne’s heels clicked across the marble as she half-led, half-carried Marcello into the house. He swayed, drunk, tie loose, lips flushed from wine, eyes bleary and glassy.

“Oh, Bianca,” Vivienne said, spotting me by the staircase, like I were some ghost haunting her view. “Didn’t expect you to be awake.”

She guided Marcello down the hall, her arm looped through his, triumphant like a bride on her wedding day. “Antonio and the twins are at my penthouse. Too tired to come back. But Marcello… he doesn’t sleep well in strange beds. Poor thing.”

A lie. I knew it. She came only to shove the truth into my face.

“I told him not to worry,” she continued, voice sweet and mocking. “I’d bring him home. Take care of him. Isn’t that what family does?”

Then she reached into her tote and tossed a plastic container at my feet. It hit the floor with a dull thud.

“Leftovers,” she said with a smirk. “Go ahead, sister-in-law. You look like a sickly twig. Really ought to take better care of yourself. Bet you weigh thirty kilos at most.”

I didn’t move. My fingers curled into tight fists at my sides.

“I’ll put Marcello to bed,” she added, sly, venomous. “I know you two don’t share a room anymore. He told me. Said your side always smells like disappointment.”

One step. Just one. My hand twitched, itching to strike. Slapping her would have felt divine. But what would it change?

And then I saw.

Marcello, drunk, slack, smiling at her like she’d hung the moon. “Vivienne’s so beautiful,” he murmured. “Smells like peaches. Bianca… smells like dishwater and fights.”

They climbed the stairs together. I remained frozen, body trembling. She laughed once more before disappearing down the hall.

And then it hit me—

They hadn’t killed me. They had replaced me.



I waited. Not out of hope. Not out of care. But because I had to see it for myself.

One o’clock. Two. Still nothing. Upstairs lights on, footsteps absent, no doors closing. Only muffled laughter, then silence.

I sat on the couch, robe around me, coffee untouched, the house reeking of lemon cleaner and betrayal.

Maybe she had fallen asleep in the guest room. Maybe…

A thump. Another. Rhythmic. Too… intimate.

My blood ran cold.

I rose, as if pulled forward by invisible hands. Each step up the stairs felt like a prayer. The hallway stretched endlessly, a graveyard of memory. The bedroom door—his bedroom now—was cracked open.

And there they were.

Vivienne, bare, straddling Marcello. Her red nails dug into his chest like claws. Hair wild around her face. Marcello, my husband, my partner of thirty years, grunting beneath her, shameless, animalistic.

My legs gave out. My mouth went dry.

Her moan cut through me. “Oh… Brother-in-law, don’t stop. Ruin me like she never would.”

Marcello groaned, “You’re perfect. Not like her. You’re everything, Lizzy—”

I ran. No tears. Straight to the downstairs bathroom, vomiting until my ribs cramped.

Their voices echoed louder than sirens in my ears.

“Harder—make me forget she ever existed!”

“You were always the one, Lizzy. Always.”

Fifty and forty-five. And still, not an ounce of shame. Not just in-laws. Not just lovers. Conspirators. Twisting the knife together.

I curled on the cold tile floor, knees to chest, shaking in waves I couldn’t stop. It wasn’t about sex. It was about erasure. Replacement.

They hadn’t merely humiliated me. They wanted me to rot in the house I built.

But a woman who survives this? She doesn’t remain on the bathroom floor. She remembers. She plans. She learns to haunt quietly.

I woke before the sun dared peek over the horizon.

No alarm. No call. Only the instinct of a woman conditioned to serve everyone but herself.

No tears. No ache. Just the rhythm of breathing—shallow, hollow, automatic.

I dabbed my face with a damp cloth, swiped on lip balm, tied my hair low. Not attractive. Functional. Just alive enough to pass unnoticed.

Then I reached under the bed.

The red suitcase waited. I dragged it out, unzipped it a few inches. Inside: cash from quiet, unremarkable sales—empanadas, lumpia—money no one asked about. My passport, my maiden name. A photo of me at eighteen, smiling with audacity, unmarked by decades of slow erosion called marriage. I zipped it back up.

Downstairs, the kitchen remained shrouded in darkness. I boiled water, cracked eggs, sliced bread. My hands moved on autopilot. Stir. Season. Flip. Feed.

I was pouring coffee when I heard them—bare feet skimming the hardwood. Her giggle first. Then his laugh.

They entered like a pair on their honeymoon. Vivienne, wearing one of Marcello’s shirts, half-buttoned, legs bare, hair disheveled as if she’d just rolled off him—which she probably had. Marcello looked freshly showered, washed anew by the scent of her.

“Coffee, Bianca,” she purred, stretching like a cat. “Strong for him, half-and-half for me. You know the routine.”

I handed them the mugs without a word.

Marcello didn’t even glance at me. He sipped, then said, “Bacon and omelet, Bianca. Lizzy likes it the way I do. None of that salty mess you used to make. She’s watching her figure—not that it shows, huh?”

Vivienne leaned on the counter, lounging like she owned the house. “Not everyone wants to look like a stick wrapped in misery, sweetie.”

I smiled. Not with warmth. Strategy.

Smile. Just smile. You’ve cooked for enemies before.

I cracked more eggs. Let the oil hiss. Ignored their chatter about the penthouse, the sheets, the sex, the way he snored with her. They complained about the shampoo, discussed him as if I were invisible. I was the maid in their play, not a person.

Then the front door swung open.

“Family’s here!” Antonio’s voice boomed, sitcom-style. “Let the party begin!”

Chiara followed, heels tapping tiles, holding a designer bag as if it were a holy relic. “Mom! Vivienne gave me this! Real leather, Italian! And these earrings! She’s amazing.”

She twirled like a child, oblivious to the closets full of things Antonio already showered on her. Not that he ever bought me a scarf.

Behind them, the twins burst in, chaos incarnate. Enzo indoors, sunglasses on. Nico lugging something bulky wrapped in brown paper.

Chiara’s laughter echoed. “We got the whole penthouse! Slept like royalty! You should’ve seen the tub! Bigger than our bedroom.”

“Oh, and the view,” Antonio added, uncorking wine without asking. “Thirty-sixth floor. Sun hits the windows like a painting. Like—perfection.”

It was nine in the morning.

The boys unveiled their surprise—a giant, glossy family portrait from the Luciana Gala. Aristocratic. Posed like royalty. Vivienne at the center. My sons flanking her. Marcello’s hand on her waist.

I wasn’t in it.

“Look, Grandma!” Nico grinned. “Don’t we look like a real family?”

Enzo added, calm, cruel: “Too bad you weren’t there. Wait—yeah. You were left behind. Too much like our maid.”

The room erupted in laughter. Even Marcello. Even my son. Chiara wiped tears from her eyes, giggling.

Vivienne sipped her coffee, all cheer and venom. “Don’t worry, Bianca. I’ll leave some of my old dresses in your closet. A little tight on me now, but I think you’ll fit.”

Marcello chuckled, not even looking my way. “You can dress a corpse in Versace—it’s still a corpse. Still smells like disappointment.”

Chiara screamed in laughter. The twins clapped like it was a roast battle.

And me? I washed their dirty dishes, one by one. Staring out at the neighbor’s lemon tree, blooming.

They think this is the end. They haven’t seen what I look like when I stop begging to belong.



That night, when the house quieted, the laughter gone, wine drained, I crept into the living room.

There it was again. The portrait. Massive, hung center stage in the sala like a crown jewel. Antonio had staged it with dramatic flair, right above the console table. Impossible to miss. Guests would pause, admire, whisper, “What a happy family.”

A lie. All of it.

I didn’t notice Marcello enter until he was behind me.

“Jealous again?” His voice roughened with boredom. “You stare at it like it’ll cry for you.”

I didn’t answer. There was no point.

He scoffed. “Damn, Bianca. If I could turn back time, I’d leave you in the province. Marry Vivienne from the start. She’s better in every way—classy, smart, knows business, knows when to shut up.”

I turned away, silent.

Then he kicked me.

Right in the knee. I crumpled, falling with a thud I didn’t even gasp at. Cold floor, familiar, merciless.

Tears came unbidden. Not from pain. From hearing him walk away like I didn’t exist.

“Enough drama,” he muttered. “You’re too old for this shit.”

His phone rang.

I could still hear my own ragged breaths as he answered. His tone melted. “Hey, baby,” he said, warm, giddy. “Mmm, missed you already.”

I wiped my face with the edge of my sleeve.

His voice dropped, playful, excited. “Yeah, yeah, I’m packing. Can’t wait to see you in that bikini. This cruise’s gonna be insane. You and me. Open sea.”

I didn’t chase after Marcello.

He walked off, laughing with Vivienne like a schoolboy at prom, whispering into his phone about bikinis and champagne as though I weren’t sprawled on the floor, knees aching, soul half-dissolved.

I rose. My knees protested with sharp creaks. My hand brushed across the tile, smearing pride and dust alike. I moved to the bathroom, closing the door gently, staring into the mirror at a stranger: puffy eyes, flushed cheeks, tangled hair. A woman who had tried to cry underwater and failed.

No funeral, yet the mourning was real.

Not for him. Not for us.

For me.

For the girl who once existed before love stole her name and silence stole her voice.

A moment later, he passed the door. No knock. No check-in. Still on the phone, laughing—then pausing long enough to say, “Pack my things. Business-leisure trip. We leave tomorrow.”

No “please.” No glance. No trace of care.

I nodded. Not that he noticed.

I dried my hands on the crooked towel, then stepped into his room like a servant. Chaos greeted me: suits tangled with polos, shoes buried under heaps of laundry. A grown man living as if he were still sixteen.

I started folding shirts—white linens, navy power suits—and polished his cufflinks with my sleeve.

Then my elbow hit the side table. A folder slipped. I picked it up, expecting tax papers. But inside—cruise tickets.

I blinked.

Read them twice. Fingers tightening around the edges.

Marcello Morocco. Vivienne Morocco. Antonio. Chiara. Enzo. Nico.

My name? Absent.

Not even as a +1. Not even a footnote.

The cruise I had dreamed about… gone.

Vivienne’s birthday in three days? He remembered hers. Mine? Never. Not once. Not ever.

I folded the tickets carefully, as if they could bleed.

Then I packed his bag. Polished shoes, ironed pants. Lined up deodorant and vitamins with the meticulousness of hotel staff.

Antonio barged in, no knock. “Ma, pack my stuff too. Chiara’s busy,” he said, sipping beer. “Don’t forget the twins. Nico wants his charger. Enzo needs the blue swim shorts. Snacks—don’t skimp, they get bored.”

He left, and I packed it all. Tiny shorts, rolled T-shirts, Chiara’s perfume tucked in a sock, snacks in ziplocks labeled with love.

I retreated to my room. Door closed silently.

Sitting on the bed, hands trembling, my mind wandered to the girl I had been at eighteen.

When Marcello wasn’t a man who kicked me in the knee, who left me off cruise lists, who had forgotten my existence.

Back when his words sounded like promises.



Fresh out of school, unsure of my own shadow, I stood before him.

Marcello’s eyes were steady, serious, soft as if I were the only anchor in his chaotic world.

“Bianca,” he said, gripping my hand like it was the only thing holding him upright, “I’ll take care of you. Always. No matter what comes, you’ll never need to worry.”

I smiled, heart so full it ached.

“Even if the world turns against me?” I whispered.

“Especially then,” he promised.



Another memory surfaced: a summer night under a sky full of stars. Limbs tangled, dreams whispered.

“I don’t care about money, power, or any legacy,” Marcello murmured, voice fierce. “You’re my future. You and me. We’ll build something real. Nothing can take it from us.”

I laughed, fearless. “You make me believe in forever.”

He kissed me like he meant it. Forever seemed ours already.

Then came my father.

The man with the crown no one dared touch.

When I told him I loved Marcello—blood not pure, name not right—his face froze into winter.

“Bianca,” he said, steel in his voice, “you’re dead to me. You don’t drag our name into this filth.”

I held my ground, tears burning but voice steady. “I am not your possession.”

He laughed, cruel. “You are my daughter, yes. But no Conti. Marry him if you must, but I will never recognize you. You are dead to me. If you return, I will kill you myself. And I don’t bluff.”

I swallowed. “I love Marcello.”

“You love a shadow. You’ll die in that darkness.”



Thirty years later, Marcello’s true colors shone through every false word, every promise.

The boy who swore forever, who vowed to protect me, was gone.

Replaced by a man who could kick me down and never glance back. A man who booked a cruise for another woman and left me packing silence.

And I sit, realizing how love so loud became a ghost I cannot escape.

I smiled bitterly, picked up the long-forgotten landline, dialed a number untouched for thirty years.

It rang. Once. Twice. Three times.

Then—

“Hello?”

The voice on the other end—his.

Older now. Worn by years, yet beneath it all, that familiar, quiet warmth lingered.

I froze. Words wouldn’t come. My hands gripped the phone as if it could hold me together. Tears slipped down, soft but unstoppable.

“…F-father,” I stammered, my voice breaking. “…Bianca. It’s me.”

The line still warmed my palm when his voice came through. Calm. Worn. The kind of exhaustion that had endured a thousand lonely nights waiting for someone who never came.

“Come home, Bianca,” he said.

“I’ve been waiting for you… twenty years,” he added.

Twenty years. Twenty long years of patient silence. And me—too afraid, too proud, or perhaps simply too broken—to lift the phone in all that time.

My legs threatened to give way, but I steadied myself, letting my weight settle on the edge of the bed. Tears slipped freely, unrestrained.

“I’m coming home,” I murmured, my words barely a breath.

He didn’t say anything more. Just the steady rhythm of his breathing—a lifeline, enough. I hung up before I could even whisper a goodbye.

And then Marcello appeared. A shadow sliding through the ajar door. His eyes cold, sharp, like he could sniff out the truth etched into me—and despised it.

“You saw the tickets,” he said casually, his smirk flat, as if sharing a punchline. “Six spots, Bianca. Me, Vivienne, Antonio, Chiara, the twins. That’s it.”

A lump rose in my throat.

“You intentionally left me out.”

His tone dropped into a smooth, lethal calm. Ice melting into stone.

“When we get back, I’ll get you diamonds. Hawaii. A trip. Don’t worry.”

Like cheap consolation. Like a consolation prize for a life erased. Then he spun on his heel and left, vanishing without so much as a glance. As though I were nothing.

I remained, frozen, staring at the closed door as if it were a coffin sealing away the last fragments of hope.

The next morning, I moved through the motions of the kitchen. Omelets, bacon sizzling, toast browning. The smells sharp, almost mocking.

From the living room, the twins’ laughter cut through the walls, pure, loud, innocent—yet cruel.

“This cruise is the best one yet!” Antonio shouted. “We’re going to have the time of our lives!”

Their voices carried joy that felt like knives in my chest.

Vivienne appeared then, arms loaded with takeout, dumping the bags on the counter with a thud that made the cabinets rattle.

“I don’t like Bianca’s cooking,” she announced, voice sharp and loud enough for every ear. “It’s like biting cardboard, or swallowing salt straight from the shaker. Bland, over-salted, uninspired—just like her.”

The room froze for a second. Then she tossed her head back, eyes glinting with malice.

“You know, family dinners used to mean something. Now? Just a reminder of how pathetic some people are. Bianca tries—bless her—but you can’t polish a cracked stone.”

The twins giggled, Antonio cutting in:

“Yeah, Mum. Why even bother pretending to care? You make food like you’re punishing us. Like you’re waiting for the second we leave to be alone with your failures.”

Chiara’s grin was sharp, cutting. “It’s sad, really. Every burnt edge, every dry bite—it’s a protest. But we see right through it.”

Vivienne picked up a bag with exaggerated care, tearing it open. “Eat, family. This is food for those who matter. We leave in an hour.”

Their eyes flicked over me as if I were an unspoken secret they shared with amusement.

They dug in ravenously, piling plates high, calling for drinks, for snacks, stacking their wants and needs, oblivious to my presence.

“Get me water.”

“Pass the salt.”

“More napkins.”

Invisible, I retreated to the background, swallowing bitterness that threatened to choke me.

Before they left, Marcello’s voice cut through the room like a whip.

“Where’s my wallet?”

He spun, eyes sharp, accusatory. “You’re hiding it. I can tell. That’s what you do—hide. From duty, from respect, from life itself. Useless, jealous little nobody.”

I shook my head, silent.

He didn’t wait. His hand struck my face. Hard. Pain and humiliation collided as blood filled my mouth.

I collapsed, the floor cold beneath me, steady, unyielding. My vision blurred, and Vivienne gasped, syrupy sweet, feigning innocence:

“Oh! Sorry, brother-in-law. Must have grabbed your wallet by mistake while digging through my earrings. You know how clumsy I am.”

She revealed it with a smirk that only I noticed, a trap designed to diminish me in front of everyone.

The family packed their bags with laughter, joy, and false cheer.

“Don’t worry, Mum. I’ll bring a fridge magnet,” Antonio said, feigning generosity.

“And a keychain,” Chiara added.

“Dirty laundry, Grandma!” the twins yelled, tongues sticking out.

Their words cut, soft but piercing.

The door slammed. Silence fell.

I didn’t linger. I didn’t cry. I went straight to my room, knees aching, and pulled the old suitcase from beneath the bed. Zipped it. Left the rest behind.

A cab carried me straight to the airport.

Then my phone buzzed. Marcello.

Guard the house while we’re gone. A week. Don’t break anything.

Another message arrived immediately.

Sorry I slapped you. But you provoked me. Always jealous, always ruining things.

I stared. His hands silenced me, now his words tried to rewrite history. Still my fault.

I smiled—not joyfully, but clearly.

Blocked. Deleted. Gone.

Phone pocketed, I boarded the plane. Didn’t look back.

I was done guarding a house that never was a home.

I was going back to the only place that ever truly was.

Home.

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By cocoxs