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Page 1 of Sinful Obsession (Broken Vows #3)

CHARLOTTE

It’s been four months since I left Cassian, my ex husband.

Four months since I abandoned a life soaked in blood, betrayal, and secrets no one should ever have to keep.

I came to Atlanta with nothing but a single suitcase and scars I couldn’t name. I’d been drowning in panic attacks, body image trauma, and a darkness that had made me question if I even wanted to live. But I wanted to try. To rebuild.

That’s why I enrolled in an Intensive Outpatient Program—IOP.

Four days a week. Group therapy in the mornings. Individual counseling in the afternoons. Breathing exercises. EMDR. Even music therapy.

The therapists didn’t flinch when I said things like, I don’t like to look in mirrors or I wake up not remembering what’s real.

They didn’t pity me. They listened. And that helped.

Still, I kept to myself. No new friends. No shared details. No risks. The last time I let people in, they broke me.

I hadn’t cut myself since I started attending therapy, haven’t woken in the night with screams trapped in my throat.

Cassian had respected my decision to leave—or so I thought.

Giving me space was the one thing I never expected from him. But he did.

No phone calls. No surprise visits. Just... silence.

And yet... I knew I was being watched.

The first time, it was footsteps by my window late at night.

Too heavy to be a cat. Too deliberate to be an accident.

The second time, I walked out of my building and found a single red rose laid across the hood of my car. No note. No name. Just the flower—its petals already starting to wilt.

The third time, I returned from IOP to find my apartment door locked... but the window cracked open, just enough to let in a breeze. And the frame smelled like a cologne I hadn’t smelled in months.

I reported it to the local police, of course.

They said they’d look into it. Nothing changed.

And at some point, I stopped caring.

If whoever was stalking me wanted to hurt me, they would’ve done it by now.

If they wanted something, they’d have demanded it.

Instead, they just... watched. Like they were waiting for something. Or someone.

I told myself it couldn’t be Cassian—he’d sworn to give me space, to let me heal. His word was iron, even if his love was a cage.

I stood in front of my vanity that morning, fastening the breast pad under my sweater

I had class.

I stepped into my car and merged onto the road toward the IOP facility.

The radio played a soft indie tune, and I hummed along, swaying slightly, trying to shake the unease.

In my rearview mirror, I caught it again—the black Jeep, three cars back, trailing just close enough to be noticed... but not close enough to cause alarm.

It had been behind me for weeks now. Not always the same driver. But always the same pattern.

My pulse quickened, but I forced myself to breathe. It’s nothing, I told myself, gripping the wheel tighter.

I kept driving.

But the Jeep stayed with me, a predator pacing its prey, until the road curved and a massive trailer truck roared into view, swerving erratically across the lanes.

Panic surged, my foot slamming the brake as I yanked the wheel to the right, tires screeching as I veered onto the shoulder.

The trailer’s horn blared, a deafening wail, but my car hit a patch of loose gravel, and the world tilted.

The sedan spun, metal groaning, and plunged off the highway, tumbling down the embankment.

My body slammed against the seatbelt, pain exploding in my shoulder as my head cracked against the window, a sharp sting blooming across my scalp.

Glass shattered, the dashboard lights flickered, and my ribs screamed with each jolt as the car rolled, debris cutting into my arms, blood trickling warm down my temple.

The world spun—a kaleidoscope of pain and metal—until it stopped, the car landing on its side with a sickening crunch.

Darkness swallowed me.

When I opened my eyes, the world felt... wrong.

Too quiet.

I sat up slowly, my head pounding like someone had cracked my skull open and poorly stitched it back together. This wasn’t a hospital. I was on a dusty, sun-faded bed, the scent of mothballs and old wood thick in the air.

I blinked, disoriented, my gaze sweeping the room—faded wallpaper, a creaky rocking chair, a cracked mirror in the corner.

This was my grandfather’s house, tucked away in the woods. The one in upstate New York.

But how? My memories were a fog, fragmented and slippery, like trying to hold water in my hands..

How did I get here?

I scanned the room. This had to be a dream.

My hands trembled in my lap, and that’s when I noticed it—blood. Dried and flaking beneath my fingernails, smeared across my palms like the aftermath of something I couldn’t remember. My breath hitched.

Then I saw the ring.

It sat snug on my left ring finger. Gold, unfamiliar, too tight. Heavy in a way that felt more than physical. I blinked at it, heart pounding, as confusion twisted in my gut.

I wrapped my fingers around it and tugged, twisting and pulling, spit slicking my skin as I tried to force it off. Nothing. It wouldn’t move. It clung to me like it belonged there.

Panic bubbled up, thick and cold in my chest.

The blood. The ring.

What the hell happened to me?

Whose blood was on my hands? And why was I wearing a wedding ring I couldn’t remember putting on?

And then his voice rang in my ears—like an echo from the past.

“ Marry into the Moretti family, Charlotte.”

I blinked. That was the last thing my grandfather said to me before he died.

But why?

Why the Morettis—the most dangerous mafia family in New York?

I’d promised, not understanding why he’d tie me to the city’s most ruthless mafia family, their name synonymous with blood and power.

The rumors swirled in my mind—whispers of murders, betrayals. But that was years ago. Or was it?

I fumbled for my phone, always tucked beneath my pillow, but my fingers found only sheets.

Panic crept in like smoke under a locked door as I shuffled barefoot to the living room. There, on the old oak table, sat Grandfather’s ancient cellular phone, its screen glowing faintly.

I tapped it, my heart lurching as the date flashed: December 1, 2027 . I froze, my breath catching.

My breath hitched.

No. That couldn’t be right.

I tapped the screen. It resisted, then opened the calendar app.

The date held firm: 2027.

Three entire years—gone. Slipped through my memory like sand through cupped hands.

My chest tightened.

I can still feel the moment Grandfather’s hand went cold in mine—the hospital bed, the sterile air thick with antiseptic, the machines falling silent one by one. His funeral came soon after.

That was in the first quarter of 2024..

Wasn’t it?

The contradiction clawed at me, my thoughts a jumble of half-remembered moments.

My childhood came in flashes—laughter, my mother’s braids, my father’s cold disdain—but the past three years were a void, a black hole swallowing everything.

Had I lost my memory? Been reborn? The thought sent a shiver through me, my shoulder throbbing in protest.

I pushed off the bed and stumbled toward the door, my legs shaky beneath me, one hand dragging along the wall for balance.

When I finally stepped outside, the sunlight hit me like a slap. I blinked against it, disoriented, and took a few steps forward. The gravel path stretched out ahead, familiar yet foreign.

Grandfather’s cabin sat in isolation, swallowed by a sea of towering pines. The silence was unnerving. The nearest neighbors were over a mile away.

I kept walking, unsure what I was looking for.

Proof I was awake? That time hadn’t cracked in half beneath me?

Finally, I spotted someone—a woman in her fifties, gray hair pulled into a loose knot, tending to a frostbitten garden near the tree line. She looked up as I approached, blinking in the morning sun.

“Excuse me,” I called out. “Ma’am? What’s today’s date?”

She gave me a strange look but answered kindly, “It’s the first of December, dear. 2027.”

The breath caught in my throat.

Not possible.

Not unless I’d somehow lost three years of my life.

I backed away slowly. My stomach turned.

What the hell happened to me?

I couldn’t piece together how I’d ended up here.

I trudged back to the cabin, the loneliness of the woods pressing against me, the house looming like a ghost.

In the kitchen, still cluttered with Grandfather’s old pots and mismatched mugs, I made a quick meal—grilled cheese, the bread slightly stale, the butter sharp on my tongue.

I ate alone at the scarred table, my mind racing.

I needed a doctor. A scan. Something to explain the blank spaces in my head and why I’d woken up three years too late.

But Grandfather’s words echoed louder, insistent: Marry into the Moretti family.

I had questions.

Too many.

But one pulsed louder than the rest:

Why did my grandfather want me to marry a Moretti?

The spoon slipped from my fingers again. Clattered against the plate.

I stared at it. Hands trembling.

I wasn’t hungry anymore.

So I stood up and pushed into his bedroom, the door creaking on rusted hinges. The room was a shrine to his absence—dust motes dancing in the slanted light, his flannel shirts still hanging in the closet.

The space felt alive with his ghost, every corner heavy with an eerie stillness that made my skin prickle.

Why had he wanted me to marry into a family that thrived on blood? Grandfather never acted without reason, his every choice a calculated step. There was something he knew, something hidden in the shadows of the Moretti name.

The weighty oak door moaned as I shoved it fully ajar, and immediately, the scent hit me. A mix of old paper, mildew, and the faintest hint of cigar smoke—remnants of a man who once ruled a city, now reduced to silence and moth-bitten curtains.

I paused, chest tight, the floor groaning beneath my feet like it resented the intrusion.

This used to be his sanctuary.

Now it felt like a grave.