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My Enemy's Ring

Thelma_Igbinoba
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Synopsis
Odette Moretti grows up in a household where daughters worth less than furniture, she is sold off by her selfish father to a man she has never met, what will happen to her in this new place? What will her future husband be like? Will she ever be able to find true love? Find out now by reading My Enemy's Ring
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Chapter 1 - A Broken House

Odette Moretti had learned early in life that her father's

love was not something freely given—it was earned,

bargained for, and often denied.

Leonardo Moretti had grown up in a small Italian

household where strength was measured not in wealth

but in sons. His own father, a stern man with a booming

voice, used to tell him: "A man without a son is like a

tree without roots. Useless. Doomed to fall." Those

words stuck like a curse in his mind. By the time

Leonardo was a young man, he had already decided what

mattered most: to carry the Moretti name forward

through his sons.

But life, it seemed, had other plans.

His first wife, Isabella, gave him not the strong heirs he

craved, but two daughters—Sophia and Odette. To

Leonardo, they were a disappointment wrapped in

swaddling cloths. He never looked at them with pride,

only with the gnawing shame of failure. He convinced

himself they were curses, proof that his bloodline was

weak.

And so, when Odette was barely two years old,

Leonardo took another wife. This time, fortune 6

"favoured" him. The second wife bore him a son, Luca

and died not long after childbirth. To Leonardo, it was

not tragedy but vindication: a son had been given to him,

no matter the cost. From then on, Luca became his

shining jewel, and the daughters were nothing more than

shadows.

Odette grew up watching this division take root in her

home.

She grew up in a house where fear lived in every corner.

Her father believed that daughters were a curse. He said

it often, sneering as though spitting poison: "Girls are

born to serve, nothing more. Boys carry the family's

blood. Boys are worth raising. Girls…" His gaze would

drift toward Odette and her sister, Sophia. "…are

burdens."

His pride was Luca, his only son. Luca was pampered

since birth, handed the things Odette and Sophia never

dared dream of. While they walked to the public school

in uniforms that were already faded and frayed, Luca

stayed at home with nannies who tended to his every

whim. He never lacked new toys, fine clothes, or tutors

who praised his smallest achievements.

The girls were never meant to see a classroom. Their

father had nearly forbidden it. He had snarled at their

mother, "Why waste money on them? What good will it

do? Books don't make wives better in the kitchen."

It was only their mother's relentless begging—days of

pleading, nights of crying—that won them the smallest

victory. Public school, and nothing more. No extra

lessons, no support, no care. Just the bare minimum,

allowed only because Leonardo feared the neighbours

would talk if he denied his daughters even that.

But school was only a sliver of light in a life otherwise

painted with shadows.

Leonardo's cruelty began with their mother, Isabella.

Odette would watch in silence as her mother endured his

anger. If dinner wasn't hot enough, he would slam his

fist onto the table and throw the plate to the ground,

shattering porcelain across the kitchen tiles. If Isabella

dared to speak back, his open hand would meet her face,

sharp and merciless, leaving her with swollen lips and

bruises hidden beneath scarves. Some nights, Odette

would wake to muffled sobs and the sound of blows

behind the bedroom door.

As they grew older, the cruelty spread to the daughters.

Sophia was the first to taste it. Bold and defiant as a

child, she once stood in front of her mother when

Leonardo raised his hand. For her courage, she was

struck down, slapped so hard she fell to the floor. After

that, her spirit dimmed. She spoke less, avoided eye

contact, and learned the dangerous art of silence.

Odette, however, could not always silence herself.

She remembered one evening vividly—Luca, only a year

younger than her, puffed his chest and mimicked his

father's disdain. He shoved her hard against the wall,

calling her "worthless, like all girls." Tired of being

treated as nothing, Odette struck back, slapping him

across the cheek.

For a brief moment, she felt a surge of pride.

But it did not last.

When Leonardo learned of it, his rage was like a storm.

He dragged Odette by the wrist into the living room,

shouting loud enough for the neighbours to hear, and

beat her with his belt until her back was raw with red

welts. His blows were not careless—they were

deliberate, each one meant to break her spirit.

But worse than the pain was what came after.

He shoved her into a small, windowless storage room at

the back of the house. Dust and cobwebs clung to the air,

the floor was cold stone, and the walls pressed in like a

coffin.

"No food. No water," he growled as he locked the door.

"You'll stay until you learn to kneel before your betters."

The darkness was endless. Hunger twisted her stomach

until she thought it would devour her from the inside.

Thirst burned her throat, every swallow sharp and dry.

Days bled into each other—how many, she never knew.

Sometimes she screamed, her fists pounding against the

door until they bled. Sometimes she whispered to

herself, her voice trembling in the silence.

When the door finally opened, she stumbled out—thin,

pale, trembling. Her lips cracked, her eyes hollow. But

inside, something had changed. Leonardo expected her

to crawl, to beg, to submit. Instead, the fire in her had

grown fiercer

He saw it too. That night, he leaned close to her ear, his

breath sharp with wine.

"You tell anyone," he hissed, "and I'll pull you out of

school. One word, and you'll never set foot in a

classroom again."

The threat carved itself into her heart. School was her

only escape, the only place where she could pretend—

even for a little while—that she was not trapped in his

house. To lose it would be worse than any beating.

But as she lay awake that night, staring at the cracks in

the ceiling, she made herself a promise. One day, she

would leave. She would never let him cage her again.

Every bruise, every scar, every punishment.

Leonardo thought he was breaking his daughter. But he

was only forging her into something stronger