The moon hung low over the rolling hills of Tuscany, a sliver of silver casting long shadows across the crumbling villa that had been Ella De Moretti's prison for as long as she could remember. It was just past midnight, the air thick with the scent of olive groves and impending rain, when she made her decision. No more waiting. No more whispered promises to herself that tomorrow would be different. Tonight, the chains that bound her shattered.Ella's hands trembled as she stuffed the last of her meager belongings into a worn backpack—a faded photograph of a woman she barely remembered, her mother's locket clutched tight against her chest, and a handful of crumpled euros she'd scrimped from odd jobs in the village. The house was silent, save for the distant creak of the old wooden beams settling into the night. Her adoptive father, Marco, snored heavily from his room down the hall, the bottle of grappa he'd drained earlier ensuring his slumber was deep and unforgiving. Upstairs, her adoptive mother, Isabella, and her sister, Sofia, slept in their lavish beds, oblivious to the storm brewing in the shadows.She'd endured it all for twenty-two years. Marco's belt, wielded like a scepter of disdain, marking her as the unwanted outsider. Isabella's sharp tongue, slicing through her with reminders that Ella was nothing but a charity case, a burden foisted upon them after some forgotten accident. And Sofia—beautiful, venomous Sofia—with her sly smiles and deliberate cruelties, stealing clothes, spreading lies to the villagers, ensuring Ella remained the invisible girl in a home that echoed with rejection. "You're not one of us," Sofia would hiss, her eyes gleaming with the thrill of dominance. "You'll never be."But Ella had learned to survive in silence, her soft brown eyes hiding a quiet resilience she didn't yet understand. She was innocent, yes—sweet in the way wildflowers pushed through cracked stone—but beneath it all simmered something fiercer, a fire waiting for the right spark.Slipping into the hallway, her bare feet silent on the cold tile, Ella paused at the front door. Her heart pounded like a war drum, each beat urging her forward. She turned the knob slowly, wincing at the faint click that seemed to echo through the house. The night air rushed in, cool and liberating, carrying the whisper of freedom. She stepped out, pulling the door shut behind her with a finality that made her knees weak.The gravel path crunched softly under her simple sneakers as she hurried toward the wrought-iron gate. Beyond it lay the winding road to the nearest town, a place she'd only glimpsed from the villa's barred windows. No car, no plan—just the stars above and the ache in her chest that screamed she couldn't go back. Rain began to fall in light patters, soaking her thin sweater, but she didn't care. It washed away the tears she hadn't realized were falling.As she pushed the gate open, a rustle in the bushes made her freeze. Her breath caught, visions of Marco's rage flashing before her eyes. But it was only the wind, teasing the leaves. Ella forced a shaky laugh, more breath than sound, and stepped onto the road. The villa receded behind her, its silhouette fading into the darkness like a bad dream.For the first time in her life, Ella De Moretti was truly alone—and utterly free. She didn't know what lay ahead, only that whatever it was, it couldn't be worse than the hell she'd left behind. With the night as her ally, she ran toward the unknown, her heart alight with a fragile hope she dared to call her own.