A Mafia Boss Tested Four Women With Black Cards. One Maid Broke Him-rosocute

Drake Salvat believed every soul had a price.

He did not believe that because he was born cruel.

He believed it because the city had taught him early, and the city was a patient teacher.

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When Drake was sixteen, he watched a councilman cry in the back room of a restaurant while accepting an envelope that would save his career.

When Drake was twenty-two, he learned that a grieving widow could be forced to sign away a building if the debt around her neck was tightened slowly enough.

When he was thirty, men who once spit at his name began waiting outside his office with gifts, apologies, and daughters they wanted protected.

Money did not change people, Drake decided.

It only translated them.

By the time he owned the penthouse on the fortieth floor, he had built an empire out of translation.

Threats became contracts.

Fear became loyalty.

Blood became influence.

From above, the city looked clean under rain.

The streets became ribbons of silver, the rooftops dark squares of glass, the headlights tiny moving stars between towers.

From the fortieth floor, nobody could smell the alleys.

Nobody could hear the men begging in parking garages.

Nobody could see the envelopes being passed beneath linen tables at charity dinners where everyone pretended the flowers were paid for with honest money.

Drake saw all of it.

He had arranged some of it.

He had survived the rest.

The office where he held his private meeting had marble floors, black leather chairs, and windows tall enough to make people feel small without understanding why.

The room smelled of espresso, rain, polished wood, and the faint bite of the whiskey he poured when he wanted others to think he was relaxed.

On the evening he brought the four women there, the storm moved down the glass in thin silver lines.

Niko stood by the door before anyone arrived.

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