The Shy Maid Who Passed a Mafia Boss’s Cruelest Loyalty Test-myhoa

The Ricci house did not wake up like normal houses did.

It did not creak gently in the morning or smell like coffee and toast.

It held its breath.

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Anna Reynolds learned that before sunrise on her first day, when the gates rolled open and her hired car eased up the long driveway with its headlights dragging across wet stone.

The air outside smelled like rain, cut grass, and cold metal.

Inside, the marble floors gave back every small sound she made.

Her shoes clicked once, and the echo traveled farther than it should have.

A narrow security camera watched from the corner of the ceiling.

Another sat above the staircase, so small it could have been mistaken for a screw head.

Anna noticed both because noticing was part of her job.

Not the maid job.

The other one.

On her employment papers, she was Anna Reynolds, twenty-four, temporary domestic staff, available for live-in work, references checked, family need urgent.

In the file locked two counties away, she was Agent Reynolds, assigned undercover support in the Ricci investigation, briefed for three months, warned not to mistake charm for mercy.

The Bureau had called Matteo Ricci dangerous.

The newspapers called him untouchable.

Men who worked near the docks lowered their voices when his name came up.

Women in the staff hallway lowered theirs even more.

Anna had accepted the assignment because her father’s hospital bills had become a second heartbeat in her life.

Every envelope that came in the mail sounded like a threat.

Every call from county hospital made her stomach drop.

Her father had been a police detective for thirty-one years, the kind of man who taught her to check locks, never leave her drink unattended, and tell the truth even when it cost her.

Now he could barely grip a paper coffee cup without his hand shaking.

Agent Davis had told her the assignment came with hazard pay, medical support, and a chance to bring down a man people were too afraid to name.

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