The Server Who Calmed A Crime Boss’s Dog And Broke His Empire-rosocute

The silver tray bit into my palms the first night I walked into Dominic Castellano’s dining room.

Six champagne flutes trembled on the polished surface, and I kept my eyes low because temporary servers were paid to move like furniture.

The house was not really a house.

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It was marble, chandeliers, oil paintings, private security, and the kind of silence money buys when everyone nearby is afraid to speak too loudly.

I had been an animal behaviorist until the rescue shelter lost its funding.

Six months later, I was wearing discount flats three sizes too narrow and pretending the ache in my feet did not matter.

The men at table three spoke in low voices about shipments, territory, and problems that needed handling.

I understood dogs better than people, but even I knew that kind of conversation meant danger.

Then the growl came from the corridor.

It was deep, rough, and close enough to make one guard curse under his breath.

A massive blue-nosed pit bull rounded the corner with his teeth showing and his body stiff with terror.

Someone shouted his name.

Zeus.

The guards backed away like he was a loaded weapon.

I saw something else.

His ears were pinned, his tail was low, and his breathing came too fast.

That was not confidence.

That was panic wearing teeth.

One guard reached toward his belt, and my body moved before my fear caught up.

I set the tray down, lowered myself onto the marble, turned my shoulder to the dog, and made myself small.

“Hey, buddy,” I whispered.

Zeus froze.

I kept my hand low and still, palm down, not reaching, not demanding.

“I see you,” I said softly.

The whole room held its breath.

Zeus took one step.

Then another.

His nose touched my knuckles, warm and damp, and I felt the first tiny crack in his fear.

I did not pet him yet.

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