The Madonna Ledger That Made a Crime Boss Go Silent in the Ballroom-rosocute

I went to the Viscardi gala because my boss had a fever and the selfish cheerfulness of an old man who no longer feared rich people.

He told me to smile, Adriana, because patrons trusted a young restorer who looked grateful for the privilege of being ignored.

I did not smile.

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I stood near the 16th-century Madonna panel I had restored, pretending to study the gold leaf halo while the ballroom glittered around me like heaven had accepted sponsorships.

Then the waitress dropped the tray.

The glass shattered bright against the marble, and everyone moved away from her as if shame could stain their shoes.

She reached for the broken stem too fast, and the edge sliced across her palm.

I knelt before sense could stop me, wrapped my clean napkin around her hand, and pressed until the blood slowed.

That was the first time Dante Salvatore noticed me.

He stood near the bar in a black suit and open collar, clicking a silver lighter without lighting it.

The room watched him the way deer watch a tree line.

When his voice came over my shoulder, it was calm enough to frighten me.

“Bring her.”

I kept my hand around the waitress’s palm and said she needed help before I did.

Someone near us inhaled like I had slapped a king.

Dante crouched in front of me, expensive wool settling into marble dust, and asked my name.

“Adriana Bellini,” I said, and something moved through his face too fast for me to understand.

An hour later, I was in the back of his car with my phone gone and the lake road swallowing the city lights behind us.

He called me Mercy before he called me prisoner.

At his house, the doors were heavy enough to tell the truth.

They locked from the outside.

Gianni, his driver, brought breakfast and announced I was not a captive, only a very exclusive guest with perimeter restrictions.

I might have laughed if I had not been terrified.

Dante came in before the coffee cooled and told me my last name had opened a door he had been trying to force for three years.

My father, Marco Bellini, had died in a warehouse fire two years earlier.

The papers called it bad wiring and a drunk guard.

Dante called it murder.

He said Vittorio Caruso had hidden laundering routes inside antique frames, and my father had been useful until he became inconvenient.

I hated the word useful almost as much as I hated the way my hands shook.

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