A Waitress Dropped The Mob Boss Who Came Looking For Her Brother-eirian

Lily was still holding the tray when I saw her hands begin to shake.

Three bottles of scotch clicked together in a rhythm that sounded too much like teeth.

Mr. Henderson kept wiping his forehead with the same damp handkerchief, watching the oak doors at the back of O’Connor’s like they might open by themselves and swallow him.

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“VIP room wants the blonde one,” he whispered.

Lily looked at me.

She was nineteen, new to the city, and young enough to believe a manager would protect her if a customer crossed a line.

I knew better.

Behind those doors sat Victor Rossi.

He was not old-school theater.

No fedora, no cigar staged for photographs, no loud threats for witnesses.

He was thirty-two, quiet, rich, and feared by people who feared almost nothing.

I took the tray from Lily.

“Go clean the espresso machine.”

Henderson caught my wrist.

“Harper, don’t.”

I looked at his hand until he released me.

“I’m already walking.”

The VIP room smelled like money, tobacco, and the kind of silence men buy when they do not want anyone repeating what they say.

Four bodyguards sat in a half-circle.

Victor sat in the center with a glass of whiskey in one hand and no expression worth trusting.

He looked past me.

“You’re not the girl I asked for.”

“She is busy.”

Rocco, the biggest of his men, stood as if his size had always been enough to win arguments.

“Boss asked for the other one.”

I set the bottles down.

“This is a restaurant.”

Victor’s gaze sharpened.

“You talk like you have a second life.”

I did.

Four years in military police.

Two years teaching Krav Maga to men who laughed until they hit the mat.

One lifetime of keeping my little brother Tommy alive after foster homes taught us nobody was coming.

I did not tell Victor any of that.

I only said, “I talk like someone who brought your scotch.”

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