The Maid At Pier 42 Who Made A Mafia King Choose Love Over Blood-eirian

The first time I entered the Moretti estate, I was on my knees with a bucket, a sponge, and a pair of rubber gloves that already smelled like bleach.

Nobody looked at me twice unless I was in the way.

That was the point of a cleaning woman.

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You became part of the floor.

My mother was sick enough that every hospital bill felt like a hand around my throat, so I took every shift Elite Cleanse offered.

When they sent me to the Hamptons estate of Lorenzo Moretti, the other maids crossed themselves and told me to keep my head down.

Lorenzo was not only rich.

He was feared.

The kind of man people whispered about in kitchens, elevators, and back staircases.

They said he bought companies in the morning and buried enemies by dinner.

But the person everyone in that house feared most was two years old.

Leo Moretti had burned through nannies like matches.

He bit one.

He split another’s lip with a toy truck.

The twenty-first nanny was a London specialist with perfect posture and a folder full of certificates.

She lasted less than an hour.

I was scrubbing baseboards outside the nursery when the door flew open and she stumbled out bleeding from the nose.

She yelled that the child was possessed and ran for the stairs.

Inside, Leo was not possessed.

He was panicking.

The nursery looked like a toy store after a storm, but in the middle of it sat a little boy with black curls, red cheeks, and eyes too frightened for a child that young.

I knew that sound.

I had heard it from my brothers after our father left and our mother worked nights until her feet swelled.

So I stepped inside.

Leo lifted a toy car like he was ready to throw it at my face.

I lowered myself to the rug, kept my hands visible, and told him if he hit my belly I might bounce right out the window.

He blinked.

Then I hummed the old song my grandmother used to sing when rent was late and dinner was thin.

The car dropped from his hand.

He walked to me, poked my stomach, giggled once, and threw both arms around my neck.

That was how Lorenzo found us.

He stood in the doorway in a charcoal suit, watching his son cling to a maid with a stained apron.

For a moment he looked less like a king and more like a starving man who had just seen food.

He asked my name.

I told him Beatrice Jenkins, though most people called me Bea.

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