The Invisible Cleaner Who Became A Mafia Boss’s Last Line Of Defense-eirian

The first thing Beatrice Gallagher noticed was the smell.

The smell came first, sharp and metallic under the bleach water in her mop bucket, and it told her she had opened a door that would never close again.

She stood in the private office of the Velvet Room, a nightclub where wealthy Chicago men bought privacy by the hour, and stared at a dead man on a plastic sheet.

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Lorenzo Costa looked up from the body with the stillness of a carved saint.

His charcoal suit was perfect.

His face was calm.

His gun was still warm.

Behind him, two guards moved at once, and one of them lifted a pistol toward Beatrice’s chest.

“No witnesses,” Leo said.

Beatrice could not even run.

Her legs were shaking too hard, and the uniform they made her wear was too tight around her stomach, and terror had turned her breath into little broken sounds.

She covered her face with both hands and waited for the end.

It did not come.

“Wait,” Lorenzo said.

The room obeyed him.

He walked toward her through the spilled bleach water and studied her like a problem he had not expected to find.

Beatrice knew that look.

People had looked at her that way her whole life, as if her body made her less dangerous, less human, less everything.

“What is your name?” Lorenzo asked.

“Beatrice,” she whispered.

She told him she had not seen anything.

She told him she was nobody.

That was the only card she had.

Lorenzo watched the tears run down her cheeks and made the strangest decision of his life.

He spared her.

He told Leo she was not a threat.

He said she was a ghost, and ghosts did not testify.

Then he ordered his men to take her to the Costa estate before anyone else decided to solve the problem with a bullet.

By morning, Beatrice’s old apartment, old schedule, and old name tag were gone.

The estate outside Chicago was not a house.

It was a fortress with iron gates, cameras in the trees, and men at every entrance who spoke in short sentences and never smiled.

They put her in a guest room in the east wing and told her she did not leave the grounds.

Lorenzo said it was protection.

Beatrice understood it was also a cage.

For the first three weeks, she lived softly and carefully, the way people live around sealed doors and loaded guns.

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