Pregnant Waitress Marries A Mob Boss To Survive One Rainy Night-eirian

Gavin Kelly had built his life on never reacting first.

Fear was for men who owed money.

Love was for men who could afford to lose.

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He had believed both things until a broke pregnant waitress looked at him from behind a diner counter with rain on the windows and a bruise blooming around her wrist.

By the time he carried Caitlin Scott out of Cooper University Hospital, the old rules were already dead.

The photo in his pocket felt heavier than the gun under his jacket.

Tommy’s tattoo had not been a random piece of street ink.

It was a black serpent wrapped around a dagger, the mark Matteo Bianchi used for runners who moved cash through laundromats, nightclubs, and pawn shops from South Philly to Brooklyn.

Tommy had been one of them.

Tommy had also been dead for eight weeks.

Gavin did not tell Caitlin that part until the SUV was already crossing the bridge and the hospital lights were gone behind them.

She sat beside him with both hands around her belly, staring at the passing rain as if the city itself had turned its face away from her.

When he said Tommy was dead, she made a sound so small it cut him worse than a scream.

She had not loved Tommy anymore.

That did not make the news gentle.

She had once eaten cheap noodles with that man, waited for his calls, folded his shirts, and believed him when he promised he would be better before the baby came.

Now Gavin was telling her that the father of her child had belonged to a rival crime family, had stolen from them, and had left her carrying the only living tie to a missing fortune.

Caitlin turned toward him slowly.

She asked if he married her because he knew.

Gavin could have lied.

He was good at lying.

He had lied to federal agents, judges, bankers, cousins, enemies, and priests who thought confession meant power over a man.

But Caitlin’s face was too pale under the passing headlights, and the baby moved beneath her palms.

He told her no.

He had married her because he needed an alibi, because she needed safety, and because he was arrogant enough to think a contract could stay a contract.

Her eyes filled, but she did not cry.

That hurt him more.

At the Cherry Hill house, Gavin’s men moved like a storm with training.

Two black SUVs took the curb.

One guard replaced the mailman before the mailman knew he had been replaced.

Another swept the nursery Caitlin had started decorating with thrift-store books and a small yellow lamp.

Caitlin stood in the foyer while men checked closets, vents, window locks, and the crawl space beneath the stairs.

It was the first time the beautiful house looked like what it had always been.

A cage with expensive trim.

Gavin saw her understand that and hated himself for every polished floorboard.

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