The Hospital Bracelet Revealed Why the Mafia Boss Brought Her to My Birthday-thuyhien

The evidence bag made a thin plastic crackle against my workbench.

Inside it, my wedding ring looked smaller than it had on my hand.

Less sacred.

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More dangerous.

Maso Greco stood with his shoulders blocking half the doorway, the pastry boxes forgotten beside the sink. Dr. Leah Ferraro did not sit. She kept one hand on her medical bag and one hand wrapped around the strap of her coat, as if she had walked into my father’s old apartment carrying something heavier than medicine.

The hospital bracelet lay beside the ring.

Camila Marino. Age 23. Discharged 6:19 p.m.

I touched neither object.

My fingers still smelled faintly of metal dust and cold water. The apartment was too bright in the thin morning light, showing every crack in the porcelain sink, every scratch my father had left in the wooden bench, every place grief had tried to make a home in me overnight.

“She wasn’t his mistress,” Leah said again.

Maso looked at the floor.

That told me more than his mouth would have.

I picked up my jeweler’s loupe and leaned over the evidence bag. My wedding ring had a nick near the inner band that had not been there before. Small. Deliberate. A pressure mark from pliers.

Someone had tried to open it.

My father had made that ring from old Romano gold, but he had added one private detail for me: a hairline seam beneath the engraved date. A secret compartment no wider than a match head. A sentimental trick, he called it. A place for a widow to hide a prayer.

Only three people knew it existed.

My father.

Me.

Alessandro.

I looked at Maso.

“Who sealed this?”

“Not police,” he said. “Me.”

Leah’s mouth tightened.

“Maso.”

“She deserves the truth before the men in that house decide which version survives,” he said.

The radiator hissed behind me. Outside, a delivery truck rattled past, and glass chimed softly in the shop below. The smell of espresso from Maso’s paper tray had turned bitter.

I opened the tool roll and selected my thinnest blade.

Leah stepped forward. “Adriana, don’t contaminate—”

“It was mine before it was evidence.”

No one argued.

I cut the seal cleanly along the edge, removed the ring with tweezers, and placed it on a square of black velvet. The gold still held the faint warmth of a room I had walked out of. I slid the blade into the seam and pressed.

A tiny click snapped through the apartment.

The ring opened.

Inside was not a prayer.

It was a folded strip of medical label, trimmed so small I needed the loupe to read it.

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