A Mafia Billionaire Bought a Painting and Found His Dead Love Alive-olive

“Can You Buy This Painting?” Billionaire Mafia froze because He Thought the Woman in the Painting Was Dead—Until Three Starving Triplets Asked Him to Save Their Mother

Dante Russo had spent seven years teaching himself not to look for Elena Ward in crowds.

He had trained his eyes away from dark-blond hair at restaurant windows.

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He had stopped turning when a woman laughed behind him in a grocery aisle.

He had learned that grief, when it stays long enough, becomes a second profession.

You report to it every morning.

You obey it without admitting you do.

Before Elena, Dante had been feared in Boston for reasons people only whispered over espresso cups and backroom tables.

After Elena, he became something colder.

Men who owed him money paid faster.

Men who lied to him swallowed before they spoke.

Even his own people learned that there were two subjects never to mention in his hearing.

One was Interstate 93.

The other was the woman buried beneath a gray headstone in Cambridge.

Her name was Elena Ward.

She had been twenty-six when Dante met her outside a charity auction where she had been helping carry framed student paintings into a hall full of people too rich to notice her.

He had noticed her because she laughed at him.

Not flirted.

Not smiled politely.

Laughed.

He had offered to buy the whole collection because one donor made a cruel remark about the children’s work, and Elena had looked him straight in the eye and said, “That is not generosity. That is a tantrum with a checkbook.”

Dante had not known what to do with a woman who corrected him in public.

So he bought one painting.

Then he came back the next week and bought another.

Within six months, Elena knew his coffee order, his silences, his temper, and the way he rubbed his thumb across his knuckles when he was deciding whether to forgive someone.

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