He Found Her Burned Ultrasound After the Mafia Engagement Lie-eirian

The night Meline Hayes burned the ultrasound, the smoke smelled sharper than paper should have smelled.

It smelled like sulfur from the match, hot plastic from the glossy print, and the end of a future she had held in both hands for less than one day.

She stood barefoot in her Wicker Park kitchen while sleet tapped against the windows and the faucet hissed into the stainless-steel sink.

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The tiny gray blur in the center of the picture disappeared first at the edges, curling away from the flame as if even the paper wanted to survive.

Six weeks and four days.

Healthy heartbeat.

Everything looks perfect, Meline.

Those words had been spoken by a doctor at Northwestern Memorial Hospital that morning, gently and brightly, as if perfect were still a safe thing to say.

Meline had left the hospital with her coat wrapped tight around her body and one hand pressed against her stomach.

The wind off Lake Michigan had cut across the sidewalk, but she had barely felt the cold because every part of her was already turned toward Dominic Valente.

Dominic was not the kind of man women imagined buying tiny shoes or painting a nursery.

He was the kind of man whose name changed the temperature of a room.

His legitimate company, Valente Shipping, moved containers through the docks of Lake Michigan with clean paperwork, polished executives, and smiling lawyers.

The other side of his empire moved through whispers, locked doors, and favors men were too afraid to refuse.

Meline had known enough to be afraid of him and still not enough to stop loving him.

They had met eighteen months earlier at Caldwell Fine Arts, where she worked as an appraiser specializing in stolen and disputed European paintings.

Dominic had arrived with two guards, a black wool coat, and a painting wrapped in museum-grade linen.

He had asked her three questions about provenance, one about restoration, and none about price.

When she answered him without trembling, his mouth had curved just enough to make her notice.

After that, he found reasons to return.

A damaged Caravaggio school piece.

A Dutch landscape with forged paperwork.

A donation to a museum wing that required her expertise.

By the time he kissed her under the blue light of an empty museum hall, Meline had already learned that Dominic noticed everything.

He noticed the scar on her shoulder before she ever told him how she had gotten it.

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