A Mafia Boss Offered Her a Fortune, Then Opened His Dead Wife’s File-eirian

Harper Watson found Nicholas Blackstone in the alley on the coldest night of her life.

The snow had started soft, almost pretty, but by the time she left the diner, it had turned mean.

It blew sideways down Franklin Avenue, needling her cheeks, slipping beneath the collar of her threadbare coat, and making every streetlight look like it was drowning in white.

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Her uniform clung damply beneath the wool.

It smelled like burnt coffee, old fryer oil, lemon dish soap, and the onion rings she had carried to tables for ten straight hours.

Her knees trembled with every step, but Harper kept walking fast because the bus fare in her pocket was already spoken for, and walking saved money.

Girls like Harper learned to count everything.

Coins.

Minutes.

Calories.

Risks.

The alley behind the abandoned storefront was one of those risks she had measured and accepted.

It was narrow, ugly, poorly lit, and lined with rusted fire escapes, but it cut twelve minutes off the walk to her apartment.

Twelve minutes mattered when she had a pharmacology exam at eight in the morning and a rent notice folded inside her nursing textbook.

Snow softened the alley in a way Harper did not trust.

It covered the broken glass.

It hid the cracked pavement.

It turned trash bags and loading pallets into quiet white shapes.

Then her foot struck something solid.

Harper lurched forward and caught herself against the brick wall, her palm scraping cold grit.

A curse rose to her mouth and died there.

At first, the shape near the dumpster looked like a pile of clothes.

Then the alley light flickered and showed her a polished leather shoe.

A cashmere coat.

A pale hand lying open against the snow.

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