Mafia Boss Caught His Fiancée Hurting His Son and Found the Proof-eirian

“Stop it, please. You’re breaking his arm.”

Lily did not remember deciding to scream.

The sound tore out of her before fear could stop it, bouncing off the white marble foyer of the Blackwood mansion and up toward the chandelier until the entire house seemed to hold its breath.

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Baby Ethan was on the floor.

He was only 14 months old, too small to understand rage, too small to understand silk dresses, too small to understand that some adults cared more about being obeyed than being kind.

Serena Montigue had him by one arm.

She was dragging him across the polished stone as though he were a doll that had offended her.

The spilled apple juice cup rolled slowly behind them, tapping once against the baseboard.

The bright orange stain spread across the marble in a crooked line, and the front of Serena’s designer dress was wet where Ethan had splashed it.

That was all it had taken.

One childish mistake.

One cup slipping from small fingers.

One stain on fabric that cost more than Lily’s monthly salary.

Ethan’s face had gone red at first, the way babies’ faces did when a cry took over their whole bodies.

Then it had changed.

The red deepened.

The breath between each sob grew thinner.

By the time Lily saw the angle of his arm, a terrible purple had begun to touch his cheeks, and something inside her turned cold.

She had been his nanny for six months.

In six months, she had learned the sound of his hungry cry, his tired cry, his angry cry, and the soft little hiccup he made when he wanted to be picked up but was too proud to reach.

This was none of those.

This was pain.

This was panic.

This was a child going somewhere his body could not afford to go.

“Let him go,” Lily said, already moving.

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