She Gave His Mistress the Mafia Ring, Then Her Father’s Secret Surfaced-eirian

I did not cry when Roman Castellano walked into my birthday party with Vanessa Lane on his arm.

That was what disappointed them most.

The Drake Hotel ballroom had been prepared for a woman who was supposed to glow under chandeliers, receive pearls from donors, laugh softly beside her husband, and pretend that turning twenty-four inside a gilded cage was still a celebration.

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The tables were dressed in white linen so crisp they looked untouched by human hands.

Champagne flutes stood in perfect rows, sweating under crystal light.

The roses in the centerpieces were red, of course, because Roman liked red things when they belonged to him.

He liked red cars, red wine, red lipstick, red dresses, and warnings delivered in voices too soft for anyone else to hear.

My dress was ivory.

Roman had chosen it.

He said it made me look clean.

I remember standing in the hotel suite before the party, staring at myself in a mirror framed in gold, and thinking that I did not look clean at all.

I looked polished.

There is a difference.

Polished things are not always valued.

Sometimes they are only prepared for display.

The Castellano Foundation had sent the invitations six weeks earlier on thick cream stationery embossed with Roman’s family crest.

The guest list had been reviewed twice by his lawyers, once by his accountant, and once by the man Roman called his events director, though everyone knew Enzo handled more than flowers and seating charts.

Three hundred people were expected.

Three hundred arrived.

Bankers came because Roman financed what banks would not admit they needed.

Aldermen came because Roman donated to campaigns with the smile of a man who understood invoices did not always need to be written.

Attorneys came because men like Roman required clean paper trails after dirty nights.

Their wives came because power had wives, and those wives had learned which silences kept their jewelry boxes full.

I had been Mrs. Roman Castellano for four years.

Before that, I had been Evelyn Moretti, daughter of Vincent Moretti, a man who owned three small restaurants, two laundromats, and one stubborn belief that a person’s name should still mean something after money entered the room.

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