A Dying Mafia Boss, a Maid’s Daughter, and the Pillow Secret-hothiyenvy_5

By the time Vincent Moretti began freezing under six thousand dollars’ worth of cashmere blankets in the middle of a Chicago summer, every doctor with a reputation worth buying had already failed him.

They had come through the doors of his Gold Coast mansion with leather briefcases, private nurses, expensive shoes, and the clean confidence of people used to being obeyed.

New York sent an infectious disease expert who spoke in a whisper.

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Boston sent a cardiologist who studied scans until dawn.

Los Angeles sent a concierge physician who wore a watch worth more than most people’s cars.

Houston sent a toxicologist whose test names were so long Vincent stopped asking what they meant.

They all stepped into his bedroom like men and women entering a kingdom.

They all left looking afraid.

The bedroom had stopped looking like a bedroom weeks earlier.

It had become a private hospital suite built inside old money.

Chrome IV stands stood beside antique furniture.

Medical folders crowded a table that once held imported whiskey.

A portable heater hummed against the wall, blowing warm air across thick rugs and polished wood.

Still, every night at exactly 2:17 a.m., Vincent woke shaking so hard his teeth knocked together.

The sound embarrassed him.

That was the first thing he hated.

Not the weakness, not the fever, not the way servants lowered their eyes when they thought he could not see them.

He hated the small, helpless sound his body made.

Vincent Moretti had survived bullets.

He had survived betrayal.

He had survived federal raids, prison investigations, street wars, and men who kissed his cheek while deciding how to bury him.

But the cold did not negotiate.

It lived inside him.

It crawled along his bones and burned under his skin.

It turned his blood to ice and made his hands shake when he reached for a glass.

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