A Mafia Boss Saw His Fiancée Burn a Maid. His Ring Said Everything-eirian

The first thing Gabriel Moretti noticed was not the scream.

It was the sound the teapot made when Camille Whitaker set it back on the table.

A clean porcelain click.

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Controlled.

Deliberate.

As if she had adjusted a place card instead of throwing hot tea at a defenseless woman.

The dining room of the Moretti estate had been built to make people feel small.

Twenty-foot ceilings rose above a long mahogany table polished until it reflected chandelier light like dark water.

Oil paintings of dead Moretti men stared from paneled walls with the cold, unsmiling expressions of people who had never asked permission for anything in their lives.

The marble floor carried every sound.

Forks against china.

Ice settling in bourbon.

A chair leg scraping when someone shifted too quickly.

Gabriel knew the room’s acoustics because his father had designed it that way.

In that house, even silence had authority.

Camille had always admired the room.

She said it made her feel like she was dining inside history.

Gabriel knew better.

It was not history.

It was warning dressed as architecture.

He was thirty-eight years old, old enough to know that people revealed themselves not when they were denied power, but when they were handed a little of it and believed no one would stop them.

Camille had been given a little.

The ring.

The guest lists.

The staff learning her preferences.

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