A Starving Mafia Boss, One Plain Bowl, And The Wife’s Hidden Lie-hothiyenvy_5

By the eleventh night, the Moretti mansion did not smell like a home.

It smelled like food going cold.

Roast duck sat under a silver dome no one had touched.

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Handmade pasta stiffened at the edges.

Wine breathed itself flat in crystal glasses, and every hour that passed made the dining room feel less like a place for dinner and more like a room where people came to fail.

Luca Moretti sat at the head of the table in a black suit with every button fastened.

He looked prepared for a funeral.

The terrible part was that everyone in the house knew it was his own.

For eleven days, chefs had carried in food and carried it back out.

Doctors had stood in the hallway with quiet voices and bags full of useless advice.

A priest had crossed himself before leaving.

Men with guns had taken turns outside the dining room door, watching a locked room as if hunger were an enemy they could shoot.

Nothing changed.

Luca did not touch bread.

He did not drink broth.

He did not take the black coffee that used to appear every morning at six sharp, the one everyone knew not to sweeten, not to cool, and not to interrupt.

In Chicago, people spoke his name carefully.

He was the youngest boss the Moretti family had ever produced.

He had money, fear, loyalty, and the kind of silence that made men stand straighter when he entered a room.

To people outside that mansion, Luca Moretti was power.

Inside the mansion, that power had been sitting motionless for eleven days.

He was not ruling anything.

He was surviving badly.

Grace Carter learned that before she had finished her first shift.

She had been hired that morning to help with the house because the old staff was falling apart.

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