Starving Twins Found The Father Their Mother Hid From The Mob-eirian

The storm reached the Long Island Sound before it reached Matteo Moretti’s house.

It pushed sheets of rain against the glass, bent the trees beyond the terrace, and made the seventy-acre estate feel like a ship at sea.

Matteo sat alone in his study with the lights low enough for memory to creep in.

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He had papers in front of him, shipping ledgers that men twice his age pretended not to fear.

For five years, the same date had lived behind his eyes.

The morning Lily Sullivan was supposed to drive across Queens.

The explosion on the expressway.

The necklace found in the wreckage.

The empty casket Matteo had buried because there had not been enough left to hold.

People called him ruthless after that.

They were not wrong.

He had become a colder man because cold was easier than grief.

At 3:07 in the morning, the security console blinked red.

Matteo’s head lifted.

The breach was not at the gate.

It was not near the garage or the service road.

It came from the east kitchen pantry.

That was impossible.

The estate had fences, guards, cameras, dogs, and men paid to spot trouble before trouble learned their names.

Matteo opened the desk drawer and took out his pistol.

He did not call for help.

If someone had reached his pantry, someone inside his world had let them in.

He moved barefoot through the hall, past marble floors and framed paintings he had never liked.

The pantry door stood open by an inch.

Light spilled across the tile.

Matteo raised the gun and stepped in.

The first sound was a jar hitting the floor.

The second was a child gasping.

Two little bodies froze in the pantry.

The boy could not have been more than four, but he threw himself in front of the girl like a soldier made from bone and fear.

The girl clutched a torn loaf of bread to her chest.

Her sweater was too big.

Her cheeks were filthy.

Her eyes were Matteo’s.

The boy begged him not to shoot his sister.

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