The Waitress Who Made A Mafia Boss Question His Own Dangerous Game-hothiyenvy_5

“Beat me and the mansion is yours,” Dante Moretti said, and at first I thought I had heard him wrong.

No normal man said a sentence like that inside a restaurant full of people and expected it to land like anything but a joke.

But Dante Moretti was not a normal man.

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He was sitting at Table Seven in Bellissimo on a Friday night, his back to the wall, his guards angled toward the room, and the October rain turning the Chicago windows into long shaking lines of gold and blue.

The dining room smelled like espresso, lemon polish, warm bread, and perfume that cost more than my weekly groceries.

Soft jazz came from the speakers above the bar.

Silverware clicked softly against china.

Everyone spoke in the low voices people use when they are used to being obeyed.

I had been working there for three years by then, and three years at Bellissimo taught me more about power than any college class I could not afford.

Power did not usually shout.

Power lifted one finger and made a server appear.

Power asked for the same private alcove every Thursday and made the owner inspect the glass himself.

Power walked through the front door and changed the posture of every employee in the room.

That was Dante Moretti.

Half the city treated his name like a curse.

The other half treated it like a prayer they were embarrassed to need.

I knew the rumors, because everyone in Chicago knew the rumors.

The youngest son.

The family business.

The quiet man who never had to threaten anyone twice.

I had never served him before.

Marco made sure of that.

Marco was our floor manager, theatrical on a good day and terrified on a Dante day, and that night he came at me from behind the service station with a bottle of Barolo held against his chest like he was carrying a newborn.

“Sophie,” he whispered.

I looked up from stacking side plates.

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