The Waitress Who Made Chicago’s Cruelest Kingpin Kneel in Public-eirian

Giovanni’s had two kinds of customers: people who came to eat and people who came to be seen eating.

Clara Jenkins served both with the same steady hands.

She was twenty-six, broad-shouldered, soft-bellied, strong-legged, and tired in the particular way working women get tired when every bill had a name attached to it.

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Her mother’s physical therapy had a due date.

So did rent.

So did the bus pass that carried her to double shifts under chandeliers she would never afford.

The only customer who made the whole staff lose color was Dominic Russo.

He came in on Tuesday nights with two men behind him and a silence ahead of him.

The first night Clara served him, Paulie caught her by the sleeve near the espresso machine.

“Do not joke with him,” he whispered.

Clara looked at the hand on her sleeve until he removed it.

“I am bringing water, Paulie, not a court summons.”

“I mean it,” he said.

So did she.

Dominic sat in the corner booth with his back to the wall and his eyes on every exit.

His suit was charcoal, his hair was black, and his face had the controlled calm of a man used to watching other people explain themselves.

Clara set down three glasses.

“Gentlemen,” she said.

Dominic did not look at her face first.

His gaze moved over her apron, her hips, her stomach, and the black uniform pulling at the places it was not designed to flatter.

Then he leaned back and spoke to Victor as if Clara were furniture with a pulse.

“When I pay this much for a table, I expect a little grace.”

Leo snorted.

Dominic’s mouth curved.

“Did they run out of waitresses and hire the whole parade?”

A fork touched a plate somewhere behind her.

That was the sound of a room deciding not to help.

She picked up the water pitcher and filled his glass.

The water reached the rim.

Then it crossed it.

It spilled over the white tablecloth and ran straight onto the cuff of Dominic’s handmade suit.

Victor shifted.

Leo’s grin disappeared.

Dominic stood so quickly the booth leather groaned.

“What do you think you are doing?”

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