When a Waitress Faced the Mob Boss’s Daughter, the Room Froze-yumihong

NO ONE COULD HANDLE THE MAFIA BOSS’S DAUGHTER—UNTIL A WAITRESS WALKED INTO THE CHAOS AND DID THE IMPOSSIBLE

Josiah had paid ten thousand dollars a week for help, and somehow the latest nanny still ended up crying in his study.

She stood on his imported marble floor with both hands over her face, her designer heels clicking every time her knees shook.

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“She locked me in the closet,” the woman said.

Josiah did not move.

“The soundproof one,” she added, voice cracking. “I was in there for almost forty minutes. She laughed from the other side of the door.”

The amber light in the study slid across Josiah’s gold watch when he lifted one hand to the bridge of his nose.

That watch alone cost more than most people’s cars.

The house cost more than entire apartment buildings.

The men outside the door would have crossed state lines for him without asking why.

But none of that mattered when an eight-year-old girl decided the world deserved to burn.

“She is not a normal child, sir,” the nanny whispered. “She bites. She screams. She breaks things. She says things no child should know how to say.”

Josiah looked toward the hallway.

Somewhere upstairs, behind a closed bedroom door, Mia was silent.

That was always the part that worried him most.

The screaming was terrible, but the silence felt worse.

“No one can handle her,” the nanny said. “Absolutely no one.”

Josiah’s jaw worked once.

He had built his life on making other people afraid to disappoint him.

He understood pressure, discipline, punishment, loyalty, debt, and consequence.

He did not understand bedtime stories.

He did not understand why a child would throw away every doll she was given, refuse every tutor, terrify every nanny, and then sit awake at night staring at the wall as if waiting for someone who never arrived.

“Leave,” he said.

The nanny fled so fast she nearly twisted one ankle in the doorway.

Josiah remained in the study after she was gone.

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