When His Ex Went Into Labor, One Phone Call Broke His Empire-hothiyenvy_5

At 2:07 in the morning, Victor Duca was awake because powerful men rarely sleep when the city they control is still moving.

Rain dragged silver lines down the glass walls of his penthouse, thirty-two floors above downtown Philadelphia.

The sound was steady and cold, a thousand tiny taps against a life built to keep weather, police, enemies, and regret outside.

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Victor stood barefoot on the dark hardwood with an untouched whiskey near his hand and his phone on the table behind him.

Below, the streets looked owned.

The clubs answered to him.

The docks moved when his people wanted them to move.

The judges who owed him favors smiled in daylight and answered private numbers after dark.

Victor had built his life on making other people afraid.

Then his phone rang.

Unknown number.

He watched it for two rings.

Calls at that hour meant trouble.

Sometimes a shipment had been stopped.

Sometimes a friend had become a witness.

Sometimes someone was dead, and the night was just deciding who would say it first.

Victor picked up and said nothing.

“Mr. Duca?” a young woman asked.

Her voice was shaky in the way trained people sound when training is no longer enough.

“This is Mercy General Hospital. You’re listed as the emergency contact for Elena Hart.”

For a second, Victor heard only rain.

Not her sentence.

Not the machines behind her.

Not the faint voice in the background calling for another nurse.

“You have the wrong number,” he said.

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