A Crime Boss Found His Maid’s Sick Baby Hidden Beneath His Mansion-congtien

By 2:17 in the morning, Roman DeLuca had already learned what men sounded like when they mistook ambition for destiny.

He had spent six hours in a South Side warehouse with three men who thought Chicago was ready to change hands.

They were wrong.

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When Roman walked back through the iron doors of his Lake Forest estate, dried blood sat beneath one cufflink, a bruise was rising across his right hand, and a silence had settled inside him so deeply that even his guards softened their steps around him.

Roman’s house had been built for silence.

Twelve-foot gates kept the road away.

Black oaks swallowed the moonlight before it reached the windows.

Imported stone walls held the cold outside, and a security system worth more than most emergency rooms watched every gate, door, corridor, and service entrance.

The staff understood his rules.

No unnecessary questions.

No movement after midnight without clearance.

No one entered the upper rooms unless called.

Nora Bennett had learned those rules faster than most.

She was twenty-six, quiet, precise, and almost invisible in the way women become invisible when they cannot afford mistakes.

She cleaned the west library twice a week, polished the brass rail outside the back staircase, folded linen napkins in the butler’s pantry, and signed every shift sheet with the same careful hand.

She had never once spoken to Roman unless he had spoken first.

Most days, he did not notice her.

That was not cruelty exactly.

It was the architecture of his world.

Men like Roman lived in rooms other people prepared for them, and they often mistook that preparation for air.

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