The Maid Who Saved the Mafia Prince From His Father’s Midnight Hit-Tep

The first bullet tore through the mahogany door at 1:17 in the morning, and Claire Hastings forgot how to be invisible.

For two years, that was the only skill that had kept her alive.

At the Bianchi estate, invisible women survived by becoming part of the furniture.

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They polished silver and never heard names.

They emptied crystal ashtrays and never noticed guns.

They scrubbed dark stains from marble and never asked why men in tailored suits spoke softly about shipments, judges, and bodies pulled from rivers.

Claire had learned the rules quickly because she could not afford to learn them twice.

Keep your eyes down.

Keep your voice low.

Do not flinch at shouting.

Do not look at blood unless you are the one cleaning it.

Most nights, she wore her gray maid’s uniform like armor, with her brown hair pinned tight enough to ache and her face arranged into the soft blankness rich people preferred from the help.

She worked the graveyard shift because it paid more.

She worked it because the other maids hated the silence.

Mostly, she worked it because silence meant no one asked questions about the cash envelopes she carried home to Hell’s Kitchen every Friday, tucked deep in her purse behind grocery receipts and a cracked compact mirror.

Her father had died owing fifty thousand dollars to Tommy Sullivan.

Tommy was not the kind of man who yelled.

That made him worse.

He had wet eyes, clean shoes, and a smile like old oil spreading across a garage floor.

When Claire told him the debt had died with her father, Tommy had only tilted his head and said debts were family heirlooms.

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