The Clumsy Secretary Who Found The Mafia Boss’s Missing Money-Teptep

No secretary lasted a week with Dante Moretti.

That was not office gossip.

It was treated like health and safety advice.

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The post had swallowed six women in five weeks, and by the time Bridget Sullivan arrived on a wet Monday morning, the receptionist had already decided not to learn her favourite tea.

It seemed kinder that way.

The building was too quiet for somewhere pretending to be ordinary.

Downstairs, the sign said Moretti Logistics in clean black letters.

Upstairs, the corridors had glass walls, dark carpet, locked cabinets and men who looked at everyone as though they were calculating how much trouble a person could become.

Bridget stood by the front desk with rain on her coat collar and a visitor pass swinging from her blazer.

The blazer was too tight at the arms because she had bought it on sale and convinced herself that breathing was optional during interviews.

Her auburn curls had escaped the clip she had pinned them into on the bus.

Her tote bag was holding a packed-lunch tub, a half-crushed receipt, a spare pair of tights and the sort of panic only rent increases could create.

The receptionist gave her a clipboard, a keycard and a polite smile that carried the emotional warmth of a warning label.

“Mr Moretti doesn’t like mistakes,” she said.

Bridget glanced at the glass office beyond the corridor, where a man in a charcoal suit sat behind a broad desk as if the whole building had been constructed around his silence.

“Excellent,” Bridget said, because terror sometimes made her cheerful. “I shall simply become a different person by half nine.”

The receptionist did not laugh.

Neither did the two guards by the lift.

One of them looked at her shoes, then at the Persian rug just inside Dante Moretti’s office, as if making a private calculation.

Bridget should have taken that as a sign.

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