He Found Her Pregnancy Test and Learned the Name She Buried-ngyen

The morning I found out I was pregnant, I was wearing a diner uniform with ketchup dried stiff on the sleeve and standing barefoot on cold bathroom tile.

The test sat in my hand like a tiny white verdict.

Two pink lines.

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Not faint enough to deny.

Not blurred enough to misread.

Not merciful enough to disappear if I blinked.

I whispered, “No, no, no,” until the word stopped sounding like speech and started sounding like prayer.

The smell of Liam Carter’s Colombian coffee drifted under the door, rich and bitter and completely ordinary, which somehow made everything worse.

Ordinary mornings are cruel when your life has just split open.

I was twenty-five.

I was broke.

I was supposed to be saving enough money to finish nursing school, not staring at proof that I was carrying the child of the most dangerous man in Chicago.

The father was Alessandro Vitali.

Everybody in Chicago knew the Vitali name.

The newspapers wrote about the hotels, the restaurants, the philanthropy, the real estate deals, and the old Italian money that seemed to polish every ugly rumor until it shone.

People who worked late shifts, rode back stairwell elevators, and knew which streets went quiet when black cars rolled through understood the truth better.

The Vitalis ruled the part of the city that never put anything in writing.

Alessandro was not just one of them.

He was the heir.

I had met him six weeks earlier at a charity gala inside the Obsidian Hotel, where the chandeliers looked like frozen rain and the marble floors reflected everyone as someone more expensive than they were.

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