The Maid’s Baby Stopped a Chicago Execution With One Tiny Hand-Tep

Gabriel Romano had already decided Tyler Gage was going to die.

The decision did not need shouting.

It did not need a speech.

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It stood in the library of the Lake Forest estate as solidly as the marble fireplace, as final as the Beretta in Gabriel’s right hand.

Rain hammered the tall windows hard enough to make the black glass tremble.

Every few seconds, lightning lit the room in pieces.

The carved ceiling.

The leather-bound books.

The old Italian marble mantel.

The terrified face of Tyler Gage, tied to a chair on the Persian rug with a split lip and one eye swollen almost shut.

The air smelled like wet wool, gun oil, smoke from the fireplace, and the copper edge of blood.

Tyler kept trying to breathe through his mouth because his nose had been broken.

Each breath came out wet and uneven.

“Mr. Romano,” he pleaded, his voice shaking so badly it almost disappeared under the storm. “I swear to God, I didn’t sell you out.”

Gabriel stood three feet away from him.

He was thirty-six years old, broad-shouldered, clean-shaven, and dressed like a man who had never been late to anything in his life.

Black suit.

White shirt.

Silver tie clip.

No expression worth reading.

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