A Dead Sicilian Lullaby Froze The Crime Boss In His Seat At Dinner-ngyen

Laurizante looked, at first glance, like the kind of restaurant where nothing was ever allowed to be ugly.

The windows were polished until the rainy street outside became a soft blur, the cutlery sat in perfect lines, and the candles made even tired people look expensive.

It was the sort of place where a person could spend the price of a weekly shop on a starter and still complain that the lemon was too sharp.

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Sophia had learnt not to react to that.

She carried plates past tables where people discussed houses, private schools, favours, holidays, debts that did not sound like debts, and enemies who were never called enemies.

She smiled when required.

She apologised when bumped into.

She cleared glasses with steady hands while men who would never learn her name spoke over her shoulder as though she were furniture with a pulse.

That was safer.

At Laurizante, survival was a matter of becoming useful and forgettable.

The maître d’ liked to say the staff were part of the atmosphere, which meant they were expected to be visible only when someone wanted another drink.

Sophia understood that sort of invisibility.

She had built a life out of it.

Sophia Gallow had been one version.

Sophia Brooks had been another.

Sophia Rizzo was the one she wore now, though even that name felt too loud some nights, like a coat with a bright lining that might show if she moved wrong.

Names were not truth to her.

They were doors.

They were locks.

They were things a frightened woman changed when the old one no longer kept danger outside.

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