A Little Girl Sat With A Mob Boss And Her Mother Froze In Place-Tep

The little girl walked into the restaurant between courses.

That was the part Nadia Reyes kept coming back to later.

Not the rain pushing silver streaks down the front windows.

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Not the low amber light that made every wine glass look expensive.

Not the smell of garlic, butter, tomato sauce, and damp wool that filled Palazzo whenever the door opened from Hanover Street.

It was the timing.

The appetizers had been cleared.

The main courses had not come out yet.

There was a quiet pause over the dining room, the kind that happens in busy restaurants when everyone has ordered and settled and believes the night is going exactly the way it is supposed to go.

Then the front door opened.

A child stood on the mat.

She was maybe five years old.

Her yellow rain slicker was buttoned wrong, with the bottom button fastened and the top hanging open so one side of the collar stood up and the other lay flat.

Her dark hair was wet at the ends.

A small backpack dangled from one hand, held by the top handle instead of worn on her shoulders, and she gripped it with the seriousness of a child who had been told she was responsible for it.

She did not cry.

She did not call out.

She looked around.

That was what made Nadia stop turning the bread roll over in her hand.

The girl looked at the room the way certain adults looked at a room when they needed to know where the exits were, who had noticed them, and what choice would cause the least trouble.

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