Blind Twins, A Mafia King, And The Waitress Who Heard Too Much-heuh

The feared maf!a king’s blind twin sons trusted absolutely no one—until a young waitress quietly whispered four simple words that changed the course of their lives forever.

By the time Dominic Romano arrived at La Stella, the rain had already turned the windows silver.

It ran down the glass in uneven lines, blurring the lights outside and making the whole dining room feel sealed away from the rest of the world.

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Inside, nothing was supposed to be messy.

The napkins were folded to a sharp point.

The wine glasses stood in perfect ranks.

The cutlery had been polished until even the nervous faces of the staff could be seen bending across it in pale, stretched reflections.

Claire Bennett noticed these things because noticing had once been her living.

Before the black service vest, before the neat bun, before the careful smile she wore for strangers, she had been paid to notice breath, balance, hesitation, and the small ways a person reached for the world.

Now she noticed because it kept her safe.

La Stella was beautiful in the manner of places that expected fear to arrive wearing expensive shoes.

The carpet softened every step.

The leather chairs held their shape.

The chandelier above Table One scattered warm light over a setting that nobody touched unless Anthony Russo said they could.

Claire had been on the staff for four weeks.

That was long enough to learn which customers liked their wine praised, which chefs threw pans when the orders backed up, and which silences meant everyone should make themselves useful without asking questions.

It was also long enough to learn that Table One was not really a table.

It was a throne in all but name.

The staff never said that aloud, of course.

They said Mr Romano’s table.

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