The Maid Who Took A Bullet Path Meant For The Mafia Heir-tantan

The first bullet came through the library door at 1:17 in the morning, and Claire Hastings forgot how to be invisible.

For two years, being invisible had kept her alive.

At the Bianchi estate, invisible women lasted longer than women who asked questions.

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They polished silver without reading the initials engraved on it.

They emptied ashtrays without noticing the guns tucked under suit jackets.

They carried laundry past closed doors and pretended not to hear names, numbers, threats, or the kind of silence that followed a man being told he had one more chance.

Claire had learned quickly.

Keep your eyes down.

Keep your hands moving.

Never look surprised.

Never remember anything out loud.

Her gray maid’s uniform was plain enough to disappear against the walls, and she wore it like armor.

Her brown hair stayed pinned tight at the back of her head.

Her shoes made almost no sound on marble.

Her voice, when she used it at all, was soft enough to be mistaken for the house settling.

She worked nights because nights paid better.

She worked nights because the other maids hated the quiet.

She worked nights because quiet had always been easier for Claire than conversation.

Back in the small apartment she barely called home, her father’s debt waited for her like a person sitting in the dark.

Fifty thousand dollars.

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