PART 3: “NO ONE COULD HANDLE THE MAFIA BOSS’S DAUGHTER—UNTIL A WAITRESS WALKED INTO THE CHAOS AND DID THE IMPOSSIBLE

“NO ONE COULD HANDLE THE MAFIA BOSS’S DAUGHTER—UNTIL A WAITRESS WALKED INTO THE CHAOS AND DID THE IMPOSSIBLE

Josiah paid ten thousand dollars a week for people to watch his eight-year-old daughter, and still, one of them stood trembling in his study, sobbing because Mia had locked her inside a soundproof closet.

The nanny’s designer heels clicked nervously against the imported Italian marble floor as she cried into her hands.

“She’s not a normal child, sir. She’s a monster. She bites. She screams. She breaks things. No one can handle her. Absolutely no one.”

Josiah said nothing at first.

He simply stood there, pinching the bridge of his nose, the heavy gold of his watch catching the low amber light of the study. He was a man who commanded an underground empire. A man who could make entire city blocks go silent with one whispered phone call. A man whose name alone made grown men lower their voices.

And yet his own child was destroying his life piece by piece.

“Get out,” he murmured.

The nanny fled.

And Josiah believed, for one bitter moment, that it was hopeless.

No one could handle Mia.

No one could reach her.

No one could survive the storm inside that little girl.

Until a waitress with absolutely nothing left to lose walked straight into the middle of it and proved every single one of them wrong.

The rain was coming down in thick gray sheets that night, hammering against the neon-lit windows of Marcelo’s, a discreet Italian bistro tucked away in the city’s financial district. It was the kind of place wealthy people loved because no one looked too closely and no one asked questions out loud.

Inside, the air was warm and heavy with garlic, simmering marinara, expensive wine, and quiet money.

Willow moved through it like a ghost.

She balanced a silver tray loaded with veal scallopini on one palm while adjusting the apron tied tightly around her waist with the other. She was twenty-four years old, exhausted down to the marrow, and focused on one thing only: surviving another double shift.

Her mother’s medical bills had not disappeared just because her mother was gone.

The collection agencies still called.

The final notices still arrived.

And grief, Willow had learned, did not stop rent from being due.

Marcelo’s was not just a restaurant. It was a sanctuary for powerful people who wanted candlelight, privacy, and staff who knew how to become invisible. Waiters did not hover. They glided. They poured wine in silence. They lowered plates without interrupting conversations that were probably worth more than their yearly salaries.

Willow was good at being invisible.

Exceptionally good.

Until the front doors blew open.

A violent gust of wind rushed inside, carrying rain, cold air, and the unmistakable presence of absolute power.

The temperature in the room seemed to drop.

Four men in immaculate charcoal suits stepped in first. Their eyes swept the room with mechanical precision. They did not simply look around. They assessed. Exits. Threats. Blind spots. Hands. Faces. Possibilities.

Then Josiah entered.

He was tall, broad-shouldered, and rigid in a way that suggested a lifetime of carrying heavy burdens and handing out consequences. His face was sharp and handsome, but cold enough to make beauty feel dangerous. Dark hair swept back from a face that gave nothing away.

But that night, he was not what everyone stared at.

The real storm was thrashing at the end of his arm.

“I don’t want to be here! I hate this place! I hate you!”

The shrieks sliced through the velvet quiet of the restaurant.

Willow turned.

The child could not have been more than eight. She wore a beautiful navy velvet dress, now rumpled and twisted from her struggle. Her dark hair looked exactly like Josiah’s, but wild and tangled. Her face was red with fury, and the rage in her tiny body looked too large to belong there.

This was Mia.

Every patron in Marcelo’s suddenly became fascinated by their plate, their glass, their napkin, anything except the infamous Josiah and the screaming child beside him.

Josiah’s jaw clenched so hard Willow could see the muscle jump from thirty feet away.

He tried to guide Mia toward a secluded corner booth, his large hand awkwardly gripping her small shoulder. He was not hurting her. That was obvious. But it was equally obvious that he had no idea how to comfort her.

“Quiet down,” he hissed. “You’re making a scene. Sit.”

“No!”

Mia planted her patent leather shoes against the hardwood floor and threw her whole body backward.

Then, with a sudden vicious twist, she broke free.

Her small arm swept across the nearest empty table.

A crystal water pitcher and a stack of appetizer plates went flying.

The crash was catastrophic.

Glass exploded across the floor in glittering shards. Porcelain shattered and skittered under tables. A woman gasped. Someone dropped a fork. The entire restaurant fell into a thick, horrified silence broken only by Mia’s ragged breathing.

Josiah froze.

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