17/05/2026
She Spoke Native Italian on the Phone—Then the Mafia Boss Whispered, “Find Everything About Her”
The bitter January wind cut through my thin coat as I rushed through the doors of Bellissimo, the upscale Italian restaurant where I had been working for exactly 3 months and 2 days. My fingers were numb, my nose was red from the cold, and the hair I had carefully styled that morning now hung in limp strands around my face.
I was already 10 minutes late for my shift.
“Sophia, where have you been?” Marco, the floor manager, hissed as I hurried through the kitchen, tying my black apron around my waist.
His eyes were wide with panic, something I had never seen in the usually composed man.
“Table 7. VIP. You’re serving them tonight.”
“What? But that’s Jessica’s section.”
I fumbled with the knot of my apron as Marco gripped my shoulders, his fingers digging in slightly.
“Jessica called in sick. Listen to me carefully, Sophia. These people are important. Very important. Don’t screw up.”
The intensity in his voice made my stomach clench. I nodded, smoothing down my black skirt and tucking a loose strand of hair behind my ear.
I needed this job desperately. Six months earlier, I had fled Boston with nothing but a suitcase and my savings after my ex-boyfriend’s escalating control had become something more frightening. New York was supposed to be my fresh start, but fresh starts were expensive, and my tiny apartment in Queens consumed most of my paycheck.
“Who are they?” I asked, grabbing my notepad.
Marco’s eyes darted around the kitchen.
“Business associates of Mr. Ricci.”
My blood ran cold.
Everyone who worked at Bellissimo knew about Mr. Ricci, the mysterious owner who rarely appeared but whose name was whispered with a mixture of fear and respect. I had never seen him. Rumors filled the space his absence created. Some said he was only a wealthy businessman. Others claimed his connections reached into far more dangerous places.
“They’re in the private room in the back,” Marco said. “Remember, Sophia. Professional, efficient, invisible.”
Invisible.
That had become my specialty lately. Keeping my head down. Blending in. Becoming background noise to the world around me.
I took a deep breath and pushed through the kitchen doors.
The main dining room of Bellissimo glowed with warm light. Crystal glasses caught the shimmer from the chandeliers, and white tablecloths lay pristine against dark wood floors. The room exuded old-world wealth, the kind that did not need to announce itself.
I moved through the dining room with my spine straight and my chin up, the way I had been trained. I passed the main area and continued down a short hallway to the private dining room reserved for special guests.
I hesitated at the heavy wooden door, my heart pounding in my chest. Then I knocked once softly and entered.
The private dining room was dimmer than the main room, its lighting golden and intimate. A large round table dominated the space, and around it sat 6 men in suits that probably cost more than my monthly rent. Their conversation stopped as I entered, and 6 pairs of eyes turned toward me.
Only 1 gaze locked onto mine and held it.
He sat in the place that was clearly the head of the table, though I could not have explained how a round table had a head. His dark hair was perfectly styled, his sharp jawline shadowed with precisely maintained stubble. His suit was not only expensive; it seemed tailored to his broad shoulders as if it had never existed before him and would never exist after.
But it was his eyes that froze me in place.
They were dark, intelligent, and utterly cold. He did not look much older than 35, younger than I had expected for someone who commanded such obvious deference.
I dropped my gaze immediately, feeling heat creep up my neck.
“Good evening, gentlemen. I’m Sophia, and I’ll be your server tonight. May I start you with drinks?”
I moved around the table efficiently, taking orders while remaining painfully aware of the headman’s eyes following me. When I reached him last, he did not immediately answer my question about his drink.
“You’re new,” he said instead.
His voice was low and smooth, with just a hint of an accent I could not place. It was not a question.
“Yes, sir. Three months.”
A ghost of a smile touched his lips.
“Scotch. Neat.”
I nodded and turned to leave just as the door opened and a man in a black suit entered. He nodded respectfully to the table before approaching the headman, then bent down and whispered something into his ear.
The headman’s expression did not change, but something in his posture shifted. A new tension settled across his shoulders.
I slipped out, releasing a breath I had not realized I was holding once I reached the hallway. Something about that room, and about him, made the air feel thinner and harder to breathe.
I hurried to the bar to place the drink orders.
When I returned with the tray, the atmosphere had changed. Voices were lower. Faces more serious. I distributed the drinks silently, trying to remain as unobtrusive as possible.
As I placed the scotch in front of the headman, my phone vibrated in my apron pocket.
I never took personal calls during a shift. But my grandmother was in hospice care back in Italy, and for the past week, I had kept my phone on me constantly.
After placing the last drink, I stepped back against the wall and discreetly checked the screen.
It was her nurse’s number.
My heart lurched.
I had been waiting for this call. Dreading it.
I glanced at the table. The men were deep in conversation, papers spread between them. I took 2 steps back toward the door and answered quietly.
“Pronto,” I whispered, Italian slipping out automatically, as it always did when I spoke to anyone from home.
The nurse’s voice came through soft and regretful.
I closed my eyes, my free hand curling into a fist at my side. When I ended the call, tears burned behind my eyes.
When I opened them, the entire table had gone silent.
Every man was looking at me.
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