THE MAID VANISHED FROM HIS MANSION—SO THE MOST FEARED MAFIA BOSS IN CHICAGO KNOCKED ON HER DOOR AND FOUND THE TRUTH THAT MADE HIM TURN AGAINST HIS OWN EMPIRE

Part 1

The first rule in Adrian Vale’s house was simple.

No one disappeared.

Not his drivers. Not his guards. Not the men who carried guns under tailored jackets and called him boss with lowered eyes. Not the quiet kitchen staff who polished silver in the west wing. Not the gardeners. Not the accountants. Not even the florist who came every Friday morning with white lilies for a mother Adrian had buried twenty-one years ago.

And certainly not Clara Monroe.

For three years, Clara had arrived at the Vale estate before sunrise, her dark hair pinned neatly at the nape of her neck, her uniform pressed, her face unreadable in that careful way people learned when they worked too close to power. She spoke when spoken to. She cleaned rooms no guest was allowed to enter. She never stole, never gossiped, never flinched when armed men passed her in the hall.

Then, on a cold Thursday in October, Clara did not come.

At 7:15 a.m., the housekeeper’s station remained empty.

At 8:00 a.m., Mrs. Donnelly, the cook, called her phone twice.

At 9:30 a.m., Adrian’s head of security, Marcus Bell, reported that Clara had missed every check-in.

By noon, Adrian Vale stood in his study overlooking Lake Michigan, one hand wrapped around a glass he had not touched, listening as Marcus gave him the facts.

“No answer at her apartment,” Marcus said. “No hospital admission under her name. No police report. Her phone last pinged near West Town last night at 11:42.”

Adrian did not turn around. Chicago glittered beyond the glass, all steel and water and lies. Somewhere in that city, men prayed his name would never be spoken in their direction. Somewhere, fathers warned sons not to borrow from him, not to betray him, not to look too long at what belonged to him.

Clara did not belong to him.

That was what Adrian told himself as he set the glass down.

She was an employee.

A quiet woman with tired eyes and capable hands.

A woman who had once found him bleeding in the pantry after a negotiation went bad and had said, without panic, “Sit down before you ruin the rug.”

He had obeyed her.

That had irritated him for weeks.

“Send someone,” Marcus said.

“No.”

Marcus looked up. “Boss?”

Adrian buttoned his suit jacket. “I’ll go.”

No one argued. Men who survived around Adrian Vale knew the difference between an order and a death wish.

Twenty-five minutes later, Adrian stepped out of a black SUV in front of a tired brick apartment building on the west side. The hallway smelled of old paint, cheap coffee, and damp carpet. A woman with a laundry basket saw him and immediately turned around, choosing another staircase.

Adrian climbed to the third floor with Marcus two steps behind him.

Clara’s door was at the end of the hall.

Apartment 3C.

Adrian stopped before it and listened.

Nothing.

No television. No footsteps. No breath behind the door.

He raised his hand and knocked.

Once.

Twice.

The sound echoed down the hallway like a warning.

“Clara,” he said.

No answer.

He knocked harder.

The door creaked inward.

Unlocked.

Marcus’s hand went inside his coat. Adrian’s had already found the gun beneath his jacket.

He pushed the door open with the toe of his shoe.

The apartment was small, almost painfully neat beneath the destruction. A lamp lay shattered across the floor. A chair had been overturned. A framed photograph was cracked face-down near the couch. One curtain had been ripped halfway from its rod, letting gray afternoon light spill over the wreckage.

Then Adrian saw her…

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