For the rest of their meal, you found excuses to attend their table.
You refilled Sophia Vitelli’s sparkling water before the lemon slice even sank. You brought extra napkins, checked the temperature of her soup, and signed every question before speaking it aloud. It was not professional strategy. It was instinct.
You knew what it felt like to sit in a room where everyone talked around someone instead of to them.
Sophia noticed.
Every time you signed, her face softened. Every time you looked directly at her instead of her son, she sat a little straighter, as if your attention had given her back some part of herself the restaurant had tried to steal.
Dante Vitelli noticed too.
He barely spoke to you again, but his eyes followed you through the dining room. They followed when you carried plates. They followed when Marco snapped at you for moving too slowly. They followed when a drunk man at table nine touched your elbow and you pulled away with a polite smile because polite smiles were how waitresses survived.
By dessert, Sophia had told you she missed Sicily, hated American coffee, loved jazz, and thought her son needed less business and more laughter.
You translated that last part aloud before thinking.
Dante’s mouth twitched.
“Did she say that exactly?” he asked.
Sophia signed quickly.
“Tell him yes. And tell him he looks like his father when he thinks scowling is a personality.”
You pressed your lips together to keep from laughing.
Dante leaned back in his chair, watching your hands.
“She said you remind her of your father,” you translated carefully.
His eyes narrowed.
“That is not all she said.”
Sophia’s shoulders shook with silent laughter.
For one second, the dangerous man at the table looked less like a figure from whispered rumors and more like a son being teased by his mother.
Then his phone buzzed.
The softness vanished.
He glanced at the screen. One of his bodyguards leaned closer. A message passed between them without words, and the air around the table tightened.
You had seen rich men take business calls in restaurants. This was different.
Dante stood.
“Mother,” he signed clumsily, “we leave soon.”
Sophia’s smile faded.
She signed back sharply.
“I have not finished my dessert.”
He gave her a look.
She gave one right back.
You looked away, pretending not to notice.
But Sophia tapped your wrist lightly.
“Tell my son I am eighty-two, not eight.”
You hesitated.
Dante’s eyes flicked to you.
“Translate.”
Your throat went dry.
“She said she is eighty-two, not eight.”
One of the bodyguards coughed into his hand.
Dante did not smile, but something in his face eased.
“She has ten minutes.”
Sophia signed triumphantly.
You brought her tiramisu.
When you placed it in front of her, she touched your hand and signed, “You are kind, Elena. Do not let this place teach you to be small.”
The words hit too close.
Your smile faltered.
Before you could respond, Marco appeared behind you.
“Elena,” he hissed. “Kitchen. Now.”
His tone was sharp enough that Sophia looked up.
Dante did too.
You signed quickly, “Enjoy your dessert,” then followed Marco toward the service hallway.
The moment you were out of the dining room, he turned on you.
“What do you think you’re doing?”
You blinked.
“Serving table seven.”
“You are not paid to socialize with high-value guests.”
“I was helping Mrs. Vitelli understand—”
“You were showing off,” he snapped. “Do you know who that man is?”
You lowered your voice.
“No, Marco. I know who his mother is. She’s a guest who needed assistance.”
His face darkened.
“You think a little sign language makes you special?”
You said nothing.
That usually worked best.
But tonight, silence tasted bitter.
Marco stepped closer.
“Stay away from that table unless I call you. If you embarrass this restaurant, I’ll make sure you never work in fine dining again.”
Fine dining.
As if carrying hot plates while men ignored your face was some sacred privilege.
“Yes, Marco,” you said.
He pointed toward the back.
“Go polish silver.”
You spent the next twenty minutes in the service area, rubbing water spots from forks while your hands shook with anger. Through the narrow window in the swinging door, you could see the Vitelli table preparing to leave.
Sophia looked around.
Looking for you.
You hated Marco for that.
You hated yourself more for obeying.
Then the kitchen door opened.
The entire service hallway went quiet.
Dante Vitelli stood there.
He looked completely out of place among stacked crates, steam, grease, and servers pretending not to stare. His dark suit seemed to absorb the fluorescent light. One bodyguard stood behind him, but Dante did not need help to command the room.
Marco rushed forward.
“Mr. Vitelli, is everything all right?”
Dante ignored him.
His eyes found you.
“Elena Russo,” he said.
You straightened.
“Yes, sir?”
“My mother wishes to say goodbye.”
Marco laughed nervously.
“Of course, I can send someone—”
Dante finally looked at him.
The hallway dropped ten degrees.
“I said Elena.”
Marco’s mouth closed.
You set down the silver cloth and followed Dante back into the dining room. Every server watched you pass. Every guest close enough to notice pretended not to.
Sophia was standing with her purse clasped in both hands.
When she saw you, she smiled and signed, “There you are. I thought they hid you.”
You almost smiled.
“They tried.”
Her eyes flashed with delighted mischief.
Dante caught enough of it to look between you both.
“What did she say?”
You shook your head.
“Nothing important.”
Sophia signed, “Coward.”
This time you did laugh.
Dante’s mouth softened.
Sophia reached into her purse and removed a small cream card.
She placed it in your hand.
On it was an address in Brooklyn Heights and a phone number written in elegant blue ink.
“If you ever need work where people do not shout at you for being useful,” she signed, “come see me.”
You stared at the card.
“Sophia, I can’t—”
She touched two fingers to your chin, gently lifting your gaze.
“Do not argue with old women. We always win.”
Dante watched the exchange silently.
Then he pulled a black card from his jacket and handed it to you.
No logo.
Just a number embossed in silver.
“If my mother needs to reach you,” he said.
That was not what he meant.
You knew it.
He knew you knew it.
Still, you took the card.
“Good night, Mr. Vitelli.”
“Dante,” he said.
The correction was quiet.
Dangerous in a different way.
You swallowed.
“Good night, Dante.”
His eyes held yours a second too long.
Then he turned and walked out with his mother on his arm.
The restaurant breathed again only after he left.
Marco appeared beside you, face tight.
“What did he give you?”
You slipped the card into your apron.
“His mother’s thanks.”
Marco did not believe you.
Good.
Let him wonder.
You finished your shift at 1:18 a.m.
By then, your feet felt bruised, your back hurt, and your uniform smelled like garlic, wine, and exhaustion. You changed in the employee bathroom, tucked Sophia’s card inside your community college notebook, and walked toward the bus stop with your coat pulled tight.
The city was cold at that hour.
Chicago’s downtown streets glittered with wet pavement and expensive loneliness. Outside the restaurant, people stepped into black cars laughing, wrapped in cashmere and perfume. You walked three blocks to the bus because rideshares were not in your budget.
A black SUV slowed beside you.
Your pulse jumped.
The back window lowered.
Dante Vitelli looked out.
“Elena.”
You stopped walking.
Every sensible part of your brain said keep moving.
“Yes?”
“My mother insisted I make sure you got home safely.”
You glanced around.
“Your mother isn’t in the car.”
“She is very persuasive from a distance.”
You almost smiled.
“I take the bus.”
“Not tonight.”
The command irritated you more than it should have.
“I’m not one of your employees.”
“No,” he said. “My employees listen faster.”
You stared at him.
Then, unexpectedly, he smiled.
Just barely.
But enough to change his face.
“I am asking,” he said. “Let my driver take you home.”
You looked at the dark street.
Then at the bus stop two blocks away, where a man was arguing loudly with nobody.
“Fine,” you said. “But only because Sophia asked.”
“Of course.”
His bodyguard opened the door.
You got in, sitting as far from Dante as possible.
The SUV smelled like leather and cedar. Soft music played from hidden speakers. You folded your hands tightly in your lap and focused on not looking impressed.
Dante noticed anyway.
“Where do you live?”
“Pilsen.”
He told the driver.
For a few minutes, neither of you spoke.
Then he said, “You are studying to be an interpreter.”
“Yes.”
“ASL only?”
“ASL and spoken English interpreting first. Eventually legal or medical interpreting.”
“Ambitious.”
You looked at him.
“Is that surprising?”
“No.”
“Your tone said it was.”
“My tone often gets accused of crimes it did not commit.”
You stared.
Then laughed despite yourself.
His eyes warmed.
Just slightly.
“Why sign language?” he asked.
You looked out the window.
“My best friend in elementary school was deaf. Her name was Maya. Teachers treated her like she was slow because they didn’t want to learn how she communicated. I got angry. So I learned.”
“And now?”
“Now I’m still angry,” you said. “Just with better vocabulary.”
Dante’s gaze stayed on you.
“That is a useful kind of anger.”
“It doesn’t pay tuition.”
“No. But it may keep you alive.”
The words settled strangely between you.
At your building, the driver stopped near the curb. You reached for the door handle.
Dante spoke before you could open it.
“Marco mistreats you.”
You turned.
“Marco mistreats everyone beneath him.”
“That was not an answer.”
“It was the only one I’m giving you.”
His eyes narrowed, not angry.
Interested.
“You are careful.”
“I’m poor,” you said. “Careful comes with the rent.”
Something shifted in his face.
You opened the door.
“Tell Sophia thank you.”
“I will.”
“And Dante?”
“Yes?”
“I don’t need saving.”
He studied you for a long second.
“No,” he said quietly. “You need choices.”
You got out before that sentence could follow you upstairs.
It followed anyway.
The next morning, Marco fired you.
He waited until after the lunch rush, when your hands were raw from polishing glassware and your stomach was empty because you had given your staff meal to a new busboy who looked ready to faint.
He called you into the office and closed the door.
“You accepted personal contact from a guest,” he said.
You stared at him.
“Mrs. Vitelli gave me her card.”
“Do not play innocent.”
“I did nothing wrong.”
“You made the restaurant look unprofessional.”
“No. I helped a deaf customer communicate.”
He leaned back in his chair.
“You’re done here.”
For a moment, the room tilted.
Rent was due in nine days.
Tuition payment in twelve.
Your checking account had $143.62.
You thought of begging.
You hated that you thought of begging.
Then you thought of Sophia’s hands signing, Do not let this place teach you to be small.
You took off your name tag and placed it on his desk.
“Fine.”
Marco blinked.
He had expected tears.
You gave him none.
“You’ll regret this attitude,” he said.
You looked at him.
“I already regret the shoes.”
You walked out with your coat, your notebook, and no job.
Outside, you sat on a bench behind the restaurant and let yourself shake for exactly two minutes.
Then you pulled out Sophia’s card.
You stared at the Brooklyn Heights address.
Not Chicago.
Brooklyn.
Of course.
Rich people had homes everywhere.
You should not call.
You knew that.
Dante Vitelli was dangerous. His family name moved through conversations in whispers. Men like him did not simply offer help. There were always strings, even if they were made of silk.
But Sophia was not Dante.
And you needed work.
You called the number.
Sophia answered through a video relay service.
When her face appeared on your phone, she looked delighted.
“Elena! Did the rude waiter fire you?”
You blinked.
“How did you know?”
“I am old, not stupid.”
Despite everything, you laughed.
Her expression softened.
“You need work?”
“Yes.”
“Good. I need an interpreter.”
Your heart stopped.
“For what?”
“For me. Appointments, meetings, family events. My son’s signing is terrible, and everyone around him fears him too much to tell him.”
You smiled.
“I noticed.”
“I will pay properly.”
“Sophia, I’m not certified yet.”
“You sign better than certified people who stare at my son instead of listening to me.”
That sentence decided it.
Two days later, you met Sophia at her Chicago apartment, a penthouse overlooking Lake Michigan. It was elegant but warm, filled with books, old photographs, Sicilian ceramics, and plants that seemed lovingly overwatered.
Dante was there.
Of course he was.
He stood near the windows, speaking on the phone in Italian. When he saw you, he ended the call.
“Elena.”
“Dante.”
His eyes moved over your face.
“You were fired.”
You looked at Sophia.
She signed, “I told him.”
Traitor.
Sophia grinned.
Dante’s jaw tightened.
“Marco will be dealt with.”
“No,” you said immediately.
His gaze snapped back to you.
“No?”
“I don’t need revenge over a restaurant job.”
“People like Marco survive because everyone calls accountability revenge.”
You hated how good that sounded.
Still, you shook your head.
“I don’t want my name involved.”
He studied you.
“Then it won’t be.”
That did not reassure you as much as it should have.
Sophia clapped her hands once.
“Enough. I am hiring her, not marrying her into a vendetta.”
Dante’s eyes flicked to your hands.
“What did she say?”
You smiled sweetly.
“She said she is very excited to work with me.”
Sophia laughed silently.
Dante looked suspicious.
Good.
Working for Sophia was nothing like working at Bissimo.
She paid you more for one afternoon than the restaurant paid for three shifts. She insisted you eat lunch with her. She asked about your classes, your childhood, your goals. She corrected your Italian signs when they differed from ASL and taught you Sicilian expressions that made Dante groan when you repeated them.
For the first time in years, work did not make you feel invisible.
It made you feel useful.
But working for Sophia also meant entering Dante’s world.
And Dante’s world was not safe.
Men arrived at odd hours. They spoke in low voices and stopped when you entered. Bodyguards remained near doors. Cars idled outside. Names appeared in conversations that you later saw in news articles connected to shipping disputes, union investigations, and federal indictments.
You told yourself you were there for Sophia.
Not Dante.
Never Dante.
Then one Thursday evening, everything changed.
Sophia had a cardiology appointment at Northwestern. Dante insisted on coming, though he spent most of the appointment standing in the corner like a thundercloud in a tailored coat.
The doctor spoke too quickly.
Too loudly.
At Sophia, not to her.
“She needs to reduce stress,” he told Dante.
Sophia looked at you, irritated.
You interpreted exactly.
Her eyes narrowed.
Then she signed back.
“Tell him I am deaf, not furniture.”
You inhaled.
Dante looked at you.
“Translate.”
You did.
The doctor flushed.
Dante smiled.
It was not friendly.
“My mother asked you a question, Doctor.”
After that, the doctor spoke directly to Sophia.
Slowly.
Respectfully.
You watched Dante watching his mother.
The ruthless man in the rumors was there, yes.
But so was something else.
A son furious at every person who treated his mother like an inconvenience.
Outside the clinic, Sophia grew tired. Dante helped her into the car with such careful gentleness that your chest tightened.
He caught you looking.
“What?”
“You’re different with her.”
His expression closed.
“She is my mother.”
“That doesn’t make everyone gentle.”
Something flashed in his eyes.
Pain, maybe.
Then it vanished.
“No,” he said. “It doesn’t.”
Later, Sophia napped in the car while the driver navigated traffic. You sat across from Dante, the city blurring beyond tinted windows.
He looked at your hands.
“Teach me.”
You blinked.
“What?”
“Sign. Properly.”
“You know some.”
“I know enough to disappoint my mother.”
You smiled.
“At least you’re self-aware.”
His mouth twitched.
“Do not enjoy this too much.”
“I will enjoy it the appropriate amount.”
You began with basics.
Not alphabet.
He knew that.
You taught him smoother sentence structure, facial grammar, how expression carried meaning. You corrected the stiffness in his hands. You made him repeat mother, appointment, pain, rest, and I am listening until he stopped looking like he was negotiating with his own fingers.
At one point, he signed, “I want understand you.”
You lifted an eyebrow.
“Me?”
He froze.
Then corrected.
“I want understand her.”
You let him have the lie.
For now.
The closer you came to Sophia, the closer you came to danger.
One night, after a charity dinner where you interpreted for her, you stepped outside the venue and found two men waiting near the alley.
Not Vitelli men.
You knew that instantly.
Dante’s bodyguards carried stillness like trained weapons. These men carried impatience.
One smiled.
“Elena Russo?”
Your pulse jumped.
“Yes?”
“Our employer wants to talk.”
You stepped back.
“I don’t know your employer.”
“You know Dante Vitelli.”
The second man moved behind you.
Your mouth went dry.
You could scream, but the street was loud and the venue doors had closed behind you. Your phone was in your bag. Your hands were empty.
Then a voice cut through the night.
“She said no.”
Dante stepped from the shadow near the curb.
You had never seen him like that.
Not charming.
Not restrained.
Dangerous in the way storms are dangerous before the first strike.
His two bodyguards appeared behind the men.
The alley went very quiet.
The first man raised his hands.
“Just delivering a message.”
Dante walked closer.
“To her?”
The man swallowed.
“To you.”
“Then you should have spoken to me.”
“You’re hard to reach.”
Dante smiled.
Cold.
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