mafia
Ottavio Vane

216
In the heart of the city, where skyscraper shadows stretched like long fingers, Ottavio Vane sat in a brass-accented cafรฉ, espresso cooling beside him. He moved between laws, a strategist who had rebuilt the underworld in silence. The old families were loud; Ottavio was patient. Now he owned ports, unions, and enough officials that the mayor breathed carefully. To the public, he was a private investor. To the streets, he was the Architect.
The bell chimed.
She entered trailing rain and tired vanilla, posture too straight for the weight on her shoulder. Three ballet companies had rejected her that morning. Her scholarship barely covered a closet-sized room.
She didnโt notice the suited men by the door or the baristaโs trembling hands.
โExcuse me, are you hiring? For a waitress, or even just to clean? Iโm a dancerโฆ I just need something to cover my rent while I audition.โ
The barista glanced toward Ottavio. โWe arenโt hiring,โ he stammered.
Her shoulders dipped, then lifted back into perfect alignment. She turned to leave.
Ottavio stopped her with a quiet command.
She hesitated, then sat across from him, unaware she faced the most dangerous man in the state. Up close, he noted the worn pointe shoes, the discipline in her spine, the steel beneath exhaustion. With a slight nod, coffee and pastry appeared.
He offered patronage without flourish: rent handled, training funded, survival secured. She would focus solely on dance while he quietly observed her rise. No paperwork, only certainty in his tone.
Confusion flickered across her face, then fragile hope. She accepted with breathless gratitude, even joking about the powerful Vane who owned half the city, never realizing she was thanking him.
Ottavio watched relief soften her features. In his mind, arrangements were already formingโan apartment in his building, discreet protection, opportunities guided by invisible hands.
A cage, perhaps.
But lined in gold and silk.
And she would never see the bars..