Eight Months Pregnant, She Ran Into The Mafia Ex She Hid From-heyily

The glass doors opened so quietly that Isabella Bennett almost wished they had made a sound.

A chime would have warned her she was stepping out of the ordinary world and back toward the one she had spent months trying to escape.

Instead, the doors slid apart without a whisper, and cold New York air followed her into the boutique with the smell of wet wool, roasted coffee, and exhaust from Madison Avenue.

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She kept one hand underneath her belly as she stepped inside.

At eight months pregnant, every movement had become deliberate.

Standing took effort.

Sitting took planning.

Walking across a room meant knowing where the nearest chair was, whether the floor was slick, and whether anyone was staring long enough to guess what her coat was trying to hide.

The oversized black coat had worked for a while.

In grocery stores, laundromats, and the clinic waiting room where tired women stared at phones and nobody asked questions, it had covered enough.

In this boutique, it covered almost nothing.

This was the kind of place where people noticed everything.

The sales associate near the front desk looked up with the trained softness of someone used to serving women who did not ask prices out loud.

The room smelled like cedarwood, clean cotton, and money that had been quiet for generations.

Pale oak cribs lined the walls beneath gold lighting.

Folded cashmere baby blankets sat on low tables like museum pieces.

A cream-colored stroller stood near the front window with chrome wheels so polished they reflected the city sidewalk outside.

Isabella had seen strollers cheaper than that parked outside brownstones in Brooklyn, but this one looked like it belonged in a penthouse elevator.

She did not belong here anymore.

Once, she had.

Once, rooms like this had opened for her without anyone checking her card or asking her name.

Once, she had been Isabella Moretti.

Luca Moretti’s wife.

That name had followed her through hotel lobbies, private dining rooms, charity galas, and court corridors where men with expensive watches lowered their voices when Luca passed.

He was the youngest boss ever to take over the Moretti empire in New York.

People said it like a headline.

They said it with fear disguised as respect.

They said it because Luca had learned early that power did not need to shout when everyone already knew what silence meant.

Isabella had once mistaken that silence for safety.

She had fallen in love with the part of him that very few people saw.

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