A Chicago Maid Was Chosen for a Moretti Wedding. Then Silence Broke-nhu9999 - Chainityai

A Chicago Maid Was Chosen for a Moretti Wedding. Then Silence Broke-nhu9999

For eleven months and twelve days, Grace Miller had learned how to disappear inside the Moretti mansion. She moved before dawn, polished after midnight, and kept her eyes lowered whenever important men spoke in rooms built to swallow secrets.

The house sat behind gates that made even delivery drivers lower their voices. Marble floors reflected chandeliers like still water, and every corridor seemed to carry the smell of expensive wood, cigar smoke, and lemon polish.

Alessandro Moretti was thirty-four, broad-shouldered, and disciplined in a way that made people nervous. From Chicago to New York, his name traveled ahead of him, quieting rooms before he ever stepped inside them.

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He was not loud. That made him worse. Loud men warned you before they struck. Alessandro used silence like a door closing, and most people understood that once it shut, there was no pleading through it.

Grace understood the rules of the house better than anyone gave her credit for. Models from the Gold Coast came through with perfume hanging behind them. Lake Forest daughters arrived in pearls, speaking softly while watching everything.

They all wanted something. Money was only the obvious part. Some wanted protection. Some wanted position. Some wanted the Moretti name beside theirs so badly they smiled even when Alessandro did not smile back.

Dominic’s wedding was supposed to be another polished family event. The younger brother would stand under flowers, powerful guests would measure one another, and women who had spent years circling Alessandro would wait to see who he chose.

In families like the Morettis, weddings were not only weddings. They were maps. Every seating chart told a story, every escort announced an alliance, and every empty chair could be read as an insult.

Grace knew none of that was supposed to involve her. She washed glasses, replaced linens, and turned away when private conversations turned sharp. Her place was the kitchen, the laundry room, the back staircase.

That was why the night before Dominic’s wedding felt strange even before Alessandro came home. Rain tapped against the windows in a thin, restless rhythm, and the mansion seemed too polished, too quiet, too awake.

Grace was drying the final stemmed glass a few minutes before midnight. The marble counter pressed cold against her hip. Her hands smelled of lemon polish, warm water, and the faint soap she used to scrub away fingerprints.

Ethan Blake entered first, which meant Alessandro was close behind. Ethan was Alessandro’s right-hand man, the kind of person who looked prepared for earthquakes, raids, betrayals, and funerals without changing his expression.

But even Ethan seemed uneasy that night. His gaze moved across the kitchen as if checking exits. He folded his arms, then unfolded them, then looked toward the hall where the grandfather clock marked every second too loudly.

Alessandro followed in a black dress shirt and tailored trousers. His sleeves were rolled to his forearms, his tie was gone, and his dark hair had slipped just enough to make him look dangerous in a different way.

Grace lowered her eyes out of habit. Staff survived by noticing everything and reacting to nothing. That was the first rule of working in a house where powerful people confused fear with respect.

Then Alessandro stopped in the kitchen instead of passing through it. Grace felt it before she understood it. The room changed shape around him. Even the refrigerator’s hum seemed to pull back.

He looked past the marble counters, the copper pans, and the final glass waiting to be dried. His gaze landed on Grace, steady and exact, as if he had been walking toward this moment all evening.

“You,” he said.

Grace froze with the glass still in her hand. For one suspended second, nothing moved. Not the grandfather clock in the hall, not the shadow of the security guard beyond the frosted door, not the breath inside her lungs.

She had heard him speak to men who owed him money. She had seen liars lose color under that same unblinking focus. Alessandro Moretti did not waste words, and he did not joke with staff.

“You’re coming with me to Dominic’s wedding tomorrow,” he said.

Grace thought she had heard him wrong. The rain tapped harder, or maybe her pulse had moved into her ears. She looked at Ethan because Ethan’s reaction would tell her whether this was real.

Ethan Blake looked openly stunned. That alone made Grace’s stomach tighten. A man prepared for danger had just been caught unprepared by a sentence, and the sentence had been aimed at her.

“Sir?” she whispered.

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