She Hated the Mafia Boss Until the Crash Revealed His Secret-Neyney - Chainityai

She Hated the Mafia Boss Until the Crash Revealed His Secret-Neyney

Elena Vale was thirty thousand feet over the Atlantic when the man she hated most unbuckled his seat belt to save her life.

One minute earlier, she had been sitting across from Luca Romano in a private jet cabin that smelled like leather, bitter coffee, and expensive cologne.

The Atlantic glittered blue beneath them, stretched out so far it made the world feel empty.

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Inside the cabin, everything was quiet in the way money can make things quiet.

Cream leather seats.

Polished wood trim.

A glass bar set into the wall.

Two guards near the cockpit, still as furniture.

Luca sat across from her with one ankle crossed over the other, reading a file as if even gravity had signed one of his contracts.

He wore a black shirt, sleeves buttoned at the wrist, an expensive watch, and the kind of calm that made people lower their voices before he even looked at them.

To the public, he was the owner of Romano Maritime, a shipping empire with private ports, coastal contracts, and boardrooms full of men who never seemed to say no.

To anyone who paid closer attention, he was something else.

Something colder.

A mafia boss.

Not the movie kind.

Not loud.

Not theatrical.

Not a man who needed to shout, threaten, or break things to make a room understand danger.

Luca Romano’s quiet was enough.

Elena had worked for him for nearly three years as an accounts coordinator.

That was the title printed on her employment file.

In practice, it meant she reconciled shipping invoices, corrected ledgers, moved payments between departments, carried sealed folders, and answered calls from men who never gave last names.

Every morning at 7:10 a.m., she checked Luca’s calendar against the driver log.

Which dock.

Which office.

Which hangar.

Which hotel hallway.

Which meeting required coffee, and which meeting required silence.

She knew the schedules of his ships better than she knew the schedules of most of her own relatives.

She knew his preferred whiskey.

She knew the thin gray folders marked PAYMENT HOLD.

She knew the way his guards moved when his mood shifted by half an inch.

She also knew he had no heart.

That was not an opinion she had formed easily.

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