Her Father Gave Her to a Mafia Boss. Then the Contract Turned-lbsuong

Bailey Smith had spent most of her life being treated like an error in a family portrait.

Not a tragedy.

Not a scandal.

Image

An error.

Something badly framed, badly lit, and impossible to crop out without making everyone ask questions.

Her father, Alaric Smith, believed in clean lines, quiet rooms, and women who knew how to become furniture when powerful men entered.

Bailey had never managed that.

She was too observant.

Too direct.

Too willing to read the page nobody else wanted her to read.

When she was sixteen, she found a customs ledger left open in her father’s study and noticed that one vessel had been routed through a port already flagged for inspection.

She told him at breakfast.

By noon, Smith Shipping had changed the route.

By midnight, the seizure order came down on the original dock.

Her father saved millions.

At dinner, he told his guests his instincts had saved the company.

Later, behind a closed office door, he looked at Bailey and said, “Never correct me in front of staff again.”

That was how Bailey learned the first rule of the Smith house.

A daughter could be useful, but she could never be seen being right.

Years passed, and the rule hardened around her.

At charity dinners, Alaric praised her older cousins for their posture, their dresses, their engagements, their talent for laughing softly at men who interrupted them.

Bailey was praised only when she was absent.

Her mother had died when Bailey was young enough that memory had turned her into fragments: lavender in drawers, pearl earrings against a black dress, a hand smoothing Bailey’s hair before the world taught her to flinch from touch.

After that, Alaric turned the house into a showroom.

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