The Mafia Boss Brought My Dead Fiancé’s Watch—And The Evidence Was Still Sealed-Cherry

The rear window of the black SUV lowered with a sound so smooth it felt rehearsed.

Matteo Bellini sat inside, pale under the gray morning light, one hand pressed to the bandage I had taped over his ribs less than four hours earlier. His white shirt had been changed. The new one was black, open at the collar, but the way he held himself told me every stitch was pulling.

Beside him, on the leather seat, lay James’s watch.

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Not a similar watch.

Not a replacement.

James’s watch.

The brown leather strap still had the tiny burn mark near the buckle from the night he tried to make crème brûlée in our apartment and nearly set off every smoke alarm on the block. The silver face was cracked across the eleven. The hands were frozen at 11:42.

The time James died.

My fingers curled around the strap of my tote bag until the canvas dug into my palm.

The man in the charcoal coat held out the old police evidence envelope. My name was written across the front in black marker.

EMMA SHAW.

Under it, in smaller print:

HARRINGTON CASE — PERSONAL EFFECTS.

The street smelled like wet pavement, exhaust, and the sour steam coming up from a corner deli vent. A garbage truck growled two blocks away. Someone’s air conditioner dripped steadily from a third-floor window. Queens was waking up around me like nothing in the world had changed.

But my dead fiancé’s watch was sitting in a mafia boss’s car.

“Get in,” Matteo said.

His voice was calm.

Not an order barked through a window.

Not a threat.

Worse.

An invitation from a man used to everyone understanding the cost of refusing.

I looked at the envelope.

Then at the watch.

Then at the three SUVs lining the curb outside my apartment building like a funeral procession without flowers.

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