The maid adjusted the mafia boss’s tie: “Your driver has a gun, don’t get in the car!” ******* PART 1 ******** In the most luxurious mansions of Las Lomas, in Mexico City, secrets weren’t hidden in safes, but behind impeccable smiles, tailored suits, and locked doors. Nora Reyes knew this well. For eight months, she had walked the halls of the Román house like a ghost: silent, invisible, always with her eyes downcast and her ears open. Everyone knew her as the discreet young woman who cleaned the Italian chandeliers, arranged the silverware, and changed the fresh flowers in the main office. No one imagined that, before wearing a gray apron and flat shoes, Nora had worked in Monterrey as a risk analyst for a corporate investigations firm. She had learned to read gestures, silences, trembling hands, and poorly concealed lies. That talent almost cost him his life when he uncovered a money laundering network connected to police officers, businessmen, and criminals. He fled without looking back. He changed his name, his city, and his life. The Román house seemed like the perfect place to disappear. The owner of that fortress was Vicente Román, still a young man, but hardened by distrust. He had inherited his father’s power after a sudden and all-too-convenient death. He didn’t raise his voice. He didn’t make a scene. His fury was cold, precise, surgical. And that’s why everyone feared him even more.
That Tuesday in October, the tension was palpable. Vicente was leaving for a key meeting in Polanco with Damián Caldera’s group, a rival family with whom he was trying to broker a truce. No one in the house said it openly, but everyone knew that this peace could be shattered with a single spark. Nora was cleaning the study in the west wing when she saw him through the window. Down below, next to the black armored sedan waiting at the entrance, stood Darío, Vicente’s personal driver. He had worked for the family for twelve years. He was a tough, methodical man, almost mechanical. But that morning he was different. He paced in short circles, as if trying to contain a storm within his chest. He pulled a disposable cell phone from his jacket, typed something furiously, and put it back. The air was cold, but sweat trickled down his forehead. Nora stopped waving the rag. Then she realized the worst. Darío reached for the small of his back to adjust a gun hidden in his pants. Nora frowned. A trained driver didn’t carry a gun like that. It was an awkward position for defending the passenger… but perfect for shooting him in the back just before closing the door. She felt an icy blow to her stomach. There was no need to listen to any conversation. Darío’s body was screaming what his mouth kept silent: fear, urgency, betrayal. Footsteps echoed behind her. Mateo Salgado, Vicente’s right-hand man, crossed the hallway talking on his phone. « We’re leaving in twenty minutes. If Caldera’s men arrive with more than three, everything’s canceled. » Nora lowered her gaze and continued pretending to clean, but inside her heart pounded wildly. If Vicente died, it wouldn’t just be a war that broke out. We employees would be the first to disappear to eliminate witnesses. Her survival depended on that man arriving alive by nightfall. She clutched the rag in her hands, took a deep breath, and made a decision that could bury her. She was going to warn him. And if she was wrong… no one would ever find his body again.The maid adjusted the mafia boss’s tie: “Your driver has a gun, don’t get in the car!”