The Mafia Boss Gathered Five Rich Women and Told His Little Son to Choose a New Mother—But the Heartbroken Boy Ignored Them All and Ran Straight to the Nanny Who Had Nothing

The Mafia Boss Gathered Five Rich Women and Told His Little Son to Choose a New Mother—But the Heartbroken Boy Ignored Them All and Ran Straight to the Nanny Who Had Nothing
Part 2
That night, Mateo woke screaming at 2:17 a.m.
I reached his room before Lucas did, though only by seconds. Mateo was sitting upright in bed, clawing at his own pajama sleeves, eyes wide open but seeing something that was not there. “No car,” he sobbed. “No, no, no car.”
I sat on the edge of the bed and let him find me. “Mateo. It’s Hannah. You’re in your room. You’re safe.”
Lucas stood frozen in the doorway, one hand gripping the frame so hard his knuckles whitened. He looked powerful in daylight. At two in the morning, watching his son break apart, he looked like a man being punished by ghosts.
Mateo finally collapsed into my arms. I rocked him until his sobs became hiccups, until his small body gave up fighting sleep. When I laid him down, his fingers stayed tangled in my sleeve.
“Don’t go,” he whispered.
“I’m here.”
Lucas waited until Mateo’s breathing evened out before speaking. “My office.”
The third floor was forbidden territory. Dark wood. Glass walls. Bookshelves. A desk positioned like a throne. Lucas poured himself whiskey but did not drink it.
“What did he mean by no car?” I asked.
His eyes lifted to mine. “You agreed not to ask questions.”
“I agreed not to ask about your business. Your son is my responsibility.”
Something flickered across his face. Annoyance, maybe. Or respect.
“Three years ago,” he said, “my daughter died in a car crash.”
My breath caught.
“Her name was Lucia. She was five. My ex-wife, Catherine, was driving. It was not an accident.”
The room seemed to narrow around him.
“My brother Marco arranged it.”
I gripped the chair in front of me. “Your brother?”
“Yes.”
“And he’s still allowed near Mateo?”
Lucas’s jaw hardened. “In my world, cutting out rot too quickly can poison the whole body. Marco is watched. Contained.”
“Children don’t feel contained danger, Mr. Ravellini. They just feel danger.”
His eyes sharpened at my tone.
I should have apologized. I needed this job. I needed the money. But Mateo’s nightmare still clung to my skin, and suddenly fear felt less important than fury.
“You asked your son to choose a nanny because you trust his instincts,” I said. “Then trust what his body is telling you. He’s terrified.”
Lucas looked away first.
That should not have felt like victory. It did.
“You were a teacher,” he said quietly.
“Yes.”
“Why did you leave?”
“I told the truth about people with more protection than I had.”
His gaze returned to mine. For the first time, he looked at me not like an employee, not like a tool, but like someone who understood exactly what power did to women without it.
“Then you know,” he said, “what it means to survive after no one believes you.”
Before I could answer, a sound came from the hallway.
Mateo stood barefoot outside the office, rabbit dangling from one hand.
“I choose Hannah,” he said sleepily. “Not just nanny. I choose her.”
Lucas did not move.
Neither did I.
The little boy looked at his father with all the courage his tiny body could hold.
“For my mother,” he whispered.

For one terrible second, nobody breathed.

The office seemed to hold Mateo’s words in its dark corners, pressing them into the wood and glass and silence. I choose her. For my mother.

Lucas turned toward his son with the stunned care of a man approaching a wound.

“Mateo,” he said softly.

The little boy’s chin trembled, but he did not look away. “The other ladies smiled too much.”

Lucas closed his eyes.

“They smelled like flowers,” Mateo continued, his small voice thick with sleep and fear. “They touched me when I didn’t say yes. Hannah waits.”

It was the kind of sentence adults spent years trying to learn.

Lucas crouched before him. “Come here.”

Mateo hesitated.

That hesitation hurt Lucas. I saw it pass across his face before he buried it.

He did not reach. He waited.

Finally, Mateo stepped into his father’s arms.

Lucas held him like he was holding the last living piece of himself.

“I am not replacing your mother,” Lucas said, voice rough. “No one is replacing anyone.”

Mateo’s face pressed into his shoulder. “But she left.”

“No,” Lucas whispered. “Your mother is alive. She loves you in the way she can.”

“She doesn’t come.”

Lucas’s throat moved. “No. She doesn’t.”

“Lucia doesn’t come either.”

At the sound of his daughter’s name, Lucas’s face changed so completely I had to look away.

For the first time since I entered that penthouse, I understood that grief lived there like another family member. It sat at the breakfast table. It followed Mateo to bed. It stood behind Lucas in every room, wearing the shape of a little girl who never got older.

Lucas carried Mateo back upstairs, and I followed.

Together, we tucked him in. Together, we waited until his breathing deepened. When Lucas moved to leave, Mateo’s hand shot out and caught his wrist.

“Both,” he mumbled.

Lucas looked at me.

I sat on the other side of the bed.

For almost an hour, we stayed there in the glow of the nightlight, two adults bound by a child’s fear and a dead girl’s shadow.

After that night, the walls inside the penthouse began to shift.

Not visibly. Nothing about Lucas Ravellini’s home allowed disorder. But the air changed. I was no longer simply the nanny. I was the person Mateo reached for after nightmares. The person Lucas watched when he thought I did not notice. The person Marco began studying with open dislike when he visited on Thursdays.

Marco Ravellini looked like Lucas in the way a knife looked like a surgeon’s instrument. Same dark eyes, same aristocratic bones, same elegance. But where Lucas held violence behind discipline, Marco displayed cruelty like jewelry.

The first time he saw me with Mateo, he smiled.

“So this is the famous Hannah Cooper,” he said. “The chosen one.”

Mateo’s small hand tightened around mine.

Lucas stepped between them. “You were leaving.”

Marco’s smile widened. “Was I?”

“Yes.”

I had seen men challenge one another before. Fathers at school board meetings. Angry husbands in hallways. Police officers in my brother David’s kitchen, voices low over coffee and bad news. But this was different. Lucas and Marco did not raise their voices because men like them did not need volume to become dangerous.

Marco’s gaze slid to Mateo. “You look well, nephew.”

Mateo pressed against my leg.

“Don’t speak to him,” Lucas said.

The words were calm.

The room became cold.

Marco lifted both hands. “Still sensitive, I see.”

“Still alive,” Lucas replied.

Marco laughed softly. “For now, we all are.”

When he left, Mateo refused lunch. Then dinner. At bedtime, he shoved the rabbit off his bed and told me he hated me.

I sat on the floor beside him. “Okay.”

His eyes widened. “Okay?”

“You can hate me tonight. I’ll still be here tomorrow.”

He kicked the blanket. “You’re lying.”

“No.”

“Everyone lies.”

“That may be true. But I’m still coming back tomorrow.”

His face crumpled. He turned away before I could see him cry.

I stayed until he slept.

Lucas was waiting in the hall.

“You don’t have to absorb all of it,” he said.

“Someone does.”

“That should be me.”

“Yes,” I said. “It should.”

He looked as if I had slapped him.

I expected anger. Instead, he nodded once.

“You’re right.”

Honesty from Lucas always arrived like a door unlocking in a room I hadn’t known was closed.

Over the next month, Mateo stopped asking if I was leaving. He did not trust completely. Trust, for him, was not a bridge. It was a series of stones placed one at a time across dark water. But he began letting me help without turning every moment into a test.