My Boyfriend Yelled “You’re Dead When We Get Home”—The Mafia Boss Was Eating At The Next Table

Part 1
“You’re dead when we get home.”
The words were hissed through clenched teeth, carrying over the clinking crystal and soft jazz of the dim restaurant.
I froze, my fork trembling halfway to my mouth.
The heavy weight of my boyfriend’s threat settled like a stone in my stomach.
I stared at my lap, trying to shrink into my plus-size frame, praying nobody heard.
But someone did.
At the adjacent table, a man in a bespoke charcoal suit slowly set down his espresso.
Soft candlelight flickered against the polished mahogany tables of Valenti’s, Chicago’s most exclusive Italian dining room.
The air was thick with the scent of roasted garlic, rich truffles, and expensive burgundy.
For most patrons, the ambiance was a backdrop for romance or high-stakes business.
For me, a 26-year-old archivist, it was a beautifully decorated hell.
I shifted uncomfortably in my emerald green wrap dress.
I had spent two weeks’ salary on it, hoping the deep color and heavy silk would complement my soft, full figure.
I was a big girl—thick thighs, broad hips, and a generous bust.
And I had spent my entire life navigating a world that demanded women be small.
Derek, my boyfriend of three years, was usually the loudest voice making those demands.
Tonight was supposed to be our anniversary dinner, a rare treat that I had secretly hoped would be a turning point.
Instead, it was just another stage for his cruelty.
“Are you really going to eat all of that?”
Derek asked, his voice a low, mocking drawl.
He gestured with his wine glass toward the plate of wild mushroom risotto resting in front of me.
He was conventionally handsome with styled blonde hair and a sharp jawline, but his eyes were entirely devoid of warmth.
My cheeks burned.
The restaurant was crowded, and I felt the phantom sting of a hundred eyes on me, even though no one was actually looking.
“It’s…
it’s my main course, Derek.
I haven’t eaten since breakfast.”
“And it shows,” he muttered, taking a sip of his Cabernet.
“I told you to order the sea bass.
It’s light.
But no, you have to embarrass me by gorging yourself on carbs in front of half my firm’s partners.
Look at you.
You’re spilling out of that dress.”
Tears pricked the corners of my eyes, but I blinked them back furiously.
I was used to this.
The insidious chipping away of my self-esteem, the quiet remarks in public, the explosive rages in private.
I stared down at the risotto, my appetite completely gone.
I wanted to disappear, to fold into myself until I vanished.
“I’m sorry,” I whispered, my voice barely audible over the low hum of the restaurant.
“You will be,” Derek snapped.
He leaned closer, his features twisting into an ugly sneer.
His hand darted under the heavy linen tablecloth, his fingers clamping down on my thick thigh with a vicious, bruising grip.
I gasped, my eyes widening in shock and pain.
“Derek, please, you’re hurting me.”
I breathed, terrified of making a scene.
It was then that he leaned in, his mouth inches from my ear, his breath hot and smelling of sour wine.
“You’re dead when we get home.
I’m going to teach you how to behave, you fat, useless cow.”
The words hung in the air between us, a promise of violence that made my blood run cold.
I knew what happened when we got home.
I knew the closed doors, the shoved shoulders, the terrifying isolation of our shared apartment.
My fork trembled in my hand, clattering noisily against the edge of my porcelain plate.
At the table directly to our right, separated only by a low divider of imported ferns, the atmosphere shifted.
The man in the charcoal suit had been ignoring us until he heard the distinct, sharp sound of Derek threatening me.
His acute hearing picked up the hissed words over the jazz music.
Without a word, the man stood up.
He was an imposing figure, radiating an aura of dark, unyielding power.
The bespoke charcoal suit clung to his muscular frame, and a heavy gold watch on his wrist caught the candlelight.
As he moved, the entire restaurant seemed to subconsciously hold its breath.
Waiters paused mid-step.
He stepped around the fern divider and stopped directly behind Derek’s chair.
Derek, oblivious to the shift in the room’s temperature, was still glaring at me.
“Wipe your face,” Derek hissed.
“You’re making a spectacle.”
“I believe,” a deep, gravelly voice echoed from above, “the only spectacle here is you.”
Derek whipped his head around, annoyed, his mouth opening to snap a retort.
The words died in his throat.
He craned his neck, looking up at the towering, terrifying figure.
“Excuse me?”
Derek stammered, releasing my leg and shrinking back into his chair.
“This is a private conversation.”
The stranger didn’t smile.
His eyes were completely dead, void of any human warmth.
“I heard your conversation,” he said, his voice quiet but carrying a lethal edge.
“It offended me.
And when I am offended, I tend to react poorly.”
I sat paralyzed, my heart hammering against my ribs.
I looked at the stranger, taking in his striking, terrifying features—raven black hair, eyes the color of a stormy ocean, and a faint silver scar cutting through his left eyebrow.
He felt dangerous, yet for the first time all night, I didn’t feel like the target of the danger.
“Look buddy,” Derek tried to muster some bravado, puffing out his chest.
“I don’t know who you think you are, but you need to back off.
She’s my girlfriend.”
Before Derek could even blink, the man’s hand shot out.
His large, scarred fingers closed around the back of Derek’s neck, gripping him with the strength of a steel vise.
He didn’t raise his voice.
He simply leaned down until his face was inches from Derek’s.
“If you ever speak to her like that again,” the stranger whispered, ensuring only Derek and I could hear.
“If you ever lay a hand on her, or if you even breathe in her direction without permission, I will have my men peel the skin from your body while you are still awake to feel it.
Do you understand me?”
