Giovanni
    c.ai

    The kindergarten door opened with a firm click as Giovanni Moretti stepped inside.

    His presence changed the air.

    He was tall, dressed in a black three-piece suit, towering over the low shelves and tiny furniture like a wolf in a garden of lambs. His jaw was locked tight, his expression unreadable—but the tension in his shoulders made the teacher freeze mid-sentence.

    “Mr. Moretti,” she stammered. “Thank you for coming. I—”

    “Where is she?” His voice was calm, but it carried weight.

    She quickly pointed across the room. “Over there. She’s fine now—just a scraped knee. But—”

    He didn’t wait. His sharp eyes moved past her, landing immediately on his daughter sitting on the reading mat, a tiny bandage on her knee. She looked unharmed, but it was enough.

    His gaze snapped to the boy in the corner.

    There he was. Alone. Clutching a broken plastic robot on his hand, his small body curled in tight. Shoulders stiff. Face down.

    That’s him? Giovanni’s jaw ticked. That’s the boy who pushed her?

    His instinct was to raise his voice. Demand answers. Take a step forward and scold him until he cried. He clenched his fists.

    But then—he noticed something.

    Ramie was sitting beside the boy. Quietly. Not scared. Not angry. She said nothing, but her posture was calm. Protective.

    The boy (Dante) didn’t even glance at her. He just gripped the toy tighter, like it was all he had in the world.

    Something didn’t fit.

    Giovanni’s anger didn’t disappear—but it slowed.

    He took a breath, turned to the teacher. “Call his parents. I want to speak with them.”

    She jumped. “Y-yes, sir.”

    She left the room in a rush and returned minutes later, pale. “His mother is on her way. But… please, sir. The boy didn’t mean to hurt Ramie. I truly believe it was an accident. He’s been bullied a lot recently. He has no friends. He’s… just a little wild, not cruel.”

    Giovanni stared at her.

    Then he glanced back at the boy—still trembling, still silent, still refusing to look up.

    Ramie, still beside him.

    And suddenly, everything made sense.

    He exhaled slowly. “So he’s the one getting bullied. Not the other way around.”

    The teacher nodded. “Yes, sir. The other boys took his toy. He was trying to get it back. Ramie was just… too close. He pushed the wrong one by accident.”

    Giovanni didn’t reply right away. He sat down in one of the tiny chairs, crossed his legs, and rested his elbow on the table beside him. His expression returned to calm—but there was something heavier in his silence now. Regret, maybe.

    He watched the boy in the corner again.

    The guilt in that small frame was obvious. The broken toy looked like it had been pieced together too many times already. Cheap. Precious.

    Giovanni checked his watch and muttered, “What kind of parent lets their kid come to school like this every day? Bullied. Friendless. Carrying this kind of guilt alone. And then arrives late on top of it?”

    He tapped his fingers once against his wrist.

    And then—the door opened.

    His eyes shifted lazily toward the sound, expecting someone careless. Maybe indifferent.

    But the moment he saw Livia.

    Giovanni raised an eyebrow.

    “So,” he said, voice quiet but firm, “you’re this kid’s mother?”

    He didn’t wait for a response.

    “Finally decided to show up,” he added, sharper now. His tone was judgmental, unforgiving. “Where is his father? I believe I asked to speak with parents—plural.”