“He Broke My Ribs”—She Texted The Wrong Number—Mafia Boss Replied: “I’m On My Way”
A Fatal Mistake
A wrong number usually ends with an awkward apology. For Evelyn Vance, it ended with a war.
Trapped in a locked bathroom with broken ribs, hiding from a violent detective who swore to kill her, she tried to text her brother for help. Her hands were shaking too hard; she mistyped one digit.
That message didn’t go to her brother. It went to the personal burner phone of Lucas Moretti, Chicago’s most elusive and ruthless crime lord, a number that hadn’t received a text in three years.
What happens when a desperate victim accidentally summons the devil himself? The answer is bloody, heartbreaking, and terrifying.
This is the story of “He Broke My Ribs.” The sound of a human rib snapping is distinct.
It isn’t a clean crack like a dry twig; it is a wet, muffled pop that vibrates through the entire torso. Evelyn Vance heard that sound before she felt the pain.
Then the air left her lungs in a violent rush, replaced by a white-hot agony that radiated from her left side. She crumbled to the linoleum floor of the kitchen, gasping, her vision swimming with black spots.
The Shadow of a Detective
“Look what you made me do,”
Marcus said. His voice was calm.
That was the worst part about Marcus Thorne. He didn’t yell; he didn’t scream like the abusers in the movies.
He was a detective with the Chicago PD, a man who knew exactly how to inflict pain without leaving visible marks. Usually.
Tonight, he had lost control. Evelyn clutched her side, unable to speak.
Every shallow breath felt like a knife twisting in her chest. She looked up at him.
He was adjusting his cufflinks, staring down at her with a look of mild disappointment, as if she were a stain on his carpet rather than his fiancée of two years. “I have to go to the precinct,”
Marcus said, stepping over her legs.
“Clean this up and if you’re not in bed when I get back, Evelyn, we’ll have to finish this conversation.”
He grabbed his keys off the counter and walked out. The heavy oak door slammed shut, the deadbolt sliding home with a finality that made Evelyn flinch.
The Message to the Unknown
She waited three minutes. She counted them by the thumping of her own terrified heart.
When she was sure he was gone, she dragged herself across the floor. The pain was blinding.
She knew medically what was wrong. She was a nurse; she knew the symptoms of a pneumothorax or a flail chest.
She needed a hospital, but she couldn’t go to one. Marcus had friends in every ER in the city; they would call him.
They always called him. She needed Liam, her brother.
He was the only one who didn’t buy Marcus’s perfect cop act. Evelyn crawled toward the hallway bathroom, the only room with a lock that Marcus hadn’t broken yet.
She dragged her purse with her. Once inside, she locked the door and wedged her body against the vanity, trembling violently.
She fished her phone out of her bag. The screen was cracked from where Marcus had knocked it out of her hand yesterday, but it lit up: 11:42 p.m.
She opened her messages. Her vision was blurring from shock.
She tried to type Liam’s number from memory. She had deleted his contact info because Marcus checked her phone every night.
3-1-2-5-5. Her thumb slipped on the slick glass, smeared with a drop of blood from her lip.
She hit 0-1-1-9 instead of 0-1-1-9-8. She didn’t notice.
She just needed someone to know she was dying. “He broke my ribs. I can’t breathe. He locked me in. Please help. 224 Oak St, apt 4B. The code is 8890.”
She hit send. The phone slipped from her hand, clattering onto the tiles.
Evelyn leaned her head back against the cabinet, tears leaking from her eyes. The pain was becoming a dull, heavy weight, dragging her down into darkness.
She closed her eyes, praying Liam was awake, praying he was close. The phone vibrated against her leg.
She jolted, a fresh wave of agony ripping through her side. She grabbed the phone.
“Unknown: Who is this?” Evelyn frowned.
Liam? Why was he asking who this was?
Maybe he didn’t have her number saved since she got the new burner phone last week, too. “To Unknown: It’s Evelyn. Liam, please, I think my lung is punctured. Marcus did it. He’s coming back.”
She stared at the three dots dancing on the screen. They appeared, then disappeared, then appeared again.
For a terrifying minute, there was nothing. Had she texted the wrong person?
Was this a stranger who would just ignore a wrong number and go back to sleep? Then the phone buzzed again.
A single sentence from Unknown: “I’m on my way.”
Arrival of the Reaper
Evelyn let out a sob of relief. It wasn’t Liam’s way of speaking; Liam would be panicking, typing in all caps.
But maybe the shock had made him serious. She waited.
Ten minutes passed, then twenty. The pain was getting worse; her breathing was becoming shallow, rapid little gasps.
The room was spinning. Suddenly, the silence of the apartment was shattered.
It wasn’t a knock; it sounded like the front door had been taken off its hinges. Evelyn froze.
Had Marcus come back? Had he forgotten something?
If he found her texting, he would kill her. Tonight would be the night she became a statistic.
She heard heavy footsteps. Not one person, many; the sound of boots on hardwood moving with military precision.
“Check the bedroom,”
A deep, unfamiliar voice commanded.
It was a voice like grinding gravel, low, authoritative, and terrifying. “Clear the perimeter. If anyone comes near this floor, put them down.”
Evelyn stopped breathing. That wasn’t Marcus, and it definitely wasn’t Liam.
The footsteps approached the bathroom. Evelyn curled into a ball, clutching her knees to her chest despite the screaming pain in her ribs.
She held her breath. The doorknob jiggled.
“Locked.”
“She’s in here,”
A voice said from the other side.
“Step aside,”
The deep voice commanded.
Evelyn squeezed her eyes shut. “Please let it be quick.”
The door didn’t just open; it exploded inward with a single powerful kick. Wood splinters rained down on Evelyn.
She screamed, throwing her hands up to protect her face. Silence fell over the small bathroom.
Slowly, Evelyn lowered her hands. Standing in the doorway was a man who looked like he had been carved out of shadows.
He was tall, wearing a bespoke charcoal suit that cost more than her entire apartment. His dark hair was swept back, and his eyes—cold, hard, and terrifyingly dark—were fixed on her.
He wasn’t a cop. He wasn’t a paramedic.
He was Lucas Moretti. Evelyn knew his face.
Everyone in Chicago knew his face, though usually only from blurry paparazzi photos or mug shots that never led to convictions. He was the head of the Moretti crime family: the Reaper.
He looked down at her, taking in the bruising beginning to bloom on her jaw, the way she held her side, the terror in her eyes. He crouched down, not caring that his expensive trousers touched the dirty bathroom floor.
He picked up her phone, which was still lying next to her leg. He looked at the screen, confirming the text exchange.
Then he looked at her. “You’re not Sophia,”
He said.
His voice was quiet, but it carried a dangerous edge. “I… I wanted Liam,”
Evelyn wheezed, tears streaming down her face.
“I texted the wrong number. I’m sorry. Please don’t hurt me.”
Lucas stared at her for a long moment. He saw the way she flinched when he moved his hand.
He saw the distinct shape of a boot print on her shirt where her ribs were broken. He stood up, towering over her.
He turned to the men behind him: two giants armed with assault rifles that they were barely concealing. “Get Dr. Aris on the line,”
Lucas ordered.
“Tell him to prep surgery three at the estate.”
“Boss,”
One of the men hesitated.
“She’s a civilian and this is… this is cop territory. If we take her…”
Lucas turned his head slightly, his eyes narrowing. “She texted that number, Luca. The number that hasn’t rung since the day my sister died. Fate sent her to me.”
He looked back down at Evelyn. “Can you walk?”
Evelyn shook her head, sobbing. “It hurts.”
Lucas Moretti, the man known for burying his enemies in wet concrete, bent down with surprising gentleness. He slid one arm under her knees and the other behind her back.
He lifted her up as if she weighed nothing. Evelyn cried out as the movement jostled her ribs, her head falling against his chest.
He smelled of expensive leather, gun oil, and rain. “I’ve got you,”
He murmured, stepping over the shattered remains of the bathroom door.
“You’re safe now.”
