“He Broke My Ribs”—She Texted The Wrong Number—Mafia Boss Replied: “I’m On My Way”
A Dark Alliance
Meanwhile, across the city, the sterile silence of a different room was broken by a rage-filled scream. Marcus Thorne lay in a hospital bed at St. Luke’s.
His hands were encased in thick plaster casts that went up to his elbows. They were heavy, useless clubs at the end of his arms.
“Detective, please, you need to calm down,”
A nurse said nervously, hovering by the door.
“Get out!”
Marcus roared.
“Get out!”
The nurse fled. Marcus stared at his hands.
The pain was excruciating, a constant throbbing reminder of his humiliation. He had been disarmed, forced to his knees, and broken by a criminal.
And Evelyn—that bitch had watched. She had let Moretti take her.
The door to his hospital room opened. It wasn’t a nurse this time; it was a man in a cheap suit smelling of stale cigarettes.
“Captain Miller.”
“You look like hell, Marcus,”
Miller said, closing the door.
“Moretti did this,”
Marcus hissed, spit flying from his lips.
“I want a warrant. I want a SWAT team at his gates. I want him dead.”
Miller shook his head, looking tired. “We can’t touch Moretti, Marcus. You know that. He has judges in his pocket.”
“And technically, there’s no proof. No witnesses. Just your word against his. And your word is worth shit right now.”
“Because internal affairs is sniffing around about your domestic dispute.”
“So we do nothing?”
Marcus whispered, his eyes bulging.
“He has my fiancée!”
“She’s gone, Marcus. Let it go.”
“No.”
Marcus looked down at his broken hands. A dark, twisted plan was forming in his mind.
The law couldn’t help him; the badge couldn’t help him. But the law wasn’t the only power in Chicago.
“Get me my phone,”
Marcus ordered, nodding toward the bedside table.
“Marcus, don’t do anything stupid,”
Miller warned.
“Just get the phone, Miller. I need to make a call.”
Miller hesitated, then placed the smartphone on Marcus’s chest. Marcus used his knuckles to clumsily swipe the screen, his face twisted in concentration and pain.
He dialed a number he hadn’t used in years—a number for the Bratva, the Russian mob, Moretti’s only real rivals in the city. The line picked up.
“This is Thorne,”
Marcus rasped.
“I have information on Lucas Moretti. I know where he sleeps, and I know his weakness.”
Marcus smiled, a gruesome expression. “I’m going to burn his world down,”
Marcus whispered to the empty room.
“And I’m going to start with her.”
The Emerald Invitation
Two weeks bled into three. The bruises on Evelyn’s neck faded to faint yellow echoes, and the sharp, stabbing pain in her ribs dulled to a persistent ache that flared only when she laughed or twisted too quickly.
But the physical healing was the easy part. It was the silence that was loud.
The Moretti estate was a fortress of solitude. Evelyn had free reign of the second floor now.
She spent her days in the library reading books she couldn’t focus on, or staring out at the manicured gardens that were patrolled by men with earpieces and grim expressions. She hadn’t seen Lucas in four days.
He was a ghost in his own home, leaving before dawn and returning after she had fallen asleep. On a Tuesday evening, the routine broke.
Evelyn was sitting on the window seat in her room, watching a storm roll in over Lake Michigan. The sky was a bruised purple, heavy with rain.
There was a knock at the door. Not the maid’s timid tap, but a solid, heavy knock.
“Come in,”
Evelyn said.
Lucas entered. He looked exhausted; there were dark circles under his eyes, and his tie was undone, hanging loosely around his neck.
He carried a garment bag in one hand and a small velvet box in the other. “You look better,”
He said, his eyes sweeping over her.
He didn’t smile, but the tension in his shoulders dropped an inch. “I feel better,”
Evelyn said, standing up.
She crossed her arms over her chest, a defensive habit she hadn’t quite unlearned. “I haven’t seen you.”
“War is time-consuming,”
Lucas said dryly.
He walked over and placed the garment bag on the bed. “There is a dinner tonight downstairs.”
“Just us?”
Evelyn looked at the bag.
“A dinner?”
“I have been negligent as a host,”
Lucas said.
He placed the small velvet box on the nightstand. “And there are things we need to discuss. Things regarding your future.”
He turned to leave but stopped at the door. “Wear the dress. I’ll see you in an hour.”
An hour later, Evelyn stood in front of the mirror. The dress was breathtaking: a deep emerald silk that draped over her body like water, with long sleeves that hid the fading bruises on her arms but a back that dipped low.
It was elegant, expensive, and made her feel like a stranger to herself. She looked at the velvet box on the nightstand.
Inside was a thin platinum chain with a small pendant: a jagged piece of raw diamond, unpolished and sharp. It wasn’t pretty in the traditional sense; it was resilient.
She clasped it around her neck. When she descended the grand staircase, Lucas was waiting at the bottom.
He had showered and changed into a fresh black suit. When he looked up and saw her, his breath hitched.
It was a microscopic reaction, gone in a second, but Evelyn saw it. He offered her his arm.
“You look dangerous, Evelyn.”
“Is that a compliment?”
She asked, taking his arm.
His bicep was rock hard beneath the expensive fabric. “In my world, it is the highest compliment.”
The Choice
They ate in the formal dining room, a long mahogany table set for twenty but occupied only by two. The candles flickered, casting long shadows against the walls.
They spoke of small things first: books, the weather, the architecture of the house. But as the main course was cleared away, the atmosphere shifted.
The storm outside had broken, rain lashing against the tall windows. Lucas poured her a glass of wine; he didn’t drink.
“Marcus has made a move,”
Lucas said.
No preamble, no sugar-coating. Evelyn’s hand froze around the stem of her glass.
“What kind of move?”
“He has reached out to the Petrov family, the Russian Bratva,”
Lucas’s voice was calm, terrifyingly so.
“He is selling them police secrets—routes, shift changes, evidence locker codes—in exchange for one thing.”
“Me?”
Evelyn whispered.
“You,”
Lucas confirmed.
“And my head on a pike.”
He reached across the table. For the first time, he took her hand fully in his.
His skin was rough, calloused from years of violence, but his touch was gentle. “I need you to understand the danger you are in, Evelyn. This isn’t just a jealous ex-boyfriend anymore. This is a syndicate war.”
“The Petrovs are ruthless. They don’t care about collateral damage.”
“So what do we do?”
Evelyn asked.
She was surprised to find that her voice didn’t shake. “Do I run? Do you send me away?”
Lucas’s thumb brushed over her knuckles. He looked at her with an intensity that made her toes curl.
“I don’t send away things I value,”
He said, his voice dropping to a rough growl.
“And I don’t run.”
“Then what?”
“We fight,”
Lucas said.
“But I need to know if you are ready. If you stay here with me, you are a target.”
“If I send you to Europe, I can give you a new name, a new life. You will be safe, but you will be alone.”
He squeezed her hand. “The choice is yours, Evelyn. The plane is fueled on the tarmac. You can leave tonight.”
Evelyn looked at him. She looked at the man who had kicked down a door to save her, the man who had sat by her bedside, the man who looked at her not as a victim but as someone dangerous.
She thought of Marcus out there in the dark, hunting her. If she ran, she would spend the rest of her life looking over her shoulder.
“I’m tired of being afraid,”
Evelyn said softly.
She tightened her grip on Lucas’s hand. “I’m not going anywhere.”
Lucas let out a breath he seemed to have been holding for a long time. He stood up, pulling her up with him.
He didn’t let go of her hand. “Good,”
He murmured, stepping closer until she could feel the heat radiating from his chest.
“Because I wasn’t sure I could let you go.”
He leaned in. His lips brushed her forehead, a chaste, protective kiss that felt more intimate than anything she had ever experienced.
