“He Broke My Ribs”—She Texted The Wrong Number—Mafia Boss Replied: “I’m On My Way”
The North Woods Sanctuary
As the helicopter sped toward the sanctuary of the North Woods, Evelyn looked down at her hands, stained with the blood of the man she loved. The fear was gone.
In its place was a cold, hard resolve. Marcus had survived the roof; she felt it.
But the next time they met, she wouldn’t be the victim. She would be the war.
The helicopter touched down in a clearing deep within the North Woods, miles away from the smoking ruins of the Moretti estate. The safe harbor wasn’t a hospital; it was a decommissioned veterinary clinic that Lucas’s family had bought under a shell company years ago.
“Help me get him inside!”
Silas shouted, sliding the stretcher out.
Evelyn’s adrenaline had frozen into a cold, diamond-hard focus. She wasn’t the terrified girl in the bathroom anymore.
She was a trauma nurse, and the man she… the man she needed was dying. They wheeled Lucas into the surgical bay.
It was cold, smelling of steel and disinfectant. “He’s lost too much blood,”
Silas said, ripping open a packet of gauze.
“I’m a pilot, Evelyn, not a doctor. I can stitch a cut, but I can’t fix this.”
Evelyn looked at the wound. The bullet had torn through the oblique muscle, dangerously close to the kidney.
It was messy, jagged, and bleeding sluggishly—a bad sign. His blood pressure was tanking.
“I can,”
Evelyn said.
Her voice didn’t shake. “Wash your hands. You’re my anesthesiologist today. There’s propofol in the cabinet. Push 200 mg.”
“Are you sure?”
Silas asked, looking at her pale face.
“Do it!”
She commanded.
For the next two hours, Evelyn Vance waged war against death. She worked with mechanical precision.
Her hands, which Marcus had crushed in car doors and slammed against walls, were now steady instruments of salvation. She clamped the bleeder.
She irrigated the wound. She stitched the torn muscle layers back together, her movements guided by muscle memory and desperation.
Lucas was silent, his chest rising and falling in a shallow, terrifying rhythm. When the final stitch was tied, Evelyn stripped off her bloody gloves and collapsed into a chair.
Her forehead rested against the cool metal of the operating table. “He’s stable,”
Silas whispered, checking the monitor.
“You did it.”
Awakening
Evelyn didn’t answer. She reached out and took Lucas’s cold hand in hers, squeezing it until her knuckles turned white.
She stayed there as the sun began to rise, painting the sky in hues of blood orange and gold. Two days later, Lucas woke up to the smell of coffee.
Pain was the first thing he felt: a sharp, hot line of fire in his side. But it was manageable.
He blinked, his eyes adjusting to the dim light of the recovery room. Evelyn was asleep in the chair next to him.
She was curled up in an uncomfortable ball, wearing one of his spare, oversized shirts. Her hair was messy, and there was a smudge of dried blood on her cheek that she had missed washing off.
She looked beautiful. Lucas tried to shift, and a low groan escaped his throat.
Evelyn’s eyes snapped open instantly. She was awake, leaning over him, her hand on his forehead.
“You’re awake,”
She breathed.
“Don’t move. You’ll pop the stitches.”
Lucas looked at her. He saw the exhaustion in her eyes, but also the steel.
She wasn’t looking at him with fear anymore. She was looking at him with possession.
“You saved me,”
Lucas rasped.
His throat was dry as sandpaper. “We’re even,”
Evelyn said softly.
She poured a cup of water and held the straw to his lips. “You came for me. I came for you.”
Lucas drank, his eyes never leaving hers. “Marcus?”
Evelyn pulled back. Her expression darkened.
“Silas has been monitoring the police scanners,”
She said quietly.
“They found three bodies at the estate: two Russians, one security guard. And Marcus…”
“He’s gone,”
Evelyn said.
“They found his trench coat melted to the roof, but no body. He escaped.”
Lucas closed his eyes. He let out a long, ragged sigh.
“Then it’s not over. He will come back, and he will bring the entire Russian syndicate with him.”
He opened his eyes and looked at her. “You should have left me, Evelyn. You should have taken the plane. Now you are at war.”
The War Has Only Just Begun
Evelyn stood up. She walked to the window, looking out at the dense forest that hid them from the world.
She reached up and touched the jagged diamond necklace she still wore. “I spent two years praying for someone to save me,”
She said, her voice low but carrying a terrifying weight.
“I thought I was weak. But then I met you, and I realized something.”
She turned around, the morning sun hitting her face, illuminating the fire in her eyes. “I’m not the damsel in distress, Lucas. And I’m not the victim.”
She walked back to the bed and placed her hand over his heart. “Let Marcus come,”
Evelyn whispered.
“Let the Russians come. We’ll break their ribs. We’ll break their hands. We’ll break everything they have until there is nothing left.”
Lucas smiled. It was a genuine smile this time—sharp and dangerous and full of awe.
He covered her hand with his own. “Okay,”
The mafia boss replied.
“We do it your way.”
The wrong number had ended; the right partnership had just begun. And that is the end of “He Broke My Ribs”—or at least the end of the first chapter.
Evelyn went from a victim hiding in a bathroom to the woman holding the leash of the most dangerous man in Chicago. Marcus is still out there—burned and broken, plotting his revenge with the Russian mob.
Do you think Evelyn made the right choice staying with Lucas, or should she have run when she had the chance? Let me know your theories in the comments below.
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Thanks for watching, and I’ll see you in the next one.
