Books and movies may have romanticized the shit out of addicts and broken women, but Iâve seen enough druggies, prostitutes, and headcases in my time as a mobster to know that thereâs no happy ending with someone like that. A craving like that only grows more destructive with time.
Someone who is in love with an illusion will throw away everything real because nothing has the power to surpass that euphoric, make-believe world of theirs. Sooner or later, sentiments like love, lust, and human connection will lose their allure.
My own mother was such a woman. Men were simply a tool for her to obtain the money needed to feed her true passionâmeth.
Francesca is unsalvageable. I come to that conclusion every single time she stares at me with those haunted blue eyes. Thereâs nothing in them except fear and a commitment to avoid the truth by any means possible. She may be relatively new to drugs, but itâll only get worse for her. Sheâs a disaster waiting to happen.
I may be a mobster, but Iâve always had a vision for my life: marry a nice girl from a well-connected crime family who will not complicate my life. If sheâs willing, Iâll have kids with her. Otherwise, weâll respect each otherâs space and grow old together. Marriage is not optional for someone who wants to ascend in the organization. So Iâve always been prepared for the eventuality.
At least that was what I told myself before I threw my common sense out of the window and fingered Francesca.
Staring at my sorry reflection in the bathroom mirror only makes anger bubble in my arteries. It was a moment of weakness. When she was drinking, I felt her misery like it was mine, felt her pain throbbing in my chest. I simply wanted to take that agony away from her by any means possible.
But then she wanted more. When she came off her orgasm, she had the eyes of an addict who has found a new high. And I realized it wouldnât end with her sucking me off. Because I wanted more, too.
Only an idiot tries to play hero for a woman like her.
I cannot forgive myself for letting Francesca drag me back to my past which I fought so hard to escape. I will not support another woman like that ever again.
Never enable a woman like that again.
Never sacrifice myself for a woman like that again.
A normal family, a peaceful family, even if it comes without love or happiness, is all I want now.
So why was I moved by the wounded vulnerability in her voice after she had a meltdown? What is it to me if she wants to self-destruct?
I need to splash cold, cold water on my face to get myself out of this funk but I dare not approach the toilets because thatâs where I left my siren of death.
The more time I spend around her, the more I soften toward her in unguarded, unexpected moments.
Iâm supposed to marry the woman Angelo has chosen for me. Nico called me yesterday to tell me that sheâd be at this charity event. Thatâs the reason Iâm here.
âWear your fanciest suit,â he said on the phone. âYou need to make a great first impression. Papa is very keen on you two working out.â
So am I. As much as I love my own company and banging random chicks when it gets too lonely, I would much rather have a wife who, even if she doesnât love me, can be a reliable presence in my life.
Straightening my tie and wiping away Francescaâs wetness from my fingers, I march to where Nico messaged me heâll be.
I blink when I crash into the strong body of another man on the way. Heâs almost as tall as me. The moment I register his face, a spark of irritation corkscrews into my spine. I rub my jaw, hoping to cut away from him, but he blocks my way.
âWhy were you talking to my sister?â he demands in an ominous tone.
âShouldnât you ask my name first?â
The veins in his throat stick out as he tightens his jaw. âI know who you are, Russo.â
And I know who he isâFrancescaâs older brother and the CEO of Astor Hotels. Ethan Astor Jr.
âShe was asking me where the restrooms were,â I lie.
He rolls his eyes. Not buying it, I see.
âI showed her the way,â I add to my previous statement. I donât give a fuck whether or not he believes me. I need to find Maria Bianchi and get my marriage plans started. No better way to cut away whatever sick thread of lust has me wrapped around the heiressâs little finger.
âTook you a long time.â Ethan is still carrying out his interrogation. âYou better not have hurt my sister.â
I did worse.
âWhy donât you ask her about what happened?â I run a hand through my hair, laying waste to the hours I spent styling my hair to look less wild. âIâm busy.â
Without waiting for his response, I sidestep him and charge forward without looking back until Iâm in the vicinity of a thin, pale woman wearing a red floor-length dress. Nico and Angelo bracket her like twin bodyguards.
âYouâre late,â Nico snaps.
âThis is Maria,â Angelo cuts in, right on cue as the woman raises her hand. I shake her hand. Weird. That was so businesslike. Guess neither of us has any illusions about whatâs going on.
âA pleasure to meet you, Mr. Russo.â Her voice is smooth and cultured. Heavy with fear.
âCall me Gabriele,â I tell her.
Her lips work, but it doesnât resemble a smile. Sheâs trying too hard.
I saw her photos before. Maria looks a lot more worn down in real life. Like she emerged from a tornado. Emotionally, that might be the case.
âIâll leave you two to talk.â Angelo clears his throat, his cue for Nico to make himself scarce. âSome of my old friends are here.â
The two men depart, leaving silence to descend between Maria and me. She gently tucks a strand of hair behind her ear. We stand side by side in solidarity, rooting around for a subject of conversation. Iâm no socialite, but I donât remember it being this awkward between Francesca and me, not even when she was my hostage. She had no problems voicing her opinions on my shoddy mobster ethics.
Canât you at least point it at my head like a proper criminal?
I reign in the fluttery feeling in my throat.
âCan I get you anything to drink?â I ask Maria, finally breaking the metaphorical wall of ice.
âI donât drink anymore,â she replies. Quickly, lines gather around her mouth as she jerks back from me in panic. âI mean, if you wanted me to, I could, but my head is clearer when I donât.â
âThatâs okay.â I prefer women who value their health, anyway.
I inhale, suddenly jubilant. This is going great. Maria seems mature and sensible, a woman who treats her body with respect. The exact opposite of a certain young, reckless heiress who has no consideration for her own well-being.
âI canât have more children. I want you to know that,â she blurts out. âI already have a son. My relationship with my ex is complicated. Youâll have to protect me all my life. Thereâs not much I can offer you in return except my fatherâs money and connections.â
âAngelo told me all that already.â
She whips her head upward suddenly. âSo Iâm wondering what you want from me, Gabriele, if we proceed with this marriage.â
âNot much,â I answer. âAs long as you stay away from addictions, attempt to have intelligent conversations with me sometimes, and keep me company at dinner, I wonât ask for anything more.â
She swallows, then her frail shoulders shake with laughter.
âThey were right about you.â She presses her fingers to her chin. âYou really are a sweetheart.â
âIâm a mobster,â I remind her.
âEverybody hurts somebody.â Again, a long pause. âI wonât hold your job against you.â
All I can focus on is that when her lips round into an O, theyâre nowhere near as luscious as Francescaâs.
Hatred clasps around my chest and drives the breath from my lungs. How could I be thinking of another woman when Iâm talking to the one that could be my future wife?
Maria is good. Clean, in the way that spring water is clean. Sheâll be right for me.
âI promise you that Iâm not abusive. You wonât have to be afraid of me,â I say. âThereâs not much I can offer you, either. My life belongs to the Russo family so work comes first and Iâm not capable of romance, but Iâll guarantee your safety in every way. If youâll trust me with it.â
She nods, though the stiffness of her movement tells me that she doesnât fully believe my words. Scars donât heal overnight, I suppose. âI was expecting a whole lot worse when they told me you were in the mafia.â
âGet it all the time,â I shoot back.
âSo what do we tell Angelo?â she asks.
âWhatever you want to,â I reply. âItâs up to you.â
She nods. âThen I hope Iâll see you again, Gabriele.â
The next morning, I take the cowardâs way out and make Ricardo tail Francesca.
âShe threw up on you, too, didnât she?â Antonio says when I slide into my seat at our small office which is essentially a front for one of Angeloâs paper companies that he uses to launder money.
I nod harder than I need to, hoping itâll mask my embarrassment at how hot my skin feels at the mention of her name. âThe girlâs a handful.â
âShe gets under your skin.â
Gets under your skin and makes you feel like youâre in heaven. I still havenât been able to put what happened at the gala out of my mind. I woke up hard last night. It has been a lifetime since I masturbated to just the thought of a woman.
The girlâs a fungus growing inside my brain. Simply the memory of her is enough to drive me mad. Every time images of her with my fingers inside her assault me, the texture of her skin becomes clearer, the taste of her sharper, and the desire to feel her wet walls clenching around my cock stronger.
âSo, any progress on Lucaâs contacts?â I inquire, rolling a pen between my fingers.
âIâm trying. Thereâs a guy I know. Used to work with him. Good with technology. Want me to contact him?â
âCan we trust him?â
âAs long as nobody holds a gun to his head and demands he spills what we made him do.â
I bark out a laugh. âSo no.â
With a frown, Antonio gets back to typing. Heâs old enough to be my father, if I had to guess, so Iâm surprised he manages to use a computer so well. Though to be completely honest, I have no idea who my father is. Iâm simply guessing his age at this point. He might have been way older than my mother, an already-married middle-aged man with poor taste in women. She was never sober enough to talk about him.
And I never asked. There was no point in growing attached to a person Iâd never have in my life.
âHow was your date?â Antonioâs gruff voice knifes between the prickly edges of my memories. âThe one you got all dressed up for.â
âFine,â I reply. âI think itâll work out.â
âSo whaddya want me to get for your wedding? I need to start saving up now.â
A black cloud gathers inside my ribcage at the question. The finality of marriage was something I always understood but it never scared me before.
Nowâ¦now I canât forget the feel of pink lips whispering Iâll return the favor against my ear. The tightening of my stomach muscles is a physical pain that refuses to fade no matter how much whiskey I drink.
âNothing.â I grip the side of my chair tightly, the feel of delicate glass against my skin. The amber liquid swirls inside. Iâve never drunk so early in the morning on the job before. Damn it. âItâs her second marriage. I doubt thereâll even be a ceremony.â
If this doesnât let up, Iâll end up an alcoholic myself. Is this how people get addicted? When they desire something too much and it slips out of their grasp?
Antonioâs gaze hardens. âIs that why youâre drinking?â
âWhat? No.â Despite the reluctance that bites my insides, I empty the remaining alcohol into the bin and put the glass away. âMaria isnât bad at all.â
âA ringing endorsement.â Antonio scoffs. Did he always have so many wrinkles on his face or has it grown in proportion to his disapproval?
âPrettier than I deserve,â I remark drily, my gaze hitting the empty ceiling before bouncing back to the blank Google page on my computer screen. âSheâs everything I dreamed of.â
Everything I dreamed of and everything Iâm realizing I donât actually want.
âIf you say so.â Antonioâs expression could freeze a desert. He rolls his shoulders and gets back to work.
I, too, start clacking keys on my computer. Pretending to be productive is better than pretending to be alright. Iâm officially still incurring the bossâs wrath for screwing up with Luca, which means I donât have to go to the weekly meetings the capos attend or do any actual jobs. I decide to use the time to look up Mariaâs ex-husband, the abusive asshole Iâll have to deal with eventually.
Christian Ricci
Heâs a bigshot businessman. Designer suits, gray hair, a smug smile, and eyes that advertise his asshole status more effectively than a neon sign. His billions were made in Hollywood. Heâs a producer and more than a few actresses have filed sexual harassment lawsuits against him. It confirms that heâs human garbage but thatâs nothing I didnât know already. Iâll need useful details if Iâm going to keep him in checkâsuch as who he uses to do his dirty work, how much law enforcement he has in his pocket, and how to make sure he doesnât touch Maria again.
Iâve almost forgotten about Francesca and am deeply invested in tracking down Ricciâs closest associates when my phone goes off all of a sudden. I refuse to examine the jump in my heart rate too deeply as I see Ricardoâs name flashing on the screen.
He wouldnât call unless something happened with Francesca. I hope she didnât decide to finally spill the beans to the police. Though that would at least get her out of my hair. Fucking an addict is one thing but I have no sympathy for traitors.
âYou donât need to give me a report until the end of the day,â I say to Ricardo. In fact, Iâd prefer it if I didnât have to hear about Francesca Astor ever again.
âWe have an issue here, though.â Ricardoâs breath swishes against my ears through the phone. âSheâs being pressed by some of our men.â
âOur men?â
âNicoâs boys,â he corrects himself. âShe was getting the goods from them. But she forgot to pay them the correct amount so theyâre going to do the regular drill.â
The regular drill involves threatening nonpaying clients, roughing them up a little if it comes to that. If it looks like they canât cough up the money at all, we hook them into prostitution so they can repay us with their earnings. But since Francesca is rich, it wonât come to that.
The roiling in my gut gets worse when I hear the rough voices seeping in through the phone line from Ricardoâs background. Intimidating, loud voices. And one scared whimper. My fist finds the hard desk to slam into. Anger is a monster inside me, thrashing violently.
I wipe my mouth with the back of my palm, the desire to do physical harm spiraling inside me. I canât believe I want to hurt my own family over a girl. Sheâs a damned nuisance.
âSeems like theyâre starting.â Ricardo whistles.
âAnd youâre just watching?â I scream into the phone. âI put you on the job toâ¦â To observe her, I remind myself. To tail her, not protect her.
âThereâs three of them. They look like they are higher ranked than me. Iâm not sure I should get involved.â
âTell them to wait. Iâm on my way.â
âWhatâre you planning to do?â
âPay whatever she owes.â
My mind whirls like a wound-up clock. The drug business is under Nicoâs supervision. Nico cannot find out about my interest in Francesca. But I have no other choice. Iâm not having her hurt on my watch. Not when the very thought of someone elseâs hands on her is acid in my throat. I tell myself I would feel this way toward any woman. Iâm a decent guy. I donât hurt women. Not unless it makes them come.
âIsnât it better to let things run their course? Her supplier is also from the family,â Ricardo breezes on. âIf she dies, well, thatâll shut her up forever. Problem over.â
He should count his lucky stars that he wasnât close to me when he said that. Otherwise, his teeth would be scattered around his feet.
âDid you forget about her background? Sheâs important. The police will be on Nicoâs trail if anything happens to her. Iâm only helping him avoid trouble.â
On paper, that sounds like a sensible argument. A hesitant pause from Ricardo stirs up my doubts.
Guilt burns my nerve endings. I shouldâve gone myself instead of sending a soldier.
âWell, when you say it like that it makes sense. No wonder youâre my boss.â Ricardo chuckles.
âDonât let things spiral out of control before I get there,â I say as I dash for my coat and throw it on. Antonio is giving me a pitying smirk from across the room.
Yeah, thereâs something really wrong with me.
I resent the part of me that cares for her. I resent the weakness that has taken root inside me since the night I touched her, the weakness I thought Iâd shed after I left her alone after we finished. I swore to never let someone distress me the way my mother did.
The memory of the longest night of my life, when I lay dead and bleeding in the snow before Angelo found me, loops back. I shouldâve learned my lesson.
I will not lose everything for a woman again.
I will not lose my mind over a woman who doesnât possess the capacity to care for me in any meaningful way.
Once I get my hands on Francesca fucking Astor, Iâll make her pay with her life.
Iâm surprised I avoid getting a traffic ticket for my driving. However, the result of my speeding is that I get to the location in twenty minutes. Ricardo is standing outside the building, grey smoke curling from the tip of his cigarette.
âThird floor,â he says. âWant me to come with you? In case things turn violent.â
âI can handle it,â I growl. âGo back to the office.â
The metal elevator is old and rickety and makes a bellowing sound as it ascends. My temper has swollen into a mass of violence in the span of my trip here so I punch through the door with no regret.
âDonât fuckinâ break our door,â says one of the men as I step into their office. Francesca is sitting on the couch, shivering, though I canât tell if those tremors are because of fear or withdrawal symptoms. The low light details a red cut on her face. The bleeding has stopped but she was hurt.
âI said not to touch her until I got here,â I grab the collar of the thug who has the misfortune to be standing right in front of me. âWhat part of that did you not understand?â
The other two men, who had been guarding Francesca, leap at me instantly. As I let go and swing my arm back, my knuckles scrape against the edge of a naked blade in one of their hands. I donât even bother checking if it cut me. I know it did.
âNot our fault. She was resisting too much,â the other one explains, as he senses the anger thatâs a flame in my eyes and pulls the knife out of his comradeâs hand.
The rest of the exchange is a blur of words, the incessant hammering of impatience against my bones. Francescaâs wide, scared eyes stick to my face and never leave for the six minutes until I manage to get her untied.
I pay her outstanding balance of twenty thousand dollars, which isnât as high as Iâd expected. Nicoâs definitely going to hear of this. He isnât going to like my behavior. My mishandling of Luca is already a sensitive issue. Yet now Iâm bailing the only witness to that episode out of her drug debt.
The boys untie her and she hobbles over to me faster than a kangaroo.
âThank you. Thank you so much. Iâll never forget this.â Her frail, tear-soaked words press into my chest along with her cheekbone. âIâm sorry I made you do this, Gabriele. But Iâm so glad youâre here.â
Warmth soaks through my skin coupled with a buoyant feeling. Strength. Pride at having protected this frail, innocent, broken thing.
Is that what this is all about, some fucked-up psychological bullshit? I couldnât save my mother from her self-destruction so I want to save Francesca Astor? When sheâs way more hopeless than my mother?
Disgusted, I shake her off with more force than necessary. She wobbles before steadying herself.
âThis favorâs not free,â I bite out in a brutal tone of voice.
âIâll pay you back,â she says immediately as she falls into step behind me. This is the meekest Iâve seen her since the day we met.
âIf you had that much money, youâd have paid him,â I reply, pointing to the soldier who is happily counting the dollar bills I threw on the scraggy table.
Francescaâs inhale is shaky. âI just forgot, okay? With all the things on my mind. I can arrange the money. Itâll take a month at most.â
âOr you could stop doing drugs?â I stick my hands in my pockets. Irritation clings to my skin when I detect the immediate resistance that stiffens her shoulders. âJust a suggestion.â
âIâll try.â The low, apologetic note in her voice could easily pass for sincerity. But I know itâs just her feeling sorry at the moment. Nothing more. âBy the way, why does it make you mad? That first night, too, you were angry at me for being high. Do you realize how much of a hypocrite that makes you? Your own family sells these drugs and profits off people like me. Iâm one of your big-time clients.â
My lips grow cold. She doesnât need to remind me of what kind of business Iâm in. Iâm not blind to what I do.
Thereâs no harm in selling a little escapism to people who want and need it, as long as theyâre paying the right price for it. Itâs a product, no different from shoes or designer bags.
Itâs a choice. A lifestyle. In the past, it never bothered me to witness our customers decaying slowly over months and years. Some of them are pretty high-functioning. They never have any problems in their work or life because of the habit. They never get caught, never lose anything. We call them happy endings. They get all the pleasure with none of the side effects.
But Francesca wonât be one of them. Because sheâs like my mother.
This may have started out as an escape for her, but it will take over her entire personality. It will become a replacement for all the things sheâs losingâher art, her social relationships, her confidence, her mind.
I suck in a breath when weâre outside. The sunshine, too hot and sharp for a winter afternoon, burns into my skin with vengeance, reminding me of the dumb mistake thatâs trailing me, her golden curls catching the daylight. Idiotic thoughts emerge from the cesspit thatâs my brain: I want to stroke that hair. I want to fist my fingers around it.
âI have a whole repayment plan worked out for you,â I tell her instead, charging to my car in long, unceasing strides. No more getting distracted by her pretty face and vulnerable expression. âMy help doesnât come cheap.â
She gulps. Lowers her gaze. Clasps her manicured fingers in front of her chest. âWhatever it is, I wonât stop you from doing it to me.â
âItâs something you need to do for me,â I correct, fully aware sheâll take this the wrong way. She probably thinks this is going to end with something as cheap as a blowjob.
I make no attempts to clear her misunderstanding. I ought to leave her to find her way back home herself, but I donât need her getting into trouble after I just rescued her so I let her ride with me. I should look into a change in my profession. With this new streak of protectiveness that Iâve developed, Iâm better suited to being a cop rather than a Mafioso.
âWait here,â she says when we pull up at her familyâs townhouse. I was so wrapped up in my thoughts I didnât realize when I drove her all the way back home.
âDonât go. You hurt your hand badly. Iâll get the first aid kit.â
I check my knuckles in the rearview mirror. Sheâs right. Thereâs a nasty cut there, slashing across my skin. Itâd be troublesome if this got infected.
She hurries inside and I wait around, purely out of curiosity. Iâve never seen what a rich girlâs first aid kit looks like.
My disappointment must be evident when she returns with a normal-looking plastic box.
âWere you expecting painkillers or something?â she inquires.
âFor a tiny cut? Youâre offending my pride as a gangster.â
Her soft fingertip glides over my skin. âLooks like a shallow wound. Hope this doesnât hurt.â
She takes out a piece of cotton and douses it with rubbing alcohol. At the damp feel of it against my skin, at the errant brush of her soft hair against my face, my stomach cramps with a hot, unknown sensation. Her luscious, rose-scented exhales are flooding over my face, filling my nose with the scent of flower petals. When sheâs being gentle, caring, and kind, sheâs extraordinarily mesmerizing. And so human. Not just a problematic druggie but a compassionate girl who touches my heart with her small gestures.
âDid you eat lunch?â she asks. âThe cook made lasagna today. Itâs delicious.â
âTake your nurse cosplay somewhere else,â I snarl, irritated at myself for growing sappy every time she does something nice. âIâm not into it.â
âI think you are.â A tiny smile curves on her sensual lips.
For a second, I canât take my eyes off their fullness.
My eyebrow molds into a sharp V. âAre you flirting with me, Francesca?â
âCanât I?â
âWouldnât advise it. Flirting with a man like me leads to bad things.â
âI donât mind.â Her gaze darkens a fraction when she lifts her head. âBy the way, who was that woman you were talking to at the charity gala? You know, after you abandoned me in the toilet.â
I retract my hand as the sting of alcohol settles under my skin. Sheâs getting clingy. Or is it jealousy?
âWhyâre you so interested in my life?â I yawn. âItâs none of your business, by the way.â
âI donât want to sleep with you if you already have a wife,â she asserts, closing her fingers into fists.
âI donât,â I assure her, the burn of acid sloshing against my throat. âAlso, youâre not sleeping with me. You let me finger you. Once. Itâs in the past.â
Iâm toeing a dangerous line. Iâm technically single since the matter with Maria isnât decided yet, nor are we officially engaged or dating. Francesca is technically of legal age. What we did was technically just sex. And technically, having her open up to me lowers her chances of ratting me out to the police.
Why is this scenario built entirely upon flimsy technicalities?
âOnce or twice doesnât matter.â Her tongue curls in her mouth.
âIt was once,â I assert.
âWhatâs the big deal?â Francesca says. âIt was just physical.â
âNo, wasnât. Itâs escapism. Addiction.â Possibly something worse.
âI felt something for you last night, Gabriele,â she whispers. I wish she was a habitual liar, but she hasnât lied to me a single time so far so I assume this is also the truth. âSomething deep. Iâm not saying itâs love. But I needed you.â
âYou needed to come again,â I say, turning my head away. The street is empty. No people. âAnd I was the only man who could make you.â
She shakes her head. âThatâs not true. What I wantâ¦itâs not something my body craves. Itâs something my soul craves. Sounds crazy when I say it, but itâs less lonely with you around. I mean, even when you watch me paint at my studio I donât hate it. Because youâre witnessing how miserable I really am. Youâre staring at the real me without flinching. Since I donât want to impress you or be loved by you, Iâm free to be myself when Iâm with you.â
What Francesca said to me before is tightening around me like a noose.
Donât give me false hope with your mixed signals and break my heart. Iâll never forgive you.
Itâs already too late for that.
âYouâre talking nonsense,â I say, though her confession has settled in my bones like a radioactive substance. My inner voice says sheâs not the only one who is less lonely when weâre together. I, too, have grown addicted to her empathy and compassion which has made me show her parts of myself I wouldnât reveal to anyone else. âYou still high?â
âI havenât taken anything today.â
âThen whatâs with that confession?â
âItâsâ¦I had to say it.â I hear the one gasp that tears the steady rhythm of her breaths. Blood rushes in my ears. âHavenât you ever wanted a friend? Someone you could be yourself around?â
âMake friends your age,â I advise as she slowly wraps a bandage around my hand and secures it with surgical tape.
âI do have friends my age,â she answers. âBut Iâll disappoint them if I show them my dark side.â
âSo what? Let them deal with it.â
âI guessâ¦I like you more. Canât say why. Youâre always mean to me, but I suppose you did save me today. So you must be a softie on the inside.â
Heat creeps up under my skin.
âI donât like you,â I say flatly.
Her jaw drops. âWhy not? Iâm pretty and kind.â
She was pretty, too.
Old memories converge in the present.
âYou remind me of my mother.â An undertone of bitterness weighs down the air between us.
âWas she a bad woman?â Francescaâs hand is a warm touch on my skin. Almost comforting.
I nod. âA druggie like you. An alcoholic, too. Never once did she seek any help. She abandoned me when I was in my teens. Left me to fend for myself.â
Her swallow forms a heavy curve, disrupting the smooth line of her throat.
âIâm sorry, Gabriele.â
âFor what? Itâs not your fault I was dealt a bad hand by fate.â
âFor being like your mother.â A long, meaningful pause. âIs that why you joined the mafia?â
I sigh. âThatâs enough of my tragic backstory. Go back home.â
She doesnât argue. Gathering her stuff, she gives me a sideways look filled with concern.
âWhat will you make me pay with?â
âExpect the worst.â
âA kidney?â
The cough of laughter pummels its way out before I can do anything about it. Trust her to make a joke out of nowhere.
âI donât want any part of your body. Iâve had enough of it.â