The Baby In The Mafia Boss’s Arms Exposed A Vanished Brother-yumihong

The back hallway of Callahan’s always smelled like old fryer oil, black coffee, and wet wool coats.

That night, the smell clung to Emma’s uniform like a warning.

Outside, Chicago had gone slick and gray with ice, and every gust that slipped through the rear door carried the kind of cold that made people walk faster and say less.

Image

Emma held Lily against her chest with one arm and balanced the diaper bag with the other.

The baby’s cheek was warm beneath the edge of Emma’s coat.

The hallway tile was cold enough to sting through the thin soles of Emma’s work shoes.

She told herself she would only need to get through one shift.

One dinner rush.

One night.

She had said that to herself so many times in the last year that it had stopped sounding like hope and started sounding like math.

Rent was due Monday morning at 9:00 a.m.

The late notice from the apartment office was clipped to the refrigerator at home, right next to the hospital intake bill from Lily’s fever and a grocery list Emma had already crossed half the items off because she knew she could not afford them.

Mrs. Alvarez from next door usually watched Lily when Emma worked nights.

Mrs. Alvarez had watched Lily through teething, fevers, and those terrible evenings when Emma came home too tired to speak and found a covered plate waiting on the stove.

But at 6:17 that morning, Mrs. Alvarez had slipped on the ice outside their apartment building.

She had not broken anything, thank God, but her knee had swollen so badly that her nephew had to help her inside and settle her on the couch with a bag of frozen peas.

Emma had stood in her kitchen holding Lily while the radiator knocked against the wall.

She called three people.

She texted two more.

One had work.

One had the flu.

One never answered.

By noon, Emma understood what the day had become.

Not a choice.

A trap.

Read More