He Came To Kill, But A Bleeding Janitor Was Guarding His Son-hothiyenvy_5

At 3:07 in the morning, the fourth floor of Lenox Hill Hospital smelled like bleach, wet wool, and coffee that had been left burning in a plastic pot too long.

The sound of rain tapped against the long windows, soft and steady, almost polite.

Everything else felt wrong.

Image

My name is Gabriel Moretti, and I have walked into more rooms with a gun in my hand than I care to count.

Most of the time, I knew what waited on the other side.

Men who wanted money.

Men who wanted power.

Men who wanted to be remembered as the one who finally made me bleed.

That night, I walked into Room 412 ready to end whoever had come for my son.

I expected assassins.

I expected a professional with a silencer, or a desperate man with shaking hands, or a corrupt cop who had sold his badge for the right envelope.

Instead, I found a cleaning lady.

She was standing between me and Daniel’s hospital bed with a broken mop handle gripped in both hands.

The splintered end was aimed at my throat.

Her blue uniform was soaked dark at the shoulder, her latex gloves were torn, and blood ran from a cut above her eyebrow in a thin line down the side of her face.

The floor under her shoes was wet from the mop bucket that had overturned beside the bed.

Her hands shook so hard I could hear the broken wood tapping against the tile.

But she did not back away.

“Take one more step,” she whispered, voice raw, “and I swear to God I’ll drive this through your neck.”

People did not speak to me like that.

Not in restaurants.

Not in court hallways.

Not in the back rooms where men made promises they were already planning to break.

Nobody stood in front of Gabriel Moretti with a wooden stick and told him no.

Yet for the first time in years, I froze.

Read More