Shot Outside Marello’s, She Became Dante Russo’s Only Witness-olive

The bullet found Lena Carter outside a restaurant where she could not afford bread.

She had been waiting for a delivery order, one hand around her cracked phone, the other pressed into the pocket of a jacket that had given up on being warm.

Behind the glass of Marello’s, Chicago looked softer than it was.

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Gold lamps washed over white tablecloths.

Wine caught the light.

People laughed with the loose, careless sound of bills already paid.

Lena stood on the sidewalk with thirty-eight dollars left, rent due Friday, and her brother’s medication still sitting behind a pharmacy counter because the insurance company wanted another form.

Marcus was seventeen.

He was all sharp elbows, too-large glasses, and stubborn pride.

His wheelchair scraped the hallway wall every morning, and he always pretended not to notice when Lena made coffee for dinner and told him she had eaten at work.

She had become good at lying gently.

At 8:41 p.m., the delivery app refreshed.

Nothing.

Then the security light across the street blinked out.

Lena heard a sound like a car cracking through ice.

Something hit her side so hard the city tipped.

Her phone fell first.

Then she did.

The curb was cold against her cheek, and for one ridiculous second she worried about the cost of replacing the screen.

Warmth spread under her jacket.

Someone screamed near the valet stand.

Someone else shouted for help and did not move.

A shadow crossed the restaurant light.

“Don’t move.”

The man crouching beside her was dressed like money and danger.

Dark overcoat.

White shirt.

Eyes that measured rooftops before they measured her face.

His palm pressed hard against her side, and pain flashed so bright she almost blacked out.

“Ambulance,” she breathed.

“No.”

Lena stared at him.

“I was shot.”

“I know.”

“Then call one.”

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