SHE TEXTED “HE BROKE MY RIBS” TO THE WRONG NUMBER—AND THE MAFIA BOSS CAME HIMSELF
Clara only meant to text her brother.

One wrong digit.
That was all it took.
She was lying on the living room rug with blood in her mouth, broken glass near her hand, and the man who had kicked her in the ribs snoring in the next room like he had not just left her there to choke on her own pain.
Her phone had 4% battery.
Her vision was blurring.
Her thumb slipped.
And instead of reaching Ben, the only person she thought might still come for her, Clara sent her desperate message to a stranger.
Trent went too far. He broke my ribs. Can’t breathe. Need help. Please.
She expected nothing.
Maybe silence.
Maybe a cruel reply.
Maybe the phone dying in her hand while Trent slept off the damage he had done.
What she did not expect was a message from an unknown number that came back cold, fast, and terrifying.
Not Ben. But I’m on my way. Give me the address.
Clara stared at the screen like it had become a loaded gun.
The apartment smelled like spilled beer, old cigarettes, wet dog, and fear. The neon liquor store sign across the street pulsed through the cheap plastic blinds, washing the room in sick red flashes.
Red.
Black.
Red.
Black.
Every breath hurt.
Breathing in felt like a needle sliding beneath her ribs. Breathing out felt like the needle twisted. She pressed one shaking hand to her left side and felt warm wetness there. Her fingers came away dark.
From the bedroom, Trent’s snoring rolled through the thin walls, heavy and wet.
That was what made it unbearable.
Not the pain.
Not even the blood.
The peace.
He had hit her. Knocked her over the coffee table. Kicked her twice while she was already down. Then he had walked into the bedroom and fallen asleep like punishing her was simply the last chore of the night.
Clara had not been planning an escape.
She was not having some brave movie moment where she suddenly discovered strength and clarity.
She was a twenty-six-year-old woman on a filthy rug, trying to survive until morning.
Her phone had skittered under the television stand when she fell. Reaching it took forever. She dragged herself inch by inch across the rough carpet, biting the inside of her lip until she tasted fresh blood just to distract from the pain in her chest.
When her fingers finally found the cold metal edge, she pulled it toward her and collapsed onto her back, panting in shallow, frightened breaths.
The screen was cracked from the week before, when Trent had thrown it against the wall.
Battery: 4%.
She needed Ben.
Her brother had told her never to contact him again after she went back to Trent the third time.
“You’re choosing your own funeral, Clara,” he had said outside the diner in the rain. “Don’t expect me to be a pallbearer.”
But Ben was a paramedic.
Ben knew how to tape ribs.
And Ben would not call the police, because Ben had warrants of his own.
Trent checked her contacts every night, so Ben’s number was not saved. Clara had memorized it.
312-555-0198.
But pain does terrible things to a body.
Fear does worse things to a hand.
Her thumb slipped.
199.
She typed blindly, desperately, trying to beat the dying battery.
Then she hit send.
For a while, there was only the neon light and Trent’s snoring.
Outside, a garbage truck groaned down the alley. Somewhere above her, a neighbor’s television murmured through the ceiling. The pain in her side throbbed in time with her heartbeat.
Then the phone buzzed.
Clara jerked so hard she nearly screamed.
Well, now who is this?
The words did not look like Ben.
They did not sound like Ben.
Her stomach dropped.
She wiped her bloody thumb on her jeans and typed back as fast as she could.
It’s Clara. Ben, please. Don’t do this right now. I’m coughing blood.
Three gray dots appeared.
Vanished.
Appeared again.
Whoever had received her message was taking time.
Clara looked at the number again.
And realized.
Wrong number.
A stranger.
She had sent her pathetic, bleeding emergency to a stranger in the middle of the night.
Shame flooded her, hot and useless. She moved her thumb to block the number, maybe turn the phone off, maybe stop humiliating herself before the battery died completely.
Then it buzzed again.
Not Ben. But I’m on my way. Give me the address.
Clara stopped breathing.
It had to be a prank.
A cruel one.
Some insomniac having fun with a wounded woman’s panic. Some man behind a screen pretending to be dangerous because he had nothing better to do at 2:00 in the morning.
But then her ribs shifted, white pain exploded through her side, and Clara remembered she did not have the luxury of skepticism.
Battery: 2%.
Why would you come? she typed.
The reply was instant.
Address. Now.
It was not a request.
It was an order.
Something about the cold certainty of it reached through the broken screen and wrapped around her fear.
Clara’s thumb found the location icon.
She shared her current location.
The next message came before the screen went dark.
Stay on the floor. 10 minutes.
Then the phone died.
Clara let her head fall back onto the carpet.
She had just invited a total stranger into her apartment.
A stranger who did not say he was calling the police.
A stranger who did not ask questions.
A stranger who simply said he was coming.
The snoring in the bedroom shifted.
Clara lay in the red-dark pulse of the neon sign and waited for whatever monster she had accidentally summoned.
Time broke apart.
Minutes stretched and snapped. Clara tried to track them by the flashing sign, but the pain made everything slippery. She was shivering now. Adrenaline had drained out of her, leaving cold behind. Her teeth chattered.
Then the snoring stopped.
The apartment fell silent.
Too silent.
The bed creaked.
A heavy thud.
Trent’s feet hitting the floor.
The bedroom door opened.
“You still on the floor, you dumb bitch?”
His voice was rough with sleep and alcohol.
He shuffled into the living room scratching his bare chest, wearing gray sweatpants and a blank expression. That was always the worst part. Not rage. Not fury. Annoyance.
To Trent, hurting her was not a crime of passion.
It was maintenance.
Something he did when she stepped out of line.
He looked down at her.
“Get up,” he muttered. “Make coffee. My head’s killing me.”
Clara did not move.
She couldn’t.
Trent turned toward the kitchen, then stopped.
He looked back slowly.
“Did you hear me?”
Before he could take one step toward her, the deadbolt snapped.
Not a knock.
Not a warning.
A sharp metallic crack.
Trent spun toward the door.
“What the—”
The front door did not swing open.
It was driven inward with controlled, brutal force. Wood splintered. The frame split. The door slammed hard against the wall.
A man stepped inside.
He did not look like a rescuer.
He looked like he had been pulled out of a private meeting in a room where people lost fortunes with one wrong sentence.
Tailored charcoal suit. White shirt open at the collar. No tie. Dark hair. Sharp features. Eyes flat as slate.
He carried no weapon Clara could see.
He did not need one.
Behind him came two bigger men in dark leather jackets, moving so silently they seemed less like people than shadows with muscle.
Trent puffed up, because men like Trent always think loudness is power.
“Who the hell are you? Get out of my house before I—”
The man in the suit did not even look at him.
His eyes swept the room, found Clara on the rug, and stopped.
“Clara.”
His voice was low. Rough. Not warm.
She gave the smallest nod she could manage.
Only then did the man turn his attention to Trent.
He did not raise his voice.
He simply tilted his head.
The two men behind him moved.
It was not cinematic.
There was no speech.
No dramatic fight.
Only fast, efficient violence.
One man stepped into Trent’s space and struck him hard across the side of the knee with something leather-wrapped. The wet pop of cartilage giving way echoed through the apartment.
Trent screamed and folded.
Before he hit the ground, the second man drove a heavy boot into his jaw.
The sound was sickening.
Trent hit the linoleum, groaning through blood.
Clara expected to feel triumph.
Vindication.
Justice.
Instead, she felt nauseous.
Blood smelled different when it wasn’t only yours.
Footsteps approached. The man in the suit knelt beside her. Up close, Clara could see faint exhaustion beneath his eyes, light scars at his knuckles, and a scar cutting through one eyebrow.
“Which side?” he asked.
“Left,” she whispered.
His hands were large, but when he touched her, he was clinical and precise. He pressed lightly along her ribs through her shirt.
Pain erupted.
Clara gasped.
“Two ribs,” he muttered. “Maybe three.”
He looked over his shoulder.
Trent was trying to crawl away, leaving red streaks on the tile.
“Wrap him up,” the man said. “Take him to the docks. Put him in a container. I’ll deal with him after I get her to the clinic.”
“Yes, Mr. Russo.”
Mr. Russo.
The name meant nothing to Clara.
But docks did.
Containers did.
The casual way he said it did.
She had not summoned a guardian angel.
She had summoned a shark.
Russo slid one arm under her knees and the other behind her back.
“This is going to hurt,” he said.
Not an apology.
A fact.
Then he lifted her.
Pain exploded through her body. Her scream broke in her throat. Her face pressed against his chest, fine wool beneath her cheek, expensive cologne cutting through the stink of the apartment.
Fresh rain.
Vetiver.
And underneath it, faintly, metal and gunpowder.
“Just breathe,” Russo said against her ear as he carried her out through the broken door and into the wet night. “I’ve got you.”
As darkness pulled her under, Clara understood something horrifying.
She was safe from Trent.
But she belonged to someone else now.
When she woke, everything smelled sterile.
Iodine.
Bleach.
Rubbing alcohol.
The ceiling above her was white acoustic tile, clean and perfect. No nicotine stains. No cracks. No shadow of Trent moving across it.
Her left side hurt, but the pain had changed. It was duller now, drugged and heavy.
A tube ran into her arm.
“Dilaudid,” a voice said.
Clara turned her head.
Russo sat near the door in a plastic chair, suit jacket gone, sleeves rolled to the elbows. He was looking at a matte black phone.
“Three fractured ribs,” he said without looking up. “Hairline, thankfully. No punctured lung. Doctor taped you, gave you fluids, and gave you enough medication to sleep through a minor earthquake.”
“Where am I?”
“A private clinic,” Russo said. “Basement of a veterinary supply warehouse, if you want the real estate specifics.”
He finally lowered the phone.
“You sent a text to my private encrypted line. A number only six people in this city have. How did you get it?”
The cracked phone screen came back to her. The blood on her thumb. The wrong number.
“I didn’t,” she whispered. “I was trying to text my brother. Ben. His number ends in 0198.”
Russo stared at her.
For three seconds, the monitor was the only sound in the room.
Then he sighed.
Not theatrically.
Not angrily.
Just tired.
“A typo,” he said. “You dismantled a low-level meth distribution node on the south side because your thumb slipped.”
Clara frowned.
“Meth distribution?”
“Your boyfriend,” Russo said. “Trent. He moves product for the Ramirez brothers. Or he did. He owed them forty grand. He owed me eighty. I’ve been looking for his primary residence for three weeks.”
Clara felt the room tilt.
“Trent was—”
“Worse than a drunk with a heavy hand,” Russo finished. “Yes.”
He stood and smoothed his shirt.
“Tonight, he turned his burner phone on for four minutes. My people triangulated the block. Then your text came through.”
The drugged fog in Clara’s head thinned.
“What did you do to him?” she asked. “You said the docks.”
Russo walked closer.
“I put him in a shipping container. I asked where my money was. He cried, blamed you, blamed Ramirez, and bled out from a compound fracture my associate gave him in your kitchen.”
Clara stopped breathing.
The monitor screamed her panic in frantic beeps.
“He’s dead?”
“Yes.”
He said it plainly.
Like weather.
Like traffic.
“Listen to me, Clara,” Russo said, leaning one hand on the bed rail. “Trent is gone. Bad memory. Fish food. But the people he worked for are still here. And when they realize he’s missing, they’re going to look for the girl who lived with him. They’ll assume you know where their forty grand is.”
“I don’t know anything about money,” Clara said, panic tightening her chest. “I swear. I work at a diner. I barely pay the electric bill.”
“I believe you,” Russo said. “The Ramirez brothers won’t. They use pliers and blowtorches to ask questions. Because I intercepted Trent, you are now a loose end in my ledger.”
She looked toward the door.
Run, her body said.
But run where?
Her apartment was a crime scene. Her brother had already abandoned her. She had twenty dollars in her account and broken ribs.
“What happens to me?”
“You don’t go back to the diner. You don’t call Ben. For the next month, you don’t exist. Leo is outside. When that IV bag finishes, he drives you to a secure location. You stay there until I decide the board is clear.”
“Am I a prisoner?”
“You’re an investment,” Russo said softly. “I spent twenty grand tonight keeping you breathing. I intend to protect that asset.”
Clara stared at the ceiling.
She had traded one monster for another.
But for the first time in three years, she knew exactly where she stood.
“Yes,” she whispered.
The SUV ride through the rain was silent.
Leo drove. He was enormous, quiet, and precise, built like a concrete wall in a black Henley. Clara sat in the back wrapped in an oversized charcoal hoodie that smelled faintly of cigar smoke and expensive laundry detergent. Her bloody clothes had been burned at the clinic.
Russo sat in the passenger seat, tapping on an iPad.
Every pothole sent pain flashing through her torso.
“There’s ice in the console,” Russo said, eyes meeting hers in the rearview mirror. “Use it.”
Clara found a gel pack and pressed it to her side.
“Thank you.”
He did not reply.
They pulled into the underground garage of a downtown high-rise. Bright lights. Clean concrete. Private elevator.
“Can you walk,” Russo asked, “or does Leo need to carry you?”
“I can walk,” Clara said quickly.
Getting out of the SUV nearly broke that lie. Sweat gathered at her hairline by the time her feet touched the ground.
Russo watched but did not offer a hand.
She understood then: the gentleness in the apartment had been practical. He needed her quiet and portable. Now she was logistics.
The elevator rose to the thirty-fourth floor and opened directly into a penthouse.
Clara stepped out and stopped.
The place was massive. Floor-to-ceiling windows. Rain-slick city below. Dark hardwood. Marble kitchen. Minimalist furniture so expensive it looked untouched. No photographs. No books. No mail. No clutter. Nothing human.
It was not a home.
It was a luxury waiting room.
“Master bedroom is down the hall,” Russo said. “En suite has a walk-in shower. Don’t take a bath. You’ll drown trying to get out with those ribs.”
“Does anyone live here?”
“I use it when I need to stay downtown.”
He poured himself two fingers of amber liquor.
“You’ll stay here. Door locks electromagnetically. You can’t open it without my biometric scan or Leo’s. Windows don’t open.”
Clara tightened her grip on the ice pack.
“You’re locking me in.”
“I’m keeping you alive. If you walk out, the lobby cameras catch you. By noon, Ramirez has a visual. By dinner, you’re strapped to a chair in Little Village.”
He stepped closer.
“I don’t do charity. You brought me Trent. You saved me weeks of hunting. For that, you get my protection. But I dictate the terms. You eat what Leo brings. You sleep in that bed. You heal. You don’t touch the landline.”
Clara looked up at him.
Monster.
Captor.
Killer.
Yet her shoulders dropped by a fraction.
Because as sick as it was, as twisted as it felt, she felt safe.
Not free.
Not loved.
Safe.
“Okay,” she breathed.
Russo studied her.
Then his knuckles brushed the fleece of the hoodie near her bruised collarbone. The touch was fleeting, almost accidental, but it sent an electric shock through her skin.
“Get some sleep, Clara,” he said. “Tomorrow we discuss what you’re going to do with the rest of your life.”
Morning came through the motorized blinds like a blade.
Clara woke wrong.
Wrong ceiling.
Wrong bed.
Wrong smell.
Instead of mildew and cigarettes, the room smelled of clean linen and ozone. The bathroom mirror was merciless. It showed every truth Trent had left on her body.
A bruise across her cheekbone, dark purple and ugly.
A split lip.
Medical tape wrapped around her ribs.
Her torso stained black and yellow with violence.
Trent did this.
And Trent was now dead.
She waited for guilt.
It did not come.
Only emptiness.
She showered carefully, using Russo’s body wash because it was the only thing there. Cedar. Black pepper. Masculine and expensive. It felt strangely intimate, like a trespass. But she wanted the smell of Trent’s apartment and the clinic off her skin.
When she finally made it to the kitchen, Leo was there, unloading groceries.
“Morning,” he grunted.
“Is he here?”
“Mr. Russo is at the office. Legitimate business during the day.”
Leo pointed to shopping bags on the sofa.
“Clothes.”
“I can’t pay for those.”
“You don’t pay for anything. Russo’s account. He prefers guests not bleed on the furniture.”
Inside were expensive basics: soft sweatpants, cotton shirts, thick cardigans, underwear. Practical. Comfortable. Chosen for healing, not style.
“Thank you.”
“Thank the boss’s assistant. She bought them.”
Leo made eggs.
When Clara asked what happened now, he said, “Now you eat.”
“That’s not what I meant.”
Leo stopped stirring.
“The Ramirez crew visited your apartment at six this morning. Kicked the door in. Found blood. Tore up the drywall looking for the stash. If you were there, you’d be in pieces. Eat your eggs. Let Russo worry. It’s what he’s good at.”
Clara took a bite and tasted nothing.
She was a ghost now.
Alive only because a violent man found her useful.
That evening, Russo returned looking exhausted.
He dropped a leather briefcase on the kitchen island and rubbed his temples. For a split second when Clara spoke, his eyes flashed with predatory instinct, as if he had forgotten anyone else was there.
Then he remembered.
“How are the ribs?”
“Better,” she lied.
He looked her over.
Bruised face.
Swollen lip.
Oversized cardigan.
“You look terrible.”
“Thank you,” Clara said dryly. “I try to keep up appearances when I’m held hostage.”
The corner of his mouth twitched.
Almost a smile.
He slid a takeout container toward her.
“Lamb shawarma. Extra garlic. Eat.”
Clara opened it and suddenly realized she was starving.
Then Russo said, “They burned your apartment.”
She stopped chewing.
“Who?”
“Ramirez. They realized Trent wasn’t coming back. Didn’t find the money, so they torched the place to send a message.”
Her stomach turned.
“Ben?”
“Went by this afternoon. My people were watching. He saw the fire engines, talked to a cop, left. They didn’t touch him.”
Relief hit so hard it hurt.
“You have nothing left out there,” Russo said. “No clothes. No home. A cartel that will skin you alive if you surface. Do you understand?”
“I understand,” Clara said, voice shaking. “I’m completely at your mercy. What I don’t understand is why. You could have left me there. Trent was the one you wanted. If Ramirez found me, you’d be clean.”
Russo stared at her for a long moment.
Then he stepped close.
Clara did not flinch.
She had survived Trent. She would not cower because this man wore a better suit.
“I don’t deal in collateral damage,” Russo said quietly. “I am a businessman. A violent, unforgiving businessman. But I don’t leave civilians bleeding on the floor to cover my tracks.”
“So I’m a charity case.”
“You’re a complication.”
He reached out.
Clara braced.
But his hand only adjusted the collar of her cardigan where it had slipped off her shoulder.
The touch burned.
“Right now,” he said, “my goal is neutralizing Ramirez. Until that happens, you are a ghost haunting my penthouse.”
He moved away.
“There’s a burner phone in the briefcase. It dials three numbers. Me. Leo. Front desk. Do not call anyone else. Do not look out the windows with the lights on.”
At the hallway, he paused.
“Get some sleep, Clara. The war starts tomorrow.”
The next day crawled.
Rain beat against the reinforced glass. Clara cleaned because she needed to move. The apartment was already spotless, but she wiped counters, folded blankets, organized pantry shelves. She had been a waitress. She knew how to keep hands busy while the mind tried not to break.
By noon, loneliness turned sharp.
She picked up the burner phone and thought about Ben.
She could tell him she was alive.
But Russo’s warning stopped her.
If she called Ben, she made him a target.
At 3:15, the lock clacked open.
Clara froze with a damp towel in her hand.
Russo stumbled in.
This time, he did not look like a kingpin.
He looked like a bleeding man.
His white shirt was soaked red along his right side. He leaned against the doorframe, breathing shallowly, face gray.
“Russo?”
He took two steps and dropped to his knees.
Blood pooled on the hardwood.
“What happened? Where’s Leo?”
“Downstairs,” he grunted. “Holding the lobby. Ramirez sent a hit squad to a sit-down.”
“We need an ambulance. Or your clinic.”
“No hospitals. Clinic’s compromised.”
“You’re bleeding out!”
“It’s not an artery.”
He pressed a trembling hand to his right side.
“Glass. Car window blew out. Piece caught me. Bathroom sink. Black tactical box. Bring it here.”
Clara didn’t argue.
She ran despite the fire in her ribs, found the heavy black case, and dragged it back.
It was not a first aid kit.
It was trauma gear.
Quick-clot.
Heavy gauze.
Iodine.
Surgical staples.
Medical glue.
“Gloves,” Russo ordered.
Her hands shook as she snapped them on.
“Pour iodine. All of it.”
She did.
Russo’s hand slammed against the floor. A low, guttural sound tore out of him, but he did not scream.
“Wipe it.”
She wiped blood and iodine from the gash.
It was deep.
Ugly.
Still bleeding.
“Staple it,” he said.
Clara stared.
“I don’t know how. I’m a waitress.”
“It’s a stapler, Clara,” he snapped. “You squeeze it. Do it before I pass out.”
The first click was the loudest sound in the world.
Russo flinched violently.
“Hold still,” Clara ordered, shocking herself.
Click.
Click.
Click.
Seven staples.
By the end, her arms trembled and sweat covered her forehead. The wound looked horrible, metal teeth holding torn flesh together, but the bleeding slowed.
She sealed it with a heavy bandage and sat back on her heels.
Russo stared at the ceiling, chest heaving.
“Messy,” he rasped, “but effective. Thank you.”
Clara wiped her forehead and smeared his blood across her own skin.
“You said you were a businessman. Getting shot at doesn’t sound like business.”
“Hostile takeover,” Russo said. “Ramirez didn’t want to negotiate territory. They sent a message instead.”
“Did they kill anyone?”
“Two of my guys.”
His eyes went flat.
Clara helped him to the sofa. He was heavy, hot, smelling of sweat and blood and iodine. She poured him scotch, then poured one for herself.
Russo watched her take a burning swallow.
“You didn’t faint. Most people faint.”
“I used to clean the deep fryer at the diner,” Clara said. “Burns, cuts, boiling grease. You learn not to panic when things get messy.”
“Trent made things messy too,” Russo said quietly.
Clara looked up.
“Trent was a coward. He hit me when I wasn’t looking. Only when he was drunk. He wanted to feel big.”
“And me?”
She looked at the bloody bandage near his waist.
“You do it for control.”
Russo did not deny it.
“I do it because order requires force.”
“You’re a mob boss,” she said.
The words felt dangerous in her mouth.
“I’m a necessary evil.”
Before she could reply, the burner phone vibrated on the kitchen counter.
Russo changed instantly.
All exhaustion vanished.
“Bring it.”
Clara grabbed it and handed it to him.
He listened.
His jaw tightened.
“How many?”
Silence.
“No. Main elevators are dead. Shut down the grid. We take freight.”
He hung up and looked at Clara.
“They bypassed security. They’re in the stairwell.”
Then he stood, ignoring the wound, and pulled a matte black pistol from behind his back.
“Who?” Clara asked.
“The mess,” Russo said. “Grab your shoes. We’re leaving.”
He hit a wall panel, and the penthouse went dark.
The beautiful glass cage became a tomb.
Clara shoved on the sneakers Leo had bought her and followed Russo into the service corridor.
The pain in her ribs was no longer dull.
It was alive.
Concrete dust hung in the air. The hallway smelled industrial, like rust and old grease. Russo moved ahead of her with predatory speed, gun low and ready.
The freight elevator was slow.
Too slow.
Above them, something thudded.
Footsteps.
They were inside the penthouse.
The freight elevator arrived with a violent shudder. Russo pulled Clara inside and hit the sub-basement button. Fluorescent light flickered over his pale face. One hand stayed pressed against the bandage Clara had just made.
“When the doors open,” Russo said, “stay behind me. Do not run. Do not scream. If someone shoots, drop and cover your head.”
“Okay.”
The elevator descended.
Then stopped.
Not the sub-basement.
Parking level one.
Russo stepped in front of her, blocking her completely.
The doors screeched open.
Gunfire erupted.
Not like movies.
Not clean.
Not distant.
It was deafening. A physical force that punched the air out of Clara’s lungs. She dropped to her knees, clamping her hands over her ears as pain ripped through her ribs.
Russo fired back.
Three shots.
Measured.
Precise.
A body hit the concrete outside.
“Clear!” a rough voice barked.
Leo.
Clara opened her eyes.
Her ears rang. The parking garage smelled of gunpowder, rubber, and blood. A man lay ten feet away in a black tactical jacket, a dark pool spreading beneath his head.
This was not Trent’s apartment anymore.
This was not survival from one drunk man’s fists.
This was a war.
Leo stood near a battered gray sedan, lowering a sawed-off shotgun like it weighed nothing.
“Two scouts down here,” he said. “They set a perimeter upstairs. Cops will be here in three minutes. Move.”
Russo grabbed Clara’s arm and pushed her toward the car.
She nearly fell into the back seat.
Russo slammed into the front passenger side.
“Drive.”
Leo hit the gas.
The sedan tore out of the garage into the rain.
Clara curled on the back seat, shivering, one arm wrapped around her broken ribs. Outside, the city blurred into red and gold streaks through the wet glass.
Her apartment was gone.
Her abuser was dead.
The man driving was a killer.

The man bleeding in the passenger seat was a kingpin.
She had texted the wrong number to escape one monster, and the universe had sent her the devil.
But as the gray sedan vanished into the storm, Clara closed her eyes and understood the terrifying truth.
She was bruised.
She was hunted.
She had nothing left.
