After Saving A Mob Boss’s Son, She Became The Next Target-congtien

Sixteen hours into a double shift, Lauren Mitchell’s hands would not stop shaking.

It was not fear.

Not yet.

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It was exhaustion, the kind that settles under the skin and makes every sound too sharp.

The EMS break room had smelled like burnt coffee and microwave popcorn all night, and the fluorescent lights in the locker room buzzed above her like they were trying to drill into her skull.

She had spent the shift kneeling on apartment floors, squeezing into wrecked cars, and standing in living rooms where families begged her with their eyes to make the impossible happen.

By the time she stripped out of her uniform shirt, her shoulders felt like wet cement.

Her left eye had started twitching.

Her paycheck was already spoken for before it hit her account.

Rent was due.

The electric bill was three weeks late.

The grocery list on her phone had been shortened twice, then shortened again.

At twenty-eight, Lauren was good at staying calm when other people fell apart, but she was tired of being calm in a life that never stopped asking for more.

Outside the station, her 1998 Ford pickup sat under the security light with rain misting across the windshield.

The truck looked as worn out as she felt.

She climbed in, turned the key, and listened to the engine cough like it had taken the request personally.

“Come on, baby,” she whispered, patting the cracked dash. “Don’t die before payday.”

On the third try, the engine caught.

Most nights, Lauren drove home on the highway.

It was better lit, safer, and boring in the way a tired person needs the world to be boring.

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