She Took A Bullet For A Mafia Boss—Then He Asked Why-Teptep

She Jumped in Front of the Mafia Boss and Took the Bullet—Then He Whispered, “Why Would You Do That?”

Morning slid gently through the windows of Lena’s Bloom and Stems, washing the little flower shop in pale gold.

The buckets by the counter were full of white roses, their petals cool with water, their stems waiting for her careful hands.

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Behind her, in the narrow back room, the kettle clicked off beside a chipped mug of tea she had made and forgotten.

Lena Kowalsska did that often.

She made tea as a promise to herself, then lost herself in flowers until the mug went cold.

At twenty-five, she had built a life that was not large, not loud, and not especially impressive to anyone who measured success in sharp suits or expensive cars.

But it was hers.

The shop had been hers for three years.

A modest place on a quiet high-street corner, with a wooden counter, narrow shelves, a cold patch near the front door where the draught came in, and a little greenhouse at the back that smelled of damp soil and green stems.

She knew every creak in the floorboards.

She knew which vase wobbled unless it was turned a certain way.

She knew which roses would open too quickly if she put them too close to the window.

Outside, the pavement still held the shine of overnight drizzle.

A delivery van passed with a low hiss of tyres, and somewhere nearby a shutter clattered up with the tired sound of a business beginning another day.

Lena liked mornings before the world asked anything of her.

At 6:15, most of the neighbouring shops were still shut.

No customers.

No questions.

No one wanting a bouquet that said sorry without admitting what they had done.

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