“I’ve never been kissed.”
Emma Reynolds did not mean to say it.
The words came out because Dante Moretti was too close, and the room was too quiet, and fear had loosened something in her that pride had spent years holding shut.

One second earlier, his hand had been against her cheek.
Not rough.
Not possessive.
Careful, which somehow scared her more.
Beyond the glass walls of his penthouse office, Chicago glittered beneath the midnight rain, all steel, traffic, and cold light.
Inside, the air smelled like whiskey, smoke, wet wool, and the faint metallic sting of blood.
Dante went still.
His thumb stopped at the edge of her jaw.
His eyes sharpened.
Emma’s heart hit her ribs so hard it felt like a warning from inside her own body.
She should not have been there.
She should not have ridden the private elevator up when the security desk downstairs sat empty.
She should not have walked into the private office of a man people discussed in restaurant kitchens with their voices lowered.
Dante Moretti owned restaurants, construction companies, shipping warehouses, and enough rumors to make ordinary people step aside when his name was mentioned.
He was the kind of man who did not need to shout.
People listened before he had to.
And Emma had just told him the one truth she had never told anyone.
For one breath, she thought he would smile cruelly.
She thought he would make it ugly.
Men had a way of doing that with a woman’s private fear, especially when she had no money, no backup, and nowhere better to go.
Dante’s thumb moved instead.
It brushed her cheek once with a gentleness that made something in her chest ache.
“Then we take it easy,” he said.
Emma forgot how to breathe.
Because nothing about him looked easy.
There was blood on the collar of his white shirt.
Not enough to look accidental.
Enough.
Enough to explain the empty security desk.
Enough to explain the strange silence in the hallway.
Enough to make her understand that the elevator ride up had not just felt wrong.
It had been wrong.
Still, Emma had come because poverty teaches a person which fears they can afford.
She had twelve dollars in her checking account.
Her mother’s electric bill was overdue.
Her rent was due in three days.
The mechanic had left three voicemails about her Honda, each one more tired than the last.
And her boss at Bell & Bloom Catering had told her that if the invoice for the St. Jude fundraiser did not reach Dante Moretti’s office before morning, Emma’s pay would be docked.
Her boss had not technically sent her.
She had yelled.
There was a difference.
At 11:42 p.m., Emma had taken the bent envelope from the catering office counter, still wearing her black work pants and white shirt.
At 11:56 p.m., she had parked her dying Honda two blocks away because the garage near the building charged more than she could justify.
At 12:08 a.m., she had found the lobby too quiet.
At 12:17 a.m., she had stepped into Dante Moretti’s office and understood that a person could be desperate and foolish at the same time.
Now his hand was on her face.
Now his shirt was stained.
Now her secret was in the air between them.
“I should go,” she whispered.
“You should,” he said.
But he did not step back.
Neither did she.
That was the worst part.
Emma wanted to blame fear for keeping her still, but fear had never felt warm before.
The office was enormous, all black walnut, leather, glass, and clean lines that made everything in her life feel frayed by comparison.
A small American flag stood near the corner window beside framed permits and inspection certificates.
A paper coffee cup sat untouched near a stack of folders.
The city below kept moving as if nothing important was happening above it.
“You came here alone?” Dante asked.
“I thought security would be downstairs.”
“It wasn’t.”
“I noticed.”
His eyes narrowed. “And you came up anyway.”
Emma tried to swallow, but her throat was tight.
“My boss said if the invoice didn’t get delivered tonight, she was docking my pay.”
“Your boss sent you here at midnight?”
“She didn’t send me,” Emma said. “She yelled. There’s a difference.”
For half a second, Dante almost looked amused.
“What’s your boss’s name?”
Her stomach dropped.
“No,” she said quickly. “Please don’t.”
“No?”
“Don’t do whatever you’re thinking.”
“And what am I thinking?”
“That someone should be punished because I was scared.”
His expression shifted.
Not softer exactly.
More focused.
“You defend people who fail you?”
Emma laughed once, and even she could hear how tired it sounded.
“I wouldn’t have anybody left if I didn’t.”
The room went quiet.
Dante looked at her then, really looked.
He saw the cheap black coat.
He saw the catering uniform beneath it.
He saw the worn shoes she had glued twice because new shoes meant skipping groceries.
He saw the envelope in her hand, bent at the corners from how hard she had been holding it.
Emma hated being seen when she had not chosen it.
Need is expensive in this country.
Sometimes the bill comes in dollars.
Sometimes it comes in dignity.
“What’s your name?” he asked.
“Emma.”
“Emma what?”
“Reynolds.”
He repeated it quietly.
“Emma Reynolds.”
She hated the way her name sounded in his mouth.
She loved it more.
That was when he finally stepped back.
Cold air rushed between them, and Emma remembered the envelope.
She held it out before her hands could start shaking again.
“This is the invoice from Bell & Bloom Catering,” she said. “For the St. Jude fundraiser last week.”
Dante took the envelope but did not open it.
“I made the cannoli, if that helps,” she added, because nerves had always made her say one sentence too many.
“I know.”
Emma blinked.
“You know?”
“You were in the kitchen arguing with the pastry chef about orange zest.”
“You saw that?”
“I notice things.”
Of course he did.
Men like Dante Moretti survived by noticing everything.
He moved behind his desk and sat with the kind of controlled ease that made the blood on his collar seem even more alarming.
He opened a drawer.
Emma tensed.
He pulled out a checkbook.
The relief that moved through her was humiliating.
Dante wrote with quick, clean strokes.
The pen scratched across the check.
The office clock clicked from 12:21 to 12:22.
When he slid the check toward her, Emma looked down.
For a second, the amount did not make sense.
Then it did.
“This is too much,” she said.
“It includes your tip.”
“This is insane.”
“The cannoli were worth it.”
“No cannoli are worth this.”
“Mine are.”
She looked up.
He was watching her with the faintest hint of a smile.
Not safe.
Not harmless.
But warmer than before.
Emma knew she needed to leave.
She knew it with the same certainty she knew her Honda would not start on the first try tomorrow morning.
She knew it because money could look like rescue right up until it became a chain.
Still, she stood there with that check in her hand, and for one weak, honest second, she imagined paying the electric bill before her mother noticed how bad it had gotten.
She imagined handing the mechanic cash.
She imagined buying shoes that did not let rain in through the left sole.
Dante leaned back in his chair.
“Have dinner with me tomorrow,” he said.
The words landed harder than a threat.
“What?” Emma whispered.
“Dinner.”
“You don’t know me.”
“I know you came here alone at midnight because someone threatened your paycheck.”
“That is not knowing me.”
“I know you defend people who make your life harder.”
“That is not knowing me either.”
“I know you make cannoli worth overpaying for.”
Despite herself, Emma almost smiled.
Almost.
Then she remembered the blood.
Her gaze dropped to his collar.
Dante noticed.
“Not mine,” he said.
“That is not as comforting as you think it is.”
His mouth twitched.
The office should have felt less dangerous once she was no longer cornered.
It did not.
It felt more dangerous because she was beginning to want to understand him.
Emma folded the check once, then stopped herself because folding that much money felt disrespectful to every panic attack she had ever had over bills.
“I can’t have dinner with you,” she said.
“Can’t?”
“Shouldn’t.”
“There’s a difference.”
She hated that he used her own line against her.
Dante stood slowly, and she had to fight the instinct to step back.
He did not come closer this time.
He only placed both hands on the desk and looked at her as if the answer mattered more than he wanted it to.
“I don’t hurt women,” he said.
Emma held his gaze.
“Men don’t usually announce it before they do.”
For the first time, his face closed completely.
There it was.
The man people whispered about.
The one who could empty a room with a glance.
Then, just as quickly, the expression was gone.
“You’re right,” he said.
It was not an apology.
It felt heavier than one.
The private elevator behind Emma chimed.
She turned so fast the check bent in her grip.
The doors opened on two men in dark coats.
One had rain on his shoulders and a bruise darkening along his jaw.
The other held a manila folder against his chest.
Both men looked at Dante first.
Then they saw Emma.
The bruised man’s face changed.
Recognition.
Not curiosity.
Recognition.
Dante did not move.
“Not now,” he said.
The man with the folder swallowed.
“Boss,” he said, “it’s the 12:17 file. The driver said it couldn’t wait.”
Emma felt the air leave the room.
A file.
A timestamp.
A driver.
Dante’s eyes flicked to the folder, then to Emma’s catering uniform.
“Leave it,” he said.
The man hesitated.
That hesitation told Emma more than words would have.
She looked at the folder.
Across the tab, stamped in block letters, was BELL & BLOOM DELIVERY LOG.
Her fingers went cold.
“What does my catering company have to do with you?” she asked.
No one answered.
Not at first.
The bruised man looked down at the floor.
The man holding the folder looked at Dante as if begging him not to make him speak.
Dante reached across the desk and took the folder himself.
He did not open it right away.
That scared Emma more than if he had.
At last, he laid it flat on the black walnut surface.
The folder looked ordinary there.
That was how trouble usually looked before it ruined your life.
Ordinary.
Paper.
A label.
A date.
Dante opened it.
Inside were photocopied delivery sheets, invoice records, and a printout from the building’s lobby camera.
Emma saw the first page upside down.
Bell & Bloom Catering.
Delivery confirmation.
St. Jude fundraiser.
Her signature.
Except it was not her signature.
Her name was there, but the letters were wrong.
The E looped too high.
The R leaned back.
Emma had signed enough rent checks and late notices to know her own exhaustion on paper.
This was not it.
“That isn’t mine,” she said.
Dante looked at her.
“I know.”
The two words hit her harder than the dinner invitation.
He turned the next page.
There was a timestamp.
12:17 a.m.
There was a note beside it.
Courier arrived alone.
No security present.
There was another line below it, typed in the same clean font.
Delay her upstairs.
Emma felt the floor tilt.
She reached for the edge of the desk, but stopped herself before touching it.
She would not steady herself on his furniture.
She would not give anyone in that room the satisfaction of watching her fold.
Dante’s jaw tightened.
The bruised man whispered, “Boss, we didn’t know it was her.”
“Who is ‘we’?” Emma asked.
Nobody answered her.
She looked from the men to Dante.
“What is happening?”
Dante closed the folder.
The sound was soft.
Final.
“Your boss didn’t yell because of an invoice,” he said.
Emma stared at him.
“She sent you here because someone paid her to.”
The room went very quiet.
Rain slid down the glass behind him.
The American flag near the window stood perfectly still.
Emma thought of her boss’s voice over the phone.
Get it there tonight, Emma.
Do you understand me?
Tonight.
She thought of the empty lobby.
She thought of Dante’s bloodstained collar.
She thought of the way the elevator had opened for her as if someone had already known she was coming.
“What do they want from me?” she asked.
Dante did not answer quickly.
That was when she understood the answer was worse than ignorance.
He knew.
He reached into the folder and pulled out one final page.
This one was not a delivery log.
It was a copy of an old hospital intake form.
Emma saw her mother’s name before she saw anything else.
Her knees almost gave.
“No,” she said.
Dante’s face changed then.
For the first time all night, the danger in him turned outward.
Not at her.
For her.
Emma had no idea which frightened her more.
“My mother has nothing to do with this,” she said.
Dante slid the paper toward her.
“She does now.”
Emma stared at the form.
The date was six years old.
The address was her mother’s old apartment.
The emergency contact line had been blacked out.
But not completely.
Somebody had done a poor job with the marker, and beneath the smear, Emma could still make out the first three letters.
Dan.
Her eyes lifted slowly.
Dante was watching her like a man bracing for impact.
“Why is your name on my mother’s hospital paperwork?” she whispered.
The bruised man in the elevator closed his eyes.
The other one made the sign of the cross under his breath.
Dante did not look away.
“Because six years ago,” he said, “your mother saved my life.”
Emma could not speak.
The city outside kept glowing.
The office clock kept ticking.
Somewhere far below, a horn sounded on the street, ordinary and distant and cruelly normal.
Dante continued before she could stop him.
“I never knew her name. Not then. I was bleeding out behind a restaurant on West Madison, and she was the woman who called 911 when everyone else kept walking.”
Emma’s throat burned.
Her mother had mentioned that night once.
Only once.
A man hurt in an alley.
A call made from a pay phone because her own cell had died.
Then police questions.
Then fear.
Then silence.
Emma had been twenty.
She remembered her mother coming home with blood on her sleeves and refusing to explain it beyond, “Somebody had to call.”
“She never told me your name,” Emma said.
“She didn’t know it.”
“Then why would anyone send me here?”
Dante looked at the folder.
“Because someone finally connected her to me.”
The room changed after that.
Not physically.
The desk was still there.
The windows still held the city.
The check was still bent in Emma’s hand.
But suddenly the night was not about an invoice, a strange invitation, or a man with blood on his collar.
It was about her mother.
Her tired, stubborn mother, who kept bills in a basket by the microwave and lied about eating lunch when money was short.
Her mother, who once called for help for a stranger and then told Emma not to ask questions because doing the right thing sometimes had consequences.
Emma pressed a hand to her mouth.
“Is she in danger?”
Dante’s answer was immediate.
“No.”
Too immediate.
Emma knew the sound of a person trying to keep a promise before they had earned the right.
“Don’t lie to me,” she said.
Dante’s eyes held hers.
“She was watched tonight.”
Emma’s breath stopped.
“Watched?”
“From across the street. My people moved her before anyone got close.”
“My people?”
He did not soften it.
“Yes.”
Emma wanted to be furious.
She was furious.
But under the fury was a terror so deep it made her hands shake.
“Where is she?”
“In a safe place.”
“That is not an answer.”
“No,” Dante said. “It’s not.”
The honesty should not have helped.
It did anyway.
Emma looked at the check in her hand.
A minute ago, it had looked like rescue.
Now it looked like bait, even if he had not meant it that way.
She laid it on the desk.
“I don’t want your money.”
Dante looked down at the check.
Then back at her.
“You earned it.”
“I don’t want to owe you.”
“You don’t.”
“Everybody owes men like you eventually.”
Something flickered in his face.
Pain, maybe.
Or memory.
“Your mother didn’t,” he said.
Emma went still.
Dante pushed the check back toward her, not with force, not with command, but with two fingers.
“She saved my life and walked away before I could repay her. That kind of debt doesn’t disappear because it makes you uncomfortable.”
Emma stared at him.
He was still dangerous.
He was still a man with secrets, blood on his collar, and two frightened men waiting in his private elevator.
But for the first time, she saw the shape of something else under all that control.
Gratitude.
Old and unfinished.
The bruised man cleared his throat.
Dante did not turn.
“Speak,” he said.
“There’s one more thing.”
Emma hated those words immediately.
The man stepped out of the elevator and placed a phone on the desk.
The screen was cracked across one corner.
A paused video filled the display.
The image was grainy but clear enough.
Emma saw the front of her mother’s apartment building.
She saw the mailbox row.
She saw the small flag sticker her mother had put beside her unit number after the Fourth of July and never removed.
And she saw a woman in a Bell & Bloom Catering jacket standing outside the building at 10:43 p.m.
Emma leaned closer.
Her mouth went dry.
It was her boss.
The woman who had yelled about the invoice.
The woman who knew Emma’s schedule.
The woman who knew her mother lived alone.
Emma looked up slowly.
Dante’s expression had gone completely cold.
“She didn’t just send me here,” Emma whispered.
“No,” he said.
“She used me.”
“Yes.”
Emma closed her eyes.
For one ugly second, she wanted to break something.
She wanted to scream.
She wanted to throw the check, the folder, the phone, the whole polished room straight through the glass.
Instead, she opened her eyes and picked up the cracked phone.
Her fingers were steadier than she felt.
“What happens now?” she asked.
Dante looked at her like he had been waiting all night for that question.
“You call your mother,” he said. “Then you decide how much you want to know.”
Emma stared at the paused video.
Her boss stood frozen on the screen outside her mother’s apartment, one hand raised toward the buzzer.
The timestamp glowed in the corner.
10:43 p.m.
Emma thought of every shift she had covered.
Every time she had stayed late.
Every time she had apologized to a woman who had been selling her fear to someone else.
Service only feels noble to people who benefit from it.
The moment you stop bowing, they call it attitude.
Emma put the phone down.
Then she picked up the check again.
Dante watched her, unreadable.
“I’m not having dinner with you,” she said.
His face did not change.
But something in his eyes dimmed.
Emma folded the check once, cleanly this time, and tucked it into her coat pocket.
“I’m having breakfast with my mother,” she said. “And you’re going to tell us both exactly what happened six years ago.”
The bruised man looked up in surprise.
The man with the folder went still.
Dante looked at Emma for a long moment.
Then he nodded once.
“Breakfast,” he said.
Emma should have felt powerful.
She did not.
She felt terrified.
But there are moments when fear stops being a wall and becomes a door.
You still shake.
You just walk through anyway.
Dante picked up his phone and made one call.
He did not raise his voice.
He did not threaten anyone where Emma could hear.
He only said, “Bring her mother home. Front entrance. No theatrics.”
Then he ended the call.
Emma’s knees weakened with relief so sudden it almost embarrassed her.
“She’s coming here?”
“Yes.”
“My mother hates elevators.”
Dante looked surprised.
It was small, but Emma saw it.
Then he said, “We’ll meet her downstairs.”
That was the first thing he said all night that sounded almost normal.
Downstairs, the lobby was no longer empty.
Two security guards stood near the desk.
A janitor pushed a mop bucket under the bright lobby lights.
Rain blurred the glass doors.
At 12:58 a.m., a black SUV pulled to the curb.
Emma’s mother stepped out wearing her old blue cardigan and the expression of a woman prepared to argue with anybody who treated her like a package.
“Emma,” she called.
Emma ran to her.
She did not care who watched.
She held her mother in the lobby of Dante Moretti’s building and felt, for the first time all night, that the ground had remembered how to hold her.
Her mother smelled like laundry soap and peppermint gum.
Real.
Alive.
Annoyed.
“What on earth is going on?” her mother demanded.
Emma laughed once into her shoulder, half sob and half relief.
“I was hoping you could tell me.”
Her mother looked past her.
Then she saw Dante.
The color drained from her face.
Not fear.
Recognition.
Dante’s posture changed.
The powerful man in the penthouse disappeared for a moment, and in his place stood someone younger, quieter, almost ashamed.
“Mrs. Reynolds,” he said.
Emma’s mother stared at him.
Then she whispered, “You lived.”
Dante nodded.
“Because of you.”
The lobby went silent around them.
The janitor stopped moving.
One security guard looked away, pretending not to hear.
Emma’s mother pressed a hand to her chest.
“I told you never to find me.”
Emma turned sharply.
“What?”
Her mother closed her eyes.
And just like that, Emma understood that the story had started long before midnight.
It had started six years earlier, in an alley behind a restaurant, with a bleeding man and a woman who refused to walk away.
It had continued through bills, silence, and a hospital form with a blacked-out emergency contact line.
It had found Emma through a fake signature, a midnight delivery log, and a boss who thought a poor woman would do anything to keep her paycheck.
Dante looked at Emma’s mother.
“I tried to honor that,” he said. “Until tonight.”
Her mother’s mouth tightened.
“Then tonight must be bad.”
“Yes.”
Emma looked between them.
“No more half-answers,” she said.
Her voice shook.
She let it.
“I walked into his office with twelve dollars, an invoice, and no idea that my mother was part of any of this. I am done being moved around by people who think scared women won’t ask questions.”
Dante lowered his eyes first.
Her mother did too.
That scared Emma almost as much as the folder had.
At 1:06 a.m., they sat in the lobby conference room under bright ceiling lights.
There was no whiskey here.
No leather shadows.
Just a long table, a wall map of the United States near the door, a box of tissues, and paper cups of coffee that tasted burned.
Dante placed the folder on the table.
Emma’s mother sat beside her, one hand wrapped around the coffee cup and the other locked around Emma’s wrist.
Then Dante told the truth.
Six years earlier, someone inside his own business had tried to have him killed.
He had survived only because a woman leaving a late cleaning shift heard him behind the restaurant and called for help.
That woman was Emma’s mother.
She had refused money.
She had refused protection.
She had refused to give a statement that would put her name into public records.
“I had a daughter,” she said quietly. “I had rent. I had no husband. I had no appetite for powerful men putting my name anywhere.”
Emma felt that sentence land in her bones.
It sounded exactly like her mother.
Dante had kept his distance.
But someone else had not.
Someone had spent years looking for the woman who saved him.
Not because she mattered to them.
Because she mattered to him.
And when they finally found the connection, they found Emma too.
A catering job.
A fundraiser.
A boss willing to take money.
A fake signature.
A midnight errand.
A woman with twelve dollars who could be sent wherever she was told.
Emma listened until the anger stopped burning wild and became something colder.
Useful.
“What happens to my boss?” she asked.
Dante’s eyes lifted.
“What do you want to happen?”
The question surprised her.
She had expected command.
She had expected revenge.
She had expected the kind of answer men give when they want gratitude for being frightening.
Instead, he waited.
Emma looked at her mother.
Her mother’s thumb moved once over Emma’s wrist.
A small signal.
Think.
Do not just react.
Emma breathed in.
“I want the records copied,” she said. “The fake signature. The delivery log. The lobby video. The phone footage from my mother’s building.”
Dante nodded.
“I want them sent somewhere official. Not just handled by you.”
Another nod.
“And I want my final paycheck from Bell & Bloom.”
For the first time, Dante almost smiled.
“Reasonable.”
Emma’s mother looked at him sharply.
“No favors.”
“No,” Dante said. “Documentation.”
That word mattered.
By 1:31 a.m., copies had been made.
By 1:44 a.m., Emma had a sealed envelope with every page cataloged in order.
By 1:52 a.m., a driver took her and her mother home, not to hide them, but because Emma’s Honda still would not start in the rain.
Dante did not ride with them.
He stood under the lobby lights while Emma’s mother got into the SUV.
Emma paused before closing the door.
“Why dinner?” she asked.
Dante looked tired then.
Not weak.
Tired.
“Because when you said you’d never been kissed, I realized everyone around you had been taking from you carefully enough to make you call it normal.”
Emma did not know what to do with that.
So she did nothing.
Dante stepped back.
“Breakfast, then,” he said.
Emma closed the door.
The next morning, Bell & Bloom Catering did not open on time.
That part Emma heard from a line cook who texted her at 8:11 a.m.
By 9:03 a.m., the manager who had yelled at her the night before was no longer answering calls.
By 10:20 a.m., Emma’s final paycheck appeared through direct deposit with a note marked payroll correction.
By noon, her mother’s electric bill was paid.
Emma did not use Dante’s check for that.
She used her own money first.
Then she sat at the kitchen table in the apartment where the sink dripped and the refrigerator hummed and her mother kept every bill in a basket by the microwave.
The check lay between them.
Her mother stared at it.
“That man is trouble,” she said.
“I know.”
“Handsome trouble is still trouble.”
Emma looked up.
Her mother shrugged.
“I have eyes.”
Despite everything, Emma laughed.
It came out cracked and small, but it was real.
For three days, Dante did not call her.
He did send copies of the records through a courier, all labeled, dated, and organized.
There was the delivery log.
There was the fake signature.
There were stills from the building camera.
There was a short written statement from the driver.
There was a copy of the old hospital intake form with a note clipped to the front.
Your mother asked me not to find her. I failed only when not finding her became dangerous.
Emma read that line three times.
Then she put it in the basket with the bills, because some papers belonged near ordinary things to stop them from becoming monsters.
On the fourth morning, at 8:03 a.m., her mechanic called again.
Emma answered.
She paid him.
On the fifth evening, Dante finally called.
Emma let it ring twice.
Then she picked up.
“I still haven’t agreed to dinner,” she said.
“I know.”
“I’m not impressed by money.”
“I know.”
“I’m not impressed by men who scare people.”
There was a pause.
Then Dante said, “Good.”
That annoyed her because it was the right answer.
Her mother sat across the kitchen table pretending not to listen.
Emma looked at the basket of bills, the repaired Honda key, the paid electric notice, and the folder that proved she had not imagined any of it.
She thought of that first moment in his office.
She had told him she had never been kissed because fear had stripped her down to the truth.
He had not used it against her.
He had said, Then we take it easy.
An entire night had taught Emma that danger was not always the loudest person in the room.
Sometimes it was the ordinary voice telling you to deliver an envelope at midnight.
Sometimes rescue was not soft.
Sometimes it arrived with blood on its collar and still asked what you wanted before it moved.
Emma closed her eyes for one second.
Then she opened them.
“Breakfast,” she said into the phone.
Dante was quiet.
Emma could almost hear him smile.
“Breakfast,” he agreed.
“And my mother comes.”
“Of course.”
“And if you try to intimidate the waitress, I’m leaving.”
This time, he did laugh.
It was low, surprised, and nothing like the cruel sound she had expected from him the night they met.
Emma’s mother pointed one finger at her from across the table.
“No kissing at breakfast,” she mouthed.
Emma covered the phone and whispered, “Mom.”
Her mother raised both eyebrows.
Emma looked away before she started smiling too hard.
Need is expensive in this country.
But that morning, for the first time in years, Emma did not feel bought.
She felt careful.
She felt scared.
She felt awake.
And when Dante Moretti pulled up outside their apartment the next morning in a black SUV and stepped out under a bright, ordinary Chicago sky, Emma did not run toward him.
She did not run away either.
She walked down the stairs beside her mother, one hand on the railing, one hand steady at her side.
Dante opened the back door for her mother first.
Her mother looked at him for a long second.
Then she got in.
Emma stopped beside him.
“You said we take it easy,” she reminded him.
Dante looked at her like the words mattered.
“We do,” he said.
Emma believed him only a little.
But a little was more than she had expected.
So she got into the car, not because she had been rescued, not because she owed him, and not because the check in her coat pocket had changed her life.
She got in because for once, the choice was hers.