She Paid A Mafia Boss 75 Cents To Make Her Monsters Go Away Tonight-Tep

Leonid Corin noticed the little girl before anyone else understood she did not belong there.

The restaurant was the kind of place where people lowered their voices without being asked, where the plates were warm, the glasses thin, and the piano near the window made every table feel expensive.

Outside, Monterey had gone blue with evening, the kind of coastal blue that made headlights smear across wet pavement and made tourists pull their jackets tighter at the curb.

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Inside, garlic butter, candle wax, and polished wood filled the air.

Leonid was halfway through dinner when the front door opened.

His fork stopped before it reached his mouth.

No mother came in behind her.

No father hurried after her.

No babysitter stepped through the entrance with a worried apology.

Only a little girl stood under the amber light, wearing a faded red dress, dirty sneakers, and a ponytail that had been tied by someone in a hurry or by a child trying to make herself look normal.

She could not have been older than seven.

That was what bothered Leonid first.

Not that she was alone.

Not that she had entered the most expensive room on the block like she had walked through worse places to get there.

It was the way she paused just inside the door and measured the room.

Children looked for candy, bathrooms, parents, balloons, friendly faces.

This child looked for exits.

Leonid had been feared by men twice her size and worshiped by men half as brave.

He had spent years building a name that made people stand straighter when he walked past.

He knew how to read a room before the room knew it had been read.

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