LOUIS
Since Mama left Father and me when I was ten years old, all I’ve ever known is suffering and pain. Father had always been cruel to me, even before my sorry excuse for a mother left—but her absence carved a chasm so deep in his already blackened heart that the only way he knew how to fill it was with fists.
Each. And. Every. Day.
And this morning was no exception.
“You sorry excuse of a man,” he roared, driving his heavy boots into my stomach again and again. The pain burned through me, but I didn’t dare cry out. Just like I hadn’t for the past seventeen years.
“Twenty-seven years and you still can’t even stand up to me,” he spat, delivering a final kick to my shin. “Such a disgrace.”
Then he turned and stomped up the stairs, likely to drown himself in whiskey or whatever poison numbed the void inside him.
I stayed on the cold, cracked kitchen floor, blinking back tears of frustration. I was pathetic. Helpless. A man who couldn’t even defend himself in his home. I’d tried over the years—God knows I’d tried— but every attempt ended the same way: bruised, broken, bleeding. And with how much he hated me… I knew it would take only a misstep for him to finally kill me.
So, why was I still here?
Because of my mother. Because my naïve ten-year-old self made a promise to her. She stood in the doorway, eyes dry but distant, and told me she couldn’t stay anymore. I begged her not to go. She knelt, held my face in trembling hands, and made me promise to take care of him.
“Don’t leave your father,” she said. “He’s all you have.”
I was ten.
I didn’t know promises like that could turn to shackles.
I pulled myself off the floor, quietly cleaned the kitchen, and trudged upstairs to get ready for work. My shoulder length blond curls were tangled and wild, so I tied them back in a messy bun. I couldn’t care less. After mornings like this, I didn’t have it in me to deal with vanity.
Besides, I’d be in a hairnet all day.
In the tiny bathroom—thankfully mine alone— I stared at the not-so-stranger in the mirror. Gaunt. Pale. My lean torso was littered with bruises in various stages of healing, some fresh, others lingering from weeks ago. Cigarette burns scarred my skin in raised patches of pink and white, clustered around my chest and inner arms like a cruel tattoo.
Let’s not even talk about the ones on my thighs.
I hated my reflection.
Most of all, I hated my face. Because it looked like hers. The woman who left me behind. The woman who didn’t think I was worth staying for.
Cornflower blue eyes—hers—stared back at me, rimmed red from unshed tears.
I swallowed them. Like always.
My life was horrifyingly pathetic. I was horrifyingly pathetic.
With a heavy sigh, I turned away from my now foggy reflection and hopped in the shower.
After a hot shower—a luxury I could barely afford but desperately needed—I got dressed and headed to work, following the same broken sidewalk. The same cracked buildings. The same grey skies pressing down on my world.
When I walked into the hospital, the few staff members on duty offered tired nods. Most people in this neighborhood barely finished high school, let alone trained for medical work. We were short-staffed, overworked, and underpaid. But we made do.
I’d wanted to be a doctor once.
Now, I just clean up after them.
“Louis, my boy,” Jamie, the elderly African-American security guard, greeted me with his usual wide toothed smile. His voice was warm, fatherly—the kind I’d always longed for.
“Hi, Jamie,” I replied, forcing a smile through the ache.
“You holding up, okay?”
I nodded.
We both knew I was lying.
He’d tried to talk to me before. Begged me to leave. Told me I deserved better. But I never listened. Not really. Still… if he tried again, maybe this time I would. I was close—so close—to breaking.
The rest of the day passed in a numb haze and I welcomed the monotony. Nothing unusual happened, and I was grateful. I didn’t have the strength to deal with chaos—not today.
But I had a plan.
A way out.
Over the years, I’d saved every spare dollar I could and hidden it beneath a loose floorboard in my room. Father never stepped foot in there—he called it “pansy territory” and acted like being near my things would infect him with weakness.
The board wasn’t obvious. I’d even modified the surrounding floor so it wouldn’t creak or echo. It was safe.
Or so I thought.
I got back home late that night, sore but relieved. As I climbed the stairs to our decrepit two-story house, I noticed the lights were still on.
He was home.
Taking a deep breath, I opened the door, stepped inside and froze.
Father was sitting on the yellowed couch—a result of time and lack of care.
He was holding a thick wad of cash in his hands—my cash. The money I’d bled for.
My heart plummeted to the ground.
How?
How did he find it?
I thought I’d been so careful. So damn careful.
“I took a stroll through your pansy room,” he sneered. “And look what I found.”
He got up.
I stepped back.
No. Not this time.
I was tire being beaten. Of being quiet. Of living like a ghost in my own body.
My hands trembled as I reached into my crossbody bag and pulled out the small pocket knife I always carried.
“Give me the money, Father,” I said, voice shaking, knife trembling in my grip. “Now.”
There was a pause.
Then he laughed. Loud and cruel. It rattled through my bones, weakening my already fragile confidence.
“So, you think, just because you have a… weapon,” he sneered, glancing at the blade, “you’re suddenly a man now?”
He lunged at me.
I panicked and tried to slash, but he grabbed my wrist mid-swing. He had an iron grip on it. He twisted my arm and the pain made me cry out.
Then came the fist.
To my gut.
The force of the blow destabilized me so much, I doubled over. I couldn’t breathe.
But he wasn’t done.
The slashing begun.
Somehow, he got hold of the knife and as the blade danced across my skin, each cut elicited a cry of agony from my lips. Blood dripped to the floor, gruesome in its brutal red tint.
My vision began to blur and I collapsed to the floor, breath shallow, eyes fluttering as more strength left my aching body.
As he kept hitting me, I felt my consciousness slipping away.
The last thing I saw was the ceiling, smeared with water marks, mold, and memories I wish I didn’t remember.
And amidst all this, the only thought in my head as spots began to dance behind my droopy eyelids was—
I can’t do this anymore.
I’m sorry Mama.
I can’t keep your promise.
And then—
Darkness.
ELIAS“Sir, you have to understand—the stocks are plummeting. We need to do something about it, and fast.” I tuned out the voice of the financial manager. I hadn’t even wanted him in this board meeting, but somehow the rat managed to weasel his way in. I wasn’t in the mood for any of this. In reality, all of this—the real estate holdings, the casinos—was just a façade. A convenient mask for my true kingdom.The mafia empire my family had built over the last sixty years. There were more pressing matters to attend to in that world. And though this company was the perfect front for our darker dealings, I was growing increasingly sick of pretending to care about its surface-level issues. Rising from my chair, I turned to my second-in-command, Cathan, and gave him a single look—one he immediately understood. He addressed the board without missing a beat. “Mr. Montgomery will ensure these matters are resolved. For now, he has urgent business elsewhere.”“So, the fact that stocks are cr
LOUISA splitting headache greeted me when I opened my eyes. The weak morning light streamed through the curtains at the other end of the room, causing me to shield my face—though the sharp aches coursing through my body made even that small motion feel unbearable.A pained whimper slipped past my lips.I didn’t even want to see what I looked like. A few feet away, the knife I’d brandished at my father lay on the floor, speckled with dried blood. A clear sign that he’d enjoyed himself last night. The familiar sting along my ribs confirmed the fresh cuts he’d left, some already scabbed over.New scars for the collection. Yay, I thought bitterly.I exhaled slowly, eyes fixed on the ceiling. A single tear slid down my temple. Then another. And another. Until they flowed freely, silently.I was tired. So damn tired. And the worst part? No one would believe me. Who would believe that a twenty-seven-year-old man couldn’t defend himself against his own father? To the world, I was weak. Pathe
ELIASMy twin sister, Elaine, was as annoying as ever during my short visit to her place. She never missed a chance to needle me about “settling down,” even while I bounced her youngest on my knee and pretended not to hear. The woman had a mouth like a whip and the subtlety of a jackhammer.Annoying.Her children were equally chaotic. I left with more hair pulled from my head than I cared to count. They’re the only ones who could bring me to my knees—literally and figuratively speaking. I loved them, of course, but my tolerance had its limits.So, I left earlier than usual.I had work to do anyway—my bimonthly check-in at Allure, one of my more legitimate fronts, though anyone in Chicago with half a brain knew better than to think that was all it was. Cathan had also just closed a deal with an arms supplier we’d been circling for months. Not many people could convince a man like Jakob Huber to sign anything, let alone trust again after what happened in Prague. But Cathan? He could tal
LOUISA nurse came to take the man away, probably to clean and properly stitch him up. I stood aside, suddenly feeling out of place—like I’d intruded on something sacred, even if I was the one who had been here first.His wound seemed deep, a slow trickle of red still seeping through the makeshift towel I’d pressed against his side. But from the moment our eyes met, I knew this wasn’t his first scar. The way he carried himself—despite the pain—was proof of a man who had survived far worse.But I couldn't get him out of my head.Not the weight of his gaze.Not the moment our skin made contact and a jolt raced through my chest like lightning in a thunderstorm.A man like that did not belong in my world. And yet… he'd looked at me like I wasn't invisible. Like I was seen. A feeling I’d longed for as long as I can remember.I finished my shift in a daze, the hum of fluorescent lights and the soft background noise of hospital chaos barely perceptible as I punched out and slipped my ID badg
LOUISA nurse came to take the man away, probably to clean and properly stitch him up. I stood aside, suddenly feeling out of place—like I’d intruded on something sacred, even if I was the one who had been here first.His wound seemed deep, a slow trickle of red still seeping through the makeshift towel I’d pressed against his side. But from the moment our eyes met, I knew this wasn’t his first scar. The way he carried himself—despite the pain—was proof of a man who had survived far worse.But I couldn't get him out of my head.Not the weight of his gaze.Not the moment our skin made contact and a jolt raced through my chest like lightning in a thunderstorm.A man like that did not belong in my world. And yet… he'd looked at me like I wasn't invisible. Like I was seen. A feeling I’d longed for as long as I can remember.I finished my shift in a daze, the hum of fluorescent lights and the soft background noise of hospital chaos barely perceptible as I punched out and slipped my ID badg
ELIASMy twin sister, Elaine, was as annoying as ever during my short visit to her place. She never missed a chance to needle me about “settling down,” even while I bounced her youngest on my knee and pretended not to hear. The woman had a mouth like a whip and the subtlety of a jackhammer.Annoying.Her children were equally chaotic. I left with more hair pulled from my head than I cared to count. They’re the only ones who could bring me to my knees—literally and figuratively speaking. I loved them, of course, but my tolerance had its limits.So, I left earlier than usual.I had work to do anyway—my bimonthly check-in at Allure, one of my more legitimate fronts, though anyone in Chicago with half a brain knew better than to think that was all it was. Cathan had also just closed a deal with an arms supplier we’d been circling for months. Not many people could convince a man like Jakob Huber to sign anything, let alone trust again after what happened in Prague. But Cathan? He could tal
LOUISA splitting headache greeted me when I opened my eyes. The weak morning light streamed through the curtains at the other end of the room, causing me to shield my face—though the sharp aches coursing through my body made even that small motion feel unbearable.A pained whimper slipped past my lips.I didn’t even want to see what I looked like. A few feet away, the knife I’d brandished at my father lay on the floor, speckled with dried blood. A clear sign that he’d enjoyed himself last night. The familiar sting along my ribs confirmed the fresh cuts he’d left, some already scabbed over.New scars for the collection. Yay, I thought bitterly.I exhaled slowly, eyes fixed on the ceiling. A single tear slid down my temple. Then another. And another. Until they flowed freely, silently.I was tired. So damn tired. And the worst part? No one would believe me. Who would believe that a twenty-seven-year-old man couldn’t defend himself against his own father? To the world, I was weak. Pathe
ELIAS“Sir, you have to understand—the stocks are plummeting. We need to do something about it, and fast.” I tuned out the voice of the financial manager. I hadn’t even wanted him in this board meeting, but somehow the rat managed to weasel his way in. I wasn’t in the mood for any of this. In reality, all of this—the real estate holdings, the casinos—was just a façade. A convenient mask for my true kingdom.The mafia empire my family had built over the last sixty years. There were more pressing matters to attend to in that world. And though this company was the perfect front for our darker dealings, I was growing increasingly sick of pretending to care about its surface-level issues. Rising from my chair, I turned to my second-in-command, Cathan, and gave him a single look—one he immediately understood. He addressed the board without missing a beat. “Mr. Montgomery will ensure these matters are resolved. For now, he has urgent business elsewhere.”“So, the fact that stocks are cr
LOUISSince Mama left Father and me when I was ten years old, all I’ve ever known is suffering and pain. Father had always been cruel to me, even before my sorry excuse for a mother left—but her absence carved a chasm so deep in his already blackened heart that the only way he knew how to fill it was with fists.Each. And. Every. Day.And this morning was no exception.“You sorry excuse of a man,” he roared, driving his heavy boots into my stomach again and again. The pain burned through me, but I didn’t dare cry out. Just like I hadn’t for the past seventeen years.“Twenty-seven years and you still can’t even stand up to me,” he spat, delivering a final kick to my shin. “Such a disgrace.” Then he turned and stomped up the stairs, likely to drown himself in whiskey or whatever poison numbed the void inside him.I stayed on the cold, cracked kitchen floor, blinking back tears of frustration. I was pathetic. Helpless. A man who couldn’t even defend himself in his home. I’d tried over t