"The Mafia King’s Collateral Girl" Chapter 1
Snow swallowed the streetlight outside Riker’s Market until the whole block looked blurred and unfinished, like the city had been rubbed with a wet thumb.
Inside, the convenience store smelled of burnt coffee, wet wool, and the cinnamon gum Mr. Riker chewed when business was slow. A small radio played behind the counter, all static and old holiday songs. The bell above the door kept shaking in the wind, though no one came in.
Ivy Bennett stood on tiptoe in front of the hot drink machine, feeding coins into the slot one by one.
“Don’t shake it this time,” Mr. Riker called from behind the counter.
“I didn’t shake it.”
“You kicked it last week.”
“It was making a noise.”
“It is a machine. Machines make noise.”
“It sounded judgmental.”
Mr. Riker lowered his newspaper and gave her the tired look adults used when they wanted to laugh but had bills to pay. Ivy grinned at him, then pressed the button for hot chocolate.
The machine choked, hissed, and spat cocoa into a paper cup.
She watched the cup fill with the kind of focus usually reserved for surgery. At ten years old, Ivy had three serious rules for winter survival: keep your socks dry, never trust boys who throw snowballs at your face, and always get whipped cream when you had enough money.
Tonight she had enough.
Barely.
She counted the last dime in her mitten and slid it across the counter.
“Whipped cream, please.”
Mr. Riker took the dime. “Your father know you’re out this late?”
“He’s fixing a heater two buildings over.”
“And he sent you for chocolate?”
“No. I sent me.”
“That sounds more honest.”
He topped the drink with a swirl of whipped cream and snapped on a plastic lid. Ivy accepted it with both hands, breathing in the sweet steam that leaked from the small drinking hole.
The bell above the door jerked again.
Outside, the storm shoved snow across the sidewalk in white sheets. A car crawled past with its hazard lights blinking. Somewhere down the street, a siren rose and faded.
Ivy was halfway to the door when she saw him.
At first, he looked like a pile of coats beside the ice machine.
Then he moved.
A boy sat on the pavement with his back against the brick wall, one knee drawn up, one arm pressed tight around his ribs. Snow dusted his dark hair and clung to his lashes. Blood ran from the corner of his mouth and cut a red line down his chin.
People passed him.
A man with grocery bags stepped around his boots.
A woman glanced once, then looked away fast and pulled her scarf higher.
The boy didn’t call out.
He didn’t ask for help.
He sat there like he had already learned not to.
Ivy pushed the door open.
Cold air slapped her cheeks.
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“Kid,” Mr. Riker said. “Leave it.”
She paused with one hand on the door.
Mr. Riker stood behind the counter now, newspaper lowered. His face had changed.
“Come back inside.”
Ivy looked at the boy again.
He had his eyes closed.
Snow collected on his shoulders.
“He’s hurt.”
“He may be trouble.”
“He’s bleeding.”
“That can be part of trouble.”
Ivy frowned at him. “That’s a terrible thing to say.”
She stepped outside before he could answer.
The wind shoved at her coat, stealing warmth through every gap. Her boots sank into slush. She held the hot chocolate against her chest and walked toward the boy slowly, the way she approached stray cats behind their apartment building.
Not too fast.
No sudden hands.
No loud voice.
The boy opened his eyes when her shadow crossed over him.
Ivy stopped.
His eyes were almost black.
Not brown.
Black, like the street after rain, like the space under a bed when the lights were out. They fixed on her face with a sharpness that made her fingers tighten around the cup.
For one second, she almost turned around.
Then his mouth pulled into a thin line, and he looked past her like she was already gone.
That made her stay.
“Hi,” she said.
The boy said nothing.
“I’m Ivy.”
Still nothing.
She held up the cup. “This is hot chocolate.”
His gaze slid to it.
“I know what that is.”
His voice was rough and low, older than his face.
“Oh.” Ivy lowered the cup a little. “Good. That saves time.”
He stared at her.
A purple bruise spread under one eye. His lower lip was split. His knuckles were torn raw, red against skin gone pale from cold.
“You should go,” he said.
“You should probably not sit in snow while bleeding.”
“I didn’t ask.”
“I didn’t ask either. We’re both being rude.”
The boy’s brows drew together.
Ivy took one step closer and offered him the cup.
He didn’t move.
“It’s for you,” she said.
“I don’t want it.”
“It has whipped cream.”
“No.”
“Whipped cream makes it medicinal.”
“No, it doesn’t.”
“You’re not a doctor.”
His eyes narrowed. “Are you always this annoying?”
“My sister says yes.”
“You should listen to her.”
“She’s five. She eats crayons.”
The boy looked away, but something happened at the corner of his mouth. Tiny. Gone fast.
Ivy saw it anyway.
She lowered herself onto the curb beside him. The slush soaked through her tights instantly, and she made a face.
“Wow. Regret.”
“Then leave.”
“No, I’ve committed now.”
He turned his head slowly, watching her like she was an animal that had wandered into a trap and started rearranging the furniture.
“You don’t know me.”
“You don’t know me either.”
“I could hurt you.”
Ivy looked at his arm pressed to his ribs, then at the blood drying on his mouth.
“You look busy.”
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That time, the almost-smile came closer to being real.
Only for a breath.
Then he flinched.
It was small, just a jerk through his shoulders, but Ivy saw it. He shifted one hand against his side, and his jaw locked hard enough to show.
She held the cup closer.
“Here.”
“I said no.”
“You can say it while holding the cup.”
His eyes cut to hers.
Ivy lifted her brows.
At last, he took it.
Their fingers touched through her wet mitten.
His hand was freezing.
He stared down at the cup, not drinking, only holding it between both hands like it belonged to someone else.
“See?” Ivy said. “Already helping.”
“I didn’t say thank you.”
“I noticed.”
He looked at her again.
Snow drifted between them. A bus groaned at the corner. The neon sign above Riker’s Market buzzed red against the storm.
“What happened to your face?” she asked.
His fingers tightened around the cup.
“I fell.”
“On a fist?”
He gave her a flat look.
She leaned sideways, trying to see the bruise under his eye better.
He pulled back.
“Don’t.”
“Sorry.”
She sat straight again and dug into her coat pocket. Her mitten found lint, a gum wrapper, three pennies, and two bandages with cartoon ducks on them.
Perfect.
She peeled one open with her teeth.
The boy stared. “What are you doing?”
“You’re leaking.”
“I don’t need that.”
“Your mouth does.”
“Touch me and you’ll regret it.”
Ivy froze with the bandage halfway between them.
For a moment, he looked exactly like the stray dogs near the train tracks. Teeth out. Eyes hard. Body ready to bite first and limp away later.
She lowered the bandage into his lap.
“Fine. You do it.”
He looked down at the cartoon duck.
A strange silence settled over him.
Not the mean silence from before. This one felt confused.
Ivy watched him lift the bandage with two fingers, as if it might explode.
“It’s a duck,” she said helpfully.
“I can see that.”
“It’s my last one, so use it respectfully.”
He pressed it badly near the corner of his mouth. It stuck crooked.
Ivy tried not to laugh.
Failed.
His eyes snapped to hers.
“What?”
“You put it on like a pirate.”
“I’m injured.”
“You’re dramatic.”
“I’m not dramatic.”
“You’re sitting outside in a snowstorm refusing hot chocolate like a sad wolf.”
The boy went still.
“A what?”
“A sad wolf.”
His stare sharpened.
Ivy tucked her knees up under her coat and hugged them. “You know. Like in movies. All angry and lonely, sitting in the snow, pretending you don’t want snacks.”
“I don’t want snacks.”
“You’re holding my hot chocolate.”
His eyes dropped to the cup.
After a long beat, he lifted it and drank.
The whipped cream left a white mark on his upper lip.
Ivy pointed.
“You got—”
“I know.”
“You don’t.”
“I do.”
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“It’s right there.”
He wiped with the back of his hand and missed.
Ivy giggled.
He glared.
She laughed harder, clapping both mittens over her mouth.
His glare lasted three seconds. Then his shoulders loosened. A breath came out of him that sounded almost like a laugh, rough and broken at the edges.
Ivy’s smile softened.
“There. Better.”
He looked down at the cup again.
“What’s your name?” she asked.
He didn’t answer right away.
A black car turned onto the block, moving slowly through the snow.
The boy saw it.
Everything in him changed.
His back straightened. His fingers crushed the side of the cup. The little warmth between them disappeared as if the storm had reached inside and taken it.
“I have to go,” Ivy said, though she didn’t move.
He stood too fast and caught himself on the ice machine. Pain flashed across his face before he buried it.
The black car slowed near the curb.
Its windows were dark.
Ivy looked from the car to him.
“Are those your parents?”
His mouth twisted. “No.”
“Then who—”
“Go inside.”
The order came sharp enough to sting.
Ivy stood, brushing snow from her coat. “You don’t have to be mean.”
“Yes, I do.”
“No, you don’t.”
His eyes met hers, and for the first time, she saw something under the cold.
Not fear exactly.
Something trapped beside it.
“You should stop talking to boys in alleys,” he said.
“This isn’t an alley.”
“Close enough.”
“You should stop bleeding near ice machines.”
The car rolled past them, then kept going.
Only when it turned the corner did the boy breathe again.
Ivy noticed.
He noticed her noticing.
“Don’t come back here,” he said.
She frowned. “To the store?”
“To me.”
“That’s a weird thing to say.”
“It’s a smart thing.”
“You’re bossy.”
“You’re reckless.”
“My dad says brave.”
“Your dad lies.”
Ivy gasped. “Rude.”
That almost-smile returned.
This time, it stayed long enough to change his whole face.
Not much.
Enough.
He looked younger when it happened.
Not like a wolf. Like a boy who had forgotten how to be one.
“What’s your name?” Ivy asked again.
The smile faded.
He looked toward the corner where the car had gone.
“Lucien.”
“Loo-shen?”
“Lucien.”
“That sounds fancy.”
“It isn’t.”
“It totally is. Mine is just Ivy. Like the plant.”
“I know what ivy is.”
“Well, look at you, fancy and educated.”
He stared at her for another second, and something in his eyes shifted again. Like he was trying to store her face somewhere safe and didn’t know where that place could be.
Mr. Riker opened the store door behind them.
“Ivy. Inside. Now.”
She turned and waved. “Coming!”
Then she looked back at Lucien.
The hot chocolate cup sat empty in his hand.
“You can keep it,” she said.
“It’s trash.”
“It’s a souvenir.”
“Of what?”
She smiled, already stepping backward through the snow.
“Of the night you met your first friend.”
Lucien didn’t move.
The word hung there, white in the cold.
Friend.
Ivy ran toward the store, boots splashing slush, laughter spilling out before she could stop it. At the door, she turned one last time.
“Bye, sad wolf!”
Then she vanished into the warm light of Riker’s Market.
Lucien stood under the broken neon sign, snow melting in his hair, empty cup crushed slightly in one hand.
After a while, he looked down.
Hot chocolate had soaked through the paper near his thumb. The cup should have gone into the trash.
He folded it instead, careful at the edges, and slipped it inside his coat.
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