The Kiss That Saved Hector Ricci And Dragged Jody Back To The Life-Quieen - Chainityai

The Kiss That Saved Hector Ricci And Dragged Jody Back To The Life-Quieen

Jody Russo had spent two years teaching her hands to be ordinary. At McCall’s, ordinary meant polishing glasses, counting register slips, slicing lemons, and remembering which regular wanted bourbon before he admitted he wanted company.

Her last name was not ordinary. Russo had weight in New York, not because Jody wanted it to, but because Frank Russo had made enemies who remembered everything. He had raised his daughter with love and warning in equal measure.

Frank sent her away when she was eighteen. Boston first, then Chicago. Nursing school. Trauma rotation. A chance to become someone whose hands stopped bleeding instead of causing it.

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But even distance does not erase training. It only teaches the training to sleep lightly. Frank had started when Jody was nine, telling her how to listen, how to look, how to leave before a room turned dangerous.

He had one rule he repeated more than any prayer. Always check the high ground. What you do not see above you is what kills you.

On Tuesday, at 3:21, Jody was behind the bar at McCall’s wiping down mahogany that did not need wiping. Eddie watched her from his stool, tapping an empty glass and pretending not to notice how far away she looked.

“You’re scrubbing a hole through the wood, sweetheart,” he said.

Jody poured him another bourbon and gave him the kind of smile that asked him not to ask. Eddie accepted it. Kind men sometimes know when silence is the gentlest thing they can offer.

Across Mulberry Street, Vincenzo’s glittered in the lunch light. It was the kind of restaurant with white tablecloths, candles at noon, and menus without prices. Three black SUVs waited outside with tinted windows.

Men in dark coats stood on the sidewalk. They were not staring at anything, which meant they were watching everything. Jody recognized the posture before she let herself recognize the reason.

Inside, at a round table, four men leaned around one man at the center. When that man turned his profile toward the window, Jody knew him from stories she wished she had never heard.

Hector Ricci.

His name had moved through Frank Russo’s world like weather. Men planned around him. Men feared him. Mothers lowered their voices when his name came up in kitchens with locked doors.

Jody told herself to look away. She was done. Done with guns, locked rooms, and men who decided who lived and who died.

Then her eyes rose to the old textile building across from Vincenzo’s. Five stories tall. Empty for months. One fourth-floor window open just a crack.

In that crack, light caught metal.

A rifle barrel.

The world tightened into one narrow line. Fourth-floor window. Restaurant glass. Hector Ricci’s head. Jody’s breath stopped, but her training did not.

She had maybe three seconds.

A hard, honest part of her thought that Hector Ricci was the kind of man who had spent his life walking toward a bullet. But another voice answered, older and colder.

You do not watch a man die when you can stop it.

Jody vaulted the bar. Eddie shouted her name, but she was already through the door. Horns blasted as she crossed Mulberry Street against traffic, one cab missing her by inches.

The air smelled like hot exhaust, rain trapped in concrete, garlic from Vincenzo’s kitchen, and the sharp metallic taste of fear. Her boots hit the street in a rhythm her father would have recognized.

Three.

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