“Run When I Drop the Tray,” I Whispered to the Most Feared Man in Chicago-luna

The man by the door reached inside his jacket.

For half a second, Bellanova stayed beautiful.

The chandeliers still glowed. The wine still shone red in Raphael Balori’s glass. A woman near the window still laughed at something her husband said.

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Then my hand opened.

The silver tray hit the marble floor with a crash so sharp every head turned at once.

Plates shattered.

A wine glass burst against the table leg.

A woman screamed.

And Raphael moved.

Not like a man startled by danger. Like a man who had been waiting years for the exact shape of it.

He grabbed my wrist and pulled me down as the first shot cracked through the restaurant.

The bullet tore through the walnut screen behind him.

Someone knocked over a chair. Someone else dove under a table. The birthday sparkler near the window fizzed out in a plate of untouched cake.

I hit the floor hard enough to steal the breath from my lungs.

Raphael’s body covered mine for one brutal second before he rolled, drew a gun from somewhere inside his jacket, and fired twice.

The man at the entrance went down.

The second man ducked behind the host stand.

The third ran toward the kitchen.

Toward me.

Raphael saw it at the same time I did.

“Kitchen,” he snapped.

I scrambled up, my palms slick against the marble.

Vincent was gone from the bar.

Of course he was.

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