The Painting on Newbury Street That Brought a Dead Woman Back-chloe

“Can you buy this painting?”

Dante Russo almost missed the voice.

October wind moved hard down Newbury Street, pushing napkins along the curb and carrying the smell of wet brick, coffee, perfume, and rain-soaked wool.

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Dante had a dinner meeting in the North End at 6:30 p.m.

An old enemy would be waiting there with a private table, a perfect suit, and the kind of smile that made men reach for weapons under napkins.

Nico and two other men walked behind him.

They were not bodyguards in any official way.

Official words rarely fit Dante’s life.

He kept walking because people like him did not stop for strangers on sidewalks.

Then the child spoke again.

“Please, mister. It’s our mom’s face. She’s sick, and we need medicine.”

That sentence turned him around.

Three little girls sat under the striped awning of a closed boutique.

They were identical, or close enough that the shock of it came first.

Auburn hair.

Thin coats.

Pale cheeks.

Green eyes too watchful for children who could not be older than six.

One held a dented coffee can with a few coins inside.

One clutched a folded scarf around her shoulders.

The third stood in front of a small canvas propped against the brick wall.

Dante looked at the painting.

The city disappeared.

The woman on the canvas sat beside a window with sunlight bright on one cheek and dark-blond hair loose around her shoulders.

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