Current location: Novel nest The Mafia King’s Collateral Girl Chapter 38

"The Mafia King’s Collateral Girl" Chapter 38

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Snow fell softly over Manhattan the morning Lucien Moretti walked back into Ivy Bennett’s life.

Not violently.

Not dramatically.

Just quiet white snowfall drifting past café windows while early customers warmed frozen hands around coffee cups and soft jazz played low through hidden speakers.

Six months had passed since the mansion attack.

Six months since blood on concrete floors.

Six months since Ivy screamed his name inside a collapsing world while Lucien looked at her like surviving mattered only if she existed afterward.

And somehow—

they survived anyway.

Interesting.

Miraculous, honestly.

Saint & Finch Café no longer existed.

Now the sign above the small corner shop in Brooklyn read:

FIRST WINTER

Ivy chose the name quietly.

Never explained it to anyone.

Rosie cried for twenty straight minutes after seeing the opening sign and blamed hormones despite not being pregnant.

Liar.

The café smelled like cinnamon, espresso, melted chocolate, and fresh pastries cooling behind glass counters. Warm gold lights reflected softly across dark wood floors while snow painted the streets outside pale white.

Peace.

Actual peace.

Ivy still struggled recognizing it sometimes.

“Table three needs oat milk,” Rosie called from behind the counter.

“That sentence sounded aggressively Brooklyn.”

“It’s a survival environment.”

Ivy laughed softly under her breath while wiping steam from the espresso machine.

Life felt smaller now.

Softer.

No guards outside windows.

No emergency meetings.

No blood on marble floors.

Just coffee orders.

Morning regulars.

And the strange quiet ache of missing someone every single day anyway.

Interesting.

Very emotionally unfair.

Lucien survived the gunshot.

Barely.

Three surgeries.

Two months disappearing into recovery and federal negotiations and dismantling enough of the Moretti empire to keep half the city from collapsing violently afterward.

The newspapers called it a strategic withdrawal.

Matteo called it “Lucien emotionally detonating organized crime.”

More accurate.

Vincent Hale somehow helped broker immunity deals quietly in exchange for enough financial evidence to bury Russo permanently.

Dante disappeared before trial.

Nobody found him afterward.

Lucien never commented on that.

Interesting.

Very suspicious.

And then—

when everything finally settled—

Lucien left.

Not forever.

Not angrily.

Worse.

Carefully.

Like a man terrified his shadow still carried danger.

He kissed Ivy once outside the hospital beneath winter sunlight and whispered:

“When it’s safe, I’ll come back to you properly.”

Then disappeared into snow before she could stop him.

Coward.

Romantic coward.

Interesting combination.

Rosie claimed it was “tragically cinematic.”

Ivy claimed she hated him.

Both statements contained emotional lies.

The café door chimed softly.

Ivy glanced up automatically while finishing another drink.

And froze.

Oh.

Oh no.

Snow drifted quietly behind him through the open doorway.

Lucien stood there in a black wool coat dusted white at the shoulders, one hand still resting lightly against the door handle while cold morning air curled softly into the café around him.

The entire room narrowed instantly.

Still happened.

Interesting.

Very concerning.

He looked different.

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Healthier.

The hard exhaustion that once lived permanently beneath his eyes had softened slightly. The healing scar near his ribs changed the way he moved sometimes, subtle enough most people wouldn’t notice.

Ivy noticed immediately.

Of course she did.

Lucien’s gray eyes found her instantly across the café.

And just like that—

six months disappeared.

Rosie looked slowly between them from behind the register.

Then whispered:

“Oh my God.”

Smart woman.

Very emotionally aware.

Neither moved at first.

The snow outside kept falling quietly while jazz crackled softly through warm café light.

Lucien looked at Ivy the same way he always had.

Like she was the first warm thing he’d ever touched.

Ivy’s throat tightened painfully.

“You disappeared,” she said softly.

Excellent opening line.

Very emotionally stable.

Lucien’s mouth moved faintly.

Tiny smile.

Still there.

“I got shot.”

“That was months ago.”

“Yes.”

“You still disappeared.”

The honesty landed quietly between them.

Lucien stepped fully inside then, letting the café door close softly behind him.

No guards.

No weapons visible.

No violence following him anymore.

Just Lucien.

Only Lucien.

Interesting.

Miraculous.

He crossed slowly toward the counter while customers pretended very badly not to eavesdrop.

Rosie physically grabbed another employee and dragged him backward toward the kitchen whispering:

“MOVE. THIS IS CINEMA.”

Lucien stopped across from Ivy.

Close now.

Close enough to see snow melting slowly into dark hair.

Close enough to notice the exact second her hands started trembling slightly against the coffee cup she held.

His eyes dropped there immediately.

Still watching her like survival depended on it.

Interesting.

Very soulmate-coded.

“You opened your café,” he murmured softly.

Ivy crossed her arms carefully.

“You anonymously funded half the construction.”

Lucien looked genuinely innocent.

“I have no idea what you’re talking about.”

“Lucien.”

“One of life’s mysteries.”

The tiny humor in his voice hit her directly in the chest.

God.

She missed him.

Terribly.

Lucien studied the café quietly for another second.

Warm lights.

Snow outside.

People laughing softly near the windows.

Then his gaze returned to her.

Home.

The realization passed silently between them.

Neither said it aloud.

Didn’t need to.

Finally Lucien reached into his coat pocket and placed something gently onto the counter between them.

A faded hot chocolate wrapper.

The original one.

Protected carefully beneath folded plastic all these years.

Ivy stared at it silently.

Then back at him.

Lucien’s voice lowered slightly.

“I think this belongs to both of us now.”

That did it.

Completely.

Ivy laughed softly through sudden tears.

“God, you’re dramatic.”

“You kissed my scars.”

“Fair point.”

The café blurred warmly around them.

Snowfall.

Jazz music.

The smell of chocolate and coffee drifting through the air.

Lucien rested one hand lightly against the wooden counter.

Not reaching for her yet.

Still giving her the choice.

Always different now.

Interesting.

Beautiful.

Then softly—

almost shy somehow—

Lucien asked:

“Can I get a hot chocolate?”

Ivy stared at him for one long second.

At the man who loved her from the first winter.

At the monster who learned softness for her.

At the lonely boy still hiding quietly beneath all that danger.

Then finally—

she smiled.

Warm.

Teasing.

Home.

“Still cold, wolf?”

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