But for what?
I couldn’t tell if it was because of the fight club, or because I had the audacity to look at her like I actually saw her. Maybe all of the above. Maybe something else entirely.
I clenched my jaw, forcing down the slow burn of irritation crawling up my spine.
Fine.
If she wanted to be pissed at me, let her.
I kept my voice unreadable. “Stay still.”
She did, but I noticed the way her fingers trembled in my hands, just slightly.
Once I finished wrapping her wrist, I took a slight step back. “If I let you fight, will you only fight for me?”
She met my eyes, searching for the catch. Then nodded.
I exhaled slowly, considering. “Two weeks. You’ll fight here. Under my conditions. That means I train you.”
She studied me, then smirked. “You don’t want to see me get hurt.”
I didn’t answer with theyesI wanted to.
Just held her gaze, my voice low. “You’ll fight for me, Meisa. That means you don’t break.”
Chapter 6
27 years old
Miami, Florida
THEAIR IN LITTLE HAVANA was thick with salt and old music.
Cuban jazz drifted from a cracked window above, soft and warbling. Neon signs buzzed in low colors – orange, pink, blue – casting long bruises across the shuttered storefronts and rusted balconies. Even this late, the humidity wrapped around me like a second shirt.
I walked with my hands in my pockets, now retired from my past profession as a contractor for hire. My shoes echoed lightly on the cracked pavement. I wasn’t rushing. For once, I had nowhere to be.
Someone hit me from behind.
Fast. Small.
I pivoted, hand instinctively brushing the hilt of the knife inside my jacket – but it was just a blur, a teenager. She didn’t even look back. Skinny frame, black hoodie, blood on her shoe. She tore down the street like hell was behind her.
I almost kept walking.
But then I heard the footsteps.
Heavy. Uncoordinated. Sveral.
Three men. Big. Running. Their boots slapped the pavement without rhythm.
I turned and watched them pass.
But I followed.
The city narrowed as we went – less street, more graffiti; less light, more dark. They turned a corner. I turned after them. Past a rusted-out Chevy, into an alley too narrow to lie in comfortably.
Dead end.