
Damon Corso stood outside the hospital room while the doctors pretended to have hope. Three hours passed. Three hours of watching nurses walk in and out with faces that told him everything their mouths wouldn't say.
Then the door opened. The lead surgeon shook his head. "I'm sorry, Mr. Corso. We did everything we could." Olivia was 29. No sickness. No warning. Just a headache that turned into a seizure that turned into a funeral. Damon didn't cry at her bedside. He waited until he got home. Until he saw her toothbrush still wet. Her coffee cup was still half-full on the counter. The small pair of pink shoes by the door that belonged to someone who was supposed to come home from school in two hours. Then he fell apart. But only for one night. Because morning came. The funeral was three days later. Damon stood at the front with his daughter, Lucy. Seven years old. Brown hair like her mother. Eyes like her father. She didn't fully understand what death meant. She kept asking when Mommy was coming back. He ran out of gentle answers after the fifth time. The service was small. Olivia didn't have many friends. She was quiet. Private. The kind of woman who loved deeply but showed it through actions, not words. She packed his lunches for six years. She never forgot a birthday. She read Lucy a bedtime story every single night, even when she was tired, even when she was sick. Especially when she was sick. Damon didn't know then that she was already gone inside. The aneurysm didn't care about her routines. It didn't care about him. It certainly didn't care about a seven-year-old girl who needed her mother. The coffin was white. Olivia's favorite color. She said white meant peace. He hoped she was right. After the priest finished, her family approached. The Dravens. Wealth. Cold hearts. Olivia ran away from them when she was nineteen. Married Damon when she was twenty-one. A janitor. A high school dropout. A man with empty pockets. They never forgave her for that. Her father, Alistair Draven, stood at the foot of the grave in a black overcoat that cost more than Damon's car. His wife, Seraphine, clung to his arm. Behind them stood their son, Cassian. Thirty-five. Perfect hair. Perfect suit. Alistair didn't offer condolences. He offered observations. "She should have married Cassian's business partner," he said. Loud enough for the other mourners to hear. "She'd still be alive if she'd had proper medical care." Damon said nothing. His jaw tightened, but he said nothing. Seraphine sniffled into a handkerchief. "Such a waste. Such a beautiful girl. Gone because she was stubborn." Cassian didn't speak. He just looked at Lucy. Then at Damon. Then back at Lucy. Something in that look made Damon's stomach turn. """" """"" The first week after the funeral was a routine. Paperwork, phone calls, sleepless nights. Damon took leave from his job at the warehouse. His boss, a heavy man named Gregg who chewed tobacco and never smiled, patted him on the shoulder. "Take what you need, Corso. But don't take too long. The world doesn't wait for broken men." He was right about that. Lucy stopped eating first. Then she stopped talking. Then she stopped leaving her room. Damon sat outside her door every night, listening to her breath, wondering how to fix something he couldn't see. The apartment felt twice as empty without Olivia's footsteps, without her singing in the kitchen, without the peace that used to live in the family. He didn't notice the Dravens trying to corner him at first. They started with small things. Alistair sent a lawyer to discuss Lucy's future. Damon tore up the letter without finishing it. Seraphine showed up at the apartment with groceries and tears that looked practiced. He took the groceries because they needed them, but he closed the door before she could step inside. Then Cassian came. He knocked on a Thursday night. Nine o'clock. Lucy was finally asleep after two hours of crying. "Easy, brother-in-law," Cassian said, hands raised when he saw Damon's face. "I'm not here to fight. I'm here to talk. Like family." Damon let him in. Stupid. Desperate. Lonely. Cassian stood in the living room and looked around at the ugly walls, the broken furniture, the water stain spreading across the ceiling. His expression didn't change. That was worse than disgust. "You can't take care of her," Cassian said. "I'm her father." "Her biological father." He shook his head. "There's a difference." Damon stepped closer. "Say that again. Louder." Cassian didn't flinch. He'd never flinched in his life. That was the problem with people born rich. They'd never been hit hard enough to learn fear. "Olivia would have wanted Lucy to have opportunities," Cassian continued, adjusting his cufflinks. "Schools. Connections. A future. What can you give her, Damon? This?" He gestured at the apartment. "A warehouse salary?" Damon's hands curled into fists. "Get out." Cassian walked to the door. Then stopped. "You have sixty days to prove me wrong. Give her a real home. If you can't..." He looked back toward Lucy's room. "My parents will file for custody. And they will win." The door closed. Damon stood in his living room for a long time, staring at nothing. Cassian was right. Damon hated him, but he was right. No savings. No degree. No family. Just two hands and a back that was already starting to ache. Sixty days. Thirty days passed. Damon worked sixteen hours a day. Warehouse by morning. Construction by night. His body screamed. His hands bled. Lucy barely saw him. But he saved. Two thousand dollars. Then three. Then forty-eight hundred. It wasn't enough. The Dravens had lawyers who billed more in an hour than he made in a month. But it was something. Then the accident happened. A steel beam slipped its chain at the construction site. Three stories up. The foreman screamed. Damon didn't move fast enough. The beam caught him across the back. Cracked two ribs. Bruised his spine. No workers' comp. No insurance. The foreman, a man named Russo, handed him an envelope at the hospital. Eight hundred dollars cash. "Sorry, kid. Off the books means off the books." Damon spent two weeks on his couch. Unable to lift Lucy. Unable to work. Savings draining. Day fifty-eight. A knock on the door. Damon opened it to find a lawyer holding papers. Alistair Draven stood behind him. Smiling. "Good morning, Damon." Temporary custody. For Lucy Corso. Due to the father's inability to provide a stable, safe environment. "You can fight it," Alistair said. "But you won't win." Behind him, a black SUV waited. Inside sat Seraphine, Cassian, and Lucy. She held a stuffed rabbit. Her eyes found Damon through the window. "Daddy?" Alistair stepped closer. "You're a janitor, Corso. A nobody." He patted Damon's cheek. "Olivia should have listened to me. Maybe she'd still be alive." Damon lunged at hum. The lawyer stepped in the way. Security guards grabbed Damon and forced him to his knees. Alistair crouched down. "You touch me again, and I'll have you arrested. You come near Lucy, and I'll have you buried." The SUV drove away. Damon stayed on his knees in the rain. He picked up the lawyer's business card. Stared at it until the rain turned it to pulp. Then he stood up. Walked inside. Closed the door. For the first time since Olivia died, he didn't cry. He sat on his couch. Counted his remaining money. Twelve hundred dollars. He thought about Lucy's face in that window. About Alistair's hand on his cheek. About the world that kept kicking him down. He made a decision. He wasn't going to court. He wasn't going to beg. He was going to get his daughter back. Any way he could. But first, he needed to become someone else. Someone the Dravens couldn't touch. Someone the city would learn to fear. That night, Damon searched the deep internet on his phone. He followed rumors. Paid a man fifty dollars for an address. Took a bus to the worst part of the city. He found a door. No windows. He knocked three times. A slot opened. Two eyes looked out. "What do you want?" "A fight," Damon said. The eyes looked him up and down. Cracked ribs. Limping stance. Bruised face. "You look like death." "I feel like it too. That's why I'm here." The slot closed. The door opened. Inside, men were already bleeding.Latest Chapter
Digging secrets
Damon didn't go straight to Frank's.He stood outside Elaine Park's office for a long time. The sun was setting. His phone buzzed again. Marcus: "Frank is waiting."Damon typed back: "Tell him I'll come tomorrow. I need rest."Marcus: "Frank doesn't like waiting."Damon: "Frank can wait."He put the phone away. Walked toward the bus stop. His ribs screamed with every step. His knuckles throbbed. His right eye was still half-closed. The bruise on his cheek had turned from purple to yellow overnight. He looked like a man who had been dragged behind a car.He needed to think. Not about fights or money or lawyers. About something simpler.Survival."""""" """""" """""The bus dropped him three blocks from his apartment. He walked slowly. The neighborhood was dark. Streetlights flickered. Men stood on corners, watching. Women walked fast with their heads down. This is his world now. Cracked sidewalks and broken dreams. The smell of garbage and desperation hung in the air like a second skin
The lawyer
Damon woke at dawn. His body was filled with pain.He lay on the couch for thirty minutes, staring at the water stain on the ceiling. His ribs clicked with every breath. His knuckles had swollen overnight. His right eye was half-closed from a bruise he didn't remember getting. He sat up slowly. One inch at a time. His spine cracked in three places. The envelopes were still under the couch cushion. Five thousand dollars. He checked twice. Three times. The money was still there. Still real. He showered. Cold water only. Hot water made the swelling worse. He stood under the spray until his skin turned red and his muscles stopped shaking. Then he dressed. Clean jeans. A black button-down shirt. The only nice clothes he owned. They were two sizes too big now. He had lost weight. Too much weight. His face was gaunt. His cheekbones stuck out. He looked like a man who had been through war. Because he had.""""" """"" """" Elaine Park's office was downtown. Not the fancy downtown
Stay down
Thursday came faster than Damon wanted. He had spent Wednesday on the couch, barely moving.The painkillers helped. The elastic bandage helped. But nothing could heal broken ribs in forty-eight hours. He accepted that. He stopped hoping for a miracle and started planning for survival.His body was full of damage. Purple bruises covered his torso. His ribs clicked when he breathed too deep. His knuckles had swollen to twice their normal size. The scabs from Tuesday night had cracked open during sleep, leaving bloody smears on his pillow.He looked like a man who had been in a car accident. Or a war. Maybe both.Marcus texted him at noon."Fight is at 9pm. Same place as Tuesday. Different opponent. Name’s Dante. Fast. Mean. Don't underestimate him."Damon typed back with his left hand. His right was too swollen."I don't underestimate anyone."Marcus: "Good. Because Dante fought The Butcher two years ago. Lasted eight minutes. The Butcher still has scars. Dante will go for your ribs. He
Blood on Tuesday
The warehouse on Tuesday night was smaller than Frank's.Damon noticed that immediately. Lower ceiling. Fewer lights. Fewer men. Maybe thirty people scattered around a platform.This wasn't Frank's operation. This was someone else's. Someone Frank had called in a favor with.Damon didn't ask questions. He didn't care about politics or territory. He cared about one thing: fifteen hundred dollars.The bald man from Frank's pit was there. Standing by the door. His name was Marcus. Damon had learned it on the way over."You sure about this?" Marcus asked. His broken nose looked worse in the dim light. "You can barely stand straight.""I'm sure."Marcus shook his head. "Frank said you were stubborn. He didn't say you were stupid.""Frank says a lot of things."Damon walked toward the platform. Every step sent fire through his ribs. The elastic bandage helped. The painkillers helped. But nothing could hide the truth. He was fighting hurt. Fighting broken. Fighting with a body that needed we
Court date
Damon woke up on the couch, still in his bloody clothes. His body was bruised. He tried to sit up. Failed. Tried again. Made it to his elbows.Three broken ribs. Maybe four. He had lost count.The envelope with the two thousand dollars sat on the coffee table. He had put it there before collapsing. Hadn't even counted it. Hadn't cared. All that mattered was that it existed.He lay back down. Stared at the water stain on the ceiling. It had grown again. Like a living thing feeding on the decay of the apartment.His phone buzzed.Elaine Park. The lawyer Leo had recommended."Leo told me about you. Call me when you can. We need to talk before the court date."Damon saved the number. Didn't call. Not yet. He needed to think first. Needed to plan.He needed to survive.By noon, Damon forced himself upright.He shuffled to the bathroom. Stripped off his bloody clothes. Looked at himself in the mirror.The man staring back was a stranger. Purple bruises covered his torso. His ribs bulged at
Tournament ahead
"You're stubborn," The Butcher said. "I'll give you that." The Butcher was staring at Damon with something new in his eyes. Respect. Or maybe confusion. He had hit Damon with everything short of a killing blow. And still the broken man stood.Damon didn't answer. He couldn't. His lungs were still weak. But his feet stayed planted. His fists stayed raised.The crowd had gone quiet again. Eighty men holding their breath. Watching to see if the miracle would happen.The Butcher came forward again. Slower this time. More cautious. He threw a jab. Damon slipped it. Another jab. Damon ducked. The Butcher followed with a hook to the body.Damon saw it coming.He turned his hip. Let the punch glance off his side instead of landing clean. It still hurt. Everything hurt. But he stayed standing.Then he threw a punch of his own.A straight right. Not fast. Not powerful. But unexpected. The Butcher had gotten used to attacking. He had forgotten that wounded animals still had teeth.The punch cau
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