A Single Mom Took One Catering Job. The Mafia Boss Knew Her Baby-rosocute

Sophie Collins did not think of herself as brave.

Bravery sounded too clean for the life she lived.

She thought of herself as tired, underpaid, and stubborn enough to keep standing when every bill on her kitchen counter suggested sitting down might be easier.

Image

The quarters on the counter had been counted twice that morning because three dollars could become gas, formula, or one more day of pretending she was not about to lose the apartment.

The checking account had eleven dollars in it after rent.

The Corolla had half a tank of gas, a broken passenger-side window switch, and a dashboard rattle that had started sounding like a warning whenever she drove home after dark.

Beside Lily’s formula can sat the eviction notice.

Sophie kept turning it face down, as if the paper might become less real if the red letters stopped looking at her.

Lily did not know any of that.

At ten months old, Lily knew the faded rug, the warmth of her mother’s chest, and the stuffed rabbit with one gray ear chewed flat from love.

That rabbit had belonged to Sophie’s brother, Michael.

Michael had carried it in one backpack after their mother died, the year the Collins children learned that grief did not arrive like thunder.

It arrived like laundry nobody washed, cereal for dinner, and adults whispering in kitchens.

When Michael grew too old for stuffed animals, he gave the rabbit to Sophie and made her promise she would keep it for “someone who needed backup.”

Years later, that someone was Lily.

Sophie did not talk about Michael often.

He had died two years before Lily was born, and the story of his death had always been a room with the door half closed.

An accident, people said.

Wrong place, wrong time.

A police report that mentioned no witnesses who were willing to be witnesses.

Sophie learned to stop asking because every answer made the silence around Michael larger.

Then the email arrived.

Exclusive catering opportunity. One night. $2,000.

Sophie almost deleted it because scams love desperate women.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *