Keira dragged him into an alleyway three blocks down.
"Are you crazy?" she whispered, checking the street entrance. "You did that... for me?"
Dock leaned against the brick wall. He fished a pack of cigarettes out of his pocket and lit one. The flame illuminated the sharp angles of his face.
He took a drag and blew the smoke upward.
"They humiliated you," he said simply. "I don't like it."
Keira's chest tightened.
No one had ever stood up for her. Not her father. Not her teachers. Certainly not her family.
And here was this man-this stranger, this criminal-risking prison time just to save her pride.
Tears pricked her eyes again, but these were different.
"We have to get rid of the dresses," Keira said, gesturing wildly at the bags. "We have to burn them. Or throw them in the Hudson."
He laughed. A low chuckle that vibrated in the narrow alley.
"Relax, Keira. The card is dead now. One-time use. The manager won't call the cops. He thinks I'm..." He paused. "He thinks I'm someone dangerous. He's too scared to talk."
"He's right," Keira muttered. "You are dangerous."
He looked at her through the smoke. "Only to them."
Her heart skipped a beat.
"We're not taking these on the subway," he said, crushing the cigarette with his heel. He pulled out his phone and typed a quick message. "My guy's got a van. He'll meet us."
They sat on a bench on a side street, the mountain of couture bags between them like a barricade. It was surreal.
Ten minutes ago, they were committing high-level credit card fraud. Now, they were watching tourists take selfies.
Keira took a bite of the hot dog he'd bought from a street vendor. It was delicious.
"Thank you," she said quietly.
He didn't look at her. He was scanning the crowd, his eyes always moving.
"Don't thank me for breaking the law."
"I'm not. I'm thanking you for... seeing me."
He stopped chewing. He turned his head slowly.
He looked at her, truly looked at her. He had expected a spoiled, entitled Jacobson princess, a carbon copy of the vicious women who had just humiliated her. Instead, he saw a girl sitting on a dirty bench, shivering in the wind, eating street meat like it was a five-star meal, and thanking a convicted felon for a shred of basic human decency. The sheer, unpretentious resilience of her shattered his preconceived notions. A strange, unfamiliar warmth unfurled in his chest.
There was a smudge of mustard on the corner of her mouth.
His hand twitched. He started to reach out, his thumb extending**, driven by a sudden, irrational urge to care for her**.
Keira held her breath.
Then he pulled his hand back. He clenched it into a fist**, violently reminding himself of the dangerous game he was playing**.
"You've got mustard," he said gruffly.
She wiped it away quickly, her face burning.
Suddenly, a black Mercedes slowed down in front of them.
Keira recognized the driver. It was a girl she used to intern with. She was looking right at her, her expression twisting into a sneer.
Keira Jacobson, eating street meat with a bum.
She ducked her head, shame washing over her.
Dock moved.
He shifted his body, angling his broad shoulders so that he completely blocked her from the street.
He sat there, a human wall, until the car drove away.
A beat-up cargo van pulled up to the curb a minute later. Dock loaded the dresses into the back and then paid the driver of a black town car that had pulled up behind it. He opened the back door for Keira.
"Let's go home," he said.
The ride back to the Bronx was quiet. Keira was pressed against the worn leather seat, hyper-aware of the space between them. She could feel the heat radiating off him. She could smell the tobacco and the soap.
He stared out the window, a silent, brooding guardian.
She felt... safe.
For the first time in years, she felt completely, utterly safe.
When they got back to the apartment, Keira shoved the expensive dresses into the back of the closet, behind his few shirts.
"I'm hiding the evidence," she told him.
He was standing by the window, looking out at the street.
"Good idea," he said.
Keira turned to him.
"Dock," she said. "Please don't do that again. I'm not worth going back to jail for."
He turned. His face was in shadow.
"You have no idea what you're worth, Keira."
It was 2:00 AM.
The heat in the apartment was stifling. The old radiator hissed and clanked, but produced no air.
Keira couldn't sleep.
She climbed out of bed, careful not to make the floorboards creak.
She needed air.
She opened the door to the fire escape. The metal was cool against her bare feet.
She climbed up to the roof.
The wind was stronger up here. It whipped her hair across her face.
She saw a silhouette standing near the edge of the roof.
Dock.
He was on the phone.
Keira froze. Who was he calling at this hour?
She crept closer. The wind carried his voice. It was low, different. It didn't sound like the gravelly voice he used with her. It sounded... educated. Sharp.
"...liquidate the assets," he was saying. "I want the Jacobson deal blocked. Yes. Every penny."
Keira's heart hammered.
Jacobson deal?
"They are selling the Long Island plot," he continued. "Kill the sale. Make sure they don't see a dime."
Keira gasped.
He spun around.
His movement was a blur. One second he was facing the city, the next he was facing her, the phone vanished into his pocket.
"Keira."
"You..." Keira stepped back. "You were talking about my family."
He walked toward her. His face was unreadable in the moonlight.
"I was talking to an old friend," he said. "From the joint."
"I heard you say 'Jacobson deal'. And 'kill'."
He didn't blink.
"You misheard," he said, his voice turning rough again, the educated tone gone. "I was talking about a rival crew. The Jacobs. They're trying to move in on some territory. I told my guy to 'kill the deal.' Street stuff. You don't want to know."
He was lying. Keira knew he was lying. The excuse was almost plausible, playing right into her assumptions about him.
But the alternative-that her husband was manipulating her family's business deals-was insane. He was a broke ex-con living in the Bronx.
"Oh," Keira said. "I thought..."
"You're hearing things," he said. "Go back to bed."
"It's too hot."
She walked to the edge of the roof, standing next to him.
Manhattan glittered in the distance. A sea of diamonds.
"It's beautiful," Keira whispered. "But it feels like another planet."
"Do you miss it?" he asked.
"I miss my mom," she said. "She's in a hospital over there. And I can't even afford to go see her every day."
The wind blew a strand of hair into her mouth.
Dock reached out.
His fingers brushed her cheek as he tucked the hair behind her ear.
His skin was rough, but his touch was incredibly gentle.
Keira looked up at him.
His eyes were searching her face. There was a hunger there. A deep, aching hunger that had nothing to do with food.
For a second, she thought he was going to kiss her.
She wanted him to.
God help her, she wanted this criminal to kiss her.
He pulled his hand back as if he had been burned.
"Get inside," he said harshly. "It's cold."
He turned his back on her.
Keira felt the rejection like a slap.
"Goodnight, Dock."
She turned and went back down the fire escape.
Jonah waited until he heard the window latch click shut.
He pulled the customized smartphone back out.
"Chad," he said.
"Still here, Boss."
"Change of plans. Don't just block the sale. I want you to make a donation. To the hospital where her mother is."
"How much?"
"Enough to cover a new ventilator. And pay for a private nurse. Anonymously. Wire it now. I want it cleared by morning."
"Done. Anything else?"
Jonah looked at the closed window. He could still feel the phantom softness of her cheek on his fingertips.
"Yeah. Pray for me."
"Why?"
"Because I'm getting too close," Jonah admitted, the realization hitting him like a physical blow. He had intended to use her as a pawn against her father, but her fragile resilience was dismantling his defenses piece by piece.
The next morning, the hospital called.
They needed a payment. Five thousand dollars. Today. Or they would move Keira's mother to a state facility.
Keira paced the small living room, chewing on her fingernail. The anonymous donation Dock had mentioned must not have cleared yet. Bureaucracy was a beast.
She had to go to her father. She had to beg.
Dock came out of the bedroom. He saw her face.
"What's wrong?"
"Money," Keira said. "I have to go to the Manor. I have to ask Edmon for the money he promised."
Dock's jaw tightened.
He went back into the bedroom. Keira heard him rummaging under the bed.
He came out holding a small, velvet box. It was faded, the blue fabric worn bald in spots.
He shoved it into her hand.
"Take this."
Keira opened it.
Inside was a heavy gold bangle and a ring with a large green stone.
The gold was dark with the tarnish of a century. The stone was dark, coated in a dull, waxy film, as if to deliberately hide its fire.
It looked old. And... well, cheap. Like costume jewelry from a thrift store.
"Dock," Keira said. "I can't take this."
"It was my grandmother's," he said. "If he won't give you the money, pawn it."
"No!" Keira snapped the box shut. "This is a family heirloom. I'm not selling your grandmother's jewelry for a few hundred bucks."
"It might be worth more than you think," he said dryly.
Keira looked at him. He was trying to help. He was giving her the only thing of value he owned.
Her heart swelled.
"I'll keep it safe," she promised. "But I'm not selling it. I'll get the money from Edmon."
"I'm not going with you," he said. "They won't let me in the gate."
"I know."
"Be careful."
Keira left the apartment, clutching the velvet box in her purse like it was the Crown Jewels.
Jonah watched her leave.
He waited thirty seconds.
Then he grabbed his keys and a black baseball cap.
He went down the back stairs to the garage where he kept the "beater."
It was a gray Ford sedan. Dented. Rusted.
But under the hood, it had a modified engine that could outrun a police interceptor. And the glass was bulletproof.
He followed the bus she took to the train station.
He watched her get on the Long Island Rail Road train, then pulled out onto the expressway that ran parallel to the tracks, keeping the train in sight.
He sat in the driver's seat, pulling his cap low.
Halfway to Long Island, he saw the train slow for a local stop. Through his binoculars, he spotted a guy in a hoodie eyeing Keira's purse.
Jonah saw the guy shift. He saw the glint of something in the guy's sleeve.
Jonah's hands tightened on the wheel. He couldn't do anything from here. He could only watch, his gut twisting into a knot of helpless rage.
The train doors opened. The guy in the hoodie seemed to think better of it, or maybe his stop was next. He got off the train and vanished into the crowd on the platform.
Jonah let out a breath he didn't realize he'd been holding.
Keira didn't even notice. She was staring out the window, clutching her purse tight.
Protecting his grandmother's ring.
The ring was a Romanov emerald. It was worth three million dollars.
And she was protecting it because she thought it was all he had. She was a girl who had nothing, yet she was fiercely guarding a criminal's fake heirloom over her own survival.
Jonah pressed his foot on the gas**, a tight, unfamiliar ache blooming in his chest**.
"You're killing me, Keira."