THE JANITOR’S BABY CRAWLED ONTO A DYING MAFIA BOSS—AND BY SUNRISE, EVERY MAN IN THE HOUSE WAS AFRAID OF HIM

 

Ji-hoon looked at the boy as if the sound had struck him somewhere deeper than the poison.

By seven, Ryu Seo arrived.

 

 

Ryu had been Ji-hoon’s right hand for almost twenty years, a lean, elegant man with silver at his temples and eyes that missed nothing. He entered the bedroom expecting a corpse or a succession crisis.

Instead, Ji-hoon Kang was sitting upright.

“You’re alive,” Ryu said.

“So it seems.”

“The doctor said—”

“The antidote worked.”

There had been no antidote.

Ryu knew it. Ji-hoon knew Ryu knew it. But neither man said another word.

By eight, three lieutenants filed into the long sitting room downstairs. Men in dark suits. Men who had spent the night preparing new loyalties.

Ji-hoon sat at the head of the table in yesterday’s shirt, pale but breathing.

He watched their faces.

Relief was easy to fake. Disappointment was not.

One man exhaled too late.

Park Jin.

Eleven years with the Kang Group. Cried at Ji-hoon’s mother’s funeral. Remembered every birthday. Kept a framed photo of his daughters on his desk.

Also, apparently, had expected Ji-hoon to die before breakfast.

By noon, Ji-hoon had his answer.

At 12:15, Park walked into Ji-hoon’s office without knocking.

“Boss,” he said softly. “Just checking on you.”

“Sit down, Park.”

Park did not sit.

His right hand drifted toward the small of his back.

Ji-hoon’s body was still weak. His reflexes were not what they should have been. He saw the angle too late.

Then something crashed in the corridor.

A lamp hit marble with a sound like a gunshot.

Park turned his head for half a second.

That was all Ji-hoon needed.

The Glock came from the desk drawer. Two shots. Center mass.

Park dropped to the carpet.

Silence rolled through the office.

Then a small voice said, “Uh-oh.”

Theo stood barefoot in the doorway, stuffed elephant in hand, staring at the lamp he had knocked over. He looked at Park. Then at the gun. Then, with the fearless logic of a child, he lifted both arms toward the only familiar face in the room.

“June,” he said. “Up.”

Ji-hoon set the gun down very slowly.

Aisha came running up the stairs.

“Theo!”

She saw the body first. Then her son. Then Ji-hoon.

She scooped Theo into her arms and turned his face into her shoulder. “Don’t look, baby.”

“He’s fine,” Ji-hoon said.

Aisha looked at Park’s body. “What happened?”

“He came to finish what the poison started.”

Her face barely changed, but Ji-hoon saw the calculation behind her eyes.

“And the lamp?”

“Your son knocked it over. Gave me half a second.”

Aisha tightened her arms around Theo.

“Twice,” Ji-hoon said quietly. “Your son has saved my life twice.”

She did not answer. If she opened her mouth, something would break loose, and she could not afford that. Not with the phone in her pocket. Not with Daniel Pierce’s latest message waiting unread.

That evening, Ji-hoon moved Aisha and Theo out of the staff wing and into a guest suite on the west side of the penthouse.

“It locks from the inside,” he said. “No one enters without your permission.”

“That isn’t appropriate, Mr. Kang.”

“Ji-hoon.”

She looked up.

“You used my name last night,” he said. “Use it now.”

Aisha swallowed. “Ji-hoon. People will talk.”

“People talked the moment your son walked into my bedroom and didn’t come out.”

The west wing suite was larger than Aisha’s entire apartment. Wide windows. Clean sheets. A crib already assembled. Theo ran in circles, laughing at the echo.

Aisha sat on the bed and pulled out her phone.

Daniel Pierce had texted twice.

Heard about Park Jin. Are you safe?

Status?

Aisha stared at the messages.

Then she typed: Fine. Will report later.

She deleted the thread.

Across the room, Theo pressed both hands to the window, looking out at Manhattan as if it belonged to him.

Somewhere in that same building, Ji-hoon Kang was alive because her son had crawled onto his chest and knocked over a lamp.

Aisha closed her eyes.

The plan was still the plan.

But for the first time, she was afraid she might not be the person who could finish it.

Part 2

Three days passed, then five, then nine.

The staff said nothing, which meant they noticed everything.

They noticed Ji-hoon Kang walking the west corridor at night with no clear destination. They noticed Theo’s new winter jacket, navy blue with a warm lining, appearing in the suite without a note after Ji-hoon saw the broken zipper on the old one. They noticed Mrs. Chen, the head of household, sending fresh fruit upstairs without being asked.

They noticed, most of all, that the child was not afraid of him.

Theo called him “June.”

The first time it happened, Aisha was cleaning windows in the east hall.

She heard her son’s voice around the corner. “Hi, June.”

She stopped.

Theo sat on the carpet with a plastic bottle cap in front of him. Ji-hoon was crouched across from him in a custom suit that probably cost more than Aisha’s car, listening as if the bottle cap contained classified information.

“June,” Theo repeated, placing both sticky hands on Ji-hoon’s face.

Ji-hoon did not move.

“He can’t say your name,” Aisha said from the wall. “He shortens everything.”

“June is fine,” Ji-hoon said.

Theo raised his arms.

For one strange, delicate second, Ji-hoon looked almost frightened.

Then he picked the boy up.

Theo grabbed his collar and settled against him like he belonged there. Ji-hoon stood frozen in the hallway, holding a child with the stunned expression of a man who had just discovered a room inside himself he had never entered.

Aisha looked away first.

After that, Ji-hoon started speaking to her in small pieces.

At first, it was practical.

“Is the crib safe?”

“Yes.”

“Did the kitchen give you trouble?”

“No.”

“Tell me if they do.”

Then the questions shifted.

“How long have you been in New York?”

“Three years.”

“Before that?”

“Lagos. Then London. Then here.”

“That’s a long road.”

“It was.”

He never asked about Theo’s father.

Most people did. They treated a woman’s pain like a drawer they had the right to open. Ji-hoon did not. He simply stood beside her in the quiet corridor, his hands in his pockets, giving her the dignity of not being investigated.

It made her angry how much she appreciated it.

One Friday, she found a paper bag on the table in the suite. Inside were wooden blocks, a padded jacket for Theo, and a tiny pair of sneakers with lights in the soles.

No note.

Theo fell in love immediately.

“June!” he shouted, stomping so the sneakers flashed.

Aisha sat on the bed, thumb brushing the jacket’s stitching.

Her phone buzzed.

DP: Two weeks without an update. Are you compromised?

Aisha stared at the word.

Compromised.

She thought of Marcus. Of the formula bag. Of Daniel’s tired eyes in the diner. Of every night she had whispered to herself that Ji-hoon Kang deserved whatever was coming.

Then she thought of Ji-hoon sitting on the floor while Theo showed him blocks, listening like a man being taught a language he desperately wanted to learn.

She typed: Not compromised. Slowed.

Then she put the phone facedown.

The fever came on a Sunday night.

Toddler fevers were cruel that way. One minute Theo was fine, wobbling across the room with his elephant under one arm. The next he was hot, limp, miserable, his cheeks flushed and his eyes glassy.

Aisha knew what to do. Acetaminophen. Cool cloth. Fluids. Watch the breathing. Watch the temperature.

What she did not expect was Ji-hoon at the door.

He took in the medicine bottle, the thermometer, Theo’s damp curls against Aisha’s lap.

He said nothing.

He came in, sat on the floor across from her, and placed the back of his hand against Theo’s forehead.

“June,” Theo whimpered.

“I know,” Ji-hoon said softly.

He stayed for two hours.

No orders. No drama. No rich man panic. He simply sat beside them, handing Aisha a cloth when she needed one, murmuring low Korean words when Theo stirred, letting the child wrap weak fingers around his thumb.

At midnight, Theo finally slept.

The room went quiet except for the rain against the glass.

“You didn’t have to stay,” Aisha said.

“I know.”

She looked at him properly then. Not as the target. Not as the man in Daniel Pierce’s files. Not as the name attached to Marcus’s death.

As a man sitting on the floor in an expensive shirt, looking at her sick child as if the child’s pain had entered his own body.

“Ji-hoon,” she said.

His name changed the room.

His eyes lifted.

“You both make me want to live,” he said. “I don’t know what to do with that.”

Aisha’s throat tightened.

“Neither do I.”

She meant it.

That was the problem.

The next week, Ryu brought news.

“Shin’s people are watching the house,” he told Ji-hoon in the second-floor office. “They’ve noticed the woman and the child.”

Ji-hoon did not look up from the file in front of him.

“People notice things.”

“They think they’re your weakness.”

Ji-hoon’s pen stopped.

Ryu lowered his voice. “Calvin Shin already poisoned you once. If he believes you care about them, he’ll target them.”

“Then I’ll end him first.”

“You can’t promise the child won’t get caught in it.”