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There’s interest in her lightly playful tone, but also a bit of worry, and I know she’s thinking about our situation. Happy to distract her, I try to give her an edited version of my life, one that won’t cause us more problems.

“Well, I guess I do have some hero tendencies, but not usually to this extreme, admittedly. My dad was a real hero. He went to Vietnam right before the US pulled out, and when he got back, he became a cop in the small town I was born in.”

“Vietnam?” Maggie asks. “What, are you the youngest of the kids or something?”

“No, it took him awhile after he got back to feel he was ready to have kids. He was older than Mom too. He was almost forty and she was only twenty-six when they got married. Still, he was a good role model, taught me right from wrong, and I grew up always wanting to make him proud.”

She lays her hand on mine where it rests on her thigh, holding it tenderly. “I’m sure he would be. You’re definitely my hero. Maybe after all this is over, you can tell him how you saved me from a mob hit and the resulting war?” She says it jokingly, like she’s trying to make the monster less scary by laughing at how ridiculous it sounds, but the underlying fear is obvious. “I’m sure he would love this story, on the run but not sure yet exactly who we’re running from.”

I sigh wistfully, shaking my head. “He died about five years ago. He would have liked the story, and I know he would have liked you. I tell myself he’s my guardian angel now.”

Without thinking, I salute the way I always do, lifting my hand from her leg to bring two fingers to my lips and then raising them toward the sky. “Thanks, Pop.”

My hand goes right back to Maggie’s thigh and hers goes right back on top of mine. It’s comfortable, and I ponder just how strange it feels that a gesture that’s only been in my life for about three or four minutes feels like I couldn’t go the rest of my life without it.

“I’m sorry for your loss,” she says softly, with genuine regret that she won’t get to meet him. “He sounds like a great dad. What about your mom?”

I smile, keeping my eyes on the road. “She’s great too. After Pop died, she didn’t let it get her down. They talked about that, and they agreed that she should do what makes her happy. So she sold the house and bought a little condo in a nice building. She works as a secretary at an elementary school. She says the kids keep her young, even though she’s not all that old, really. I’m one of the lucky ones.” Feeling like the storyline of my history might be getting into dangerous territory, like how the son of a war vet police officer ended up working door security in a mob-owned strip club, I turn the questions back to Maggie. “What about you? What’s your family like?”

Maggie’s lips screw up a bit, and she hums quietly before answering. “Well, not as picturesque as yours, but they’re good. My parents divorced when I was little, so I bounced back and forth between their houses, but it was an amicable divorce at least, not some made-for-TV drama deal. I see them both regularly, talk to my mom almost every Sunday on the phone.”

“How’d you end up waitressing at Petals?”

I can feel her retreat, like a physical removal of her warmth even though she hasn’t moved. “Oh, I’ve done a lot of moving around, this job and that. Waitressing is something I did when I was younger, so it seemed like a good way to make some money.”

She’s lying. I can tell this time, but I can’t put my finger on how I know. Her tone doesn’t change, her face is neutral, her body relaxed. And that worries me. This girl, innocent as she may seem, is lying, and she’s good at it. Really fucking good at it.

Wanting to tease out what she’s lying about, I pick at her answer, keeping it casual and teasing her a little. “This and that? Tell me, what has an Angel like you done before becoming a strip club waitress?”

She smiles, but it’s her fake one, too much teeth and not enough eyes. It’s a dazzling smile still, but I guess when you’ve made a woman come and then made her deep-throat you, you get to see a lot of what her eyes can reveal. “Well, I’ve been a barista, a secretary, a copy girl, a waitress, a nanny, and a personal assistant. It’s not quite the Village People, but finding a construction job is really difficult at my size.”


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