Marcus Kane never rang the doorbell. He always knocked three times like he was announcing he already owned the space he was about to enter. Tonight was no different. I opened the door in nothing but low-slung gray sweatpants, fresh shower steam still clinging to my skin. The tattoos across my chest and arms were still shiny from the new piece I’d gotten last weekend: a coiled snake down my ribs, black ink sharp against the scars from county fights. I’m twenty-four. Six months out of prison. My body still carries that prison hardness, thick traps, veined forearms, knuckles that never healed right. Officer Kane filled the doorway. Thirty-five. Six-three. Shoulders straining the seams of his navy button-down. Dark hair clipped military short. A jawline sharp enough to cut glass. He alwa

