John Baby [CONFIRMED × 2027]
The nickname came from a misunderstanding. At twenty-two, John had already earned a reputation for cracking jaws and collecting debts. But one night, after a particularly messy job, he came home to his mother’s brownstone with a busted lip and tears he couldn’t stop. She wrapped him in a quilt, made him warm milk with honey, and said, “You’re just a baby, John. My baby.” His cousin Vinny heard through the wall and told the whole neighborhood by morning. John Baby stuck.
The boss laughed. “You can’t be out, John Baby.” john baby
He works at a flower shop now. The old crew leaves him alone. And when customers ask about the big, gentle man who arranges roses with surprising care, the owner just smiles and says, “That’s John. John Baby.” The nickname came from a misunderstanding
And he walked out. No one stopped him. Because sometimes a baby is the strongest thing in the room—not in spite of the softness, but because of it. She wrapped him in a quilt, made him
John looked him in the eye. For the first time in his life, he didn’t clench his fists. “Try me,” he said softly.
John hated it. He tried everything: scowling harder, breaking more things, even getting a tattoo across his knuckles that read “BEAST.” But when a man twice his size called him “John Baby” in a bar, John just sighed and bought him a drink. Because the truth was, he didn’t want to be a monster. He wanted to be someone who could still cry in his mother’s kitchen.