"They’re talking again, Luca," Mateo said, nodding toward a group of elders crossing the street to avoid them. "They say we’re nothing but trouble. That we’ve got no soul, just greed."
In the heart of a neon-lit neighborhood where the bass from passing cars rattled windowpanes, lived a man named Luca—better known to the streets as one of the "Fratii Peste." He carried a reputation that preceded him like a shadow, fueled by the lyrics of the songs that echoed from every open balcony: "Zice lumea ca-s golan" (People say I’m a hoodlum).
One rainy Tuesday, Luca sat at a corner bodega, stirring a coffee with a plastic spoon. Across from him sat his younger brother, Mateo.
He walked away, disappearing into the mist of the city. The world continued to judge him by the rhythm of the streets and the rumors in the air, never knowing that behind the "hoodlum" exterior was a man who understood the struggle better than anyone else. He was a Fratii Peste, and if being a "golan" meant surviving while keeping his own code of honor, he’d wear the title with pride.