“Russell is wrong.”
Nora’s eyes lifted to his.
It was the first moment she looked seven.
Just seven.
Marla guided her toward the chair beside the desk. Nora hesitated until Evan carried Milo with them, then sat stiffly on the edge, her dirty feet not quite touching the floor.
Marla wrapped a blanket around her shoulders.
“You walked here barefoot?” she asked gently.
Nora nodded.
“I had shoes, but the laces were loud on the stairs.”
Evan looked at her.
“The laces were loud?”
She nodded again.
“Russell was sleeping in the chair. Mama said if he was sleeping, don’t wake him. Don’t ever wake him if he’s been drinking from the brown bottle.”
The station changed temperature.
Not literally. The heat still hummed through the vents. The fluorescent lights still buzzed. But something in the room hardened around them.
Evan had been in law enforcement for fourteen years. He had learned to keep his face calm when people told him things that made his hands want to curl into fists. He had learned that the first duty in a room with a frightened child was not anger. It was steadiness.
So he nodded slowly.
“You were very quiet,” he said.
“I practiced,” Nora replied.
Marla turned away for a moment.
Evan saw it.
She was blinking too fast.
The baby gave another weak cry, stronger this time. Evan gently rocked him, awkward at first. He had nieces, nephews, friends with babies, but holding a hungry five-week-old in a police station at night while his seven-year-old sister watched like a tiny guard dog was different from anything he had done before.
“Milo needs a doctor,” Evan said. “The ambulance is coming.”
Nora shook her head quickly.
“No hospital first.”
Evan paused.
“Why not?”
“Mama said police first. She said don’t let Russell tell them he’s our daddy. He isn’t. He says he is when people are listening.”
Evan glanced at Marla.
Marla was already typing.
“Does your mama have papers?” Evan asked.
Nora’s eyes widened.
Then she slid down from the chair and went back to the grocery bag.
“I almost forgot.”
From beneath the towels, she pulled out a large envelope.
It was bent from being carried too tightly, with one corner damp from the baby blanket. Across the front, written in neat but shaky handwriting, were four words:
For the police only.
Nora held it out with both hands.
“Mama said give this to a real badge.”
Evan took the envelope carefully.
“Did she tell you what’s inside?”
Nora shook her head.
“She said it was our way out.”
Evan did not open it in front of her right away. He set it on the desk beside him and crouched again so they were eye-level.
“Nora, I need to ask you something important. Did anyone hurt Milo tonight?”
“No,” she said quickly. “I kept him wrapped.”
“I know. Did anyone hurt your mom?”
Her face changed.
Not fear this time.
Loyalty.
The fierce, impossible loyalty children carry for the adults they love, even when those adults have been pushed past what they can explain.
“Mama fell,” Nora said.
Then, after a pause, she added, “But only because he scared her.”
Evan nodded once, accepting the answer without forcing more.
The front doors opened again.
Two paramedics stepped in carrying a medical bag and a soft infant carrier. Evan stood and passed Milo to the nearest one, a calm woman named Tasha who had worked nearly every emergency in Briar Glen for ten years.
Nora jumped up.
“No!”
Evan turned toward her immediately.
“They’re going to check him,” he said. “You can stay right here. See? He’s still in the room.”
Nora’s chest rose and fell too fast.
“He doesn’t like strangers.”
Tasha, bless her, stopped where she was.
“I understand,” she said to Nora, her voice warm but not syrupy. “How about I sit right there on the floor, and you can watch everything I do?”
Nora studied her.
“You have to keep his hat on. He gets cold.”
“I will keep his hat on,” Tasha promised.
“And he likes the song about the moon.”
“I don’t know that one,” Tasha admitted. “Can you hum it?”
Nora hesitated.
Then, very softly, she hummed a broken little tune while Tasha checked the baby’s breathing, temperature, and pulse.
Evan looked away for one second.
Sometimes the job gave you a sight so tender it hurt.
Marla placed the envelope beside him.
“You need to read this,” she said quietly.
Evan broke the seal.
Inside were several documents folded together: a handwritten letter, a photocopy of a birth certificate, hospital discharge papers, a printed protective order petition that had not yet been signed by a judge, a pharmacy receipt, and three pages of notes written in the same shaky handwriting from the envelope.
At the top of the letter was a name.
Hannah Whitaker.
Evan read.
If my daughter Nora brings this to you, it means I could not get to the station myself. Please do not release my children to Russell Cade. He is not their father. He has no legal rights to either child. He has taken my phone twice, my car keys, and the debit card for the grocery account. I filed a petition this afternoon at the county clerk’s office and hid the receipt in this envelope. If he comes in acting calm, please understand that is how he gets people to believe him.
Evan stopped reading for a moment.
The station around him blurred at the edges.
He looked toward Nora.
She sat cross-legged on the floor beside the paramedic, humming to her baby brother with the grave seriousness of a child who had been trusted with something no child should have had to carry.
Evan continued.
I am not abandoning my children. I am trying to save them. Nora knows to ask for a real badge because Deputy Hollis came to Briar Glen Elementary last year and told the children police stations were safe places if they were ever scared. She remembered. I pray she remembered.
Evan’s throat tightened.
He remembered that school visit.
It had been a routine community event. He had stood beside a fire truck and handed out plastic badge stickers while first graders asked if police dogs ate pizza and whether jail had windows. He had said what adults always said at those events.
If you are lost or scared, find a police officer. Go somewhere with lights. Ask for help.
He had said it to fifty children.
One of them had built a survival plan around it.
Marla looked at him.
“What does it say?”
Evan folded the letter halfway closed, not because he wanted to hide it, but because Nora was still in the room.
“It says we do not release these children to Russell Cade under any circumstances.”
Marla’s face hardened.
“Understood.”
The radio crackled.
“Unit Three on Sycamore. We have one adult female located inside the residence. She’s breathing. EMS requested priority. Possible medical distress. Scene not secure yet. Checking the rest of the house.”