Her apartment looked exactly as she had left it that morning: dishes in the sink, a folded onesie on the radiator, Lily’s stuffed rabbit on the floor. The normalness of it broke something in Emma. She stood in the doorway and had to fight the urge to cry.
Roman said nothing.
Dominic did, but quietly. “Where’s the necklace?”
“In the bedroom.”
Emma handed Lily to Roman before she could think better of it.
He accepted her as if it had already become natural.
That frightened Emma too.
She went to the bedroom and pulled open the bottom drawer of her dresser. Beneath old birthday cards, hospital papers, and Lily’s first tiny hat was a small velvet pouch.
Her fingers trembled as she opened it.
The silver lamb lay inside, tarnished slightly, harmless and sweet.
Roman came to the doorway with Lily asleep on his shoulder.
Emma placed the charm in his palm.
He studied it. “Dominic.”
Dominic took it, turned it under the light, then let out a low whistle.
“What?” Emma asked.
“It opens.”
He pressed the lamb’s tiny head and twisted.
A seam appeared along its belly.
Emma stared as he pulled out something no bigger than a grain of rice, black and metallic.
“A microdrive,” Dominic said.
Roman’s face hardened.
Emma felt suddenly sick. “Caleb sent that to my baby?”
“He sent it to you,” Roman said. “Through her.”
“That doesn’t make it better.”
“No,” he said. “It doesn’t.”
Dominic held the drive up. “We need a clean machine. Offline.”
Roman nodded. “Back to the club.”
But before anyone moved, a sound came from the kitchen.
A floorboard creaked.
Roman pushed Emma behind him.
Dominic drew his gun.
Emma’s heart slammed against her ribs.
From the kitchen doorway, Mrs. Alvarez appeared, wrapped in her old brown coat, leaning on a cane.
Emma gasped. “Mrs. Alvarez?”
The old woman looked at the gun in Dominic’s hand, then at Roman holding Lily.
Her face did not show surprise.
That was the first thing Emma noticed.
Not fear.
Not confusion.
Recognition.
Roman noticed too.
His voice became ice. “Who are you?”
Mrs. Alvarez sighed.
“Oh, Emma,” she said sadly. “I was hoping you wouldn’t find it tonight.”
Emma took a step back. “What?”
Mrs. Alvarez looked older than she had that morning, but not weaker. Never weaker. Her eyes were steady, almost apologetic.
“I did hurt my knee,” she said. “That part was true.”
Dominic aimed the gun. “Hands where I can see them.”
She obeyed, slowly.
Emma shook her head. “No. No, what is this?”
Mrs. Alvarez looked at Lily. “I watched that child because Caleb asked me to.”
Emma’s throat closed.
Roman’s arms tightened around Lily.
“You knew Caleb?” he asked.
“I knew both of you when you were boys,” she said.
Dominic cursed under his breath.
Roman’s stare turned lethal. “Explain.”
Mrs. Alvarez looked at Emma instead.
“Caleb came to me before he disappeared. He was scared. Not for himself. For you. For the baby. He said if anything happened, I was to stay close. Make sure you had help, but not too much help. Too much would make you suspicious.”
Emma felt as if the floor had tilted. “You let me think I was alone.”
The old woman flinched.
“I paid what I could without you knowing. A grocery card here. A landlord delayed there.”
Emma remembered sudden kindnesses. A waived late fee. A bag of food left by mistake. Heat fixed after weeks of complaints.
Her eyes burned.
“You lied to me every day.”
“Yes,” Mrs. Alvarez said.
Roman stepped forward. “Who do you work for?”
The old woman lifted her chin. “Not Novak.”
“Then who?”
Her gaze moved to the silver lamb.
“For Caleb.”
Roman’s face twisted with anger. “Caleb is alive.”
“Yes.”
The word hit the room like a gunshot.
Emma’s voice shook. “Where is he?”
Mrs. Alvarez’s eyes filled with tears.
“I don’t know anymore.”
“But you did.”
“Yes.”
“Why didn’t he come back?” Emma asked. “Why didn’t he come back for us?”
Mrs. Alvarez looked at Roman.
“Because your brother made a deal with the devil,” she said. “And then he became useful to him.”
Roman’s voice was low. “Novak.”
She nodded.
Emma felt numb. “The man tonight said Caleb wants to see Lily.”
Mrs. Alvarez looked sharply at her. “No. Caleb would never send Novak’s man to his daughter.”
Dominic lowered the gun slightly. “Then who sent the photo?”
Mrs. Alvarez’s face went pale.
Roman handed Lily back to Emma and took the photograph from Dominic. He turned it over, reading the six words again.
Ask Emma about the silver lamb.
Then he looked at Mrs. Alvarez.
“Who knew about it?”
“Caleb,” she said. “Me. And the priest.”
Dominic blinked. “There’s always a priest.”
Roman ignored him. “What priest?”
“Father Michael. St. Agnes.”
Roman’s expression changed.
Emma saw it instantly.
“You know him,” she said.
Roman did not answer.
Mrs. Alvarez whispered, “Roman?”
But Roman was already moving.
Dominic caught his arm. “You can’t go charging into a church in the middle of the night.”
Roman looked at his hand.
Dominic released him.
Emma stepped forward. “What is St. Agnes?”
Roman’s jaw worked.
“My mother’s church,” he said. “The place Caleb and I hid when our father was drunk.”
Mrs. Alvarez crossed herself.
Roman looked at the microdrive in Dominic’s hand. “We go there.”
Emma shook her head. “What about Lily?”
Roman looked at the baby, then at Emma.
“You both come with me.”
The words surprised everyone, maybe Roman most of all.
Snow fell harder by the time they reached St. Agnes.
The church stood wedged between old brick buildings, its stone steps glazed white, its stained-glass windows dark except for one small light near the altar. Emma had passed it before without noticing. Now it looked like a place waiting to confess.
Roman entered first.
The air inside smelled of wax, cold stone, and old wood. Their footsteps echoed down the aisle.
A priest knelt near the front pew.
He was gray-haired, thin, and calm in the way of men who had seen too much and forgiven none of it cheaply.
He stood before Roman spoke.
“I wondered when you’d come,” Father Michael said.
Roman’s hand curled at his side. “You knew.”
The priest looked at Lily in Emma’s arms.
“I knew Caleb had a child,” he said. “Not where she was. Not until tonight.”
Dominic stepped from the shadows near the aisle. “Popular secret.”
Father Michael ignored him. “The drive is not what you think.”
Roman held out his hand.
Dominic gave him the microdrive.
The priest looked at it as if it were something poisonous.
“Caleb stole Novak’s ledger,” he said. “Yes. But not for money. Not for freedom. He stole it because he found Lily’s name in it.”
Emma felt the world stop.
“My daughter’s name?”
Father Michael nodded once. “Not Lily Hart. Lily Callahan.”
Roman went utterly still.
Emma whispered, “Why would my baby’s name be in a criminal ledger?”
Father Michael’s eyes were full of sorrow.
“Because Novak was not tracking debts. He was tracking bloodlines.”
Roman’s face darkened. “What the hell does that mean?”
The priest looked at him. “Your father made agreements you never knew about. Alliances sealed the old way. Through marriages, inheritances, children. Caleb discovered that any child of the Callahan line, especially one outside Roman’s protection, could be used as leverage.”
Emma backed away, clutching Lily.
“No.”
Roman stepped toward the priest. “Who told Novak about Lily?”
Father Michael looked past him.
Toward the rear of the church.
Emma turned.
The doors opened.
A man stepped inside, snow on his shoulders.
For one impossible second, Emma saw the man she had loved.
Thinner. Harder. Haunted beyond recognition.
But alive.
Caleb.
Her breath broke.
He did not look at Roman first.
He looked at Lily.
His face crumpled.
Emma’s eyes filled instantly, rage and relief colliding so violently she could not speak.
Roman did speak.
One word.
“Brother.”
Caleb’s gaze shifted to him.
There was love there.
And fear.
“I’m sorry,” Caleb said.
Roman walked toward him slowly. “You let us bury you in our heads.”
“I had to.”
“You had a daughter.”
“I know.”
“You left her.”
Caleb flinched as if Roman had struck him.
Emma found her voice. “Don’t look hurt. You don’t get to look hurt.”
He turned to her then.
“Emma.”
“No.” Her voice shook. “You do not say my name like you still know me.”
He stopped.
Tears stood in his eyes, but Emma did not care. Not yet. Maybe not ever.
“I came back as soon as I could,” he said.
“She’s fourteen months old.”
“I know.”
“You missed her first laugh. Her first fever. Her first tooth. You missed everything.”
“I watched what I could.”
The words chilled her.
Emma’s face changed. “What?”
Caleb looked ashamed.
Mrs. Alvarez, who had followed them into the church with Dominic’s help, looked down.
Emma understood.
The grocery cards. The fixed heat. The neighbor who had always been there.
Caleb had not been gone.
He had been orbiting her life like a ghost, close enough to see their suffering and far enough to do nothing that mattered.
Roman’s voice was deadly quiet. “Why are you here now?”
Caleb looked toward Father Michael.
“Because Novak knows the drive is active. The second Dominic opened the lamb, it sent a signal.”
Dominic went pale. “That thing had a tracker?”
Caleb nodded. “Not mine. Novak’s.”
Roman turned on him. “You sent it.”
“I sent the necklace. Novak found out later and altered the charm before it reached Emma.”
“You expect us to believe that?”
“No,” Caleb said. “But it’s true.”
Outside, tires hissed over snow.
Too many.
Dominic moved to the window and lifted the curtain a fraction.
His face hardened.
“We’ve got company.”
Roman’s men shifted, guns appearing beneath coats.
Emma held Lily so close the baby squirmed.
Caleb stepped toward them.
Roman blocked him.
“Don’t.”
Caleb’s eyes flashed with pain. “She’s my daughter.”
“She’s a child you abandoned.”
“To keep her alive.”
Roman leaned closer. “Try another excuse.”
Caleb’s face changed.
Not anger.
Desperation.
“Novak doesn’t want the drive anymore,” he said. “He wants Lily.”
Emma’s blood turned to ice.
The church lights flickered.
Father Michael crossed himself.
From outside came the sound of car doors opening.
Roman looked at Emma, then at Lily.
Something settled over his face—old violence, new purpose.
“No one takes her,” he said.
Caleb stared at his brother. “You don’t understand. Novak won’t stop. Not for you. Not for anyone.”
Roman’s mouth curved slightly, but there was no humor in it.
“Then he should have stayed afraid of me.”
A crash exploded through the side entrance.
Shouts filled the church.
Dominic fired first.
Emma screamed and dropped behind a pew with Lily as wood splintered above her. Roman moved like a shadow made of knives, dragging one attacker down before the man fully crossed the threshold. Caleb grabbed Emma’s arm and pulled her toward the sacristy.
“Move!”
She fought him. “Don’t touch me!”
“Emma, please!”
A bullet struck the stone pillar beside them, spraying dust.
Roman’s voice thundered across the nave. “Get them out!”
Caleb shoved open a narrow door behind the altar.
“This way.”
Emma ran.
Lily wailed against her chest.
Behind them, gunfire cracked through holy silence.
The passage was dark and freezing, leading down a set of old stone steps. Father Michael hurried ahead, keys shaking in his hand. Mrs. Alvarez limped behind, breath harsh. Dominic came last, firing once before slamming the door.
They emerged into a basement lined with shelves of candles, donation boxes, and forgotten Christmas decorations.
Father Michael unlocked a metal door at the back.
“Tunnel goes to the rectory garage.”
Roman arrived a second later, blood on his knuckles, eyes scanning Emma first, then Lily.
“You hurt?”
“No.”
His gaze moved to Caleb, who still had a hand near Emma’s back.
Caleb removed it.
Dominic bolted the door behind them. “We don’t have long.”
They ran through the tunnel, breath fogging in the cold air. Emma’s legs burned. Lily sobbed until her cries turned hoarse.
At the garage, Father Michael lifted the door just enough for them to see the alley beyond.
Empty.
Roman looked to Dominic. “Car?”
“Two blocks west.”
Caleb shook his head. “Too obvious.”
Roman turned slowly. “You have a better idea?”
“Yes.”
He pulled a key from his coat.
Roman stared at it. “What is that?”
Caleb looked at Emma.
“My car is under the rectory. I kept it there in case I ever had to get them out.”
Emma laughed once, a cracked and bitter sound. “You planned for everything except being a father.”
Caleb’s face crumpled again.
Roman took the key from him. “You’re not driving.”
They piled into an old black sedan hidden beneath a tarp. Roman drove. Emma sat in the back with Lily. Caleb sat beside her, not touching, not speaking. Dominic rode in front, checking the gun in his lap.
The car slid into the night.
Behind them, St. Agnes glowed with red and blue light that did not yet belong to police.
Emma looked at Caleb.
He seemed older than thirty. There were scars near his hairline, one across his lower lip. His hands were the same, though. The same hands that had once built a crib from mismatched wood because they could not afford a new one.
“You were alive,” she said.
“Yes.”
“And you let me hate myself for not being enough to make you stay.”
His eyes filled. “It was never you.”
“But you let me think it was.”
He had no answer.
Roman’s eyes met Emma’s in the rearview mirror.
For one second, the strange bond between them returned. Not trust. Not comfort. Something more dangerous because it had been born too quickly under fire.
Understanding.
Then Lily stopped crying.
Not gradually.
All at once.
Emma looked down.
Her daughter was staring at Caleb.
The baby’s wet lashes clung together. Her lower lip trembled. Then she reached one small hand toward him.
Caleb broke.
A sound came out of him that was almost a sob. He covered his mouth, turning his face away.
Emma should not have felt anything.
But she did.
That made her angrier.
Roman looked away from the mirror.
The sedan turned onto a quiet street near the river, where warehouses stood dark against the snow. Dominic’s phone buzzed.
He answered, listened, then looked at Roman.
“Call came in from the club. Novak’s people hit the office after we left.”
Roman’s face hardened. “Casualties?”
“Two wounded. No dead.”
“And?”
Dominic hesitated.
Roman glanced at him. “Say it.”
“They took the diaper bag.”
Emma’s stomach dropped.
“The diaper bag?” Caleb whispered.
Roman swore.
Emma clutched Lily. “Why would they take that?”
No one answered.
Then Caleb looked at her with horror dawning in his eyes.
“What?” she demanded.
“The lamb was only the decoy,” he said.
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