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.”
Nora’s humming stopped.
“Mama?”
Evan crossed the room quickly and knelt in front of her.
“They found your mom,” he said. “She’s alive.”
The words seemed to hit Nora slowly.
Alive.
She looked at Tasha.
Then at Milo.
Then back at Evan.
“Alive like talking?”
“Not yet,” Evan said honestly. “But alive. The doctors are going to help her.”
Nora’s little shoulders folded inward.
For the first time since she had entered the station, she began to cry.
Not loudly.
Just silently, with tears spilling down her dirty face while her hands twisted together in the blanket Marla had wrapped around her.
Marla sat beside her and put one arm around the back of the chair—not touching her without permission, just near enough to be felt.
“You did good, baby,” Marla said. “You did so good.”
Nora leaned into her.
That nearly undid Evan.
He stepped away and read the rest of Hannah Whitaker’s notes.
They were not dramatic. That somehow made them worse.
No wild accusations. No long emotional speeches. Just dates, times, practical details, names of places, receipts, the way a woman with no power left tries to make a record because she knows charm can erase bruises that nobody sees.
Changed locks on back door after argument.
Told landlord I was unstable.
Took my phone after I called my sister.
Said if I left, he would tell police I was unfit.
Told Nora police take children from mothers who complain.
The last line had been written darker than the others, as if she had pressed the pen hard into the paper.
My daughter is not lying. Please believe her the first time.
Evan folded the papers and put them back into the envelope.
He had spent years watching people look for certainty in messy places. Life rarely handed it to you. But sometimes, in a quiet police station after dark, certainty arrived in a brown paper bag carried by a barefoot child.
He turned to Marla.
“Call Child Protective Services. Emergency response. Ask for Denise Larkin if she’s on call. Tell them we have two minors in protective custody, infant medically fragile, mother transported, named adult male excluded by written statement and pending court petition.”
Marla nodded.
“Already dialing.”
Tasha secured Milo in the soft carrier, then looked up at Evan.
“He’s cold and hungry, but his vitals are better than I expected. We’re taking him in. I’d like Nora checked too.”
Nora stiffened.
“I have to go with Milo.”
Evan expected that.
“You can ride with him,” he said. “But only if Tasha says it’s okay and we get you wrapped up. Your feet need looking at.”
Nora looked down as if surprised to remember she had feet.
They were scratched from pavement and gravel. One heel had a small smear of dried blood.
“I didn’t feel it,” she said.
That was how adrenaline worked.
That was how love worked too, sometimes.
You didn’t feel the damage until the person you were protecting was safe.
Before Evan could answer, the radio crackled again.
“Unit Three. Be advised, neighbor reports male subject associated with residence left on foot approximately ten minutes ago. White male, forties, tan jacket, work boots. Possible direction toward downtown.”
Marla looked toward the front doors.
Evan did too.
Downtown Briar Glen at 10:03 p.m. meant three blocks, four streetlights, and almost nowhere else to go.
He moved to the window beside the station entrance.
The sidewalk outside was washed in yellow light. Across the street, the courthouse lawn sat empty. The flag above the steps snapped softly in the April wind.
At first, Evan saw nothing.
Then a man crossed beneath the far streetlamp.
Tan jacket.
Work boots.
Walking fast.
Marla’s voice dropped.
“Evan.”
“I see him.”
Nora had gone very still.
No one had said the man’s name. No one needed to.
Her eyes had found the window, and every bit of color drained from her face.
Evan stepped between her and the glass.
“Marla, lock the interior door.”
The buzz sounded down the hallway.
Tasha moved the baby carrier closer to the desk. The second paramedic shifted subtly in front of it.
The front door chimed again.
Russell Cade stepped into the Briar Glen Police Department as if he had every right to be there.
He was not a big man, but he carried himself like someone accustomed to taking up space. His hair was damp from sweat or night air, neatly combed back with his fingers. His tan work jacket had the logo of Cade Heating & Air stitched over the chest, and his expression was a careful mix of worry and irritation.
The kind of face a man wore when he wanted witnesses to see him being reasonable.
“Evening,” he said, slightly out of breath. “I believe you’ve got my kids here.”
Nora made a sound behind Evan.
Not a word.
Just a small, broken breath.
Russell’s eyes flicked toward her and then to the baby carrier. Relief flashed across his face so quickly another person might have missed it.
Evan did not.
Russell smiled.
“There you are,” he said, his voice turning soft and public. “Nora, honey, you scared everybody half to death.”
Nora stepped backward until her shoulders hit Marla’s chair.
Evan moved fully into Russell’s path.
“That’s far enough.”
Russell stopped.
His smile stayed, but the warmth left it.
“Deputy Hollis, right? I’ve seen you around. I’m Russell Cade. Hannah’s fiancé.”
“Hannah Whitaker is being transported for medical care,” Evan said. “The children are being evaluated.”
Russell sighed through his nose.
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