A Lawyer, A Birth Certificate, And The Concrete Slab Nobody Was Allowed To Break-eirian

The second car door slammed below us, and Jonathan Sterling turned toward the bedroom window like a man hearing an old sentence being read again.

I moved first.

Not toward him. Toward my children.

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Emily stood in the doorway with both hands over her mouth. Brandon had one fist locked around the little brass key from the funeral. Their faces were pale in the thin bedroom light, and the hidden room behind me breathed out tobacco, dust, old cedar, and the sour metallic smell of secrets left too long in walls.

“Go downstairs,” I said.

My voice did not shake.

That surprised me more than Jonathan did.

Brandon looked past me at the cot, the money, the birth certificate on the floor. “Mom, who is he?”

Jonathan lowered his hands slowly. He did not step closer.

“I’m family,” he said.

“You don’t get to say that yet,” I snapped.

From outside came a familiar male voice, smooth enough to make my stomach tighten before I even saw him.

“Jenny? You here?”

Ryan.

My ex-husband had managed to make a death, an inheritance, and a house full of buried crime into an opportunity.

Jonathan’s eyes moved to mine.

“Who is that?”

“A problem,” I said. “Stay here. Don’t touch my children.”

He nodded once.

I took Brandon and Emily by the shoulders and guided them into the hall. The upstairs air smelled like Chanel No. 5 and old plaster. Downstairs, Ryan knocked again, harder this time, the kind of knock he used when he wanted neighbors to hear how reasonable he was being.

“Jennifer, I saw your car. Open up.”

Emily whispered, “Don’t let him in.”

I looked down at her. Seven years old, and already she knew the sound of a man arriving with a smile he did not mean.

“Stay behind me. If I tell you to run, you run to Mrs. Porter’s porch next door.”

Brandon nodded, but his fingers tightened around that brass key until his knuckles went white.

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