She Hid His Twins For Five Years Until Black SUVs Found Them-eirian

The empty bunk did not look real at first.

It looked like a trick of sleep, like Ivy had rolled under the blanket or slipped to the floor to find the bathroom in a house she did not know.

Then Serafina saw the open window.

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Two inches.

No screen.

A white scrape on the latch where someone had forced it from outside.

Rowan sat on the top bunk with both hands over his mouth, eyes huge, hair sticking up from sleep. He was alive. He was here. His sister was not.

Damien reached the doorway behind Serafina and stopped so hard the floor seemed to stop with him. For one second she saw the father in him before the dangerous man came back. Pain first. Then calculation. Then a cold that made every other person in the hall go quiet.

“They have her,” one of his men said from the phone.

Serafina turned on him. “Who?”

Damien looked at the latch, the window, the little gap of winter air still breathing into the room.

“Creel,” he said. “And someone here told him where we were.”

The sentence landed with a name before anyone spoke it.

Marcus.

Eight years in Damien’s circle. One of the three men who knew the house. The quiet man who had stood by the window, arms folded, while Serafina called Patrick Hale and fed him the false trail.

Downstairs, a door slammed.

Then an engine started.

Damien was already moving.

Serafina followed him with Rowan clinging to her hand. Leaving her son in that house was impossible now. There was no safe room left in the world, only the room she could see.

Reyes met them at the bottom of the stairs with a weapon under his jacket and the kind of face that did not waste language.

“Marcus is gone,” he said. “Creel is at Pier 41.”

“Ivy?” Serafina asked.

“They will take her there,” Damien said. “He wants me on his ground.”

Serafina looked at him once. “Then we go.”

He started to say no. She watched it gather in his mouth. Then he looked at Rowan, then back at the mother standing barefoot in his marble hallway with terror burning itself into something harder.

He did not say no.

The drive to Brooklyn took twenty-two minutes and felt like a year cut into pieces.

Rowan sat pressed against Serafina’s side, silent in the back seat. He had asked only one question before they pulled away from the estate.

“Is she scared?”

Serafina put her palm between his shoulder blades. “Ivy watches before she panics.”

It was not an answer.

It was the only thing she had.

The terminal rose out of the waterfront like a sleeping animal, cranes still above the black water, security lights spreading yellow pools across wet concrete. Damien’s SUV rolled in without headlights. Reyes spoke into a radio so low Serafina could not make out the words.

On the third floor, one window glowed.

“Creel will keep her close,” Damien said. “He will want me to see what he can reach.”

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