The Nurse, The Boy, And The Hospital Bracelet That Made Carter Voss Lower His Gun-thuyhien

Carter’s gun rose no higher than Elena’s shoulder before she said one sentence that made his wrist stiffen.

“Smile for your camera, Carter.”

The rain hit the black umbrella above him in a steady metallic hiss. His shoes stayed planted in the alley mouth, polished leather shining beneath the SUV headlights. For half a second, his eyes moved over the brick walls, the bakery door, the rusted fire escape, the dumpster with the crooked lid.

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Then he looked at the tiny red light blinking above the old bakery’s delivery entrance.

I had forgotten it was there.

My mother installed that camera in 2009 after someone broke the bakery window for $43 in the register. She had made my father climb a ladder in January and bolt the thing above the door while she stood below with a broom and threatened him in Italian if he dropped it. After she died, I kept paying the security bill because canceling it felt like burying her twice.

Carter knew many things about my ports, my men, my money.

He did not know my mother’s bakery still watched the alley.

Elena’s hand stayed pressed against my ribs. Her fingers were white from pressure, wet with rain and blood. Noah stood behind her left hip, both golden boots planted on the pavement, his small hand gripping the hem of her hoodie.

Carter’s smile came back slower this time.

“Cute,” he said. “You think an old camera scares me?”

Elena lifted my cracked signet ring between two fingers.

“No,” she said. “The camera only confirms you came here.”

Her other hand slid into the soggy cardboard box Noah had dragged through the rain. Canned soup rolled against a roll of gauze. The folded red scarf shifted. Beneath it, wrapped in plastic, was a phone.

Not new. Not expensive. A scratched black iPhone with tape over one corner.

Elena tapped the screen with her thumb.

At 11:53 p.m., Carter’s own voice came out thin and tinny beneath the rain.

“Nothing personal, Rome. You got soft.”

Carter’s umbrella tilted.

The gun dropped one inch.

My breath scraped hard in my throat. I remembered the loading dock lights. The muzzle flashes. Carter’s mouth shaping those exact words as men I had paid for years turned their guns on me.

Elena had not been at the dock.

Which meant someone else had sent it.

Carter looked at Noah, then back at Elena.

“Where did you get that?”

“From the man you didn’t check for a pulse,” she said.

A low sound left Carter’s chest. Not anger. Calculation.

Behind him, the SUV driver shifted in his seat. I saw one pale hand tighten on the steering wheel. Carter did too. His jaw moved once.

“Elena,” he said, almost gentle. “You have a child here.”

She stepped slightly to the side, putting more of herself between Carter and Noah.

“Yes,” she said. “That is why I scheduled the upload before I spoke.”

Rain ran off Carter’s umbrella and splashed near his left shoe.

“What upload?”

Elena did not answer him. She pressed the towel harder against my side until black dots crowded the edges of my vision.

“Roman,” she said without looking down. “Stay awake.”

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