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Chapter 6

Author: Marysol James
last update publish date: 2026-05-20 22:31:16

Canandaigua, New York

11 Years Later

Nala Freeman woke to a sound that did not belong in her house.

Not the harmless old-house noises she had grown accustomed to over the past decade in Canandaigua, with its sleepy lake-town charm and narrow tree-lined streets and neighbors who still left mince pies on each other’s porches at Christmas. Not the radiator knocking awake in the walls, not the slow settling creaks of ancient hardwood, not the maple branches scraping softly against the siding whenever the wind came hard off the lake.

This sound was wrong. Intentional. Human.

Nala’s eyes opened instantly in the dark, every part of her body going perfectly still before her mind had even fully surfaced from sleep, instinct already listening harder than consciousness itself.

There.

A dull thud from downstairs. Then silence.

Her heart began pounding immediately, hard enough that she could feel it in her throat, but she didn’t move. Panic wasted time, and time was usually the thin fragile line standing between survival and catastrophe. She had learned that lesson eleven years ago outside a prison in Colorado with a biker’s forearm crushing her windpipe and one hand pressed threateningly against her pregnant stomach.

Some lessons never left the body afterward; they settled into bone.

Nala lay motionless beneath the blankets, listening so carefully that the muscles in her neck began aching from tension. Beside her bed, her phone glowed faintly on the nightstand: 2:17 a.m.

She slid silently from bed, bare feet meeting cold hardwood while moonlight spilled pale and silver across her bedroom floor. Her pulse thundered harder now, but her hands remained steady as she crossed to the dresser and opened the bottom drawer.

Not for the pepper spray, not for the phone. For the brass key hidden beneath a stack of insurance forms and clinic schedules she’d brought home from Finger Lakes Family Dental, where she spent her days dealing with ordinary frustrations: staffing shortages, billing disasters, angry patients who somehow believed screaming at employees would magically force insurance companies to pay claims faster.

Normal problems, safe problems. The kind she had spent eleven years building her life around… because safety had become an obsession after Colorado. Not peace. Never peace.

Peace implied trust in the world, and Nala had lost that permanently somewhere around the moment Wheels Jordan threatened her unborn child with one hand resting possessively against her stomach, like he already owned the right to decide whether her baby lived or died. No, what she built afterward was not peace. It was vigilance, and routine, and preparation. Nala had constructed a goddamn fortress disguised as an ordinary life.

Every choice she’d made since fleeing Denver had revolved around her daughter, whether consciously or not. Choosing a small city instead of a major metropolitan area, no social media, no dating. Cash savings hidden in three separate locations, emergency bags packed and updated every six months, security cameras positioned discreetly around the property. And the house. Especially the house.

Nala crossed silently to the built-in cabinet at the far wall of her bedroom, though cabinet was not really the correct word for it. The concealed dumbwaiter had been one of the reasons she bought the place all those years ago.

The realtor had laughed while showing it to her, calling it charming, quirky, a cute historical feature from another era. Nala had smiled politely while staring into the narrow wooden compartment and she saw something else entirely:

A hiding place.

A secret.

A way down and out.

Because women like her did not survive by accident. For eleven years she’d lived right on the edge, sleepless and watchful and violent when necessary, motherhood transforming her into something savage and relentless. People liked pretending maternal love was soft and gentle and nurturing, but those people had never met truly terrified mothers. There was nothing gentle about the kind of creature fear turned women into when their children were threatened.

Nala unlocked the narrow door carefully and eased it open, wincing at the faint creak of old hinges. Then she froze.

A voice drifted upward from downstairs. Male. Low. Unfamiliar.

Her blood went completely cold.

Not a burglar, then. Burglars took televisions and laptops and jewelry. Burglars crashed through houses carelessly, because objects could be replaced and sleeping families usually stayed asleep if left alone.

But men who whispered in the dark were hunting something alive.

Nala climbed silently into the dumbwaiter, folding herself awkwardly into the cramped compartment while gripping the old rope-and-pulley system tightly enough that the rough fibers bit into her palms. Then she began lowering herself slowly downward through the narrow shaft hidden inside the walls of the old house.

Don’t make noise. Don’t breathe too hard. Don’t think.

But of course she thought anyway.

Because Luna was upstairs.

Luna, who had just turned ten and somehow existed in that impossible in-between place between child and young woman already, all long limbs and sharp intelligence and wild dark curls she hated brushing in the mornings. Luna, who still slept in purple pyjamas with tiny moons printed on them, because she was enough of a child to love matching sleep sets, and old enough to roll her eyes when Nala tucked her in too carefully. Luna, who loved astronomy and graphic novels and terrible reality baking shows. Luna, whose laugh could still make sunlight out of the worst day imaginable.

Luna, whose eyes were not Nala’s.

They were Cole’s eyes… and they were dark and watchful and devastatingly familiar every single day of her life.

The dumbwaiter reached the kitchen level with the softest possible bump, and Nala froze completely, every muscle locking while she waited to see whether the sound carried.

Nothing. No footsteps. No reaction.

Slowly she pushed the lower door open just enough to peer through the narrow crack into the kitchen, moonlight spilling across countertops and hardwood floors in pale fractured lines. Empty. But beyond the kitchen, somewhere near the hallway leading toward the stairs:

“Easy now, you little bitch,” a man whispered harshly. “Stop fucking fighting me.”

Nala almost came apart, the words tearing through her body with such savage force that for one horrifying second she genuinely could not move at all. Her vision narrowed violently, pulse roaring thunderously in her ears while the entire world collapsed down to one unbearable reality:

A strange man had his hands on her daughter.

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