Page 100 of The Lawyer


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Now it holds Mateo’s wedding ring.

The chain is gold, just like the ring. The pendant is an open rhombus shape with a small diamond set into the bottom. His ring hasn’t left it since Gino handed it to me after they broke into Mateo’s hotel room and recovered his things.

I walk over to the bed and sit down, holding the necklace and staring at it for a moment. “I just hope your daddy comes home soon,” I whisper, looking down at Victoria and Julian.

I pick them both up again and head back downstairs. After setting them in the playpen, I sink onto the couch and turn on the TV. Some reality show plays in the background, but I barely see it. My eyes start to burn, just like they do every morning. The emotions hit all at once—sadness, anger, fear. I know it’s amix of postpartum depression and the constant anxiety of not knowing where Mateo is.

Before I realize it, it’s almost ten, and Juliet still hasn’t shown up. She’s always here before nine.

I head back into the kitchen to make more bottles for the twins. In the mornings I prefer to bottle-feed them and breastfeed later in the day. After warming the bottles, I carry them into the living room and set them on the coffee table. I lay each baby on the couch, sit between them, and start feeding them.

That’s when I hear the front door open and close.

Footsteps move down the hall, but I’m so focused on the babies that I don’t turn to see who it is.

“Hey, Juliet,” I call out. “You’re late,” I add jokingly.

Nothing.

No response.

Weird.

“Okay, I was kidding,” I say. Still nothing.

The hairs on the back of my neck stick up. I can feel someone behind me.

“Juliet, I was joking. I heard you come in,” I say, not daring to turn around.

Silence.

My chest tightens. I’m starting to panic.

I glance up and catch a reflection in the TV screen.

Someone tall.

Oh God.

Someone is in my house.

My mind races. Who breaks into a house at ten in the morning? Who would come here?

I go completely still, fear locking my body in place. My only thought is the twins. I have to protect them—no matter what.

I feel whoever it is step closer, until they’re right behind thecouch. Then hands settle on my shoulders, heavy and solid, sending a jolt of terror through me.

I feel warm breath brush my right ear. I try to pull away, but fear has me frozen.

“Sweetheart, don’t pull away.”

That voice.

I haven’t heard it in so long, but I know it instantly. Soft, rough, familiar in a way that makes my chest ache.

My body tries to move, but my mind tells me it has to be a hallucination.

“Baby.”