Chapter 12: The Choice
The heavy metal doors of the warehouse creaked open, and Carlo stepped in, his pistol drawn, securing the perimeter.
I stood up, holding Emma tightly in my arms. She buried her face in the crook of my neck, refusing to look at the bodies scattered across the floor.
In the center of the room, illuminated by a single swinging bulb, Alessio stood over a cowering figure.
It was Mike.
Anton had caught him trying to slip through a rusted side door. Now, the giant bodyguard held Mike by the collar of his expensive jacket, forcing him to his knees in the pooling water.
Alessio looked down at the man who had caused so much destruction. He held the encrypted flash drive in his left hand, tossing it lightly into the air and catching it.
“Please,” Mike begged, his voice high and reedy, completely devoid of dignity. “Alessio, please. I gave you the drive back! I didn’t tell them the password! We’re even!”
Alessio didn’t look at Mike. He turned his piercing blue eyes toward me.
“Sophia,” Alessio called out softly. “Bring her out to the car. Carlo will take you. You should not see this.”
“Sophie, wait!” Mike screamed, twisting in Anton’s iron grip. “Tell him! Tell him I’m the father of your child! Tell him he can’t do this!”
I stopped walking. I turned around slowly, the weight of Emma in my arms grounding me to reality.
I looked at the man I had spent five years of my life with. The man I had defended to my family. The man I had starved myself to cover rent for, while he bought tailored suits and gambled his money away.
The man who had packed our daughter’s passport into a backpack to sell her to monsters.
“You aren’t a father, Mike,” I said, my voice eerily calm, carrying perfectly across the silent warehouse. “A father sacrifices himself to save his child. You sacrificed your child to save yourself.”
Mike’s face crumbled into absolute despair. “Sophie, please. I love her!”
“No, you don’t,” I replied simply. “And you never loved me. You only loved the fact that we were too weak to stop you.”
I looked up at Alessio. His face was a mask of cold stone, but his eyes were burning with a fierce, protective fire.
“Is the debt settled?” I asked Alessio.
“The debt is settled,” Alessio nodded respectfully.
“Then do what you have to do,” I said without a single tremor of hesitation.
I turned my back on Mike’s screams. I walked out of the warehouse, into the freezing rain, and climbed into the warm, secure cabin of the armored Escalade. I closed the heavy door, sealing out the noise of the underworld.
A few seconds later, a single, muffled gunshot echoed from the warehouse.
Emma didn’t even flinch. She was already falling back asleep against my chest, exhausted by the terror of the night.
I stroked her damp hair, staring blankly out the tinted window at the rain. I expected to feel guilt. I expected to feel horror.
Instead, I felt a profound, overwhelming sense of peace. The shadow that had hung over our lives for years was finally, permanently gone.
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