LOGINThe envelope never made it to me.
George arrived in twenty minutes. Agent Rodriguez arrived in thirty. They pulled the lobby footage, identified the delivery man as a mid-level associate of Germany's named Corey Hall, and had him in an interview room by midnight.
Corey Hall wouldn't say a word.
"He's scared," Rodriguez told us the following morning. "More scared of Germany than he is of a federal obstruction charge. That tells you something."
"It tells me Germany still has leverage over people even from a holding cell," I said.
"Yes." Rodriguez didn't sugarcoat it. "His legal team filed for bail this morning. Judge Holloway denied it, but Germany's people are appealing. Could take two weeks, could take four days. Depends on the circuit."
George's jaw tightened. "What do we do in the meantime?"
"You keep her somewhere he can't map," Rodriguez said, tilting her head toward me.
I was already shaking my head. "I'm not going into hiding. I have clients. I have a business. I have a life."
"Monica..." George started.
"Don't." I looked at him. "I understand the risk. I'm not dismissing it. But the moment I disappear, Germany wins the psychological game. He wants me scared. He wants me gone. I'm not giving him that."
Rodriguez studied me for a moment, then nodded. "Compromise. Temporary relocation within the city. Somewhere with controlled access. You keep your schedule, your clients, your work. You just don't sleep somewhere he already knows."
George spoke before I could. "She can stay at the penthouse. Full security system, twenty-four-seven concierge, private elevator. Germany doesn't have access to any of my building's systems, I had them swept last week."
I looked at him. "You had your building swept last week?"
"After the hotel incident. Yes." He held my gaze, steady. "I wasn't going to wait for something to happen again."
The penthouse. Our old home. The place where three years of my marriage had lived and then died in the space of one night.
"Separate rooms," I said.
"Of course."
"I keep my own schedule. Come and go as I choose."
"Absolutely."
"And if it becomes uncomfortable for me, I leave. No arguments."
"Agreed."
Rodriguez looked between us with the neutral expression of someone who had watched many complicated situations and understood this was one of them. "I'll have a detail on the building. Check in every forty-eight hours."
The penthouse was different now.
Sharon's influence had been scrubbed away, no trace of her cold, minimalist aesthetic remained. The furniture was warmer, the lighting softer. George had changed more than I'd expected. Or maybe I was just seeing it differently now that I wasn't walking these rooms as his wife.
He put me in the guest suite at the far end of the hall. High ceilings, a window facing the park, a bathroom with heated floors. He'd stocked it without being asked, prenatal vitamins on the nightstand, a white noise machine plugged in by the bed, a humidifier in the corner still in its box.
I picked up the white noise machine. "When did you...
"Yesterday. While you were at your client meeting. The doctor's pamphlet mentioned sleep disruption in the second trimester."
I set it back down. "We're still in the first trimester, George."
"I know. I'm getting ahead of it."
I didn't say anything. I turned to unpack my bag so he wouldn't see my face.
The first three days were careful and quiet. George left for his office early, came back in the evenings, kept his distance without making it feel like distance. We ate dinner together twice, talked about safe things, my consulting pipeline, the Winston Corporation restructuring, a documentary we'd both apparently watched during our time apart.
It felt dangerously like something I recognized.
On the fourth night, I woke at 2 AM to my phone buzzing.
Unknown number.
I almost didn't answer. Then I thought about the man in my lobby with the envelope, and I picked up.
Silence on the line. Then a woman's voice, low and quick.
"Monica Charleston?"
"Who is this?"
"My name is Emily. Emily Slater." A pause weighted with meaning. "Germany Slater is my father."
My hand tightened on the phone.
"I'm not calling for him," she said quickly, as if she'd anticipated my reaction. "I'm calling because of what he told his lawyer this morning. I have a source inside his legal team, someone who doesn't want to see this go where Germany is taking it."
"What did he tell his lawyer?"
Another pause. I could hear her breathing, fast and frightened.
"He said the baby changes everything." Her voice dropped to barely a whisper. "He said if the court won't free him, he'll take what George loves most. He wasn't talking about the company, Ms. Charleston." She stopped. "He was talking about you. And the child."
The room felt very cold suddenly.
"Why are you telling me this?" I said. "He's your father."
"He was," Emily said. "Until I found out what he did to your family. What he's been doing for years." Her voice cracked. "I'm not him. I need you to know that. And I need you to know that what I just told you is only half of it."
My pulse spiked. "What's the other half?"
"The bail appeal," she said. "It's going to succeed. I don't know how, but he's already planned for it. He already knows he's getting out." She exhaled. "Ms. Charleston, Germany Slater is going to be released in seventy-two hours. And the first place he's going ... his lawyer said it out loud, like it was nothing, like I wasn't sitting right there ... is wherever you are."
The line went dead.
I sat in the dark guest bedroom of George's penthouse, the white noise machine humming softly beside me, and I tried to think clearly through the fear closing around my lungs.
Seventy-two hours.
I pulled up Rodriguez's number. Then I stopped.
Something Emily had said snagged in my mind like a thread caught on a nail.
She said Germany's lawyer spoke openly. Out loud. Like it was nothing. Like she wasn't sitting right there.
Why would a criminal defense attorney say something that incriminating in front of someone he had no reason to trust?
Unless Emily Slater wasn't calling me behind her father's back at all.
Unless Germany had sent her.
Tyler stayed an hour. Legal updates, Rodriguez had filed for a new warrant targeting Linda Carthage, and the FBI's internal affairs team had narrowed the leak to one of two agents. Nothing actionable yet, but moving in the right direction.George was polite. Precisely, surgically polite, in the way he'd been trained since childhood to manage situations that offended him.After Tyler left, we didn't discuss it. The fight from earlier still sat between us, unresolved. Georgia had fallen asleep on the sofa and I was covering her with a blanket when my phone rang.My mother.Eleanor Charleston did not call after nine PM. She considered it a social failing. The fact that it was nine-forty and her name was on my screen made something drop in my stomach before I even answered."Mom.""Monica." Her voice was careful in the way of someone choosing each word with both hands. "I need to tell you something and I need you to stay calm.""What happened.""Your father is gone. He left this morning.
Rodriguez sent a sweep team within the hour. Four agents, equipment cases, systematic and silent.George and I took Georgia to the building's private lounge on the third floor while they worked. Georgia colored. George watched the door. I sat with my phone face-down on the table and tried to do the thing I'd told him to do... think before moving.The sweep took two hours. When Rodriguez called, her voice carried the particular flatness of someone delivering information they wish they didn't have."One device found. A listening mic behind the ventilation panel in the main hallway. No visual surveillance, we checked every room." She paused. "Based on the device model, it's been active for approximately two weeks."Two weeks. Germany had been listening since before the Astoria rescue. Since before George came home from the hospital. Since before every conversation Monica and George had fumbled their way through in the kitchen at midnight.I told George when we came back upstairs. He took
Simon ran the phone's serial number by nine the next morning.The result came back in under an hour and it was worse than either of us had prepared for.The device was registered to a shell account traced to Linda Carthage Germany's fixer, the woman who had walked into Georgia's preschool with forged documents and walked out with my daughter. The woman who had been arrested outside the Astoria house the night of the rescue.Except she hadn't been arrested. Not really."Her arrest file was wiped," Simon said. He was on speakerphone, his voice tight in a way I'd learned meant he was controlling something larger than irritation. "Processed, logged, then removed from the system forty-eight hours later. Same pattern as Sharon's release. Someone with database access intervened.""The same leak," George said."Possibly. Rodriguez's team is still working the internal investigation, but we don't have a confirmed name yet." Simon paused. "What I can tell you is that Linda Carthage has not been
George came home on a Tuesday.Not to his penthouse, he was already there. What I mean is he came home the way people do after something has broken them open and put them back together slightly differently. Quieter. More careful with the space around him.His arm was in a sling. He refused the prescription painkillers and accepted ibuprofen instead, which I noted but didn't comment on. He sat at the kitchen island while I made tea neither of us had asked for, and Georgia climbed onto the stool beside him and studied his bandages with the focused concern of a three-year-old medical professional."Does it hurt?" she asked."A little.""I had a hurt once," she said seriously. "On my knee. Mama kissed it."George looked at me over her head. Something in his expression was almost unbearable."That sounds like a good treatment," he said.Georgia nodded, satisfied, and slid off the stool to retrieve her rabbit from the living room, already done with the conversation in the way of small child
"I had doubts," George said.He said it quietly, which was worse than if he'd said it loudly. Quiet meant he'd been sitting with it, turning it over, understanding the exact shape of it before bringing it into a room."Before Germany. Before the blackmail. Before any of it." He looked at the ceiling. "We'd been married two years. I was working eighteen-hour days and you were trying to build a life around someone who wasn't really there. And I started asking myself what I felt for you, because I knew what I felt for you, but whether I was capable of being the kind of man that feeling deserved." He paused. "I couldn't answer that. So instead of facing it, I buried it in work."I sat with that."Germany found it," George continued. "That doubt. He was good at finding what people were trying not to look at. He'd been watching me for months, and when he saw the distance I was putting between us, he understood how to use it. The night he drugged me — he'd already been working on me for week
The hospital was white with fluorescent and too loud.I sat in a plastic chair outside the surgical suite with Georgia asleep across my lap, one of my hands on her back to feel her breathing, and I let myself be completely still for the first time in twenty-four hours.The bullet had hit George's left shoulder. Through-and-through, the paramedic had said, which was apparently good, which was apparently the best possible version of someone you loved being shot. It had struck the shoulder joint, missed the subclavian artery by less than two centimeters, and the surgical team was repairing the damage with the brisk efficiency of people who did not believe in dramatic pauses.Silver had been the one to get Germany's gun. Simon's people had held Sharon and Linda Carthage until the police arrived, not the Rodriguez's people, but city police, because I had called 911 from that room and stated the address clearly so there would be a public, untamperable record of what happened there. Germany







