The Seven-Year-Old Who Carried Her Brother Into A Police Station-heuh

At 9:46 p.m., the front doors of the small police station in Briar Glen opened with a careful metallic click.

It was not loud, but it cut through everything.

Officer Evan Hollis heard it beneath the strip lights, beneath the rain ticking on the awning, beneath the scratch of Marla Benton’s pen as she worked through the last lines of the evening duty log.

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Briar Glen did not usually turn dangerous all at once.

It wore danger slowly, like damp in an old wall.

Most nights brought little problems to the counter: a missing wallet, a complaint about noise, a neighbour who had moved the bins again, a driver who swore the satnav had lied, a frightened teenager asking whether the last bus had gone.

Evan had learned to listen to all of it properly.

Small troubles were only small until somebody had nowhere else to take them.

That night, the kettle near the back counter had clicked off twice without anyone making fresh tea.

A mug stood beside the duty log, a skin forming across the top.

Marla had taken off one shoe under the desk because her ankle always ached when the weather changed, and Evan had been pretending not to notice because she would have hated him fussing.

Outside, the rain had turned the car park black and shiny.

A car moved past the windows, its tyres whispering over the wet road, then the night settled back around the station.

That was when the door opened.

Evan almost said, “Evening,” before he looked up properly.

The word died before it left him.

A little girl stood just inside the entrance.

She was so small that the lobby swallowed her, all pale tiles and glass panels and noticeboards above her head.

Her hair was brown, tangled, and pasted to both sides of her face.

Rain had darkened the shoulders of her sweatshirt, and the sleeves hung over her hands as if the clothes had belonged to someone older.

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