The Four Words That Stopped an Attack Behind a Chicago Restaurant-Tep

Ryan Mercer had Emily Carter by the throat behind Russo’s when the black car turned into the alley.

The rain had already soaked through her work shirt, her apron, and the thin sweater she wore because the restaurant kept the dining room cool for customers in expensive jackets.

It ran down her face in cold lines and made the brick wall behind her feel slick and alive.

Image

For one terrifying second, Emily thought this was where all her careful survival had been leading.

Not to a courtroom.

Not to a hospital hallway.

Not to some clean place where people spoke softly and knew what to do.

To an alley behind the restaurant where she worked double shifts, with leftover bread scattered at her feet and Ryan Mercer’s hand closing around her throat.

“You took him from me,” Ryan said.

His voice was low, almost tender, and that made it worse.

Emily tried to breathe.

Nothing came.

She thought of Ethan.

Eight years old.

Small for his age.

Always carrying the sketchbook with the cracked blue cover because after Maya died, words had become too heavy for him.

Maya had been Emily’s sister, her best friend, and the only person who could still make Emily laugh at a grocery receipt.

Fourteen months earlier, a car accident took Maya away before anyone was ready to lose her.

Ethan survived the crash physically.

The rest of him had been harder to reach.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *