Juni was placed with an older couple, the Reynolds, who greeted her kindly and gave her a real bed and a warm dinner, yet even with safety around her, she kept asking the same question with the same trembling steadiness.
“How’s Rowan?”
Owen visited as often as he could, because he had seen what it did to children when adults appeared once and then vanished, and Juni watched him with eyes that seemed older than seven.
One evening, while she colored a picture meant for Rowan’s hospital wall, she looked up and spoke like a child who had learned to ask for reassurance before she dared to believe in it.
“Officer Kincaid,” she said, “are you going to leave too?”
Owen felt the question land in his chest like a weight, because he knew it wasn’t only about fathers who walked away or mothers who collapsed into sleep, it was about every door that stayed shut when she needed it open.
He sat across from her, keeping his voice low and sure.
“No,” he said. “I’m here.”
She hesitated, then offered her pinky the way children do when they want words to turn into something binding.
“Promise?”
Owen hooked his finger with hers.
“Promise.”
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