At 1:45 p.m., I stood outside the store, my heart pounding so hard.
At exactly 2 p.m., I saw him, the homeless man wearing the same red sweater. He walked toward me with a small smile that made me uneasy.
His eyes dropped to the bag in my hand. “You bring the money?”
I pulled the top of the bag open just enough for him to see stacks of folded paper inside. It wasn’t cash, but it looked convincing.
He walked toward me.
He nodded quickly. “Good. Let’s go.”
We started walking down the same street he’d taken the day before. The man moved fast.
We turned one corner, then another. The streets grew quieter. Storefronts gave way to brick walls and narrow alleys.
Finally, we reached a bridge that stretched over the highway. Beneath it stood a small cluster of tents, shopping carts, and makeshift shelters.
Several homeless people sat near a fire in a rusted metal drum.
The streets grew quieter.
My guide slowed down.
“Before we go any farther,” he said, “I want my payment.”
I tightened my grip on the bag. “I haven’t seen my daughter.”
He frowned. “We’re almost there.”
“Then you’ll get paid when I see her.”
His expression hardened. “That wasn’t the deal!”
“I need proof,” I said firmly.
Then the man lunged. His hand grabbed for the bag, and the sudden force pulled me forward.
“I want my payment.”
“Hey!” I shouted.
He tried to yank the bag from my hands. “Give it here!”
Before I could react, a large arm shot between us.
It was Ethan who’d followed us as planned.
He shoved the homeless man back hard enough that he stumbled.
“That’s far enough,” my brother said. “You trying to rob my sister?”
The man froze. “I wasn’t robbing anybody!”
“Then start talking,” Ethan said. “Where’s Lily?”
The man glanced between the two of us. His confidence faded quickly.
A large arm shot between us.
“I told her,” he muttered. “She’s here.”
Ethan crossed his arms. “Then show us. Now.”
The man swallowed and turned. “Follow me.”
We walked past the fire and toward a darker corner beneath the bridge.
Then I saw her! She sat on a blanket beside a small pile of bags and blankets. Her hair was longer than I remembered, and her face looked thinner.
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