He Thought He Controlled Both Twins Until Police Saw the Urgent-Care Paper-quetran123

The knock hit the door a second time, harder.

Damian Reyes did not move.

His hand stayed in the air between us, fingers curved like he had already decided where they would land. Blue and red light slid across his cheek through the rain-streaked glass. Behind him, Marisol’s wineglass trembled against her bracelet. Bianca’s phone kept buzzing on the table, faceup, lighting her chin from below.

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Sophie made a small sound from the couch.

Not a cry.

Just a sleepy breath catching on the edge of a bad dream.

I kept my eyes on Damian.

“Answer it,” I said.

His lips barely moved. “You have no idea what you just did.”

The third knock came with a voice behind it.

“Cleveland Police. Open the door.”

Marisol snapped out of her chair first. “Nobody opens anything until we call our attorney.”

I picked up the urgent-care discharge paper from beside the cracked mug and held it flat against my chest. The paper was thin, damp at one corner from spilled beer, but the black ink still showed clearly: 7:18 p.m. intake. 7:44 p.m. bruising noted. 8:03 p.m. child services referral pending.

Damian saw where my thumb rested.

The referral number.

That was when his face changed.

Not all at once. First the skin around his mouth loosened. Then his eyes cut toward his mother. Then toward Bianca. Then toward the couch where Sophie was stirring under a thin blanket with her purple rabbit tucked beneath her chin.

“You called them,” he whispered.

I shook my head once.

“Lena did.”

His jaw tightened. “Lena doesn’t do anything unless I let her.”

I smiled without showing my teeth.

“That was your mistake.”

The front lock clicked again, this time from outside. Someone had a key.

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