The neighbor's dog, a mange-ridden beast named Buster, started barking. It was a frantic, terrified sound that cut through the humid West Virginia heat.
Faith crawled to the window, careful to keep her head below the sill. She peeled back a single slat of the yellowed blinds.
Three black SUVs sat on the gravel road like hearses waiting for a funeral. They were massive, pristine, and completely alien against the backdrop of rusting siding and overgrown weeds. The mud on the tires looked like a mistake, a blemish on perfection.
The door of the middle vehicle opened.
A man stepped out. He didn't look at the mud pooling around the sole of his Italian leather shoe. He stood tall, adjusting the cuffs of a charcoal suit that probably cost more than the entire trailer park. He wore sunglasses that hid his eyes, but Faith could feel the weight of his gaze even through the dark lenses.
Julian Sterling.
Her heart hammered against her ribs, a painful, erratic rhythm. He looked like salvation wrapped in a warning label.
The trailer door groaned open behind her. Faith flinched.
"Who the hell is that?" Her stepfather, Ray, stumbled into the small living space. The neck of a whiskey bottle clutched in his hand was the only clean thing about him.
Faith scrambled up, clutching the garbage bag to her chest. "Don't go out there, Ray."
"I'll go where I damn well please. This is my property." Ray pushed past her, kicking the screen door open. It slammed against the metal siding with a gunshot crack.
Faith followed, her bare feet sinking into the damp earth of the front yard.
A large man in a suit-a bodyguard-stepped in front of Julian, his hand hovering near his waist. Julian didn't flinch. He just raised a hand, a small, dismissive gesture that stopped the bodyguard in his tracks.
Julian took off his sunglasses. His eyes were the color of a winter ocean, cold and indifferent. He looked at Ray, then at the trailer, and finally, his gaze landed on Faith.
He didn't smile. He didn't frown. He just assessed her, like an appraiser looking at a house with a cracked foundation.
"Miss Vance?" His voice was a low baritone that seemed to suck the sound out of the air around them.
Faith nodded. Her throat felt like it was filled with sawdust.
"I'm Julian Sterling. Per Arthur Sterling's instructions, I am here to collect you."
Ray took a step forward, swaying slightly. "You ain't collecting nothing unless you got cash."
Julian looked at Ray with an expression of clinical boredom. He didn't snap his fingers for money. Instead, he reached into his inner jacket pocket and withdrew a folded legal document.
"Mr. Vance," Julian said, his voice slicing through the humidity. "This is a sworn affidavit detailing three counts of child endangerment, one count of distribution of controlled substances from this premises, and tax evasion spanning the last decade. I am a Federal Assistant United States Attorney. I don't carry cash for bribes."
Ray froze, his eyes darting between the document and the armed men behind Julian. The whiskey bottle lowered.
"However," Julian continued, signaling his assistant, Liam, who stepped forward with a clipboard and a modest check. "The Sterling Family Trust is willing to provide a relocation stipend to ensure you do not impede Miss Vance's departure. This is a settlement, legally recorded. Sign the release of guardianship and the non-disclosure agreement, and you stay out of federal prison. Refuse, and the DEA raids this tin can in twenty minutes."
Ray looked at the check, then at the legal threat. The fight drained out of him instantly. He snatched the pen, scribbling his name with shaking hands. He didn't look at Faith. He didn't say goodbye. He just grabbed the check and retreated inside the trailer, closing the door on her forever.
Faith felt a cold hollow open up in her stomach. She had been sold, not for cash, but for her stepfather's freedom.
"Let's go," Julian said. He turned toward the car.
Faith hesitated. She looked back at the small window where her little sister, Patty, would be hiding.
"She stays," Julian said, not turning around. He knew exactly where she was looking.
Tears pricked Faith's eyes, hot and stinging. "She's only ten. I can't leave her with him."
"The agreement was for one," Julian said, pausing with his hand on the car door. He glanced back, his expression unreadable. "However, Child Protective Services has already been anonymously tipped off regarding the conditions here. A case worker is ten minutes out. If you take her now, you become a kidnapper in the eyes of the law. If you leave her, the state takes custody. It is the only legal path to safety for her right now."
Faith stared at him. It was cold comfort, but it was a plan. "Get in," Julian said. The interior was cream leather, spotless and inviting.
Faith gripped the neck of her garbage bag tighter. It contained two shirts, a pair of jeans, a photograph of her mother, and a stuffed bear with one eye. It was everything she owned.
She walked toward him, the mud squelching between her toes. She reached for the door handle, but Julian blocked her path.
His eyes dropped to the black plastic bag in her hand.
"Throw it away," he said.
Faith froze. "What?"
"The bag," Julian said, his voice devoid of emotion. "Throw it in the ditch."
"These are my clothes," Faith whispered. "It's all I have."
"Sterling House does not accept refuse," Julian said. He leaned in slightly, and she smelled sandalwood and something sharp, like ozone. "And frankly, that bag is a biohazard. If you want to survive where you are going, you cannot smell like this place. Leave the contamination in the dirt."
Faith looked at the bag. Then she looked at the open door of the car. The air conditioning wafting out felt like a promise of a different world. If she stayed, she would die here, just like her mother. If she left, she had a chance.
Her hand trembled. She loosened her grip.
The bag dropped. It hit the mud with a wet thud, tipping over. The stuffed bear spilled out, face down in a puddle of oil and rainwater.
Faith let out a small, strangled sound.
"Get in," Julian ordered.
She stepped over the bag, over the bear, and climbed into the car. The door slammed shut, sealing her in a vacuum of silence and leather.