Outside the bars, the night was quiet. Inside her head, it was chaos. Ava was dead. Mr. Billy had framed her. And the officer who arrested her happened to be Harris, the same man whose betrayal had sent her fleeing two years ago. The same man who had no idea Cherry existed... or maybe he did.
Was that why he looked at her that way? That flicker of recognition under all the cold procedure?
A lump rose in her throat. No. She had to think.
Suddenly, the door buzzed. Keys jangled. A uniformed guard appeared, followed by a familiar figure in heels and a storm-colored coat.
"Ruby?" Monique breathed.
"Move," Ruby told the guard, stepping into the cell before he could finish unlocking it. "Give us five."
The man raised a brow but left them alone.
Monique stood up, and for the first time in days, allowed herself to sag into the arms of her oldest friend.
"Jesus, Mo," Ruby whispered. "They said you were in custody. I took the first train down."
Monique clung tighter, pressing her face into Ruby's shoulder. Her voice came out cracked and dry. "They think I killed Ava."
Ruby eased back and scanned her with lawyer-sharp eyes. "I know. I pulled the report. But you didn't, right?"
"No," she croaked. "Of course not. I didn't even know she was dead until this arrest. And they....." Her voice broke. "They had pictures. The body. My name written on a mirror in her blood. It's sick, Ruby. It's all sick."
Ruby's jaw tensed. "It's staged. Designed to crush you before you can fight back. And Billy's behind it. I would bet my license on it."
Monique nodded numbly. "But Harris... he...." Her voice trailed off.
Ruby's eyes darkened. "He's leading the case. I saw his name on the file."
"Why?" Monique whispered. "After everything... why him?"
"I don't know," Ruby said, but her tone suggested she had theories. "But listen to me. This isn't over. You have a right to silence. No interviews without me. No statements. I'm working on bail, but this is Eastwood and Billy has claws in deep places. You know that better than anyone."
Monique sat down again, gripping her knees. "He said he would ruin me."
Ruby crouched in front of her. "He tried. But you've got me. And Cherry needs you. So no breaking. We start digging. We prove Ava was already being threatened. We prove you were framed. I'll find someone to investigate Billy's people."
Monique's voice was barely audible. "And Harris?"
Ruby hesitated. "We'll deal with him. One truth at a time."
That same night, Harris stood in front of his mirror, unbuttoning his uniform with robotic movements. The apartment was dark but for the orange glow leaking in from the streetlights outside.
He couldn't stop thinking about her face when he read her the Miranda rights.
Monique.
It had taken everything in him to keep his voice neutral. To not falter when she whispered, "You?" like the word itself had betrayed her.
He hadn't known she was back in town. Hadn't known she had a child.
He sank onto the couch, resting his head in his hands.
Two years ago, everything had shattered in a single week, a criminal informant gone missing, a raid that backfired, and Monique leaving without a word. He had tried to find her, but by the time he connected the dots, she was gone.
Now she was back. And the girl... Cherry. Blue eyes. Just like his mother's.
He pushed the thought away. It didn't matter. Not now.
But it did.
He grabbed his phone and scrolled through Ava Morris's old report. There, buried in the witness list, a handwritten note from a crisis center:
Monique Harris referred Ava for legal aid. Client appeared distressed. Feared someone named "B."
"B." As in Billy.
Had she known Ava personally? Had she been trying to help?
And now she was accused of murder.
A ghost of guilt crept over him.
He had a job to do. But he couldn't stop asking himself: What if she wasn't lying?
The next morning, Ruby stood in the waiting room of Eastwood's municipal court, her phone pressed to her ear.
"$250,000?" she repeated to the bail clerk on the other end. "That's insane. She has no prior offenses. She's a mother with ties to the community."
"She's also accused of a high-profile, violent homicide," came the flat reply.
Ruby hung up and dialed again. She needed help. Someone outside the legal system. Someone who didn't care about rules.
Her fingers hovered, then hit Jace Harris in her contact list.
He picked up after one ring.
"I figured you would call," he said, voice rough.
"We need to talk. And this time, you're going to listen."
In a quiet café two blocks from the courthouse, Ruby sat across from Harris, who looked like he hadn't slept.
"You really believe she did it?" Ruby asked.
"I believe the scene was designed to make us think so," he admitted. "But it's too clean. And Monique's reaction... that wasn't fake."
Ruby arched a brow. "So you're doubting your own arrest?"
"I didn't know she'd be the one in cuffs when I showed up. I thought it was a gang thing. Ava's name only flagged as we approached the scene."
"She was helping Ava. They met at the community center. Ava was being threatened by someone named 'B.'" Ruby leaned in. "We both know who that is."
Harris ran a hand through his hair. "You want me to investigate Billy Pierce. Without a warrant. Off the books."
"I want you to look at what doesn't add up. Monique said she was being followed. Harassed. You think she made that up?"
He hesitated.
Then Ruby pulled out her phone and slid it across the table. A photo of Cherry blinked on the screen.
"Monique's daughter," Ruby said softly. "Her name is Cherry. She's two years old. Do the math."
Harris stared at the photo, his jaw tightening.
"You think she's mine."
"I think you need to ask yourself why Monique ran. And whether you let her go... or pushed her."
Silence settled between them.
Then Ruby stood. "Decide what side of this you're on, Jace. Because if you're not with us, then stay out of our way."