My mother was five minutes from execution when my little brother pointed at the man standing by the door.-luna

Ethan’s finger stayed in the air.

For one impossible second, nobody moved.

The room was full of people trained to control panic, but panic still found its way in.

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A guard stepped between my mother and the door.

The warden raised one hand and said, “Stop the procedure.”

His voice was calm.

His face was not.

My uncle Victor stared at Ethan like my little brother had dragged a body into the room.

“Grace,” Victor said, turning to me. “He’s confused.”

He used the voice he always used after Dad died.

Gentle. Hurt. Reasonable.

The voice that made people trust him.

Ethan backed into Mom’s knees.

My mother could barely touch him with the cuffs on, but she leaned forward anyway, shielding him with her body.

“Ethan,” the warden said carefully. “Tell me exactly what you saw.”

Ethan shook his head.

Victor took another step toward the exit.

The guard shifted with him.

“Sir,” the guard said. “Stay where you are.”

Victor gave a laugh that sounded almost normal.

“This is ridiculous. He was two years old.”

That was true.

That was the reason no one had ever asked Ethan anything that mattered.

The detectives had questioned neighbors, relatives, friends, coworkers.

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