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Part I — The Ashes of Welcome
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Mahdi touched her hand, just for an instant. The warmth jolted through her more than the chaos outside. “Not when they see us as less than human,” he whispered.
And in that storm, the first kiss came unexpectedly — quick, desperate, as if they both needed proof that tenderness still existed.
When they pulled apart, Isla’s breath shook. For the first time in her career, the line between duty and desire blurred beyond repair.
Back in Sheffield, chants rose beyond the barricades. Fists pounded against plastic shields. Bottles burst. A flare hissed scarlet.
Isla tightened her grip on her baton. She found Mahdi in the stairwell, handing his scarf to a woman with a baby.
“You give away too much,” she said.
He smiled faintly. “And you guard too much.”
Then the glass shattered downstairs. Shouts tore through the lobby. Isla reached for him, half an order, half a plea. “Stay behind me.”
She wanted to answer, but her radio crackled harshly: All units, remain at posts. Secure the premises. Protect property. Maintain calm. Do not escalate.
Not one word about the people inside. Not about the children.
Isla’s jaw tightened.
Mahdi rose, the boy still clutching his sleeve. “Will it be bad tonight?”
“Stay inside,” she said. “Let us deal with it.”
His eyes searched hers. “Do you believe that?”
The answer lodged in her throat. She turned away before he could read it.
Mahdi Abdalla caught her gaze from across the room. He was tall, shoulders bent by journeys no one here wanted to imagine. He sat cross-legged on the floor, showing a boy how to fold paper into a bird. When he looked up, it was not with fear but with quiet defiance.
“You should rest,” Isla said as she crossed to him.
Mahdi shook his head. “Rest is for those who are safe.”
Snow had turned to dirty slush on Sheffield’s pavements. The hotel stood like a fortress, its windows taped from the last protest. Inside, families huddled close, their bags still packed as if ready to flee again.
PC Isla Hartley leaned against the radiator in the lobby, her uniform damp from the cold. She was young enough to still believe in duty, old enough to know that duty rarely believed back
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Very poignant story! Cudos!