PART 9 – My husband had a vasectomy, and two months later, I got pregnant. He called me unfaithful, left me for another woman… but he didn’t know that the biggest shock was waiting for us during the ultrasound.

PART 9

The countdown continued.
05:58:41
05:58:40
05:58:39
Emily sat inside the yellow nursery with her wrists tied to the arms of a wooden chair.
Behind her, the two empty bassinets waited beneath hand-painted names.
HOPE
FAITH
The room had been prepared for children who would not be born for months.
Tiny blankets had already been folded.
Bottles lined a shelf.
Two identical white dresses hung from hooks on the wall.
Someone had chosen stuffed rabbits, curtains printed with stars, and a rocking chair positioned between the bassinets.
From a distance, it looked loving.
That was what made it monstrous.

 

This was not a nursery.
It was evidence of how long Evelyn had been planning to take my daughters.
Agent Cross pulled the live feed onto a larger monitor.
“Do not touch the link,” he warned. “We are tracing the transmission.”
“I’m not going to close it.”
My voice sounded distant.
I could not stop looking at Emily.
My sister.
The woman who had stood beside me when Derek left.
The woman who slept in my house because I was afraid.

 

The woman who brought groceries, banana bread, and a baseball bat.

The woman who had also helped my husband watch me.

For two years.

Every memory I reached for now had another shadow behind it.

When I cried to her after an argument, had she reported my words to Derek?

When she warned me that he was controlling, had guilt been speaking?

When she found the camera in the smoke detector, had she already known where to look?

Rachel stood near the monitor with her injured arm secured against her chest.

“She admitted helping him buy one camera,” she said quietly. “That does not mean she knew everything.”

“She told him about my father’s trust.”

“She said she thought it would help during the divorce.”

“She gave him the reason to stay.”

My voice cracked.

“If Derek had not known about the trust, he might have left after taking the house.”

Rachel did not answer.

Neither of us knew whether that was true.

Evelyn might have discovered the money another way.

Derek might have hunted until he found it.

But Emily had opened the first door.

And once Derek entered, every locked room in my life became accessible to him.

Agent Cross pointed toward the nursery screen.

“The feed is routed through servers outside the country. We cannot rely on the location data.”

Marcus enlarged the background.

“There has to be something in the room.”

The painted tree.

The stuffed rabbits.

A clock.

A narrow window covered by yellow curtains.

A framed illustration of a woman holding two babies.

Nothing distinctive.

Nothing that gave us a location.

“We should speak to Lucas,” I said.

Cross looked at me.

“He is recovering from major surgery.”

“He spent years with Evelyn.”

“He is also a confessed killer.”

“He may recognize the nursery.”

Lucas had been transferred to a secure medical facility after the cemetery shooting.

He remained under federal guard.

One lung had partially collapsed.

Doctors had warned that stress could kill him.

But Emily’s countdown was moving.

05:53:12

“Call him,” I said.

Cross hesitated.

Then he ordered the connection.

Lucas appeared on a hospital video screen several minutes later.

Oxygen tubes rested beneath his nose.

His skin looked gray.

Bandages covered his upper chest.

A federal agent stood behind him.

Lucas stared at me.

Not warmly.

Not angrily.

As if he still did not know what I was to him.

The wife of his biological father.

The mother of his unborn half-sisters.

The woman who had helped convince him to release Lily.

“Why are you calling?” he asked.

I turned the screen so he could see the nursery.

His expression changed immediately.

“You know it,” I said.

He looked away.

“Lucas.”

“That place is gone.”

“Where is it?”

“It burned.”

“The video is live.”

He continued staring at the wall beside his bed.

“Evelyn said it burned.”

“She lies.”

“I know.”

The words carried the weight of every body she had left behind.

“Then look again.”

He turned slowly.

The moment his eyes settled on the painted tree, his breathing quickened.

The monitor beside him began beeping faster.

“Where is it?” Agent Cross asked.

Lucas did not respond.

“An eleven-year-old girl is safe because you eventually made the right choice,” I said. “My sister may not have that much time.”

His mouth tightened.

“She helped Derek.”

“So did Jessica.”

“So did Thomas.”

“So did Barnes.”

“So did you.”

The words were cruel.

They were also true.

Lucas’s gaze hardened.

I continued before he could disconnect.

“Emily betrayed me. That does not give Evelyn permission to kill her.”

Something in his face shifted.

Evelyn had taught him that mistakes erased personhood.

One failure.

One betrayal.

One weakness.

And a person became disposable.

I would not repeat that lesson.

“Where is the nursery?” I asked again.

Lucas studied the image.

“The tree had lights.”

“What?”

“The painted tree. Small bulbs were fitted inside the stars.”

Marcus zoomed in.

Tiny holes marked several painted stars.

Lucas continued.

“It was a maternity home before Evelyn used it.”

“Name?”

“She called it Haven.”

“That is not enough.”

“There was a chapel attached.”

Marcus glanced at the cemetery maps.

“What kind of chapel?”

“Catholic. Small. Red brick. The basement connected to an old medical wing.”

Grace had been detained in a separate federal facility.

Agent Cross ordered another team to question her immediately.

Lucas’s eyes moved toward the framed illustration behind Emily.

He froze.

“That picture.”

“What about it?”

“It was in my room.”

“When you were a child?”

“Yes.”

The framed woman held two babies wrapped in blue blankets.

Beneath them, barely visible, were painted words.

Marcus enhanced the image.

The writing sharpened slowly.

ST. AGATHA’S HOME FOR MOTHERS AND INFANTS

Agent Cross’s team began searching.

The original institution had closed thirty-four years earlier.

Its public records said the buildings were demolished after a fire.

But satellite maps showed a large private residence on the former property.

The owner was a charitable foundation.

The same foundation that had paid Thomas Bell.

“We found it,” Cross said.

My pulse jumped.

“Where?”

“Forty-two miles northwest.”

The countdown showed:

05:41:06

“We go now.”

Cross shook his head.

“You stay.”

“Derek expects me.”

“He expects control.”

“He said the twins will be delivered at a hospital of his choosing.”

“You are twelve weeks pregnant. He cannot deliver them tonight.”

“No. But he can take me.”

The countdown message promised that two daughters would lose their mother.

Derek’s goal was not to take Hope and Faith immediately.

His goal was to remove me from everyone protecting them.

To isolate me until they were born.

Just as Evelyn had isolated Caroline.

Just as she had hidden Lauren.

Just as she had planned to hide one of my twins beneath a false identity.

Agent Cross turned toward the hospital doctors.

“Mrs. Collins is not leaving this building.”

I stared at him.

“You used me at the cemetery.”

“You were inside a protected command vehicle.”

“And Rachel was shot.”

His jaw tightened.

“That is exactly why you are staying here.”

“The plan failed because Evelyn knew where we were.”

“The plan saved Lily.”

“And nearly killed three people.”

“Sarah,” Rachel said.

I turned toward her.

“We need you alive,” she continued. “Derek needs you frightened. Do not give him what he wants.”

“I can help.”

“You can help from here.”

My hands curled against the blanket.

Everyone was right.

That did not make staying behind easier.

I looked back at Lucas.

“Is there another entrance?”

He nodded slowly.

“The chapel sacristy has a stairwell. The main nursery is belowground.”

“Any tunnels?”

“One leads toward an old ambulance garage.”

“Where does it exit?”

“Behind a stone wall near the woods.”

Marcus wrote everything down.

Lucas’s oxygen alarm sounded.

The agent behind him called for a nurse.

Before the connection ended, Lucas said my name.

“Sarah.”

“Yes?”

“Evelyn kept three rooms.”

“Three?”

“The nursery.”

His breathing became labored.

“The punishment room.”

A cold sensation moved across my skin.

“And the third?”

He looked toward the live image of Emily.

“The recording room.”

The call disconnected.


Federal teams surrounded the former St. Agatha’s property before sunset.

They remained beyond visual range.

Drones scanned the roof.

Thermal cameras identified at least five people inside.

One in the nursery.

Two moving through the main building.

One near the chapel.

One belowground in a space the architectural plans did not show.

Derek.

Evelyn.

Barnes.

Emily.

And possibly someone else.

The fifth person could have been Grace’s contact.

A medical worker.

A guard.

Or another hostage.

The live video remained active.

Emily had stopped crying.

She sat very still, staring toward the camera.

The countdown continued.

04:32:19

Derek entered the frame.

He had changed clothes.

No prison uniform.

No handcuffs.

He wore dark trousers and a white shirt with the sleeves rolled to his elbows.

The same way he dressed when working from home.

The familiar sight made my stomach turn.

A pistol rested against his waistband.

He stood behind Emily.

“Your sister is watching,” he said.

Emily looked directly into the camera.

“Sarah.”

I moved closer to the monitor even though she could not see me.

Derek placed one hand on her shoulder.

She flinched.

“You told her everything?” he asked.

“Yes.”

“Not everything.”

Emily’s face tightened.

“What else is there?”

“You did not tell her why you came back into her life after five months apart.”

My heart stopped.

Emily looked toward the floor.

Derek smiled.

“Tell her.”

“I came because I was worried.”

“That is what you told yourself.”

“Shut up.”

“You contacted me first.”

Emily’s eyes closed.

I pressed one hand against my chest.

Derek continued.

“You asked whether I was leaving Sarah.”

“I knew about Jessica.”

“You suspected.”

“I saw your car outside her apartment.”

“And instead of telling Sarah?”

Emily said nothing.

“You called me.”

“I wanted to know what you were planning.”

“You wanted your money.”

Emily’s head snapped up.

“You promised to erase the debt.”

“I did erase it.”

“With Sarah’s money.”

Silence.

Emily’s face collapsed.

I stared at the screen.

Derek had paid her debt using our marital funds.

The money he later accused me of trying to steal.

“You told me it came from a business account,” Emily whispered.

“It did.”

“Sarah’s father’s money?”

“Eventually.”

“You said it was yours.”

“Marriage made it mine.”

“No,” I whispered.

My voice could not reach him.

Not yet.

Derek leaned toward the camera.

“Sarah, your sister did not merely give me information. She accepted payment.”

Rachel placed a hand over mine.

I pulled away.

I needed the pain.

I needed to feel every piece of the truth without anyone softening it.

Emily looked directly into the lens.

“I did.”

Her voice shook.

“I accepted money.”

My throat burned.

“For ninety thousand dollars?” Derek asked.

“Yes.”

“To help document Sarah’s emotional instability?”

“You said it was for the divorce.”

“To tell me when she spoke to attorneys?”

“Yes.”

“To tell me when she discovered the trust?”

Emily began crying again.

“Yes.”

“To convince her not to contact your father’s old friends?”

“Yes.”

Each answer stripped another memory from me.

Emily had not simply made one desperate mistake.

She had made a series of choices.

Phone calls.

Messages.

Payments.

Silences.

The betrayal had lasted long enough to become a routine.

Derek looked pleased.

He believed the confession was destroying me.

Perhaps it was.

But not in the way he expected.

The woman I had believed Emily to be was dying.

A different woman remained.

Flawed.

Ashamed.

Terrified.

Still my sister.

But no longer protected by innocence.

Derek tilted Emily’s chin toward the camera.

“Tell Sarah the rest.”

She stared at him.

“No.”

“You know what happens if you refuse.”

“You will kill me either way.”

His smile faded.

“You always were more intelligent than she was.”

Emily spat in his face.

Derek struck her.

The sound cracked through the nursery.

I screamed.

Agent Cross grabbed my shoulders as if I might somehow enter the screen.

Derek wiped his cheek.

Then he pulled Emily’s chair backward and disappeared from the camera.

For several seconds, only the empty bassinets remained.

Then Emily was pushed back into view.

Blood touched the corner of her mouth.

“Tell her,” Derek said.

Emily looked into the camera.

“I found the original recording device three months before Sarah became pregnant.”

I froze.

“The one in the smoke detector?” Derek asked.

“Yes.”

“And what did you do?”

“I installed a second transmitter.”

Agent Cross moved closer to the screen.

Marcus looked toward him.

Emily continued.

“I copied everything Derek recorded into a private account.”

Derek’s expression changed.

“That was deleted.”

“No.”

He grabbed her hair.

“Where is it?”

“You never found it.”

“Where?”

Emily smiled through the blood.

“Somewhere Sarah can reach.”

My mind raced.

A private account.

A transmitter.

Something I could reach.

Derek shook her.

“Tell me.”

She looked at the camera again.

“The banana bread recipe.”

For one strange moment, I thought fear had confused her.

Then I remembered the afternoon she arrived at my house.

Suitcase.

Groceries.

Baseball bat.

Banana bread.

She had placed the recipe card inside my kitchen drawer.

A handwritten card I had carried with me when federal agents evacuated the house because it had belonged to our mother.

Except it had not belonged to our mother.

Emily had written it.

I turned toward Marcus.

“My personal belongings.”

The military hospital had stored everything from my transfer inside a sealed evidence locker.

“The recipe card,” I said. “Get it.”

Marcus ran.

On-screen, Derek struck Emily again.

“The account password,” he demanded.

She laughed weakly.

“You taught me never to trust one password.”

Derek’s face twisted.

He dragged her chair closer to the camera.

“Sarah, your sister believes one heroic act erases two years of betrayal.”

“No,” I whispered.

It did not.

Nothing would erase it.

But her betrayal did not erase the evidence she preserved either.

People were not one choice.

That had been Evelyn’s lie.

One mistake made you worthless.

One act of rescue made you innocent.

The truth was harder.

Emily had harmed me.

Emily had also begun collecting the proof that might finally end Derek.

Both could be true.

Marcus returned carrying a sealed plastic bag.

Inside was the recipe card.

The front contained ingredients.

Flour.

Sugar.

Butter.

Bananas.

On the back, beneath a grease stain, were twelve handwritten numbers.

Agent Cross read them.

“Recovery key.”

A technician entered them into an encrypted-storage service.

The account opened.

Thousands of files appeared.

Audio.

Video.

Messages.

Bank transfers.

Derek speaking with Evelyn.

Derek speaking with Barnes.

Derek rehearsing the false accusations he planned to make after my pregnancy.

Derek instructing Jessica to attend the coffee-shop meeting.

Derek asking Emily for updates about my mental state.

And one folder labeled:

ST. AGATHA

Cross opened it.

The first recording showed Evelyn inside the yellow nursery nearly seven months earlier.

Before my pregnancy.

She stood between the two empty bassinets.

Derek entered.

“You had the names painted already?” he asked.

“Names can be changed.”

“You assume there will be girls.”

“Sex is irrelevant.”

Derek touched one bassinet.

“What if Sarah never gets pregnant?”

“She will.”

“How can you know?”

Evelyn looked toward someone outside the frame.

A woman wearing medical scrubs entered.

She carried a small cooler.

Dr. Evans’s former clinic logo appeared on the side.

Not Dr. Evans herself.

Another employee.

The woman placed the cooler on a table.

Inside were medication vials.

Derek frowned.

“What is that?”

“Fertility support.”

“Sarah is not undergoing treatment anymore.”

“She does not need to know.”

My blood turned cold.

I remembered the months before the pregnancy.

Headaches.

Hot flashes.

Unusual cramping.

Derek insisting I take new “vitamins” from a bottle he kept beside the coffee maker.

He said they would improve my energy.

I had trusted him.

The video continued.

“You cannot make someone pregnant with vitamins,” Derek said.

Evelyn smiled.

“No. But you can increase the likelihood of ovulation.”

My hands moved over Hope and Faith.

Twins.

Not a miracle Derek had failed to prevent.

A pregnancy Evelyn had increased the chances of creating.

“You drugged me,” I whispered.

Rachel’s face filled with horror.

On-screen, Derek looked uncertain.

“This was not the agreement.”

“The agreement was to create circumstances Sarah could not explain.”

“You wanted her pregnant?”

“I wanted evidence of infidelity.”

“What if the child was mine?”

“You had not completed the vasectomy.”

“I did not have the vasectomy.”

“Exactly.”

Derek stared at her.

“You planned for me to father the child.”

“I planned for uncertainty.”

The recording continued.

Evelyn instructed the clinic employee to replace supplements in my kitchen with low-dose fertility medication.

Not enough to guarantee conception.

Enough to increase the chance of releasing multiple eggs.

Enough to create twins.

Enough to generate chaos when I became pregnant after Derek’s fake procedure.

Hope and Faith moved beneath my hands.

Their lives had been manipulated before they began.

But they were not mistakes.

They were not evidence.

They were mine.

No matter what chemicals Evelyn used.

No matter what purpose she assigned them.

They had become themselves the moment their hearts started beating.

Agent Cross paused the recording.

“We have enough for additional charges.”

“Not enough to find the room,” I said.

The account contained more than five thousand files.

The technician searched for building plans.

Emily had copied footage from the nursery cameras, but not the full security system.

Then Marcus noticed a repeated sound in several recordings.

Three bells.

A pause.

One bell.

“Church clock,” he said.

The chapel beside St. Agatha’s was supposedly abandoned.

But the bells were automated.

Their pattern identified which side of the property the nursery occupied.

Agent Cross sent the coordinates to the tactical team.

The countdown read:

03:46:11

They could enter now.

But Cross hesitated.

“Five heat signatures. We still do not know who the fifth person is.”

“Emily said one sister tells the truth,” Rachel said. “Maybe she is not the only hostage.”

I studied the live feed.

The yellow curtains moved slightly.

Not from wind.

From air pressure.

A ventilation system.

Behind the sound of Emily’s breathing, I heard something faint.

A baby crying.

I leaned toward the speaker.

“Turn it up.”

The technicians isolated the background noise.

There it was again.

A child’s cry.

Very young.

Not Lily.

An infant.

Everyone in the room became still.

“Who has a baby?” I asked.

Rachel looked toward Caroline.

Caroline’s face tightened.

“Evelyn may have taken another child from the archive.”

“Why?”

“To force someone else to cooperate.”

Or the infant was one of the children already stolen through her identity network.

A living secret kept inside St. Agatha’s.

The nursery had two bassinets labeled for my twins.

But perhaps someone else was already sleeping in a third room.

Agent Cross ordered the tactical teams to prepare for multiple hostages.

Then the live feed changed.

Evelyn entered.

She wore a dark suit.

Her gray hair was pulled neatly behind her head.

She looked composed despite being one of the most wanted women in the country.

Derek stood behind Emily.

Barnes entered moments later.

His left arm was bandaged.

The old detective appeared weaker than before, but he still carried a gun.

Evelyn looked toward the camera.

“Sarah.”

This time, a speaker inside my hospital room activated automatically.

The stream had become two-way.

Agent Cross motioned for everyone to remain silent.

Evelyn smiled.

“I know you found Emily’s archive.”

Emily’s face changed.

Derek grabbed her shoulder.

“You said the account was hidden.”

“It was,” Emily replied.

Evelyn shook her head.

“No account is hidden from someone who helped build the system.”

She had known.

Maybe she allowed us to find it.

Maybe the confession was another performance.

“You drugged me,” I said.

Evelyn’s smile widened.

“You are welcome.”

“You endangered my life.”

“I gave you what you wanted.”

“Children are not gifts when the purpose is control.”

“You had failed to conceive for years.”

“You do not get to claim credit for my daughters.”

“Hope and Faith exist because I created the opportunity.”

“No. They exist despite you.”

The smile disappeared.

Derek stepped into view.

“Enough.”

Evelyn turned toward him.

“You do not give instructions here.”

“They are my children.”

“Temporarily.”

The word changed the room.

Derek stared at her.

“What does that mean?”

Evelyn looked almost amused.

“You believed I built this nursery for you?”

Derek’s hand moved toward his weapon.

“You said we would raise them.”

“I said the family would raise them.”

“I am the family.”

“No. You are a bridge.”

Barnes looked toward Evelyn.

“Do not do this now.”

“Be quiet.”

Derek’s face hardened.

“A bridge to what?”

“The next generation.”

“My daughters.”

“Your daughters are useful because Sarah carries Michael’s blood and you carry mine.”

Barnes flinched.

Derek turned toward him.

“Yours.”

The biological truth had already been revealed, but hearing Evelyn say it transformed something in Derek.

He looked at Barnes not as a fact on paper, but as a man standing in the same room.

His father.

The corrupt officer who had watched his entire childhood from a distance.

“You knew,” Derek said.

Barnes lowered his eyes.

“Yes.”

“And you let her tell me Michael was my father.”

“It kept you safe.”

Derek laughed.

A hollow, disbelieving sound.

“Safe?”

Barnes stepped closer.

“Your mother had enemies.”

“My mother created enemies.”

“Derek—”

“You watched her raise me to hate a dead man.”

“I did not know everything she told you.”

“You falsified the birth certificate.”

Barnes said nothing.

Derek’s voice rose.

“You buried Rachel’s report. You helped with Amanda. You came to Sarah’s house.”

“I protected you.”

The same poison.

The same phrase.

Derek pulled the gun from his waistband.

Emily gasped.

Barnes raised his own weapon.

Evelyn did not move.

“Put it down,” Barnes said.

Derek aimed at him.

“You are my father.”

“Yes.”

“And you still chose her.”

Barnes’s hand trembled.

“She had evidence.”

“She always has evidence.”

“I was young.”

“You stayed young for thirty years?”

The question cut deeper than Derek knew.

It applied to all of them.

Barnes.

Thomas.

Emily.

Derek.

Every adult who claimed one fearful decision had trapped them forever.

Evelyn stepped between the guns.

“Both of you are embarrassing yourselves.”

Derek turned toward her.

“What does ‘temporarily’ mean?”

Evelyn glanced toward the bassinets.

“You were never going to raise both.”

The air left my lungs.

Derek’s face emptied.

“You told me—”

“One child remains visible. One child is transferred.”

“Transferred where?”

“To a family capable of protecting the Price bloodline.”

“These are my daughters.”

“You thought the same thing about Lily.”

Derek flinched.

Evelyn continued.

“And where was she while you built your career? Raised by strangers.”

“I did not know she existed.”

“You did not need to.”

Derek’s gun lowered slightly.

He looked at the bassinets.

At the names.

Hope.

Faith.

For the first time, perhaps he understood that Evelyn intended to do to him exactly what she had done to every other parent.

Take the child.

Change the record.

Call theft protection.

Evelyn looked toward the camera.

“At midnight, Sarah will sign a voluntary medical guardianship agreement. She will be transferred here under psychiatric observation.”

“No,” I said.

“She will remain until the babies are born.”

“You will be dead before then.”

“Perhaps.”

Her calmness frightened me.

“But systems survive people.”

She looked toward Emily.

“Your sister has already prepared the statement declaring you unstable.”

Emily shook her head.

“I will never read it.”

“You already signed it.”

Derek looked at her.

“What?”

Evelyn removed a document from a folder.

Emily’s signature appeared at the bottom.

“She signed several blank pages in exchange for her debt payment.”

Emily stared at the paper.

“You said those were confidentiality forms.”

“They were whatever I needed them to become.”

Emily closed her eyes.

Derek looked from Evelyn to Barnes.

Then toward the camera.

For the first time, I saw the full truth reach him.

He had believed he was different.

The chosen son.

The man who understood the plan.

But Evelyn had treated him exactly as he treated everyone else.

Useful while obedient.

Disposable when dangerous.

“Mother,” he said slowly, “what happens to me after the babies are born?”

Evelyn did not answer.

Barnes looked away.

Derek noticed.

“What happens?”

“Do not become dramatic.”

“What happens to me?”

“The kidnapping charges make your long-term involvement impractical.”

“Involvement?”

“You will accept responsibility.”

His face changed.

“For everything?”

“You are the husband. The father. The financial beneficiary. The evidence already points toward you.”

Barnes closed his eyes.

Derek turned toward him.

“You agreed to this?”

Barnes said nothing.

“You were going to blame me?”

Evelyn sighed.

“You always needed recognition. Now you will have more than enough.”

Derek’s hand tightened around the gun.

Emily looked toward the camera.

Her eyes moved subtly toward the yellow curtains.

Once.

Twice.

Then toward the clock.

A signal.

Marcus noticed.

“What is she doing?”

The clock showed 8:16.

But the countdown indicated only three hours and twenty minutes remained before midnight.

The clock was wrong.

Or it showed a different time zone.

Emily looked toward it again.

Then mouthed a word.

Behind.

Behind the clock.

A camera.

A door.

Or someone.

Agent Cross relayed the information to the tactical team.

Thermal imaging identified a narrow unoccupied corridor behind the nursery wall.

A hidden observation passage.

The perfect place for agents to approach without entering through the main door.

Cross raised his hand.

The team moved.

On-screen, Derek turned his weapon toward Evelyn.

“I am not taking the blame.”

She smiled.

“You already have.”

The nursery lights went out.

The live feed switched to infrared.

Emily screamed.

Gunfire erupted.

Federal agents breached the observation wall.

The camera shook violently.

Derek disappeared from view.

Barnes fired toward the opening.

Agents returned fire.

Evelyn pulled Emily’s chair backward.

The stream filled with smoke.

“Hostage moving!”

“Left corridor!”

“Barnes armed!”

“Derek armed!”

I gripped the edge of my bed.

The fetal monitor alarms increased.

“Sarah, breathe,” the nurse ordered.

I could not.

The camera tilted.

For one second, I saw Barnes on the floor.

Blood spread beneath his chest.

Derek stood over him holding the gun.

His face showed shock.

He had shot his own father.

Or an agent had.

The image shifted too quickly to tell.

Evelyn dragged Emily through a concealed doorway.

Agents followed.

Derek looked toward the camera.

Toward me.

Then he ran after them.

Not away from law enforcement.

Toward my sister.

Toward his mother.

Toward the nursery he had believed belonged to him.

The live feed cut out.

The screen went black.


The next four minutes were the longest of my life.

No video.

No clear radio communication.

Only broken voices from the tactical channel.

“Lower corridor.”

“Medical room clear.”

“Infant located.”

“Suspect moving east.”

“Hostage not visible.”

“Officer down.”

“Repeat, officer down.”

I stared at the black monitor.

Hope’s heart rate raced.

Faith’s became irregular.

The nurse adjusted my position.

“Sarah, focus on me.”

“My sister is in there.”

“Your babies are here.”

“I cannot choose.”

“You are not choosing. The agents are rescuing Emily. I am protecting Hope and Faith. Your job is to breathe.”

I obeyed because there was nothing else I could do.

In.

Out.

In.

Out.

Agent Cross pressed a hand against his earpiece.

“What?”

He looked toward me.

“They found the infant.”

“Who is it?”

“Newborn girl. Approximately three weeks old.”

“Identity?”

“Unknown.”

“Emily?”

“Not yet.”

The radio crackled.

“Hostage sighted in chapel tunnel.”

Gunfire sounded through the transmission.

Then Derek’s voice came across an open channel.

“Stop shooting! I have her!”

I moved closer.

The tactical microphone transmitted from the chapel.

Derek had Emily.

Evelyn stood somewhere nearby.

An agent shouted, “Drop the weapon!”

Derek answered, “She is not my hostage.”

Emily’s voice came faintly.

“Then untie me.”

“Be quiet.”

“You said she is not your hostage,” an agent replied. “Let her walk.”

“I want Sarah.”

“No.”

“I speak to Sarah or Evelyn leaves with the baby.”

My body went cold.

The newborn.

Evelyn had taken the infant.

Agent Cross looked at me.

I nodded.

He connected me to the tactical channel.

“Derek.”

Silence.

Then:

“Sarah.”

“Release Emily.”

“Tell them to let me leave.”

“No.”

“They will kill me.”

“You should have considered that before kidnapping my sister.”

“I did not kidnap her.”

“You escaped custody with Barnes.”

“My mother arranged it.”

“You still came.”

“She said we could fix everything.”

“You mean control everything.”

A pause.

Then Derek whispered, “She was going to take one of the twins.”

“I know.”

“She lied to me.”

“She always lied to you.”

“I thought I understood her.”

“You understood her perfectly. You simply believed her cruelty would always be aimed at someone else.”

His breathing changed.

Emily made a soft sound.

I continued.

“You knew she destroyed Rachel. You still married me.”

“She told me Rachel had stolen from us.”

“You knew she planned to call me unstable.”

“You refused to sign.”

“You knew she drugged me.”

“I learned that later.”

“You continued anyway.”

“I wanted my children.”

“You wanted control of them.”

“No.”

“Yes.”

The word echoed through the chapel channel.

“You did not call them children until you learned what they were worth.”

“I changed.”

“You changed targets.”

“Sarah—”

“Release Emily.”

“If I do, I have nothing.”

The honesty stunned me.

Nothing.

Without a hostage, Derek believed he had no value.

Evelyn had taught him that power required ownership of another person.

“You have the truth,” I said.

He laughed bitterly.

“The truth sends me to prison.”

“Yes.”

“You expect me to surrender?”

“I expect you to decide whether Hope and Faith will one day learn that their father died helping Evelyn steal another baby.”

Silence.

“You will tell them about me?”

“I will tell them everything.”

“No.”

“I will tell them you lied. You cheated. You helped kidnap me. You tried to take them.”

“Stop.”

“I will tell them your mother manipulated you.”

“Stop.”

“And I will tell them whether, at the final moment, you chose to remain her weapon.”

Derek’s breathing became ragged.

Emily whispered, “Let me go.”

He did not answer.

Then Evelyn’s voice came from farther inside the tunnel.

“You weak, disappointing fool.”

A baby cried.

The newborn.

Evelyn continued.

“Bring Emily. We are leaving.”

Derek said, “Where?”

“The lower garage.”

“You said there was no lower garage.”

“I said you did not need to know.”

“You planned an exit without me.”

“You have become difficult.”

Derek began laughing.

The sound frightened me.

“You were leaving me.”

“I was preserving the family.”

“Which family?”

“The one capable of surviving.”

“And I am not?”

“You were never capable of anything without me.”

The words landed in the silence.

Then Emily cried out.

Metal struck stone.

An agent shouted.

A gunshot exploded through the channel.

I screamed Derek’s name without knowing why.

Another shot.

Then the baby’s cries became louder.

A woman shouted.

Footsteps.

An agent’s voice:

“Hostage secured!”

“Which hostage?” I demanded.

No answer.

“Agent Cross!”

He held up one hand, listening.

Then relief entered his face.

“Emily is alive.”

My body nearly collapsed.

“And the infant?”

“Recovered.”

“Evelyn?”

Cross’s expression changed.

“Missing.”

“Derek?”

A long pause.

“Wounded.”

“How badly?”

“We do not know.”

Barnes was dead.

The tactical team confirmed it minutes later.

One bullet had entered his chest.

The weapon recovered nearby belonged to Derek.

Whether Derek intended to kill him or fired in panic would be investigated.

Emily had been found in the tunnel with a gunshot wound to her thigh.

The bullet had passed through without striking bone.

Derek had been shot in the abdomen.

He remained conscious when agents reached him.

Evelyn had escaped through the lower garage using an old medical vehicle.

But she had been forced to leave the infant behind.

Again.

She escaped without the child she had intended to rename.


I saw Emily through video from the ambulance.

Her face was pale.

An oxygen mask covered her mouth.

She lifted one hand when she saw me.

I did not know what to say.

I loved her.

I hated what she had done.

I wanted to hold her.

I wanted to demand every detail.

All of those feelings existed together.

She removed the mask.

“I’m sorry.”

“Save your strength.”

“I need you to know.”

“I know enough for tonight.”

“No.”

Her eyes filled with tears.

“I did not know he drugged you.”

“I believe you.”

“I did not know about the babies.”

“I believe you.”

“I helped him.”

“Yes.”

The word hurt both of us.

She nodded.

“Yes.”

“I cannot forgive you because you were shot.”

“I know.”

“I cannot pretend the archive erases the money or the lies.”

“I know.”

“But you saved the recordings.”

“I should have gone to you sooner.”

“Yes.”

“I was afraid you would hate me.”

“I do not hate you.”

She began crying.

“I do not trust you either,” I continued.

Her face crumpled.

“But you are my sister. Both things are true.”

The paramedic told her to replace the mask.

Before the screen disconnected, Emily whispered, “The baby.”

“What about her?”

“She belongs to someone in the archive.”

“Who?”

“I heard Evelyn call her Rose.”

The feed ended.

Rose.

A three-week-old infant with no confirmed identity.

Another child caught between a stolen name and a prepared future.

Federal agents transported her to a secure pediatric hospital.

DNA samples were collected.

Every missing-infant report from the previous six months was reviewed.

Grace was questioned.

Lucas was questioned.

Caroline was questioned.

No one recognized the name Rose.

Then a photograph from Emily’s archive changed everything.

It showed Evelyn inside St. Agatha’s three weeks earlier.

She stood beside a hospital bed.

A young woman lay unconscious.

The newborn rested in Evelyn’s arms.

The young woman’s face was partly hidden.

But I recognized her.

Jessica.


Jessica had disappeared from protective supervision twelve days earlier.

Investigators believed she had fled because she feared prosecution.

Her attorney claimed she was safe but refused to provide a location.

Now we knew she had been taken—or had gone willingly—to St. Agatha’s.

The photograph showed her immediately after giving birth.

But that made no sense.

When Jessica came to my hospital room in a wheelchair, she did not look pregnant.

She had been bruised.

Injured.

But no one had mentioned pregnancy.

The dates did not fit.

The newborn was three weeks old.

Jessica had visited me only days earlier.

Unless the photograph’s timestamp was false.

Or the infant had not just been born.

Agent Cross opened more files from the St. Agatha folder.

One showed Jessica entering the building months earlier.

Another showed Derek beside her.

A third showed Evelyn holding a medical consent form.

The document title was visible.

GESTATIONAL TRANSFER AUTHORIZATION

My mouth became dry.

“What is that?”

No one answered immediately.

Mia enlarged the image.

“It appears to be related to fertility treatment.”

I thought of the medication hidden in my supplements.

The cooler from Dr. Evans’s former clinic.

The years Derek and I had tried to conceive.

Then I remembered something I had not thought about in a long time.

Three years earlier, we had visited a fertility specialist.

Only once.

Derek said the consultation was too expensive.

The doctor collected blood.

Performed scans.

Discussed egg retrieval.

But we never continued.

At least, I believed we had not continued.

“What did they do with my samples?” I whispered.

Agent Cross searched the archived footage.

A folder appeared under my maiden name.

MILLER, SARAH — REPRODUCTIVE MATERIAL

Inside were consent forms.

My signature had been copied from old medical records.

Egg retrieval authorizations.

Embryo-storage agreements.

Genetic reports.

I had never seen any of them.

Mia read quickly.

“According to these documents, reproductive tissue was collected during a procedure listed as diagnostic laparoscopy.”

I remembered the procedure.

Three years earlier.

Derek said doctors were checking for endometriosis.

I had been under anesthesia.

I had woken with pain and bandages.

The clinic closed six months later.

“They took my eggs,” I said.

No one denied it.

The records showed fourteen eggs.

Nine successfully fertilized.

Derek’s genetic material.

My eggs.

Nine embryos.

Derek had told me we had never reached that stage.

The truth was that an entire future had been created without my consent.

“Where are they?” I asked.

Mia continued reading.

“Two were marked nonviable.”

“Seven?”

“Three listed as destroyed.”

“And the others?”

Her face changed.

“Four transferred.”

My heart stopped.

“Transferred to whom?”

The screen listed identification codes instead of names.

One had been transferred approximately fourteen months earlier.

One nine months earlier.

One five months earlier.

And one sixteen weeks earlier.

“Four women?” Rachel asked.

“Possibly.”

“Successful pregnancies?”

The records contained outcome codes.

The first failed.

The second was listed as an early loss.

The third produced a live birth.

Rose.

The fourth showed an active pregnancy.

I stared at the screen.

“Someone else is carrying my baby.”

No one moved.

Hope and Faith shifted faintly beneath my hands.

I was pregnant with Derek’s twins.

And somewhere outside the hospital, another woman carried a child created from my stolen eggs.

A child who was biologically mine.

“Identity?” Agent Cross demanded.

The fourth carrier file was encrypted.

Technicians began breaking through it.

The third carrier—the woman connected to Rose—was listed only by initials.

J.H.

Jessica Hart.

Jessica had carried my child.

But the photograph of her on the hospital bed could not have been taken three weeks earlier if she had appeared physically normal days ago.

Unless Rose’s birth occurred earlier and the date had been altered.

Or the image had been staged.

A second medical report appeared.

Delivery date: seven months earlier.

Rose was not three weeks old.

She was seven months old.

Evelyn had falsified her pediatric records to make her appear younger.

The infant recovered at St. Agatha’s was small because she had been born prematurely.

Jessica had carried her before the affair became public.

Before I became pregnant.

While smiling at me across dinner tables.

While texting me for recipes.

While telling me Derek and I had a beautiful marriage.

Jessica had been pregnant with my biological daughter.

And I had never noticed.

“How?” I whispered.

Mia studied the record.

“Loose clothing. Remote work. A private medical facility. It would have been possible to conceal.”

Jessica had stroked her flat stomach at the coffee shop.

The gesture returned to me.

Not smugness alone.

Memory.

She had already given birth.

She had sat across from the biological mother of the child she carried and said signing away my home was the healthiest thing for everyone.

I felt sick.

“Did she know the embryo was mine?”

The records included a video.

Evelyn sat beside Jessica in a consultation room.

Derek stood near the door.

Jessica looked nervous.

“I want confirmation,” she said. “This child is mine and Derek’s?”

Evelyn answered.

“Yes.”

Derek did not speak.

Jessica had believed the embryo came from her own egg.

She had agreed to carry Derek’s child secretly.

She had not known she was carrying mine.

Evelyn lied to her too.

After the birth, she took Rose.

She told Jessica the baby had died.

The same lie.

Again.

One mother drugged.

One baby declared dead.

One child reassigned.

The cycle never changed.

Only the women did.

Rachel covered her mouth.

“Does Jessica know Rose is alive?”

“No,” I whispered.

Not yet.

Agent Cross received a call.

He listened without speaking.

Then he looked at me.

“Jessica has been found.”

“Where?”

“At a motel outside Richmond.”

“Is she safe?”

“She contacted federal authorities after seeing the St. Agatha raid on the news.”

“Does she know about the baby?”

“Not yet.”

“Tell her.”

“Sarah—”

“Tell her Rose is alive.”

“The infant’s identity must be confirmed.”

“She deserves to know there is a possibility.”

Mia touched my arm.

“You also deserve time before deciding what relationship you want with this child.”

Relationship.

The word split me open.

Rose was biologically mine.

Jessica had carried her.

Neither of us had consented to the truth.

Who was her mother?

The woman whose egg created her?

The woman whose body grew her?

The woman who had fed and held her during the first hidden months?

Had Evelyn cared for her?

Had someone else?

Rose had three weeks—or seven months—of records that could not be trusted.

She had no reliable history.

No legal identity untouched by fraud.

But she was alive.

That came first.

“I want to see her,” I said.


Rose was transported to the same military hospital.

I watched from behind glass while pediatric specialists examined her.

She was tiny.

Dark hair.

Wide brown eyes.

A faint birthmark near her left ear.

When a nurse lifted her, she looked around the room without crying.

Alert.

Careful.

As if she had already learned that noise brought unfamiliar hands.

My body reacted before my mind could.

A deep ache entered my chest.

I wanted to hold her.

I wanted to protect her.

I also felt guilty for wanting something Jessica might feel was hers.

Rachel stood beside me.

“What are you thinking?”

“That I do not know what I am allowed to feel.”

“Everything.”

“I did not carry her.”

“You did not consent to losing her either.”

“Jessica gave birth.”

“She also agreed to a secret pregnancy with your husband.”

“She believed the embryo was hers.”

“She still betrayed you.”

“And she was still robbed.”

Rachel nodded.

Both things were true.

Again.

Every person in this story was becoming more complicated than the role assigned to them.

Victim.

Betrayer.

Mother.

Accomplice.

Sister.

Enemy.

Evelyn survived by forcing people into one category.

The moment we accepted complexity, her control weakened.

The nurse stepped into the hallway.

“Would you like to meet her?”

My heart stopped.

“Can I?”

“You cannot have direct contact until infectious-disease screening is complete, but you may enter the room wearing protective equipment.”

I dressed in a gown, gloves, and mask.

The nurse placed Rose in a bassinet.

I stood beside her.

She stared at me.

I had imagined meeting Hope and Faith after months of pregnancy.

I imagined hearing their first cries.

Counting their fingers.

Kissing their faces.

I never imagined meeting another biological daughter through glass and stolen medical records.

“Hello,” I whispered.

Rose blinked.

Her hand lifted.

Tiny fingers curled around the air.

I placed one gloved finger against her palm.

She closed her hand around it.

Tears filled my eyes.

“My name is Sarah.”

My voice broke.

“I do not know what they called you before Rose.”

She watched me.

“But I promise no one will erase you again.”

Hope moved inside me.

Then Faith.

For one impossible moment, I felt connected to all three girls.

One holding my finger.

Two moving beneath my heart.

I did not know what motherhood would look like after the courts, the DNA tests, and Jessica’s claim.

I only knew that Evelyn would never decide it.


Jessica arrived by secured video several hours later.

Her face appeared on a hospital monitor.

She looked thinner than before.

Exhausted.

Terrified.

When she saw Rose asleep in the bassinet, she made a sound that came from somewhere deeper than speech.

“My baby.”

The words hurt.

Not because they were wrong.

Because they were not the only truth.

Jessica touched the screen.

“They told me she died.”

I sat beside the bassinet.

“I know.”

“They said her lungs failed.”

“She was premature, but she survived.”

“I never held her.”

“I’m sorry.”

She looked at me.

The history between us filled the silence.

The affair.

The coffee shop.

The lies.

The ultrasound.

The kidnapping.

And now this child.

“Did you know?” I asked.

“That she was yours?”

“Yes.”

“No.”

“You believed the embryo was genetically yours and Derek’s?”

“Yes.”

“Why did you agree to carry his child while he was married to me?”

Jessica closed her eyes.

“He told me you had agreed to use a surrogate.”

I stared at her.

“What?”

“He said your fertility treatment had created embryos. He said you became afraid after the retrieval and refused to continue, but you gave him permission to use one with a surrogate.”

“I never knew embryos existed.”

Her face collapsed.

“He showed me a consent form.”

“Forged.”

“I thought you knew.”

“Then why keep the pregnancy secret?”

“He said you had changed your mind and would try to stop us if you knew I was the carrier.”

“You still chose him.”

“Yes.”

“While calling yourself my friend.”

“Yes.”

Her tears began.

“I was jealous. I thought carrying his child would make him choose me.”

“Did he?”

“No.”

She looked at Rose.

“After the birth, Evelyn told me the baby died. Derek disappeared for two weeks. When he came back, he said grief had changed him.”

“He knew she was alive.”

Jessica pressed a hand over her mouth.

“He knew?”

“The files show him visiting St. Agatha’s.”

Her grief turned into rage.

“He let me bury an empty box.”

My stomach twisted.

There had been another funeral.

Another grave without a body.

Another mother mourning a living child.

“I’m going to kill him,” she whispered.

“No.”

She stared at me.

“No more killing.”

“He stole her.”

“He helped.”

“He watched me grieve.”

“Yes.”

“And you expect me to remain calm?”

“No. I expect you to remain free.”

Jessica looked back at Rose.

“What happens now?”

“I do not know.”

“She is my daughter.”

“She is genetically mine.”

The words hung between us.

Jessica’s face hardened.

“You think you can take her.”

“No.”

“You are carrying twins. You have two babies.”

I flinched.

Children were not numbers.

One did not replace another.

“You carried Rose,” I said carefully. “You gave birth to her. That matters.”

“I am her mother.”

“Yes.”

The answer surprised her.

“And I may be her mother too.”

Her mouth tightened.

“That is not possible.”

“Evelyn survived by convincing women that only one person could matter.”

“I am not sharing my child with the wife of the man who lied to me.”

“I am not asking you to decide today.”

“She knows my voice.”

“Does she?”

Jessica began crying harder.

“I talked to her every night while I was pregnant.”

Rose shifted at the sound coming through the monitor.

Her eyes opened.

Jessica froze.

“Rose?”

The baby turned her head toward the screen.

Jessica sobbed.

“She knows me.”

Perhaps she did.

Perhaps she only heard a familiar rhythm.

Either way, I stepped back.

This moment belonged to Jessica.

Not because I had no claim.

Because love did not require taking every moment for myself.

Jessica whispered to the screen.

“I’m here.”

Rose stared.

“I’m sorry I believed them.”

The same apology echoed through our entire family.

I believed them.

I trusted him.

I was afraid.

I thought I was protecting you.

The explanations never erased consequences.

But truth gave us somewhere to begin.


The encrypted file for the fourth embryo transfer opened shortly before dawn.

Agent Cross entered the room carrying a printed report.

His face was grave.

“Another pregnancy was confirmed.”

“How far along?”

“Approximately sixteen weeks.”

Four weeks ahead of me.

The embryo had been transferred before I conceived Hope and Faith.

“Who is the carrier?”

“The file contains no legal name.”

“Then how do we find her?”

“There is a photograph.”

He placed it on the table.

A woman stood outside a clinic wearing a long gray coat.

Her face was turned partly away.

But Rachel recognized her.

“No.”

Caroline leaned toward the image.

Her expression changed.

“Who is she?” I asked.

Rachel looked at me.

“Grace.”

I stared at the photograph.

Grace Mercer.

Natalie’s aunt.

Thomas’s former assistant.

The nurse who helped hide Dr. Evans.

The woman who had aided Evelyn for years while claiming she did it to protect Natalie.

“She is too old.”

“Not necessarily to carry an implanted embryo,” Mia said. “It would be medically dangerous, but possible with hormonal preparation.”

The transfer date matched the period when Grace still had access to fertility records.

“Does she know the embryo is mine?” I asked.

Agent Cross turned to the final page.

“She signed a form acknowledging intended genetic parents.”

The names were written clearly.

Sarah Miller Collins

Derek Collins

Grace knew.

Unlike Jessica, she knew exactly whose child she carried.

“Why?” Rachel asked.

A video file was attached.

Grace sat alone in a clinic room.

She spoke directly to the camera.

“If Sarah becomes pregnant naturally, Evelyn will attempt to take one or both children. This embryo is insurance.”

Insurance.

Another child reduced to a strategy.

Grace continued.

“I will keep the pregnancy hidden until Evelyn is imprisoned. If Sarah’s babies do not survive, this child will preserve Michael’s line.”

My body went cold.

Hope and Faith moved beneath my hands.

Grace had created a replacement.

Not from cruelty.

From the same poisonous idea that had infected everyone.

That children existed to preserve bloodlines.

Trusts.

Names.

Plans.

“If I die,” Grace said in the recording, “the child is to be delivered to Natalie Evans.”

Dr. Evans appeared on the hospital monitor from her recovery room.

She had been watching remotely.

Her face showed horror.

“I did not know.”

“I believe you,” I said.

“I never asked her to do this.”

“I know.”

Agent Cross looked toward the report.

“Grace was examined after her arrest. She concealed the pregnancy beneath her medical history, but imaging now confirms it.”

“She is still pregnant?”

“Yes.”

“Is the baby healthy?”

“Preliminary evaluation says yes.”

Another biological child.

A fourth daughter or son connected to me.

Rose.

Hope.

Faith.

And a baby growing inside Grace.

My stolen eggs had become lives across multiple bodies.

No court order could simplify that.

No DNA report could define who belonged to whom.

Derek had stolen my reproductive choices.

Evelyn had turned embryos into contingency plans.

Grace had convinced herself that carrying one secretly was protection.

Every person had treated my future children as objects before I knew they existed.

Then Agent Cross placed another document beside the transfer report.

“There is something else.”

I looked at the header.

EMBRYO INVENTORY STATUS

Nine embryos had been created.

Two nonviable.

Three listed as destroyed.

Four transferred.

The count should have ended there.

But a handwritten correction appeared at the bottom.

One additional viable embryo recovered after initial assessment.

Ten.

There had been ten.

“Where is it?” I asked.

The status line read:

TRANSFERRED — RECIPIENT CONFIDENTIAL

No date.

No identification code.

No outcome.

Only one notation.

AUTHORIZED BY E.C.

Evelyn Collins.

A fifth child might exist.

Older than Rose.

Younger.

Already born.

Still unborn.

Alive under another name.

The room became silent.

Then my phone vibrated.

A new message arrived from an unknown number.

A photograph loaded slowly.

Evelyn stood inside an aircraft hangar.

Beside her was a young boy, perhaps four years old.

He had Derek’s dark eyes.

My chin.

And a small birthmark near his left ear—the same shape as Rose’s.

The boy held Evelyn’s hand.

He looked directly into the camera.

Beneath the image, Evelyn had written:

You found the daughters I allowed you to find.

A second message appeared.

Now come find your son……………………..

PART 10…

TO BE CONTINUED IN PART10…

CLICK HERE CONTINUE TO READ PART 10 – My husband had a vasectomy, and two months later, I got pregnant. He called me unfaithful, left me for another woman… but he didn’t know that the biggest shock was waiting for us during the ultrasound.