Part 2
Inside the veteran’s house, there were no dusty military medals, no faded family photographs, no cheap furniture.
There were surveillance screens.
Wall safes.
A private elevator.
A medical-grade refrigerator humming behind locked glass.
I should have run immediately.
Instead, I sat dripping wet at his kitchen table while he placed a towel beside me as neatly as evidence in a courtroom.
“You know what Adrian did,” I said quietly.
“I know far more than that.” He slid a thick folder across the table. “I know he moved marital assets through three shell corporations. I know his mother forged your signature on fertility clinic consent forms. I know Celeste was receiving company money long before she officially became his mistress.”
My fingers went numb.
“How?”
The old man’s expression never changed. “Because your husband tried to buy my land last year. When I refused, he sent men to intimidate me.”
“And?”
“They apologized.”
I opened the folder.
Bank transfers. Property documents. Fertility clinic records. And a medical report Adrian had hidden from me.
Male factor infertility: severe.
My breath stopped.
“He knew,” I whispered.
“Yes.”
“All those injections. All those nights I blamed myself.”
Captain Hayes remained silent. Somehow, that silence felt kinder than comfort.
Then he made the strange offer.
“I run a foundation,” he said. “Veterans. Orphans. Medical research. I need someone with discipline, discretion, and nothing left to fear. Take the position. Salary, housing, legal protection. In return, you stop thinking like a victim.”
A sharp, broken laugh escaped me. “That’s your offer?”
“No.” He opened another file. “That’s merely the beginning. You froze embryos three years ago before your first surgery. Adrian signed the consent forms, then buried the paperwork after learning his own fertility results. Legally, the embryos belong to you.”
The room tilted around me.
“My embryos?”
“Your embryos.”
Six weeks later, I was living in the guest wing of his estate under a different name.
Three months later, I was directing the public health division of the Hayes Foundation.
Five months later, Adrian sued me for “fraudulent abandonment” and accused me of stealing from him.
He looked smug arriving at court in charcoal gray, Celeste hanging from his arm while his mother stood behind him like a crowned serpent.
“You look exhausted, Mara,” he said outside the courthouse. “Poverty suits you.”
I touched the sleeve of my plain black coat. “Does it?”
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