After a night with his mistress, he came home expecting everything to be the same. Instead, the crib was empty—and so was the house.

PART 3

By noon, Richard Dalton’s house no longer felt like a home.

It felt like a crime scene.

Uniformed officers moved quietly through the rooms, careful not to touch more than necessary. Detective Holloway stood in the nursery with his hands in the pockets of his gray coat, staring at the empty crib as if it might speak.

Richard paced behind him.

“She kidnapped my son,” Richard said for the fifth time. “Why aren’t you treating this like an abduction?”

Holloway turned slowly.

“Because Ethan is with his mother.”

“She took him without my permission.”

“She left her own marital home with her own child,” Holloway replied. “That is not automatically kidnapping.”

Richard’s jaw tightened. “She cleaned out the nursery. She drained money from our accounts. She disappeared.”

“She withdrew funds from joint accounts,” Holloway said. “Again, not automatically illegal.”

Richard pointed toward the crib. “She planned this.”

“Yes,” Holloway said calmly. “It appears she did.”

The answer struck Richard harder than any accusation.

Sarah had planned this.

Not panicked. Not snapped. Not cried herself into some dramatic mistake.

Planned.

For weeks, maybe months, she had moved through their house carrying bottles, folding laundry, answering his distracted questions, while quietly building an exit beneath his feet.

Richard looked around the nursery. The pale blue walls. The framed animal prints. The empty shelf where Ethan’s stuffed elephant used to sit.

He remembered buying that elephant on the way home from work, not because he had thought of Ethan, but because he had forgotten to buy diapers and wanted Sarah to stop looking at him that way.

That tired, silent way.

He hated remembering it now.

“Did she leave a note?” Holloway asked.

“No.”

“Text? Email?”

“No.”

“Threats? Anything suggesting she might harm herself or the baby?”

Richard snapped his head up. “Sarah would never hurt Ethan.”

Holloway watched him.

The silence stretched.

Richard realized too late what he had admitted.

If Sarah would never hurt Ethan, then the emergency was not Ethan’s safety.

It was Richard’s control slipping away.

Downstairs, Marcus Chen arrived in a dark suit, expression sharp and unreadable. Richard almost felt relieved seeing him. Marcus handled lawsuits like a surgeon handled scalpels. He was precise, expensive, and untroubled by sentiment.

But even Marcus looked grim after Holloway briefed him.

“This is a family court matter,” Holloway said. “Unless evidence suggests danger to the child, we can’t issue an Amber Alert. Your client can file for custody. He can request an emergency hearing. But Mrs. Dalton leaving is not a crime.”

“She used deception,” Richard said.

Marcus gave him a warning look. “Richard.”

“She stole my son.”

“Stop saying that in front of law enforcement,” Marcus said under his breath.

Holloway handed Richard a business card. “Call if Sarah contacts you. And Mr. Dalton?”

Richard looked up.

“Be careful what you say next. Angry husbands have a way of making their own cases worse.”

Then he left.

The front door closed with a soft click.

Richard stood in the foyer, surrounded by the silence Sarah had left behind.

Marcus walked into the kitchen and saw the wedding ring on the counter. He stared at it for a moment.

“Did you touch it?” he asked.

“No.”

“Good.”

Richard frowned. “Why?”

“Because it is not just a ring anymore. It is a message.”

“A message that she’s unstable.”

Marcus looked at him flatly. “A message that she is done.”

Richard’s phone buzzed.

For one wild second, his heart leapt.

Sarah.

But it was Vanessa.

Are you okay? You left so fast. Call me.

Richard turned the screen face down.

Marcus saw enough.

“Is that her?”

“That doesn’t matter.”

“It matters more than you seem to understand.”

Richard’s temper broke. “I hired you to get my son back, not lecture me.”

Marcus folded his arms. “Then listen carefully. If Sarah knew about the affair, and if she documented your absences, your spending, your behavior at home, and anything that could be framed as neglect, then she may already be ahead of us.”

“She can’t prove neglect.”

“Where were you last night?”

Richard said nothing.

Marcus nodded once. “Exactly.”

“I made mistakes,” Richard said. “That doesn’t make me a bad father.”

“No. But family court is not about your self-image. It is about patterns.”

Richard grabbed the edge of the counter.

Patterns.

A word too small for the wreckage it described.

The late nights. The missed pediatrician appointments. The weekends when he claimed he had to work but drove to Vanessa’s apartment. The morning Sarah had called him five times because Ethan had a fever, and he had silenced his phone during brunch.

He remembered Sarah standing in the hallway that night, Ethan against her chest, her hair unwashed, her eyes red.

“I needed you,” she had said.

And he had answered, “I can’t drop everything every time you panic.”

Now those words returned like a blade.

Marcus opened his leather folder. “We need to move fast. Emergency custody petition. Request disclosure of Ethan’s location. Freeze remaining accounts if possible. But Richard, before we file, I need to know everything she might have.”

Richard laughed bitterly. “She has nothing.”

Marcus did not smile.

“Men always say that right before the evidence appears.”

The evidence appeared at 3:17 p.m.

An email landed in Marcus Chen’s inbox with the subject line:

RE: DALTON MATTER — NOTICE OF REPRESENTATION

Marcus read it once.

Then again.

His expression changed so subtly that Richard almost missed it.

“What?” Richard demanded.

Marcus looked up. “Sarah has a lawyer.”

“Who?”

Marcus turned the laptop toward him.

Eleanor Voss.

Richard did not know the name, but Marcus clearly did.

“Is that bad?”

Marcus exhaled through his nose. “Eleanor Voss doesn’t take messy divorce cases unless she intends to win.”

Richard leaned closer. The email was short, formal, and devastating.

Mrs. Sarah Dalton and minor child Ethan Dalton are safe. All communications should be directed through counsel. Mr. Dalton is instructed not to contact Mrs. Dalton directly, not to attempt to locate her through third parties, and not to access, freeze, or interfere with funds legally belonging to Mrs. Dalton.

Attached were three files.

Marcus opened the first.

A calendar.

Every night Richard had come home after midnight was marked in red.

Every weekend “business trip” was listed with receipts beside it.

Seattle. Portland. Bellevue. Vancouver.

Hotels. Restaurants. Jewelry.

Vanessa Cole’s name appeared again and again.

Richard felt the room tilt.

“How did she get that?”

Marcus’s face hardened. “Joint credit card statements. Phone records. Location history, maybe.”

“She tracked me?”

“She paid attention.”

The second file was worse.

Screenshots.

Texts between Richard and Vanessa.

I told Sarah I’m in Portland. Meet me at 8.

She’s too tired to ask questions anymore.

Can’t wait to be somewhere nobody calls me Dad.

Richard looked away.

Marcus did not.

The third file was titled: HOUSEHOLD LOG.

It was Sarah’s writing.

Not emotional. Not dramatic.

Precise.

January 14: Ethan cried from 2:10 a.m. to 4:45 a.m. Richard slept in guest room.
January 18: Richard missed pediatrician appointment. Claimed client emergency. Later receipt shows lunch downtown with V.C.
January 29: Asked Richard to watch Ethan for twenty minutes so I could shower. He said he had a call. No call on phone record.
February 3: Ethan fever 101.6. Called Richard five times. No answer.
February 4: Richard said I was “acting unstable” because I cried while making bottles.

Richard shoved back from the table.

“That is not fair.”

Marcus looked up sharply. “What part is untrue?”

Richard opened his mouth.

No answer came.

Because the terrible thing was, Sarah had not exaggerated.

She had not embellished.

She had simply written him down.

Marcus closed the laptop. “We have a problem.”

Richard walked to the window. Outside, a neighbor’s dog barked behind a fence. Somewhere down the street, a mother laughed as a child squealed.

The sound made something in him twist.

“Find her,” he said.

Marcus shook his head. “Not that way.”

“I don’t care how.”

“You should. Because if you send someone after her, if you harass her family, if you show up angry at her mother’s house, you will hand Eleanor Voss exactly what she wants.”

Richard spun around. “And what does she want?”

Marcus’s voice was quiet.

“To prove Sarah was right to run.”

That night, Richard did not sleep.

He sat in the nursery on the floor beside the empty crib. His hand was bandaged. The house was cold because Sarah always handled the thermostat and he had never noticed how.

His phone glowed beside him with messages.

Vanessa: Please call me.
Vanessa: I’m scared.
Vanessa: Richard, are we okay?

He stared at the words until they blurred.

Are we okay?

It was almost funny.

He had destroyed one life and frightened another, and both women were now waiting to see what kind of man he would become under pressure.

At 2:03 a.m., he finally called Vanessa.

She answered immediately.

“Richard?”

Her voice was soft, breathless, rehearsed.

He closed his eyes. “Sarah left.”

“I know. You said.”

“She took Ethan.”

There was a pause.

“I’m sorry,” Vanessa said.

But there was something beneath it.

Not grief.

Calculation.

“You knew she knew,” Richard said.

“What?”

“Did you know Sarah knew about us?”

Vanessa was silent too long.

Richard stood.

“Vanessa.”

“She messaged me once,” Vanessa admitted.

The room became very still.

“When?”

“Three weeks ago.”

Richard’s grip tightened around the phone. “And you didn’t tell me?”

“She told me to stay away from her family.”

“What did you say?”

Vanessa sighed, annoyed now. “I told her the truth.”

“What truth?”

“That you were unhappy. That your marriage was already dead. That I wasn’t the reason.”

Richard felt heat rush into his face.

“She had just had a baby.”

“You said she changed,” Vanessa snapped. “You said she barely looked at you anymore. You said you felt trapped.”

“I said a lot of things.”

“Yes,” she whispered. “You did.”

The accusation in her voice surprised him.

As if she, too, considered herself betrayed.

“Did she say where she was going?” Richard asked.

“No.”

“Did she mention anyone?”

“No.”

“Think.”

“I am thinking.”

But her voice had shifted.

Too careful.

Richard heard it because he had used that same tone with Sarah for months.

“Vanessa,” he said slowly, “if you know anything and you hide it from me—”

“Don’t threaten me.”

“Then don’t lie to me.”

She hung up.

Richard lowered the phone.

For the first time since finding the empty crib, he felt something colder than rage.

Fear.

Not fear for Ethan’s safety. Not exactly.

Fear that every woman in his life had known more than he did.

The next morning, Sarah’s petition arrived.

Marcus read it in his office while Richard paced before the windows.

Petition for legal separation. Temporary sole physical custody. Supervised visitation pending hearing. Exclusive use of separate funds. Protective order limiting direct contact.

Richard exploded at the word protective.

“Protective? From what?”

Marcus turned a page.

“Emotional intimidation. Financial control. Documented abandonment during postpartum recovery. Threatening language witnessed by neighbors this morning.”

“That was after she took my son!”

“You punched a nursery door hard enough to bleed on it.”

“It was my house.”

“It was also evidence of volatility.”

Richard sank into the chair.

Marcus kept reading.

Then he stopped.

“What?” Richard asked.

Marcus’s brow furrowed.

“There’s a declaration from a witness.”

“Who?”

Marcus did not answer immediately.

“Vanessa Cole.”

Richard laughed once. “No.”

Marcus looked at him.

“No,” Richard repeated. “That’s impossible.”

Marcus slid the page across the desk.

Vanessa had signed a declaration stating Richard had described marriage as a prison, fatherhood as suffocating, and Sarah as fragile and incompetent. She also stated that Richard had told her he would “make sure Sarah had nothing” if she ever tried to leave.

Richard stared at the signature.

Vanessa Cole.

His mistress.

His escape.

His witness against him.

“She’s lying,” he said.

Marcus leaned back. “Is she?”

Richard’s throat worked.

He remembered the hotel room in Seattle. Champagne sweating in a silver bucket. Vanessa in a silk robe. Him lying on his back, staring at the ceiling, drunk on attention and resentment.

If Sarah ever left, I’d bury her in court.

Had he said it?

Maybe.

Probably.

He had said so many cruel things because Vanessa had listened as if cruelty were truth.

Marcus folded his hands.

“You need to understand what is happening. Sarah did not simply leave. She built a case.”

Richard’s voice came out hoarse. “And Vanessa helped her?”

“Possibly after Sarah contacted her. Possibly to protect herself. Possibly because Eleanor Voss is very good at finding weak points.”

Richard stood suddenly. “I need to see Sarah.”

“No.”

“I need to talk to her.”

“No.”

“She’ll listen to me.”

Marcus’s eyes sharpened. “Richard, I have represented men like you for twenty-two years. The most dangerous sentence they say is, ‘She’ll listen to me.’”

Richard flinched.

Marcus lowered his voice. “Do not go looking for her.”

But Richard was already gone inside himself, moving backward through every conversation, every clue, every unguarded thing Sarah might have left behind.

She wasn’t at her mother’s.

Not with friends, probably. He knew her friends. Or thought he did.

But there was one place.

One name he had forgotten because Sarah had stopped saying it after they married.

Anna.

Anna Whitaker.

College roommate. Maid of honor. The woman who had once looked Richard in the eye at their wedding reception and said, “Be good to her. She forgives too much.”

He had laughed then.

He wasn’t laughing now.

That evening, Richard waited until Marcus called to say the hearing had been scheduled for Monday morning. Then he lied and said he was going home.

Instead, he drove three hours north.

Anna Whitaker lived in a small coastal town where the roads curved through wet pines and the houses sat low against the wind. Richard found the address in an old wedding guest spreadsheet Sarah had kept in the cloud.

The porch light was on when he arrived.

A woman opened the door before he knocked.

Anna looked older than he remembered, her hair shorter, her expression harder.

“No,” she said.

Richard froze.

“I haven’t said anything.”

“You don’t need to.”

“Is she here?”

Anna stepped out onto the porch and closed the door behind her.

Rain dotted Richard’s coat.

“I’m asking as Ethan’s father,” he said.

Anna’s eyes flashed. “Funny. Sarah asked for Ethan’s father every night for three months. He was never available.”

His face tightened. “You don’t know anything about my marriage.”

“I know more than you think.”

“Did Sarah send you?”

“No. Sarah would be furious if she knew you were here.”

That was answer enough.

Richard looked past her shoulder toward the curtained windows.

“Sarah!” he shouted.

Anna slapped him.

The sound cracked through the rain.

Richard stared at her, stunned.

Anna’s voice was low. “There is a sleeping baby inside my house.”

Something moved behind the curtain.

A shadow.

Richard’s heart lurched.

“Ethan,” he whispered.

Anna blocked him as he stepped forward.

“You need to leave.”

“I just want to see him.”

“No.”

“He is my son.”

“And she is his mother.”

“Sarah!” Richard shouted again, louder.

A light switched on upstairs.

Then the door opened behind Anna.

Sarah appeared.

For a moment, Richard forgot every argument, every lawyer, every document.

She stood barefoot in gray sweatpants and an oversized sweater, Ethan asleep against her shoulder. Her hair was tied loosely at the nape of her neck. Her face was pale, thinner than he remembered.

But her eyes were different.

Not soft.

Not pleading.

Not waiting to be understood.

Steady.

Richard took one step toward her.

Sarah did not move.

“Don’t,” she said.

One word.

It stopped him.

Rain slid down his face. “You took him.”

“I protected him.”

“From me?”

“From what you were becoming.”

His mouth opened, then closed.

Ethan stirred against her shoulder, making a small sound.

Richard’s face crumpled before he could stop it.

“Please,” he said. “Let me hold him.”

For the first time, something in Sarah’s expression flickered.

Pain.

Not love. Not forgiveness.

Pain.

“You should go,” she said.

“I’m his father.”

“You remembered that today.”

The words landed quietly, brutally.

Richard looked at Ethan. The baby’s tiny fist rested against Sarah’s collarbone. He was warm, alive, real.

All day Ethan had been a symbol in Richard’s mind. Loss. Theft. Victory. Defeat.

Now he was just a child.

His child.

And Richard understood, with terrible clarity, that Sarah had spent months holding this reality alone while he chased the feeling of being wanted somewhere else.

“I messed up,” he whispered.

Sarah’s eyes filled, but no tears fell.

“You didn’t mess up, Richard. You made choices. Over and over. Then you came home and expected me to call them mistakes.”

Anna stood between them like a guard.

Richard swallowed. “Vanessa signed something against me.”

Sarah’s face changed slightly.

“So you came because of that.”

“No.”

“Yes.”

“I came because I need to fix this.”

Sarah gave a small, exhausted laugh. “You still think this is a broken appliance.”

“I can change.”

“Maybe.”

The word hurt more than no.

Because maybe belonged to a future that did not include promises.

Sarah shifted Ethan gently. “But you won’t change inside my life. Not anymore.”

A car rolled slowly down the street.

Anna looked toward it.

Sarah noticed too.

Richard turned.

A dark sedan stopped near the curb.

For one second, nobody moved.

Then the driver’s window lowered.

Detective Holloway.

Richard felt the blood leave his face.

Anna spoke first. “I called him when you arrived.”

Holloway stepped out, rain shining on his coat.

“Mr. Dalton,” he said, calm as ever. “Your attorney advised you not to seek contact.”

“I wanted to see my son.”

“And now you have.”

Richard looked back at Sarah.

Her face was unreadable.

Holloway walked closer. “You need to leave.”

Richard’s pride rose, hot and stupid. “Am I under arrest?”

“Not unless you refuse.”

The rain fell harder.

For a moment, Richard considered refusing. Some old, ugly part of him wanted to push past everyone, take Ethan, force the world back into the shape it had yesterday.

Then Ethan opened his eyes.

Small. Dark. Confused.

He looked at Richard without recognition.

That destroyed him.

Not Sarah’s leaving. Not Vanessa’s betrayal. Not Marcus’s warnings.

His own son did not know him.

Richard stepped back.

Sarah watched him, her lips parted slightly, as if she had expected a fight and did not know what to do with his surrender.

“I’ll see you in court,” he said.

Sarah nodded once.

“Through lawyers,” she replied.

The door closed.

Richard stood in the rain until Holloway touched his arm.

“Go home.”

Home.

The word had lost its address.

Monday morning arrived cold and bright.

The family courthouse smelled of coffee, wet wool, and panic. Richard sat beside Marcus in a hallway full of broken families pretending not to stare at each other.

Across from him, Sarah sat with Eleanor Voss.

Eleanor was in her fifties, silver-haired, elegant, and terrifyingly composed. She spoke softly to Sarah, who held Ethan in a carrier at her feet.

Richard could not stop looking at the baby.

Ethan kicked one foot beneath a blue blanket.

Sarah did not look at Richard once.

Marcus leaned in. “Do not react in there. No interruptions. No visible anger.”

“I know.”

“You don’t. That’s why I’m saying it.”

The hearing lasted forty-three minutes.

It felt like an execution.

Eleanor presented the log. The receipts. The screenshots. Vanessa’s declaration. The police report from Anna’s house. The photograph of Richard’s blood on the nursery door.

Marcus argued that Richard had no history of violence, that Sarah had concealed Ethan’s whereabouts, that a father’s rights should not be erased by marital conflict.

The judge, a woman with tired eyes and no patience for theatrics, listened.

Then she spoke.

Temporary physical custody would remain with Sarah.

Richard would have supervised visitation twice a week.

No direct contact with Sarah.

No harassment through third parties.

No removal of Ethan from Sarah’s care.

Financial accounts would remain accessible for child-related expenses, with further review pending.

Richard heard each sentence like a door closing.

When it was done, Sarah stood.

Ethan made a small noise.

Richard stepped forward before Marcus caught his sleeve.

Sarah paused.

For the first time that morning, she looked at him.

There was no hatred in her eyes.

That made it worse.

Hatred would have meant he still occupied some burning place inside her.

This was quieter.

This was distance.

Outside the courtroom, Vanessa waited near the elevators.

Richard stopped dead.

She wore a cream coat and dark sunglasses pushed into her hair. She looked perfect, as always, but there was tension around her mouth.

Sarah saw her too.

For a moment, the three of them stood in a triangle of ruin.

Vanessa looked at Richard first.

Then Sarah.

“I didn’t do it for you,” Vanessa said to Sarah.

Sarah’s face remained calm. “I know.”

Richard stared between them. “You two spoke.”

Vanessa’s laugh was sharp. “Your wife found me because you are not as careful as you think.”

“Why sign the declaration?”

Vanessa’s eyes hardened. “Because I listened to you talk about destroying her while she was home raising your baby. At first, I thought it made me special. Then I realized it only made me next.”

Richard flinched.

Vanessa stepped closer. Her voice dropped.

“You told me I was different. You told her that once too, didn’t you?”

He had no answer.

Sarah quietly lifted Ethan’s carrier.

Eleanor touched her shoulder. “We should go.”

But before Sarah could turn away, Vanessa spoke again.

“There’s something else.”

Eleanor’s attention sharpened.

Sarah stilled.

Richard frowned. “What?”

Vanessa reached into her handbag and pulled out a small envelope.

“I wasn’t going to give this to anyone,” she said. “But after last night, I think I should.”

Richard felt Marcus tense beside him.

Eleanor took the envelope, opened it, and removed a folded sheet of paper.

Her expression changed as she read.

Only slightly.

But enough.

Sarah looked at her. “What is it?”

Eleanor did not answer at once.

Richard’s pulse began to pound.

“What is it?” he demanded.

Eleanor folded the paper again.

“This is not the place.”

Vanessa looked at Sarah, and for the first time, her polished mask cracked.

“I’m sorry,” she said.

Then she walked away.

Richard moved after her, but Marcus caught him.

“Don’t.”

“What did she give her?”

Marcus’s voice was low. “I don’t know.”

But he looked worried.

That evening, Richard had his first supervised visit.

The visitation center was painted in cheerful colors that made everything feel more humiliating. A young woman named Claire sat in the corner with a clipboard while Richard held Ethan on a faded green couch.

At first, Ethan cried.

Richard panicked.

Claire gently showed him how to support the baby’s head, how to rock without bouncing too hard, how to hold the bottle at the right angle.

“You’re doing fine,” she said.

Richard almost laughed.

Fine.

He was a thirty-six-year-old man being taught how to feed his own son by a stranger because he had been too busy betraying his wife to learn.

After ten minutes, Ethan settled.

His small hand curled around Richard’s finger.

Richard stared down at him.

“I’m sorry,” he whispered.

Ethan blinked.

The apology went nowhere useful. It fixed nothing. It changed no ruling.

But it was the first true thing Richard had said in days.

Across town, Sarah sat in Eleanor Voss’s office with Ethan’s diaper bag at her feet and the envelope on the desk between them.

Anna sat beside her.

“What is it?” Sarah asked again.

Eleanor removed the paper.

“It’s a lab report.”

Sarah frowned. “For what?”

Eleanor’s eyes lifted.

“A prenatal paternity screening.”

The room tilted.

Anna whispered, “Whose?”

Eleanor hesitated.

Sarah’s hand moved instinctively to her stomach, though Ethan had been born three months ago.

“That’s impossible,” Sarah said.

Eleanor turned the report toward her.

The names were clear.

Vanessa Cole.

Richard Dalton.

Sarah read once.

Then again.

Her lips parted.

“No,” she whispered.

Anna leaned over.

Then she covered her mouth.

Eleanor spoke carefully. “According to this, Vanessa is pregnant.”

Sarah heard the words as if from underwater.

Vanessa is pregnant.

Pregnant.

Richard’s child.

The final humiliation should have broken something in her.

Instead, a strange quiet opened inside her.

Eleanor continued. “She appears to be approximately sixteen weeks along.”

Sarah looked up sharply.

Sixteen weeks.

She did the math before she could stop herself.

While she was still bleeding after birth.

While Ethan was waking every two hours.

While Richard was saying she was cold, distant, changed.

He had been making another family somewhere else.

Anna stood. “I’m going to kill him.”

“No,” Sarah said.

Her voice surprised them all.

Steady.

Empty.

Eleanor watched her closely. “Sarah.”

Sarah stared at the report.

There were many kinds of endings, she realized.

Some came with slammed doors. Some came with wedding rings left on counters. Some came in courtrooms where strangers decided how much of your child’s life a man deserved.

And some arrived quietly, on folded paper, confirming that the life you mourned had never existed.

She looked at Eleanor.

“Does Richard know?”

“I don’t think so.”

Sarah sat back.

For one second, she imagined telling him.

Watching his face collapse.

Giving him the same kind of shock he had given her when she first saw the hotel receipt. When she found the messages. When she read the words, Can’t wait to be somewhere nobody calls me Dad.

But then another thought came.

Sharper.

Darker.

Useful.

“Don’t tell him yet,” Sarah said.

Anna turned. “What?”

Sarah’s eyes remained on the report.

“Not yet.”

Eleanor studied her. “Why?”

Sarah slowly folded the paper and placed it back in the envelope.

“Because Richard thinks this is about getting back what he lost.”

She looked toward the window, where dusk had turned the city glass-black.

“But he hasn’t even found out what he’s about to lose.”

Across town, Richard returned from visitation to the empty house.

For the first time, he noticed everything Sarah had taken.

Not just the baby things.

The family photos were gone from the hallway.

Her books were gone from the bedroom.

Her coffee mug was gone from the sink.

The small framed ultrasound from the mantel was gone.

But on the kitchen counter, beside the place where her wedding ring had been, sat something new.

A plain white envelope.

Richard froze.

His name was written across it in Sarah’s handwriting.

He looked around the dark kitchen.

The doors were locked. The alarm had not been triggered.

His hands shook as he opened it.

Inside was a single photograph.

A picture of Ethan asleep.

On the back, Sarah had written:

You wanted freedom.
Now you have it.

Richard stared at the words until his vision blurred.

Then his phone rang.

Unknown number.

He answered.

For a moment, there was only breathing.

Then Vanessa’s voice came through, thin and trembling.

“Richard,” she said. “We need to talk.”

He closed his eyes.

“What now?”

Her answer was barely a whisper.

“I’m pregnant.”

Richard did not move.

The house seemed to disappear around him.

Then, from somewhere upstairs, a floorboard creaked.

Richard’s eyes opened.

He lowered the phone.

“Sarah?” he called.

No answer.

Another creak.

Slow.

Deliberate.

Someone was in the house.