It was official. The boys were mine.
I didn’t waste a second. I called an old friend of mine, Marcus, who was a high-ranking detective in the state police department. I told him everything. I sent him the screenshots of the Cayman Islands bank account, the text messages, the DNA results, and Martha’s written statement, which she had mailed to me the day before.
Marcus was horrified. “Arthur, this is massive. This is federal-level human trafficking. We can’t just walk into her house and arrest her tonight without a warrant, but I am going to get a judge to sign off on emergency arrest warrants for your wife, her mother, and Doctor Vance by tomorrow morning. Do not let her know you know. Act completely normal tonight. Can you do that?”
“I can do it,” I told him, my voice dead and empty. “Just hurry, Marcus.”
When I arrived home that evening, the atmosphere felt different. The air was thick, suffocating.
I walked into the living room, and my heart stopped.
Sarah was sitting on the sofa. But she wasn’t alone. Sitting across from her was her mother, Eleanor, sipping a cup of tea. And sitting next to Eleanor was a man I hadn’t seen in five years. A man whose face was etched into my nightmares.
It was Doctor Vance.
The three of them stopped talking the moment I entered. The room fell into an icy, dead silence. Doctor Vance looked nervous, sweating profusely through his expensive suit. Eleanor looked cold and calculating.
Sarah looked up at me. The sweet, innocent smile she usually wore was completely gone. Her eyes were cold, sharp, and predatory.
On the coffee table between them lay a piece of paper. As I walked closer, my blood ran cold. It was the printed copy of the DNA test results I had left in my car’s glove compartment.
Sarah stood up slowly, crossing her arms over her chest. She looked at me not with fear, but with a terrifying, malicious amusement.
“Looking for this, Arthur?” she asked, her voice dropping the sweet act entirely, replaced by a venomous, mocking tone.
I froze, realizing my mistake. I had forgotten to lock the glove compartment when I came home to change out of my work clothes earlier.
“You went to a small restaurant in Oak Creek three days ago, didn’t you?” Eleanor said, her voice dripping with aristocratic disdain. “You met Martha. You took hair samples. You thought you were so clever, Arthur.”
Doctor Vance stood up, wiping his forehead with a handkerchief. “Arthur, you should have just kept mourning. It was safer for everyone if those babies stayed dead to you.”
I reached slowly into my pocket, trying to grab my phone to call Marcus, but before my fingers could touch the screen, the front door behind me clicked locked.
I spun around. Standing behind me was a tall, heavily built man in a dark suit—someone I had never seen before. He had one hand inside his jacket, clearly holding a weapon.
I was trapped. In my own home. With the monsters who had stolen my children.
Sarah walked up to me, stopping just inches away. She reached up and gently patted my cheek, her touch feeling like a slithering snake.
“You really shouldn’t have dug up the past, honey,” Sarah whispered, a cruel, psychotic smile spreading across her lips. “Because now, we can’t just let you leave. And unfortunately for you, people die of sudden, tragic accidents all the time…”
The large man stepped forward, pulling a silenced pistol from his jacket.