Mag-log inThe police arrived in a flurry. Questions came at me like bullets. “Ma’am, did you see the faces of the men?” “No!” I screamed, shaking. “I didn’t! They wore hoods, gloves… I don’t know! They just, took them!” “The license plate?” “I didn’t…” My hands flew to my face. “I was shoved to the ground! They came out of nowhere!” Clara whimpered beside me, head in her hands. “It was… like they were ghosts…” I barely heard the officers talking after that. All I could feel was my heart hammering, my pulse tearing through my veins. Rain and River… my babies… gone. One officer crouched in front of me, voice unnervingly calm. “Ma’am, breathe. We’re going to get every camera feed. We’ll trace them…” “They’re newborns!” I yelled, voice hoarse. “They can’t survive out there! You don’t understand, they…oh God…they’re so tiny!” Clara’s voice, trembling, barely reached me. “Zoe… tell them everything. Every small thing you remember. It could matter.” I tried. I listed every tiny detail, every
The next morning felt deceptively peaceful. Sunlight filtered through the trees as Clara pushed River’s stroller while I guided Rain’s beside her. Yes, I’d finally named the twins after getting bored of calling them Baby boy and Baby girl. River and Rain Gatsby. The twins were bundled up, tiny hats, tiny mittens, tiny breaths fogging the air. The park was alive with joggers, dog walkers, laughter from a playground nearby. Normal. So painfully normal. “See?” Clara nudged me. “Fresh air. Sunlight. No crazy in-laws. No jealous husbands. No sexy neighbors with bouquets.” I shot her a look. “Not funny.” “Just saying.” She smirked. “Adrian would gladly…” “Clara.” “Okay, okay.” She held up her hands, then cooed at Rain. “But your mama is very pretty and confusing.” I rolled my eyes, but a small smile tugged at my lips. For a moment… it felt safe. Then it happened. A shadow passed on my right. I didn’t think anything of it until Clara’s hand tightened around my arm, nails diggi
My stomach dropped. The apartment felt suddenly too small, the air too thin. For a moment I couldn’t think, only listen, to the babies’ quiet breaths, to the pounding of my own pulse in my ears, to the soft click of Adrian’s boots as he straightened.Then the hallway erupted.Heavy footsteps. The front door slammed open. Brayden filled the frame like a dark tide, breathless, eyes burning with something feral I hadn’t seen since before the accident.His gaze cut the room in two: me, bruised cheek and shaking hands, and Adrian, tall and unruffled, standing a hair’s breadth from the toppled roses.“Zoe,” he said, voice sharp as a blade. “What happened?”“Brayden…” I started, voice raw, but Adrian answered for me before I could.“Your family came here. They threatened her. They tried to take the babies.” Adrian’s words were calm, clinical, but his eyes never left Brayden’s. “I stopped them.”Brayden’s face went white and then red in a flash. “Where are they?” he snarled.“Gone,” Adrian sa
The next day sun poured through the living room windows. The twins slept in their bassinets, tiny chests rising and falling in perfect rhythm. Clara had stepped out to grab a few essentials, leaving me alone with the quiet hum of the city outside. The quiet shattered in an instant. A sharp knock at the door rattled the apartment frame. Then another. And another. I froze. The sound of heels clicking against the floor before even opening the door was unmistakable. “Zoe!” Alessia’s voice cut through like a whip. “Open up!” My heart stuttered. I rushed to the door, peeking through the peephole. She wasn’t alone. Leonardo leaned against the wall, arms crossed, smirk plastered on his face, and behind him, Mrs. Gatsby, pearls gleaming, eyes sharp as knives. I swallowed, voice shaking. “What do you want?” Alessia didn’t answer. She slammed the door open before I could react, barging in with the kind of force that sent Adrian’s flower arrangements tumbling to the floor. “Zoe!” Alessia
The first night home was nothing like I imagined.There were no soft lullabies, no quiet sighs of contentment, only the fragile rhythm of newborn cries, the shuffle of feet, the clink of bottles, and Clara’s sleepy muttering about caffeine and divine punishment.The twins had their own rhythm, a demanding, unpredictable one. If one stirred, the other followed. If one quieted, the other found a reason to wail.By 3 a.m., I’d lost count of the diaper changes.“Remind me,” Clara mumbled from the couch, hair sticking out in every possible direction, “why people keep doing this to themselves voluntarily?”“Because they forget this part,” I whispered, rocking our daughter gently.Clara groaned, pulling a blanket over her head. “Selective amnesia. Mother nature’s cruel joke.”I smiled faintly, exhaustion heavy behind my eyes. But when I looked down at the tiny bundle in my arms, with her button nose and impossibly small fingers, the fatigue melted a little.She blinked up at me, curious and
By the time they left, the room felt hollow. The scent of roses still lingered, mixed with the sterile tang of antiseptic and the faint, sweet smell of the twins.Brayden stood by the window, back turned, shoulders rigid. He hadn’t said a word since they’d gone. Not when Clara slipped quietly back in to check on me, not when the nurse came to record the babies’ vitals. Not even when our son gave a soft whimper in his sleep. A week later, the discharge papers were signed.Brayden hovered near the door, pacing as Clara helped pack up the last of the hospital things. The babies were bundled up and asleep, oblivious to the tension weaving through the air.“I’ll have the car ready,” Brayden said, glancing over his shoulder. “You’ll be more comfortable at the mansion. There’s a nursery, staff…”I smiled faintly. “I’m not going back there.”He stopped mid-step. “What?”“I’ve got my own place now. Clara’s staying with me. I’ll be fine.”His brow furrowed, confusion giving way to something he







