로그인MABEL
The California sun streams through the floor-to-ceiling windows of my studio, casting golden light across racks of designer gowns that shimmer like liquid jewels. I stand before the three-way mirror, my expert hands adjusting the drape of a crimson Valentino gown on Dakota Mills's shoulders. "Turn slightly to the left," I instruct, my voice carrying the quiet authority I've earned over five hard years. Dakota obeys, and the fabric transforms, creating an optical illusion that will photograph beautifully on the Oscars red carpet. I step back, critically assessing my work with the same intensity I bring to every client. This is my domain now, my empire built from nothing but determination and an eye for transforming people into their most confident selves. Five years have reshaped me into someone virtually unrecognizable from the broken woman who fled New York with empty arms and a shattered heart. My dark hair, once pulled back in practical ponytails during my days as an overworked assistant, now falls in glossy waves past my shoulders. The budget department store clothes have been replaced by carefully curated pieces that speak of success without screaming it. But the most striking transformation is in my eyes, I see it every morning in the mirror. Once clouded with pain and self-doubt, they now hold a sharp, focused determination that has propelled me from nothing to the top of Los Angeles's competitive styling scene. "You're a miracle worker, Mabel," Dakota gushes, admiring her reflection. "I don't know how you do it. You make me feel like I could conquer the world in this dress." "That's the goal," I reply with a small smile, the kind that never quite reaches my eyes anymore. "Confidence is the best accessory anyone can wear." Jenny, my assistant, a bright-eyed twenty-three-year-old with purple highlights and infectious enthusiasm, enters the studio balancing a tray with two cappuccinos. "Your three o'clock called to confirm," she announces, setting the coffee down on my desk. "And these just arrived from Milan." She gestures to several garment bags hanging near the entrance. "Perfect. We'll look at those after Dakota's fitting." I reach for my coffee, grateful for the familiar ritual. These small moments of normalcy have become my anchors, keeping me grounded when memories of what I've lost threaten to pull me under. My phone buzzes on the desk, and I glance at it absently, expecting another client inquiry or vendor confirmation. Instead, my breath catches in my throat. The email is from an unknown sender, the subject line reading simply: "Your son's 5th birthday is next month." The cappuccino cup slips from my suddenly nerveless fingers, splashing across the hardwood floor. Dakota and Jenny both jump, but I barely register their reactions. My entire world has narrowed to the glowing screen in my hand. "Mabel? Are you okay?" Dakota's concerned voice seems to come from very far away. "I…yes, I'm sorry. Jenny, could you finish up with Dakota? I need to…" My voice cracks. I clear my throat, fighting to maintain composure. "I need to take this. It's urgent." I don't wait for a response. My legs carry me automatically to my private office. The door closes behind me with a soft click, and only then do I allow myself to look at the email again, my hands shaking so violently I nearly drop the phone. Below the subject line is an attached photograph. With trembling fingers, I open it. A little boy stares back at me from the screen. He can't be more than four years old in the picture, his dark curly hair catching the sunlight in a way that makes my chest physically ache. His eyes, warm brown, sparkling with pure joy, are fixed on something beyond the camera's frame. He's laughing, the kind of uninhibited laughter only children possess, and clutched in his small hands is a red toy car. My knees buckle, and I sink into my desk chair, unable to tear my gaze from those eyes. Are they my eyes? His father's? Both? I've spent five years searching, following every lead no matter how tenuous, hiring private investigators who found nothing but dead ends and sealed records. Five years of wondering if I'd ever see those newborn features again, if I'd ever know what color his eyes had become or what his laugh sounded like. And now, here he is. Real. Alive. Beautiful. My vision blurs with tears as I scroll down to read the rest of the email: "Liam Latham. Adopted by Vanessa Latham, NYC real estate mogul. Invitation to style her for upcoming charity events attached. His birthday party is your way in. Don't waste this chance." Liam. His name is Liam. I press a hand to my mouth, suppressing a sob. Liam Latham. My son has a name, a life, a home. With Vanessa Latham, my mind races, pulling up everything I know about New York's real estate elite. Vanessa Latham is a powerhouse, featured regularly in business magazines and society pages. Wealthy beyond measure, connected, influential. And she has my son. The attachment opens to reveal a formal invitation, embossed and elegant, requesting my services for a series of high-profile events. It's an olive branch, a door opening. But who opened it? I read the email three more times, searching for clues in every word, every punctuation mark. Who knows about Liam? Who knows about me? Most importantly, who is helping me, and why? The questions spiral through my mind, but beneath them all pulses a single, overwhelming truth: this is my chance. After five years of darkness, someone has switched on a light. My fingers fly across my phone's screen, pulling up flight options to New York. The first available seat is tomorrow morning, absurdly expensive for the short notice, but I don't hesitate before booking it. Money means nothing compared to this. Nothing in my carefully constructed Los Angeles life means anything compared to the little boy with the curly hair and the toy car. I look at the photograph again, memorizing every detail of Liam's face. My son. Five years old next month. Five birthdays I've missed, scraped knees I haven't kissed, bedtime stories I haven't read. But not anymore. "I'm coming, baby," I whisper to the image on my screen. "Mama's coming.”MABELThe contractions were relentless.Three minutes apart. Then two. Then barely any break between them."You're at nine centimeters now," the nurse said. "Almost time to push."Damian held my hand. Wiped my forehead with a cool cloth. "You're doing amazing.""I don't feel amazing. I feel like I'm dying.""You're not dying. You're bringing our daughter into the world."Another contraction. I squeezed his hand so hard he winced."Sorry…""Don't apologize. Squeeze as hard as you need."The doctor came in. Dr. Martinez. She'd been my OB throughout the pregnancy."Alright, Mabel. Let's check your progress." She examined me. "You're at ten centimeters. Fully dilated. Ready to push.""Already?""Fast labor. Your body knows what it's doing." Dr. Martinez positioned herself. "On the next contraction, I want you to push. Hard. Like you're having the biggest bowel movement of your life.""Lovely image.""But accurate. Ready?"The next contraction came. I pushed. Hard. Everything in me focuse
MABELAt eight and a half months pregnant, Damian asked me something.We were having dinner at his apartment. Our apartment now, mostly. I'd moved most of my things over. We were living together again. Slowly rebuilding."I have a question," he said. "And if the answer is no, that's completely fine. No pressure.""Okay. What is it?""Would you marry me? Before the baby comes?"I looked at him. Surprised. "Marry you?""Yes. Not a big wedding. No production. Just us. At a courthouse. Make it official before she's born.""Why?""Because I want to be married to you. Want us to be a family legally. Want to stand up and commit to you publicly." He took my hand. "And because we've done the work. We've rebuilt trust. We're in a good place. I want to make it official."I thought about it. About eight months of therapy. Eight months of him showing up. Eight months of rebuilding."What about a ceremony? Don't you want something more?""No. I don't need a ceremony. I just need you. And Liam. And
MABELLiam had adjusted to the idea of a baby sister quickly.At six years old, he was old enough to understand. Young enough to be genuinely excited."When will she be born?" he asked for the hundredth time."About six more weeks. In November.""That's forever!""It'll go fast. You'll see."He'd started collecting things for her. A stuffed bear from his room. A blanket he'd picked out at the store. A book about being a big brother."I'm going to teach her everything," he announced one evening at dinner.Vanessa, Damian, and I were all there. Co-parenting dinner. A new tradition we'd started."What are you going to teach her?" Vanessa asked."How to play games. How to read. How to ride a bike when she's big enough." Liam counted on his fingers. "And I'll protect her. Make sure no one is mean to her.""That's very sweet," I said. "She's lucky to have you as a big brother.""I know. I'm going to be the best big brother ever."Damian smiled. "I believe you will be."After dinner, Liam we
MABELThe first therapy session was tense.Dr. Andrew asked hard questions. Made us articulate our feelings. Our fears. Our hurts.I talked about betrayal. About Ethan. About how Damian's secret made me feel like history was repeating.Damian talked about fear. About protecting the adoption. About making bad choices to avoid consequences."You can't rebuild trust while holding onto secrets," Dr. Andrew said. "Complete transparency going forward. That's non-negotiable.""I understand," Damian said."And you," Dr. Andrew looked at me. "You can't punish him forever for one mistake. At some point, you have to choose. Forgive or walk away. Staying in the middle helps no one.""I know. I'm trying.""Try harder. For yourself. For this baby. For him."We left that first session exhausted. Emotionally drained.But we came back the next week. And the week after that.By week three, we were talking more openly. Dr. Andrew guiding us through difficult conversations."Why did you keep the secret?"
MABELI stayed at Damian's apartment for another hour.We talked about logistics. Practical things. Doctor's appointments. Prenatal care. What I needed."Have you seen a doctor yet?" he asked."No. I was going to make an appointment this week.""Can I come? To the first appointment?"I hesitated. That felt intimate. Like something couples did.But he was the father. He had a right to be there."Yes. You can come.""Thank you." He made a note on his phone. "Let me know when it is. I'll clear my schedule.""You don't have to…""I want to. Want to be there from the beginning. Want to be involved in everything."We talked about telling Liam. Agreed to wait until the second trimester. Until we were sure everything was progressing well.Talked about living arrangements. Whether I'd stay in my apartment or if we needed somewhere bigger."We can figure that out later," Damian said. "After we know more. After we've done some counseling. After we see where things stand between us.""Speaking of
MABELWe sat in silence for a while.Damian's hand still on my stomach. Both of us processing. Absorbing the reality.A baby. Our baby. Due in seven and a half months."We need to talk about logistics," I said finally."Okay." Damian pulled his hand back. Giving me space. "What do you need?""I need to know you'll be involved. That you'll be present. That this baby won't just be my responsibility.""Of course I'll be involved. Mabel, I want to be part of this. Completely.""Even if we're not together? Even if I can't forgive you? Even if we end up co-parenting from separate homes?""Even then. This is my child. I'll be there. For every appointment. Every milestone. Everything." Damian's voice was firm. "You won't do this alone. I promise."I wanted to believe him. Wanted to trust those words.But trust was the problem, wasn't it?"I'm still hurt," I said quietly. "Still angry about the lies. About the secrets. About everything.""I know.""That doesn't just go away because I'm pregnan
MABELI stared at the paused video. At Claire's younger face caught in grainy security footage.Twenty-five years younger. But definitely her."Play it again," Damian said quietly.I restarted the video from the beginning.The timestamp read; November 12, 1999. 11:47 PMThe night my mother died.Th
MABELThe interview aired the following Sunday evening.Prime time. 7 PM. Right after the evening news.We gathered in the safe house living room. Me, Vanessa, Bella, Lily, Damian. Even Andrew came.Liam was upstairs. Asleep. Too young to watch."Ready?" Damian asked, remote in hand."No. But play
MABELI didn't get in a cab.Instead, I stood outside the restaurant, watching through the window as Claire composed herself.She was talking to someone on her phone. Probably her lawyer. Probably planning her defense.Too late.My phone rang. Damian."Where are you?" he asked."Outside the restaur
MABEL"Wait."Claire's voice stopped me at the restaurant entrance.I turned back. She stood beside our table, composed as ever."We're not finished," she said."Yes, we are.""No. We're not." Claire gestured to my chair. "Sit down. I have an offer to make.""I don't want anything from you…..""You







