LOGIN
Selena didn’t make a scene when the truth dawned on her. She didn’t cry or break down. She just did what she always did: she checked the facts. Her world revolved around proof, which included timestamps, signatures, and records. Data didn’t pretend or twist words; it never lied and was always valid.
The Geneva Summit was still echoing behind her as she left, applause trailing off, while Marcus kept basking in the spotlight. She barely glanced back. She couldn’t afford emotion, not right now. She needed a clear head.
Inside the executive suite, the silence felt almost surgical. Selena went straight to the terminal, working through login, authentication, override, her routine, no hesitation. She typed in the embryo ID she’d memorized from the screen.
E-419-KB.
Of course, the system didn't bring out any data. She entered the code she knew by heart, though she’d never wanted to use it for this.
MK-7713.
The screen was loading. She scanned every detail: maternal registry SH-419, paternal code MK-7713, successful live birth. Age: four years.
Her breathing slowed. Her face stayed still.
Four years. Exactly the timeline of the pregnancy she’d grieved.
She scrolled. Transfer date: April 18.
Selena leaned back, connecting dates in her head. She’d started bleeding on April 20. The pain, the confusion, that emptiness, she remembered all of it. But now, staring at hard evidence, it all reassembled. This wasn't a loss. It was a choice.
Her pregnancy hadn’t failed. Someone had taken it.
Clarity came over her, cold and absolute.
She heard Marcus come in, so quiet, so controlled. He was angry, not afraid. That told her enough.
She turned, locking eyes with him, referencing the file, her registry, the transfer. She asked for confirmation once.
He didn’t hold back. “Yes.”
She didn’t flinch. It anchored her.
She stared a moment longer. Then, sharply: “You extracted my embryo without my consent.
Marcus tried to rewrite the story, saying her pregnancy was at risk and that the extraction was necessary. But she wasn’t buying it. She saw the formula behind his words, the cold logic. He’d never been saving anything. He was controlling it.
She went back to the screen and opened the development file. A photo appeared, a young boy with sharp eyes, and her features. A quiet jolt of recognition.
Her son.
Marcus was speaking, but to be honest, she wasn’t listening; she couldn’t believe what she was hearing.
He kept spinning his version, calling it their success and legacy, something they’d accomplished. Selena ignored him. She saw the gap between his justification and reality. That gap swallowed everything.
She faced him again. Calm, but final: “You didn’t save him. You took him.”
Marcus faltered, just for a second. That hesitation broke it wide open. He knew. He’d always known.
Selena grabbed her phone. She’d stopped caring about what he admitted. Now, it was all about what she could prove.
At the door, she paused. “Next time, hide your authorization code.”
And she left
By the time Selena got to Zurich, the shock had burned itself out, replaced by something ruthless: focus.
The Kingsley Biologics archive flashed open just after two AM. She knew this interface, but she wasn’t wandering anymore. She was hunting.
The document appeared:
Executive Override Authorization.
Protocol 7B.
Marcus signed it.
April 11.
She stared at the date. Nine days before her miscarriage. Nine days before anything had happened. Nine days before, he’d decided.
This wasn’t a reaction. It was premeditated.
She dug into the metadata. Marcus was at the office till late at night. She remembered he'd come home withdrawn that night. Now she saw why.
None of this was by accident.
Selena moved fast, breaking into linked files, bypassing blocks she’d designed herself years ago. Once in, she scanned the records.
Diagnosis: spontaneous hormonal decline.
Outcome: non-viable pregnancy.
Clean. Convincing. Completely false.
She pulled the hormone data from April 17. Numbers told the story—low progesterone, falling hCG—the scientific groundwork for her supposed miscarriage.
But she didn’t stop there.
She found the system logs, filtered for changes. The record showed an original upload, then an edit just hours later.
The edit came from Marcus.
Her heart didn’t race because of surprise; it was pure confirmation.
She dug out the archived original report, the one hidden behind edits. This time, the numbers blew the whole lie apart.
Progesterone: normal.
hCG: rising.
Stable pregnancy.
Selena stared at that screen, hands frozen.
“My body was fine,” she whispered.
Perfectly fine.
Everything after that was crafted, engineered.
Her phone rang. Marcus’s name glowed on the display. She let it ring once, then answered, voice steady.
She didn’t ask questions. She stacked facts to him, the dates, the authorization, the altered labs. Marcus didn’t even try to deny it now. He justified, leaning into big words like preservation, unpredictability, and outcomes.
She heard what mattered.
He decided first. Then built the evidence around his plan.
Her voice cut through. Calm, firm: “You modified my labs to justify extraction. That’s not medicine.”
Marcus reframed again and called it innovation, necessity. He reminded her of the company, their legacy, and the risks if this exploded in public. He thought those things would still mean something to her.
He was wrong.
Selena no longer saw herself inside what he’d built. She was now the evidence he’d tried to bury.
When the call ended, the silence in her room felt different; it was clear, not heavy. She went back to the screen, reviewing the timeline once more.
April 11—authorization signed.
April 17—pregnancy stable.
April 18—data tampered with.
April 20—miscarriage.
The details left no doubt.
This wasn’t random. It was scheduled.
An alert flashed. Marcus, remote access, trying to lock her out. Selena just smirked, encrypted every file he’d never touch, every log, every trail.
She had control now.
Before she shut it all down, she opened the original lab report once more, eyes on the numbers that told the truth her body had known.
Nothing was wrong.
She closed her laptop with a slow, steady hand. That simple truth turned her world upside-down.
Her miscarriage wasn’t a tragedy.
It was a decision.
And Marcus had signed it off before she ever felt a thing.
Rain kept tapping the hotel windows long after midnight. Ireland’s rain, she thought, had its own way about it—slower, more patient than in London. Like it just wanted to hang around, unhurried.Selana hovered by the balcony doors, wrapped in her hotel blanket, eyes locked on the black coast, dark under heavy clouds. The town below had gone still hours ago. Only the ocean waves and a stray pair of headlights slipping through mist broke the quiet.She ought to be asleep. She was exhausted. But her head just wouldn’t let her. It was crowded up there—Ava, Marcus, Elara, the little girl with dark curls. And Keller. Especially Keller.No sense pretending anymore. Something between them had shifted—sometime between quiet laughter, those glances that lingered, and how right it felt just to be next to him.The problem? She needed that feeling. Needed him, honestly. Admitting it shook her more than she wanted.“Normal people sleep at this hour, you know?”Keller’s voice slipped into the hush b
Selana woke up and, honestly, it was strange—the panic just wasn’t there. Usually it barged in, but not today. She felt something peaceful and clear as the sunlight crept through the curtains. Outside, waves rolled along the Irish coast, steady and soft. No alarms, no sirens, nobody pounding on her door. Just quiet. Real quiet.She lay in bed, staring up, letting herself sink into the gentleness of it all. Her breathing was different—fuller, deeper. Like the place handed her a scrap of calm she’d forgotten how to hold onto.Keller was at the window, drinking coffee, watching the world. When he saw her awake, he turned, his voice low and gentle. “There she is.”Selana rubbed her eyes. “How long’ve you been up?”He shrugged. “Long enough to know Irish weather doesn’t keep promises.”She laughed, actually laughed, the kind that bubbles up without thinking. Keller heard it—and that smile hit his eyes.“You laugh more here,” he said, just above a whisper.She moved slow, sitting up. “Guess
reland’s air really was different. As Selena stepped off the plane and drew a deep breath, something inside just let go. Coming here—she knew. It made sense, even if things with Elara took a nosedive. No regrets.Rain and salt rode the wind, the fields rolled out, wild and green. Honestly, the place looked unreal—like something you’d imagine when everything goes sideways. Maybe too pretty for the kind of truth Selena was chasing.She tugged her coat tight while Keller handled the bags. Her son skipped along, totally wired despite the flight.“Mummy, everything’s green!” he shouted, eyes wide at the hills.Keller laughed. “That’s a good thing, kid.”“It’s too much green!”Selena cracked up. For a moment, that tightness in her chest faded. It didn’t stick around long.As soon as her son’s excited chatter faded into background noise, old worries crashed in—Ava, still unconscious in that hospital bed; Marcus falling apart; and the woman tangled up at the center of it all, living with the
The decision to go to Ireland looked like it wasn’t well thought about, but Selena couldn’t control it. She packed her boxes with impulse and speed, moving with urgency like her life depended on this move. But honestly, she knew she wasn’t being impulsive, this was very necessary. Then Elara Quinn entered the picture, and everything changed. Ever since the secret of the embryos had gone out, she had had a little longing to find the embargo that was used for the external test, and she really wondered who it was. Now, she finally had a name, a face, a child….her child. Selena couldn’t let it go. Especially after seeing Ava in the hospital.Her swollen face clearly from being beaten up, how cold her hands were and how much pain she imagined she was going through. It hurts her and that image was what was driving her to know more about the truth. She zipped up her suitcase, then stopped, stuck in her thoughts.Keller’s voice brought her back. “Are you ready?”She glanced up. He leaned
The hospital used to be Selena's favorite place, it was where she showed one of her greatest skills, where she got to do life with her husband and now ex, where she got to work with some of the smartest minds in the industry. But lately it has been from one issue to the other. A threatened miscarriage and now Ava struggling for her life and she blamed herself. If they had not tried to locate her, she wouldn't be in this state. If they hadn’t pressed her for more information, maybe she would have been enjoying her life now. But here she was. As they walked down the hospital hallway, Selena could not show off the guilt she felt. Keller stood close as usual and she was grateful for his steady presence. They appeared by the door of her room. Room 312.Selena wasn’t sure of what to expect once that door opened. Her hands shook as she held on to the door handle, not sure if she should go ahead or wait. “You don’t have to do this right now,” Keller said quietly. “I really want to know.
Dusk slid in, quiet and sneaky. The air shifted—you know that feeling before you notice? Selena and Keller leaned on the balcony, soaking up the last stretch of sunlight. Keller noticed her drifting, eyes locked on something far away.He nudged her. “You okay? You got quiet all of a sudden.”Her gaze stayed glued to the horizon. “Can’t stop thinking about Ava. And… something else. You remember the embryo we found? The external one? I keep wondering where it ended up, who has it. I can’t shake it.”Her phone rang, slicing through the silence. She answered immediately, like she’d been waiting.“Daniel?” Her voice tightened up.“I found her,” he said—straight to it.Selena’s heart skipped. “Where?”“Private hospital. Totally off the books. Took a ton of digging just to confirm she’s there.”She started pacing, words tumbling out. “How bad is she? What happened?”Daniel’s silence felt heavy. “She’s in critical condition.”Selena stopped dead. “Wait. Critical? What do you mean?”“She’s in







