The card felt heavier than paper.
Damon,
Do not trust the paternity report.
The children are yours.
But not for the reason you think.
For several seconds, I could hear nothing except Lila’s soft cries against Sylvie’s shoulder.
The handwriting was my mother’s. I knew the slight backward slant, the firm pressure, the way she crossed every t with a line too long for the word.
But my mother had not written anything in eighteen months.
Not since the stroke.
I looked at Eva.
“When did these flowers arrive?”
“Just now.”
The orderly shifted uncomfortably near the door. “They were left at the nurses’ station.”
“By whom?”
“I don’t know, sir.”
He looked young. Nervous. Ordinary.
Not part of a conspiracy. Just a hospital employee who had carried a bouquet into the wrong kind of room.
Eva took the lilies from him and thanked him. Then she closed the door.
Sylvie watched me carefully.
“What does she mean?”
“I don’t know.”
But even as I said it, an old memory returned.
A clinic.
A private room.
My mother sitting beside Sylvie five years earlier, laughing through tears.
At the time, I thought they were discussing our failed attempts to have children.
We had wanted a family.
For years.
At first, we had been patient. Then hopeful. Then disciplined. Appointments, tests, specialists, schedules.
Eventually, the hope itself became painful.
The doctors said the problem was complicated but not impossible. My fertility had been affected by a childhood illness. There were viable samples stored from an earlier treatment, but the chances of success were uncertain.
Sylvie and I had begun fertility treatment once.
Only once.
Then my company entered the most difficult year of its existence, and I told her we should pause.
I had called it practical.
She had called it another promise postponed.
I looked at the card again.
“The embryos,” I said.
Sylvie’s face changed.
Eva frowned. “What embryos?”
“Our fertility treatment.”
Sylvie lowered herself slowly onto the edge of the bed.
“We had three embryos preserved,” she said.
“No,” I replied. “We had two.”
She looked at me.
“The clinic told me there were three.”
The room went still.
“How could we have received different information?”
“I don’t know.”
Eva opened her folder again.
“Which clinic?”
“Halcyon Reproductive Medicine,” Sylvie said.
I knew the name well.
It had once been a small private practice. Three years ago, Vexley Pharmaceuticals acquired the medical group that owned it.
The acquisition had been recommended by Martin Pierce.
A cold clarity moved through me.
The altered letters.
The false photographs.
The intercepted pregnancy notice.
The trust.
The clinic.
All of it touched the same circle of people.
Eva’s phone rang.
She glanced at the screen.
“Miriam.”
She answered on speaker.
“Miriam, are you safe?”
“For the moment.”
Her voice was quieter than before.
“Where is Martin?” I asked.
“He left your mother’s apartment.”
“Was he holding you there?”
“No. He came because he knew I was trying to reach you. He wanted to convince me to stop.”
“Why?”
“Because the records connect him to Halcyon.”
Sylvie tightened her hold on Lila.
“What records?”
Miriam hesitated.
“Your fertility files.”
I looked at the paternity card in my hand.
“What did they do?”
“I don’t know all of it,” Miriam said. “Your mother discovered that Halcyon’s archived records had been altered after the acquisition. Patient files were reassigned. Genetic data was hidden. She believed Martin had used the clinic to conceal something about Damon’s family.”
“About my father?”
“Yes.”
My mother had always refused to discuss my father after he disappeared.
She told me grief was easier than anger because grief did not ask to be fed.
I had mistaken that silence for certainty.
“What does any of this have to do with the twins?” I asked.
Miriam took a breath.
“The paternity report Eva received was genuine. But it was based on the wrong comparison sample.”
I looked at Sylvie.
Her face had gone pale.
“What sample?” Eva asked.
“One stored under Damon’s name at Halcyon.”
“Mine,” I said.
“No,” Miriam replied. “That is the problem.”
A knock sounded at the door.
Every person in the room froze.
The door opened slowly.
Dr. Ortiz entered with a nurse carrying a portable bassinet monitor.
She took one look at us and stopped.
“Is this a bad time?”
“No,” Sylvie said quickly. “Please come in.”
Normal life returned for ten minutes.
The doctor checked the babies’ breathing and temperature. The nurse adjusted their blankets. Noah sneezed twice, which made Sylvie smile despite everything.
I stood beside the window, holding a card from my supposedly incapacitated mother while a doctor explained that my children were healthy.
The contrast felt almost impossible.
Before leaving, Dr. Ortiz looked at Sylvie.
“You need rest.”
Then she looked at me.
“And so does she.”
“I understand.”
Her expression suggested she doubted that.
When the door closed, Miriam was still waiting on the line.
“Tell me whose sample it was,” I said.
“Your father’s.”
The words entered the room quietly.
But they changed everything.
“My father’s?”
“Yes.”
“Why would his sample be stored at a fertility clinic?”
“It wasn’t originally. It came from a medical research program Vexley funded more than thirty years ago.”
I felt the floor shift beneath me.
Vexley Pharmaceuticals had started as a small laboratory studying hereditary conditions.
My father had been one of the first participants in a cardiac research trial.
The company used his story for years after he vanished. A founder willing to become his own patient.
His tissue samples had been preserved.
Miriam continued.
“Someone replaced your fertility record with his genetic profile. The paternity test compared the twins to him.”
I understood the sentence and still could not make sense of it.
“If the report showed a match—”
“It did.”
“Then the test would identify him as their father.”
“Genetically, yes.”
Sylvie covered her mouth.
Eva leaned forward.
“But that cannot be the full explanation. A grandparent shares significant DNA with grandchildren, but not enough to be listed as the biological father in a correctly interpreted test.”
“Exactly,” Miriam said. “Which is why your mother believed the report had been deliberately mislabeled.”
I looked at the card again.
The children are yours.
But not for the reason you think.
A thought began forming.
One I did not want.
“One of the embryos,” I said.
Sylvie stared at me.
“What about it?”
“You said there were three.”
“Yes.”
“I was told two.”
Eva looked between us.
“What are you thinking?”
I forced the words out.
“That someone may have substituted genetic material before the embryos were created.”
“No,” Sylvie whispered.
I moved toward her.
“I’m not saying the children aren’t ours.”
“Then what are you saying?”
“I don’t know yet.”
And that was the truth.
For a man who had built his life on answers, admitting uncertainty felt like stepping into open air.
Miriam spoke again.
“Damon, your mother wants to see you.”
I looked at the phone.
“She can speak?”
“Yes.”
“Since when?”
“Several months.”
Anger rose in me so quickly I had to turn away.
“Several months?”
“She was afraid.”
“Of me?”
“Of what would happen if the wrong people knew she was recovering.”
“She let me believe she could barely recognize me.”
“She knew the trust was being watched. She knew Martin had access to her medical reports. She wanted proof before she spoke.”
I closed my eyes.
Every person in my life had hidden something from me in the name of protection.
My father.
My mother.
Sylvie.
My lawyers.
My staff.
But for the first time, I saw another truth.
I had made myself difficult to approach.
Unreachable.
Protected by assistants, schedules, assumptions, and anger.
People had not simply chosen silence.
I had built a world where silence was easier.
“I’ll come,” I said.
Sylvie looked at me.
“Go.”
I turned toward her.
“I’m not leaving you here.”
“You’re going to see your mother, not disappearing into a board meeting.”
“I can send someone.”
“This is not something you send someone to do.”
Her voice was tired but certain.
Eva stood.
“I’ll stay.”
I hesitated.
Sylvie reached for my hand.
The gesture surprised both of us.
Her fingers were warm.
“Go,” she repeated. “Find out the truth.”
I looked at Lila sleeping beside her and Noah in the second bassinet.
Then I looked at the woman I had once loved badly, but never stopped loving.
“I’ll come back.”
Sylvie held my gaze.
“Then come back.”
It was not forgiveness.
It was something more valuable.
A chance to keep a promise.
I left the hospital at sunrise.
The rain had cleared, leaving the city washed in pale silver. Traffic moved slowly through wet streets.
I sat in the back of the car without checking a single message.
My mother lived in a quiet apartment overlooking Central Park, though she had not truly lived there since the stroke.
For eighteen months, I had visited twice a week.
I sat beside her bed.
I read financial news aloud.
I told her about the company.
She answered with blinks and small movements.
At least, that was what I believed.
Miriam opened the door before I knocked.
She looked older than she had the week before.
Not physically.
Guilty.
“Where is Martin?”
“Gone.”
“Did he threaten you?”
“No.”
“That is not an answer.”
“He tried to persuade me that revealing everything would destroy the company.”
“Would it?”
“Possibly.”
I stepped inside.
“Then perhaps it deserves to be rebuilt.”
Miriam’s eyes softened.
“That sounds like your mother.”