Mag-log inTeresa’s POV
Two nights had passed since Suzanne caught me with those documents, and the incomplete name burned in my mind like a brand I couldn't shake off. "Tim—" Just three letters. Three damn letters that haunted every waking moment. I lay in the oversized bed, staring at the ceiling with my hands on my swollen belly. I was already eight months pregnant. The babies inside me were restless, as if they could feel my anxiety. I had tried everything to fall asleep. Warm milk. Deep breathing. Counting backwards from a hundred. But nothing worked. Because somewhere in this villa was the truth. And I needed to know it. The clock on the nightstand read 2:47 PM. Suzanne would be taking her afternoon nap right about now. She was religious about it, claiming it helped her stay alert for the rest of the day. So I had maybe an hour, maybe less. My heart hammered against my chest as I sat up in bed, the silence of the villa making every sound seem louder. The floor creaked under my weight as I slowly made my way towards the door, my hand gripping the wall for balance. The study was three doors down from my room. I knew because I had counted them obsessively over the past two months. Suzanne kept files there, documents related to the villa and probably more. Thankfully the door was unlocked, so I slipped inside and closed it behind me with a soft click. The room smelled like old paper and furniture polish. A large desk dominated the space, filing cabinets lined one wall, and afternoon sunlight filtered through heavy curtains. My hands were shaking as I moved to the desk first and pulled open drawers. Inside, I found bills, grocery lists, and medication schedules for my pregnancy, but nothing of use. Then I remembered the filing cabinet. Suzanne had pulled those property documents from the bottom drawer two days ago. I knelt down, ignoring the protest in my lower back, and opened it. There were so many files. I flipped through them quickly. Property deeds. Purchase agreements. Maintenance records. And then, buried under a stack of property documents, I found a corporate filing. The letterhead was professional and expensive looking. And at the top, in bold black letters was ‘Timothy Chase, CEO. Chase Medical Technologies’ I blinked in surprise and read it again. “No. It couldn't be.” But the name stared back at me, undeniable and permanent. Gregory Chase. Thomas's father was Gregory Chase. I remembered that I had been at his father's estate. Some family dinner I wasn't important enough to attend. Thomas came back late, drunk, a bottle of whiskey dangling from his hand. "My father had a bastard," he had said, his voice thick with bitterness. "From his first marriage. Gave him away like garbage." I had been folding laundry. I remembered because I had stopped mid-fold, a shirt hanging limp in my hands. "Why would he do that?" Thomas had laughed coldly. "To protect him from my mother. She would have killed the boy if he stayed." Thomas had a half-brother who had been given away for adoption. Stripped of his legitimacy. Hidden from a family that would have destroyed him. The room tilted as I realized that I was carrying the babies of my ex-fiancé's half-brother. The same blood. The same family. The same twisted, poisonous lineage that had already shattered my life once. Did Timothy know who I was? Did he know I was Thomas's ex-fiancée? Was I chosen because of it? Was this some kind of revenge? Some sick game between half-brothers I didn't understand? The accident. Thomas leaving me. The hospital bills draining every cent I had. And then this offer. Anonymous. High-paying. Perfectly timed. Suddenly I felt a sudden pain, like something inside me had snapped. I gasped, doubling over. My hand flew to my belly as it hardened under my palm, tight as stone. “No. Not now.” I was two weeks early so the babies weren't supposed to come yet. But for some weird reason my body didn't negotiate. The contraction slammed into me and I cried out, the sound coming from somewhere deep, raw and desperate. At that moment, the document slipped from my hands and fluttered to the floor. I couldn't think. Couldn't breathe. All I could feel was pain. "Teresa!" The door flew open. Suzanne stood there, face drained of colour. Her eyes darted from me to the open filing cabinet to the papers scattered across the floor. "What did you do?" I couldn't answer. Another wave of agony crashed over me and I gripped the desk like it was the only thing keeping me upright. "Suzanne." My voice cracked. "The babies. They are coming." She stared at me for one frozen moment. Then something shifted in her face and she quickly yanked her phone from her pocket and dialed. "We need the car. Now. Jane Doe is in labour. I don't care that she's early. Get the car ready. Now." She hung up and grabbed my arm, steadying me. "Can you walk?" I nodded, though I wasn't sure. Every muscle in my body was seizing, contracting, trying to expel three lives whether I was ready or not. Suzanne half-carried, half-dragged me towards the door. "Why did you go in there?" Her voice was low, tight with something I couldn't name. "You were told not to snoop." "I needed to know." I gasped between contractions, sweat pouring down my face. "Know what?" "Who he is." Suzanne went silent. Her grip on my arm tightened but she didn't say a word. We made it to the front entrance just as the car screeched to a stop. The driver jumped out, eyes wide. "Hospital," Suzanne barked. "Now." They helped me into the back seat and I collapsed against the leather, my clothes soaked through. Suzanne climbed in beside me, face pale and drawn. "Breathe, Teresa. Just breathe." But I couldn't. My mind was spinning. Pain and shock tangled together until I couldn't tell where one ended and the other began. Timothy Chase. The man whose children I carried was tied to the man who destroyed me. And I had no idea why. What would he do when he found out I knew? What would happen when he realized his secret was out? "We are almost there," Suzanne said softly. I opened my eyes, staring out the window. "Timothy Chase." The name left my lips in a whisper. Suzanne's head whipped towards me. "What did you say?" I turned to face her, my voice hoarse and broken. "You knew who I was, didn't you?"Timothy's POV My phone rang at 2 AM.I was not fully asleep so the phone's vibration on the nightstand pulled me the rest of the way up before the second ring.It was an unknown number.Without thinking, I answered.The voice that came through was distorted. Digitally processed into something flat and genderless, the voice of someone who understood that anonymity was its own kind of power."Mr. Chase," it said. "We thought it was time to speak directly."I immediately sat up. But I did not turn on the light."I've been expecting this," I replied."We know." There was a pause that was too comfortable to be accidental. "That is one of the things we appreciate about you. You are rarely surprised. It makes conversations like this more efficient.""Then be efficient.""The three children," the voice started. "Kasey, Kylie, and Kai. We want them delivered to our research facility within thirty days. All three. Together. The arrangement will be comfortable, Mr. Chase. They will be treated a
Timothy's POV The encrypted message arrived at 3 AM on a Tuesday.I was already awake. I had been awake for most of the night, sitting at the desk in the hospital's private office that the administration had made available to me, working through security reports that Carson had sent over at midnight with a note that just said: Read these before morning.And I had read them.Then I had sat with them for two hours and thought about what they meant and what they required and what the appropriate response was to a situation that was escalating in ways I had hoped, until recently, I had successfully prevented.The encrypted channel was one I had closed four years ago. Or believed I had closed. The message that came through it was short and exact in the way that messages from people who did not need to explain themselves tended to be.“The children. All three. Final request before we proceed.”I read it once before I closed the channel, picked up my phone, and called Carson.He answered on
Teresa's POV The first thing Kai asked for when he was fully awake was water.The second thing he asked for was me.Mei had told me once, in the early months when I had first left him in the village and driven back to Dhuran with my chest hollowed out, that he always asked for me first thing in the morning before he was fully awake. Before his eyes opened, before the day had fully arrived. Her name for it was his checking call. He still did it two weeks after surgery.Every morning his eyes would open and find the chair beside his bed where I had slept, and he would look at me for a moment with that quiet, checking attention, and then something in his small body would settle and he would be ready for the day.And I was not going anywhere.I had slept in that chair for fourteen nights. My back had opinions about this that I was choosing to ignore. The nursing staff had twice offered me the family rest room down the corridor and twice I had thanked them and stayed where I was.Kai's r
Kylie's POV I had known before she said it.I had known the moment I walked through the door and saw his face against the white pillow, pale and still and surrounded by machines. I had known the way I knew things sometimes before I had the words for them.But hearing Teresa say it out loud was different from knowing it silently.It made it real in a way that settled into my chest and stayed there.Kasey was already moving towards the bed slowly. The way he moved when he was going to something he wanted to examine without disturbing. He stopped at the side rail and looked at the boy in the bed for a long moment without speaking.I moved to stand beside him.Up close, the similarities were not… small. They were not the kind of thing you could dismiss as coincidence or explain away as people just looking alike. They were specific and detailed and undeniable in the way that facts were undeniable when you looked at them directly.His nose. The exact curve of it at the tip.The line of his
Teresa's POV The surgery started at six in the morning.By six fifteen I had already walked the length of the waiting room four times and memorized every detail of it without meaning to. The arrangement of the chairs. The pattern on the floor. The quality of the light coming through the window at the far end.Timothy was already there when I arrived. Standing near the window with his hands in his pockets and his back partially turned, the way he stood when he was thinking something through and didn't want his face read while he did it.He heard me come in. I knew because his shoulders shifted slightly. But he didn't turn around immediately.We had not spoken since the transfer, so there was nothing comfortable about sharing this room with him. But Kai was in surgery.And that made everything else secondary in a way that required no discussion.I sat down, while Timothy remained at the window, and we waited.An hour passed. Then two. Then three.Somewhere during the fourth hour Timot
Timothy's POV "We are taking him to Dhuran," I said. "Today."Teresa looked up at me from across the bed. Her eyes were still red at the edges from the yard. But her hands were steady and her voice, when she spoke, was the controlled voice of a woman who had learned to function through things that should have stopped her completely."He doesn't travel well," she whispered. "His heart rate destabilizes with stress and unfamiliar environments trigger…""I have a medical transport vehicle. Equipped. Dr. Green can ride with him. You can ride with him." I held her gaze. "He will be monitored every minute of the journey. I will make sure of it."She looked at me for a moment before she nodded once and turned back to Kai.I stepped out and called Carson.Within twenty minutes the calls were made. The pediatric cardiac center in Dhuran had been notified. The department head, a man who understood that a call from my office meant everything stopped and reorganized immediately, had already begu
Teresa's POV Derek's behaviour changed after I accepted his proposal.Small things at first. Things I told myself were normal.He appeared at St. Catherine's on Monday afternoon without warning. I was organizing supplies in the medication room when he walked in, his easy smile in place."Thought I
Teresa's POV Tuesday evening arrived faster than I wanted it to.I stood outside Timothy Chase's penthouse door for thirty seconds, my hand raised to knock.This was it.Beyond this door were my children.Kasey and Kylie. The babies I had carried for nine months. The ones I had left behind to save
Teresa's POV I was exhausted.Twelve hours of organizing supplies, assisting with minor procedures, and dodging gossip about Derek Saltzman had left me physically and emotionally drained.All I wanted was to go home, collapse on my bed, call Kai and pretend everything was fine.I pushed through th
Teresa's POV Three days of agonizing deliberation ended with me accepting Timothy's offer.I had stared at his business card for hours. Picked up my phone to call him, then put it down. Talked myself into it. Talked myself out of it.But in the end, the decision was simple.I needed money. I neede







