LOGINNatasha did not leave the hospital.
Hours passed.
Dawn slowly crept over Atlanta, painting the sky in shades of pale orange and gray, but she remained seated beside Malia's bed.
Her sister still hadn't regained consciousness.
Every beep from the monitor felt like a countdown.
To what, Natasha didn't know.
The door opened quietly.
A young nurse stepped inside carrying a folder.
"Dr. Harris asked me to bring these."
Natasha accepted the file.
"What is it?"
"Malia's preliminary laboratory results."
The nurse offered a sympathetic smile before leaving.
For several moments, Natasha simply stared at the folder.
Part of her didn't want to open it.
As a nurse, she knew enough to understand how devastating a few pages of medical data could be.
Eventually, she opened it.
Blood chemistry.
Genetic markers.
Organ function reports.
She flipped through the pages automatically.
Then stopped.
Her eyes narrowed.
A particular section had caught her attention.
Blood type.
Natasha blinked.
Looked again.
Then again.
Her pulse quickened.
"No..."
She checked the report a fourth time.
The result remained unchanged.
Malia's blood type was listed as AB-negative.
Natasha immediately pulled out her wallet.
Tucked behind an old photograph was a faded donor card.
Her own blood type.
O-negative.
That wasn't unusual.
What troubled her was something else.
Their late mother's records.
She remembered them clearly.
A-negative.
Their father had been O-positive.
The combination bothered her.
Enough that she grabbed her phone and searched quickly.
The answer appeared almost instantly.
Her stomach tightened.
The odds were extremely rare.
Not impossible.
But rare enough to raise questions.
Questions she didn't like.
Questions she wasn't ready to ask.
The room suddenly felt colder.
A soft groan interrupted her thoughts.
Natasha's head snapped upward.
"Malia?"
Her sister's eyelids fluttered.
Weakly.
Slowly.
Then opened.
Relief crashed over Natasha so hard that she nearly cried.
"Malia!"
A faint smile appeared.
"You look terrible."
Natasha laughed despite herself.
"You almost gave me a heart attack."
"Sorry."
Her voice sounded weak.
Like sandpaper.
"What happened?"
Malia frowned.
"I don't remember."
The monitor continued its steady rhythm.
Natasha squeezed her hand.
"Don't worry about anything right now."
But worry was already spreading through her mind.
The blood test.
The hereditary disease.
The strange inconsistency.
Something wasn't right.
And she could feel it.
Across town, in a glass skyscraper overlooking the city, another person was studying the same report.
A man sat alone in a luxurious office.
The morning sun reflected against the floor-to-ceiling windows behind him.
His expensive suit was immaculate.
His expression wasn't.
The paper trembled slightly in his hand.
He read the laboratory results once.
Then again.
Then a third time.
A muscle tightened in his jaw.
"Impossible."
The man stood abruptly.
The name at the top of the report stared back at him.
Malia Rowett.
A name he had not expected to encounter.
Not after all these years.
Not after everything that had been buried.
His phone rang.
He answered immediately.
"Did you verify it?"
"Twice."
The voice on the other end sounded nervous.
Silence filled the office.
The man slowly looked toward a framed photograph sitting on his desk.
An old photograph.
A family photograph.
His eyes lingered on one face.
Then returned to the report.
Finally, he spoke.
"Tell no one."
"Sir?"
"No one."
The line went dead.
For several moments, he stood motionless.
Then he picked up another phone.
A secure phone.
One almost nobody knew existed.
The call connected after a single ring.
"I need everything you can find on Natasha Nielson."
The voice replied immediately.
"How urgent?"
The man's expression darkened.
"Before she starts asking questions."
Back at Saint Agnes Medical Center, Natasha stared through the window of Malia's room.
She had no idea that somewhere in Atlanta, powerful people already knew her name.
And they were afraid.
Because a secret protected for twenty-six years was beginning to crack.
And once the first crack appeared—
The entire foundation could collapse.
The rain had eased to a fine mist.Dark clouds still hung low over the quarry, but the violent storm had passed, leaving the ground slick with mud and scattered pools of water.Patricia stood beside Obadiah's lead vehicle.Her mind was no longer in the quarry.It was already at Kilele Estate.With Glen.With Faith.She closed her eyes for a moment.Please don't let me be too late.Inspector Bethwel Kanda walked over."I understand why you want to leave."Patricia looked at him."But I need you to trust me for another five minutes."She searched his face."Five minutes?"He nodded."If Alex is right—and he usually is—someone is trying to force us into making a mistake."Patricia exhaled slowly."I know."She looked down at her hands."But I'm their mother, Inspector.""My heart isn't thinking like an investigator."Bethwel smiled sympathetically."I wouldn't expect it to."A few metres away, Alison watched Patricia in silence.Until now, she had admired Patricia's courage.Now she saw
The realization settled over the quarry with frightening clarity.Obadiah's estate...Had never simply been a safe house.It had been built above another entrance to the underground network.For several long seconds, only the rain could be heard.Then Bethwel spoke."Did you know?"His question was directed at Obadiah.The billionaire answered without hesitation."No."Joel looked at him carefully."I believe him."Korir, however, laughed."That's the irony."Everyone turned toward him."You've all spent years believing Obadiah Waore was one of the architects of this conspiracy."He smiled mockingly."When in truth...""...he has been living on top of it."Obadiah's face darkened."If you're trying to unsettle me..."Korir interrupted."I'm trying to educate you."He slowly walked toward the edge of the quarry."Do you know why your grandfather was allowed to purchase Kilele Estate in 1952?"Obadiah frowned."It was auctioned."Korir nodded."Officially."He looked back."Unofficially
The flashing red dot pulsed on the tablet screen like a heartbeat.Nobody spoke.Patricia stared at it."No..."she whispered.Obadiah took the tablet from his guard.His face remained unreadable, but his grip tightened ever so slightly."Confirm the coordinates."The guard's fingers flew across the rugged tablet.Three seconds later, he looked up."Confirmed."He swallowed."It's Kilele Estate."Patricia's knees weakened.The words struck her harder than the explosions at the quarry.Kilele Estate.The secluded ranch where Glen and Faith had been taken after the attack on her home.Her children.Alison immediately caught Patricia before she stumbled."They'll be alright."Patricia nodded automatically.But inside...She wasn't convinced.For the first time since Mercy had disappeared...Her instincts as a mother overwhelmed every logical thought.She no longer cared about Grace.Or the Genesis File.Or hidden tunnels.Only two small faces filled her mind.Glen...Faith...She remembe
Rain continued to fall over the quarry.The furious downpour had softened into a steady drizzle, but everyone was soaked to the skin. Water streamed from broken cliffs into the flooded excavation below, carrying away loose gravel and the last wisps of concrete dust from the explosion.For the first time since dawn, neither side moved.Korir's officers remained behind their vehicles.Obadiah's security detail held their positions behind heavy machinery.The sniper fire from the western ridge had stopped as abruptly as it had begun, leaving only an uneasy silence.It was the kind of silence that made experienced men expect another storm."Alex."Obadiah's voice was firm.The young man turned."You need to change."Alex looked down at himself.The cement-stained overall clung heavily to his body. Rainwater had washed away much of the dust he had deliberately rubbed into the fabric, exposing patches of faded blue beneath. His old sports shoes squelched with every movement."I'm fine."Oba
The strip of photographic film danced wildly in the air."No!"Alex lunged forward instinctively.His fingertips missed it by inches.The wind caught it again, carrying it over the broken edge of the quarry as rain poured from the heavens in thick, blinding sheets.For one terrifying second...Everyone forgot the rifles.Forgot Korir.Forgot the bunker.Forgot the Genesis File.Every eye followed the tiny strip twisting helplessly against the grey sky."Get it!"Korir shouted.Half a dozen officers sprinted toward the edge.At the same moment, Obadiah barked his own command."Move!"His security team broke formation.Suddenly, the quarry erupted into chaos.Two groups were chasing a piece of film no larger than a finger.Bethwel remained rooted where he stood.Something felt wrong.Very wrong.His instincts screamed that the film wasn't the real objective.He turned sharply."Nobody touch the key!"Too late.A young officer had already reached for the brass key lying on the rock where
The brass key felt unnaturally heavy in Alex's hand.Not because of its weight.Because of what it represented.WAO HOUSE. ATTIC. 1998.Everyone stood frozen.Patricia was the first to break the silence."Our house doesn't have an attic."Alison nodded immediately."It never has."Alex looked at the sisters."You're certain?""I grew up there."Patricia answered firmly."So did I," Alison added. "I've explored every room in that house."Dr. Margaret smiled sadly."So you believe."Joel slowly removed the key from Alex's hand.His fingers traced the faded engraving."I've seen this kind of key before."Bethwel looked at him."Where?""Government safe houses."Everyone turned.Joel continued."In the 1990s, several intelligence safe houses were modified.""False ceilings.""Hidden crawl spaces.""Secret document compartments.""They weren't designed as attics.""They were designed to disappear."Silence followed.Bethwel's mind immediately began reconstructing every report he had ever r
The first gunshot changed everything.One moment, the quarry had been a tense standoff.Then next, it became a battlefield.Kepha Gaya's man collapsed instantly.A crimson stain spread across his chest before he hit the ground.Then came the second shot.Another.And another.The echoes bounced off
Patricia barely slept.Every time she closed her eyes, she saw the photograph.Alex.Smiling.Holding another woman.The image had burned itself into her memory.By dawn, the rain had stopped, leaving Nakuru wrapped in a blanket of mist. The cool morning air drifted through the cracked kitchen wind
Patricia stared at the glowing phone screen.The message refused to disappear.I miss you Then the second one.When will you tell your wife the truth?Outside, thunder rolled across the skies of Nakuru, shaking the windows of the small house.Her hands trembled.No.There had to be an explanation.
The Wife He BetrayedThe evening sky above Nakuru had turned the color of dying embers.From the balcony of their modest rental house in Kiamunyi Estate, Patricia Sewe stood motionless, watching the last streaks of sunlight disappear behind the distant silhouette of Menengai Crater. The cool July w







