Adelina's gaze drifted to the nightstand. No flowers. No cards. Just a glass of water with a film on top and a single piece of paper, crumpled from a thousand desperate readings. The infertility report. The two words that had been her death sentence long before the cancer.
Her fingers, thin as bird talons, reached for the paper. The texture was soft, worn down by the sweat and tears of her shame.
A sound in the hallway. Footsteps.
Her breath hitched. A surge of something hot and impossible flooded her chest. Garret.
She tried to push herself up on her elbows, a pathetic, weak movement. The door swung open.
It wasn't him.
The man who stood in the doorway was a stranger. He was tall, dressed in a dark overcoat that seemed to absorb the weak light of the room. His face was all sharp angles and shadows, his jaw set like stone. He looked like he belonged in a storm, not a hospital room.
His eyes, a cold, clear gray, swept over the barren room, lingering for a second on the empty visitor's chair before landing on her. The line of his mouth tightened.
He walked toward the bed, his steps silent and deliberate. Up close, she saw the exhaustion etched around his eyes. A deep, profound pain that mirrored her own, but for reasons she couldn't guess. It wasn't pity. It was something closer to self-reproach.
His voice was low, rough, like stones grinding together. "I'm Dr. Douglass Ward. Beryl Terry's ex-fiancé."
Adelina's world tilted. Beryl. Her adoptive sister. The woman who had taken her fiancé, Garret. The woman who had gotten pregnant when Adelina couldn't.
Douglass reached inside his coat and pulled out a manila envelope. He held it with a kind of rigid control, as if it might burst into flames.
"There are some things you should know," he said, his voice flat. "Before the end."
He placed the envelope on the thin blanket covering her legs. Her hands shook as she fumbled with the clasp. Inside was a single sheet of paper. A medical report.
But the name at the top wasn't Adelina Bell.
It was Garret Stein.
Douglass's next words felt like icepicks driving into her ears. "Garret Stein's sperm viability is zero. It always has been. He's incapable of fathering a child."
The air left her lungs. The beeping of the heart monitor seemed to fade into a dull hum. She couldn't form a thought. Her lips moved, but no sound came out.
"The baby," Douglass continued, his voice even colder, devoid of any emotion. "The one Beryl is carrying. It isn't his."
The report in her hand crinkled as her fist clenched, the sound like a gunshot in the silent room.
A dam broke. Twenty years of memories flooded in, drowning her. Her adoptive parents' disappointed glances. Garret's cold withdrawal. Beryl's triumphant, pitying smiles. All of it. Every last humiliation.
Her entire life had been a cage built from a single lie. And she was the only one who hadn't known.
A tear escaped her eye, hot and sharp. It wasn't for the life she was losing. It was for the life that had been stolen from her. The anger was a physical thing, a fire in her gut, burning away the sickness, the weakness, the despair.
With a strength she hadn't possessed in months, she shot her hand out and grabbed his wrist. Her grip was so tight he flinched, his cool gray eyes widening in surprise.
Her voice was a raw, broken whisper. "Why... why are you telling me this now?"
He looked down at her hand on his arm, then back to her face. His throat worked. "Because I just found out myself," he said, and for the first time, a crack appeared in his stone facade. "I have my own regrets."
The heart monitor shrieked.
A sudden, violent alarm. The steady rhythm shattered into a frantic, chaotic scramble.
A crushing weight slammed into Adelina's chest. The strength vanished, leaving her gasping. But her mind was clearer than it had ever been. She stared at Douglass Ward's face, a face she'd never seen before today, and felt a bizarre, wrenching sense of loss.
If I just had one more chance-
The monitor's frantic beeping gave way to a single, unending tone.
The line on the screen went flat.
Darkness swallowed everything.
And then, a brilliant, searing flash of white light.