Isabella frowned. She pushed the heavy carved wood open. The entryway was dark. The silence of the house felt thick, almost suffocating.
She set her suitcase down on the marble floor. She placed the limited-edition tie box on the console table, and left her Birkin bag there too. She slipped off her heels, her stockinged feet making no sound against the hardwood.
A sharp, sudden noise broke the silence.
It was the click of high heels against the floorboards, coming from the guest room down the hall.
Isabella's stomach dropped. The house was supposed to be empty except for Deontae and the baby. She walked slowly toward the half-open door. A sliver of yellow light spilled into the dark hallway.
She stopped outside the door. On the floor, just inches from her feet, lay a custom-made trench coat. It belonged to Hilary. Her best friend.
Isabella's breathing turned shallow. She moved her eyes up to the gap in the door.
Two bodies were tangled on the velvet sofa.
Her heart slammed against her ribs. The impact was so violent it made her physically dizzy. She bit down on her lower lip. She bit down so hard she tasted copper. She had to stop the scream from ripping out of her throat.
Deontae's heavy breathing mixed with Hilary's breathless laughter. The sounds pierced Isabella's eardrums like needles.
She took a trembling step back. Her spine hit the wall.
"Finally," Hilary whispered, her voice dripping with satisfaction. "Owen is finally going to grow up in the Barry house. Right where he belongs."
"Don't worry," Deontae replied. His voice was cold. It was a voice Isabella had never heard in nearly three years of marriage. "That sick little brat Anna is already gone. She's out of the way."
Isabella's pupils dilated. The oxygen vanished from the hallway. Black spots danced at the edges of her vision.
Anna. Her daughter. Her sick, fragile baby who was still desperately waiting for a life-saving bone marrow transplant.
Owen. Hilary's son.
Her hand trembled as she pulled her phone from her pocket. She angled the camera through the door gap, her fingers shaking so badly she nearly dropped it. She hit record. The video captured the tangled bodies, the heavy breathing, the laughter-every sickening detail. She didn't know if she would ever need it. But some cold, distant part of her brain told her to preserve the proof.
She dug her fingernails into the European wainscoting. The sharp pain in her fingertips grounded her. The shock morphed into a violent, acidic nausea. The pieces slammed together in her brain. Deontae hadn't just cheated. He had swapped the babies. He had taken her daughter.
She didn't scream. She didn't burst into the room.
She turned away. Her legs felt like lead, but she forced them to move. She crept up the curved staircase to the second floor. She headed straight for the nursery.
She pushed the door open. The room was bathed in the dim, yellow glow of a nightlight.
She walked to the crib. A baby boy was sleeping soundly under the expensive blankets. Owen.
Isabella leaned over the rail. She stared at the boy's face. He didn't have her nose. He didn't have Deontae's eyes. He looked exactly like Hilary. How had she been so blind? She had been so weak after the delivery, so drugged, so trusting.
Her hand shook violently as she reached out. She hovered her fingers over the baby's head.
She took a sharp breath. She pinched a few strands of his soft hair and yanked.
Owen whimpered in his sleep. His tiny face scrunched up.
Isabella froze. She stopped breathing. She shrank back into the shadows of the nursery, her heart hammering a frantic rhythm against her sternum.
She waited. Ten seconds. Twenty. Owen settled back into a deep sleep.
She pulled a soft, clean tissue from the nursery changing table. She dropped the hairs inside, folding it carefully. She reached up to her own scalp, ripped out a strand of her own hair from the root, and shoved it into a second folded tissue.
She turned and walked out of the nursery. She didn't look back.
She slipped down the stairs, past the guest room, and out the front door, leaving her Birkin bag behind on the console table.
The cold wind hit her face. She started running. She ran down the sidewalk, her stockinged feet slapping against the concrete. She ran until her lungs burned and her chest ached.
She reached Fifth Avenue and threw her arm out. A night-shift taxi slammed on its brakes.
She yanked the door open and fell into the backseat.
"Manhattan 24-Hour DNA Center," she gasped. Her voice was raw, shredded by the tears she refused to shed. "Now."
Twenty minutes later, she stood at the sterile white counter. She pushed the two folded tissues across the surface. She slapped her credit card down next to them.
"Expedite it," Isabella told the nurse. "I don't care what it costs. I need it now."