The next morning, Kaitlynn woke up before dawn. She pulled on a pair of work boots that were two sizes too big and grabbed the axe from the shed. The front door was still hanging off its hinges, and the broken window was letting in the cold.
She needed wood.
She headed up the slope behind the house, into the dense forest. Cason and Paige trailed behind her, Cason with his bandaged head and Paige with her thumb in her mouth.
"You two don't have to come," Kaitlynn said, swinging the axe experimentally. It was dull, but it would do.
"I want to," Cason said.
Paige just stuck closer to her brother.
Kaitlynn found a dead oak tree, its trunk dry and brittle. She raised the axe and brought it down with a powerful swing. The blade bit deep. She swung again, and again, finding a rhythm. The physical labor felt good. It burned off the restless energy that had been coiled inside her since she woke up in this body.
Cason watched her, his eyes narrowing slightly. He had never seen his mother chop wood. The old Kaitlynn could barely carry a laundry basket.
Within an hour, she had a stack of logs. She tied them together with a length of rope, hoisting the bundle onto her shoulder. It was heavy, but her muscles were warming up, remembering the strength that came from years of training.
"Let's head back," she said, starting down the familiar path.
"Wait." Cason's voice was sharp.
Kaitlynn stopped. "What is it?"
Cason pointed to the left, where a narrow, overgrown trail branched off into the underbrush. "We should go this way."
Kaitlynn frowned. That trail was barely visible, choked with weeds and fallen branches. It looked like it hadn't been used in years. "That's not the way home, Cason."
"I know. But we need to go this way." He lowered his hand, his expression unreadable. "I just... I feel like something's waiting for us."
There it was again. That eerie intuition. It was the same feeling he'd had about the metal box. Kaitlynn looked at the trail, then back at her son. She remembered the file, the future it predicted. If Cason was going to be a strategic genius, maybe that started now.
"Okay," she said. "Lead the way."
She shifted the logs on her shoulder and followed Cason onto the overgrown path. Paige clutched the back of Kaitlynn's shirt, her eyes darting nervously.
They walked for about ten minutes. The trees grew thicker, blocking out the sun. The air grew colder, damper. And then, Kaitlynn smelled it.
Gasoline. And underneath it, the coppery tang of blood.
Every instinct screamed to life. Kaitlynn dropped the logs, letting them crash to the forest floor. She pulled Paige behind her, shielding her with her body.
"Cason, stay back," she ordered.
She moved forward, slow and silent, her eyes scanning the underbrush. She rounded a bend and pushed through a thicket of bushes.
The scene that greeted her made her stomach drop.
A black sedan was crumpled against a large boulder at the bottom of a ravine. The front end was accordioned, steam hissing from the radiator. The driver's door was hanging open, the interior dark.
But the car wasn't the problem. It was the body lying in the grass a few feet away.
It was a boy. Maybe fifteen or sixteen. He was wearing clothes that looked expensive-a silk shirt, designer jeans-but they were torn and soaked in blood. One of his legs was bent at an angle that made Kaitlynn wince.
She approached cautiously, checking for threats. The woods were silent. No engine sounds, no voices. Just the wind in the trees.
She knelt beside the boy. He was alive, but barely. His breathing was shallow, his skin pale and clammy. She ran her hands over his body, checking for injuries. His leg was broken, definitely. But as she moved up his torso, her fingers found something else. Puncture wounds. Sharp, clean cuts that weren't caused by a car crash. The wounds were deep, but miraculously, they seemed to have missed any major organs or arteries. The car itself was wedged in a thicket of young, pliable trees that must have cushioned the final impact.
This boy had been stabbed. Multiple times.
This wasn't an accident. It was a hit. And the target was still alive.
"Mommy?" Paige's small voice came from the bushes. "Is everything okay?"
"Stay there!" Kaitlynn barked. She looked back at the boy's face. He was young. Too young. He looked like a kid who had been playing dress-up in his father's clothes and had stumbled into a nightmare.
She thought about leaving him. It was the smart play. Whoever wanted him dead would come looking for him. If she took him in, she would be painting a target on her own back, and on the backs of her children.
But then she thought about Cason. About the monster he was supposed to become. Could she save one child while letting another die? Could she preach about changing fate if she turned her back on someone who needed help right now?
She made her decision in three seconds.
"Cason," she called out, her voice steady. "Paige. Come here. I need your help."
They emerged from the bushes. Paige gasped when she saw the blood, hiding her face in Cason's shoulder. Cason just looked at the boy, his expression calm.
"Is he dead?" Cason asked.
"Not yet." Kaitlynn stood up. "We're taking him home."
Cason didn't argue. He just nodded, as if he had expected nothing less.
Kaitlynn gathered the fallen branches, lashing them together with rope to form a makeshift stretcher. She rolled the boy onto it as gently as she could, securing his broken leg with a splint made from a straight stick and strips of his own shirt.
It took every ounce of her strength to drag the stretcher up the ravine and through the woods. The boy was dead weight, and the terrain was rough. Sweat poured down her face, mixing with the dirt and blood on her hands.
But she didn't stop. She just gritted her teeth and pulled.
The boy was heavy. By the time Kaitlynn dragged him through the back door of the farmhouse, her arms were burning, and her lungs felt like they were on fire.
She dumped him unceremoniously on her own bed-the only clean, flat surface in the house.
"Paige, go put some water on the stove," she ordered, already reaching for the first aid kit she had assembled from the clinic's supplies. "Cason, bring me the bottle of alcohol and the clean rags."
The kids moved without question. They were getting used to this new version of their mother.
Kaitlynn cut away what was left of the boy's shirt, exposing his torso. The stab wounds were deep, but they had clotted slightly, which meant he hadn't bled out. Yet.
As she pulled the fabric away, something fell out of his pocket and clattered onto the wooden floor.
It was a heavy, brass lighter. Expensive-looking. But it wasn't the metal that caught Kaitlynn's eye-it was the engraving on the side.
A snake eating its own tail, wrapped around a single poppy flower.
Kaitlynn's hand froze in mid-air. Her blood ran cold.
She recognized that symbol. She had seen it in the deepest, darkest corners of the DEA database. It was the mark of the Golden Crescent Syndicate, one of the most ruthless international drug cartels in the world. And this particular variant-the ouroboros with the poppy-was the personal sigil of their high-ranking inner circle.
She hadn't just saved a random kid. She had saved a cartel prince.
"Damn it," she muttered under her breath. This was bad. This was very, very bad.
She couldn't take him to the hospital. The cartel would find him. And if they found him, they would find her. She couldn't call the police. A kid with that tattoo would disappear into the system, or worse, be killed before he ever made it to a cell.
She had to make him disappear.
"Paige! Cason! Don't come in here yet!" she shouted.
She worked quickly. She searched the boy's pockets, finding nothing else. Then she checked his shoes. Inside the lining of his left shoe, her fingers brushed against something flat and hard. She pulled it out.
A micro SD card, wrapped in a tiny piece of plastic.
Evidence. This boy wasn't just a prince; he was a courier. Or a liability.
She pocketed the SD card and the lighter. Then she gathered up the boy's bloody, expensive clothes and carried them to the kitchen. She shoved them into the wood-burning stove and stoked the fire until they were nothing but ash.
She went back to the bedroom and pulled out one of Cason's old shirts, slipping it over the boy's head. It was too small, but it would do.
"Cason," she called out. "I need you to run to Dr. Brennan's house. Tell him... tell him I found a homeless kid in the woods who fell down the ravine. Tell him it looks like he got thrown from a train. Can you do that?"
Cason stood in the doorway, his eyes taking in the scene-the blood, the makeshift bandages, his mother's grim expression. He didn't ask questions. He just nodded and ran out the door.
Kaitlynn let out a breath. She looked down at the unconscious boy. His face was pale, his breathing shallow. She had stepped right back into the world she had died to escape.
A knock came at the door twenty minutes later. Dr. Brennan hurried in, his medical bag in hand. He took one look at the boy on the bed and his eyes widened.
"Good lord, Kaitlynn. What happened?"
"I found him up on the ridge," Kaitlynn said, reciting the lie she had rehearsed. "He looks like a runaway. Maybe he fell off a freight train. I don't know."
Brennan moved to the bed, his professional instincts taking over. He examined the leg, the stab wounds. "These aren't from a fall," he said, his voice low.
"I know," Kaitlynn said. "But I couldn't just leave him there to die."
Brennan looked at her, a mixture of admiration and concern in his eyes. "You're a good woman, Kaitlynn. A lot of people would have walked away."
She didn't feel good. She felt like a woman standing on the edge of a volcano.
Brennan set to work. He reset the broken leg, making the boy cry out in his unconscious state. He stitched the stab wounds and hooked up an IV bag of antibiotics.
Kaitlynn assisted him, handing him instruments, cutting bandages. Her movements were precise, efficient. She knew the names of the tools before he asked for them. She anticipated his needs.
Brennan paused, looking at her hands. "You've done this before," he said. It wasn't a question.
Kaitlynn met his gaze. "Colt taught me," she said smoothly. "He said these were skills everyone should know, just in case."
It was the perfect excuse. Colt Richmond, the Green Beret. It explained everything-her strength, her skills, her calm under pressure. It was a shield she could hide behind.
Brennan nodded slowly. "He was a smart man." He finished the last stitch and stood up, wiping his hands. "He's stable for now. Keep him warm, keep the IV flowing. I'll check on him tomorrow."
"Thank you, Doctor," Kaitlynn said, walking him to the door.
After he left, she stood in the quiet house. She could hear Paige's soft breathing from the other room. She could hear the wind whistling through the broken window.
She walked outside, into the cold night air. She pulled the brass lighter from her pocket. She stared at it for a long moment, the engraved snake seeming to mock her. It was a beacon, a death sentence. She walked over to the burn barrel in the yard and tossed it in. She lit a match and dropped it on top. The flames flared up, consuming the evidence, the orange glow dancing in her eyes.
But the SD card remained in her pocket. She went back inside, prying up a loose floorboard beneath her bed. She wrapped the tiny card in a piece of oilcloth, tucked it into the dark space, and pushed the board firmly back into place. It was too dangerous to look at now, but far too valuable to destroy. It was an insurance policy. A weapon. An ace in the hole she might need to survive what was coming.
She looked back at the house, her eyes settling on the overgrown garden and the peeling paint. She had a lot of work to do.
Over the next two days, Kaitlynn threw herself into the work with a ferocity that surprised even herself. She used the wood she had chopped to board up the broken window and reinforce the front door. She patched the hole in the roof with scrap metal and tar she found in the shed.
Cason and Paige watched her, their eyes wide. They had never seen their mother like this. She was a whirlwind, a force of nature. She didn't complain, didn't rest. She just worked until the job was done.
The house was still a shack, but it was a secure shack. It felt like a home again.
The boy in the bed slept through most of it. Kaitlynn checked on him every few hours, changing his IV, sponging the sweat from his forehead. He mumbled in his sleep, words in a language she didn't understand. Spanish, maybe. Or something Eastern European.
But on the third morning, reality came crashing back. Kaitlynn opened the cupboard and stared at the single can of beans sitting on the shelf. That was it. That was all the food left in the house.
She had a roof over her head, but her children were starving.
She sat down at the kitchen table and buried her face in her hands. She was a DEA agent. She could shoot, fight, and outsmart drug lords. But she couldn't feed her kids with fists and guns.
She needed money. Fast.$200 wasn't enough to support her and her two children.
She ran through her options. She couldn't get a job in town; the nearest factory was thirty miles away, and she didn't have a car. She couldn't rely on the charity of Dr. Brennan forever.
She thought about the original Kaitlynn. What had she been good at? The memories surfaced slowly. Baking. The old Kaitlynn had been a decent baker. She made pies for the church socials, for the school bake sales. They were simple, old-fashioned recipes-apple, cherry, pecan.
But Kaitlynn Bruce had a different palate. She had traveled the world with the DEA. She had eaten in five-star restaurants in Paris, street stalls in Bangkok. She knew flavors that the people of Sweetwater Creek had never even dreamed of.
She could make pies. But not just any pies. Gourmet pies. Pies that would blow this town's mind.
The idea was solid, but the execution was the problem. She needed ingredients. Good ingredients. Butter, not shortening. Fresh fruit, not canned. And she needed money to buy them.
She thought of Dr. Brennan again. She hated to ask for more help, but she didn't have a choice.
"Cason," she said, pulling on her coat. "I'm going to the clinic. You're in charge. Keep an eye on our guest."
Cason nodded, his eyes flicking to the bedroom door. "I will."
Kaitlynn took Paige's hand and walked to town. The clinic was quiet when they arrived. Dr. Brennan was in his office, reading a journal.
"Doctor," Kaitlynn said, knocking on the open door. "The boy is doing well. His fever is down."
Brennan smiled. "That's good news. You have a healing touch, Kaitlynn."
She shifted uncomfortably. "Doctor, I... I have a favor to ask."
"Name it."
"I want to start a business," she said, the words coming out in a rush. "Baking pies. I want to sell them at the county market this weekend. But I'm a little short on supplies. I was wondering if I could maybe... buy some flour and sugar from you on credit? I'll pay you back as soon as I make some sales."
Brennan leaned back in his chair, studying her face. Then, a slow smile spread across his features.
"Nonsense," he said. "You won't be buying anything from me."
Kaitlynn's heart sank. "I understand if-"
"I mean," Brennan interrupted, standing up, "you won't be paying for it. Come with me."
He led her out the back door of the clinic, into a sprawling backyard. Kaitlynn stopped, her eyes widening.
The garden was a masterpiece. Rows of vibrant vegetables, lush herbs, and fruit trees heavy with produce. It was an oasis of green in the dusty town.
"My wife, God rest her soul, she was the gardener," Brennan said, a hint of sadness in his voice. "I just maintain it now. But I can't keep up. The fruit just rots on the trees."
He pointed to a row of bushes. "Those blueberries are going crazy this year. And the strawberries. And the apples are just about ready."
He turned to her. "Take what you need, Kaitlynn. Consider it payment for saving that boy's life. On one condition," he added, a weary but kind look in his eyes. "I need help keeping it up. My back isn't what it used to be. You help me with the weeding and pruning once a week, and the harvest is yours. And I'll have Silas bring over some flour and sugar from the pantry."
Kaitlynn stared at him, overwhelmed. "Doctor, I can't-"
"You can, and you will." He patted her shoulder. "Now go pick some fruit. I expect a taste of those famous pies when they're done."
Kaitlynn didn't argue. She grabbed two large baskets from the shed and set to work. Paige ran between the rows, her face smeared with strawberry juice, giggling as she chased a butterfly.
Kaitlynn picked the biggest, ripest blueberries she could find. She selected crisp, green apples. She snipped sprigs of fresh rosemary and basil. Her mind was already racing, combining flavors, adjusting recipes.
She carried the heavy baskets back to the house, her arms aching but her heart light. She had the ingredients. She had the knowledge. Now she just had to make it work.
When she walked through the door, she found Cason sitting on the edge of the bed, holding a damp cloth to the unconscious boy's forehead. The boy's eyes were still closed, but his breathing was easier.
Cason looked up at her, his expression unreadable. But there was something soft in his eyes, something that looked almost like concern.
"He moved his hand," Cason said quietly. "I thought he was waking up."
Kaitlynn felt a swell of pride. Her son, the future monster, was showing compassion. It was a small thing, but it was a start.
"Good job," she said. "Keep watching him."
She set the baskets on the kitchen table and began to work. She washed the fruit, peeled the apples, mixed the dough. She moved with a confidence and precision that the old Kaitlynn had never possessed.
She rolled out the crust, her hands moving automatically. She sprinkled a pinch of rosemary into the apple filling, a handful of torn basil leaves into the blueberry. The aromas filled the tiny kitchen, exotic and intoxicating.
She slid the pies into the oven and set the timer. Then she sat down at the table and waited.
The smell that filled the house was incredible. It was sweet, savory, and completely foreign. It smelled like hope.