Chapter 6

Antwan took another loud, crunching bite of his apple. He turned around, whistling a cheerful tune, and walked out of the hospital room.

Columbus stood completely rigid near the window. His jaw was tight. Guilt and cold determination warred on his face.

Charlene lay flat on the bed. She stared straight up at the acoustic ceiling tiles.

A low, raspy sound vibrated in the back of her throat.

It started as a quiet chuckle. Then, it grew. It clawed its way up her throat and erupted into a loud, hysterical laugh.

She laughed so hard her entire body shook. The cast on her arm banged against the bedrail. Huge, hot tears spilled out of the corners of her eyes, soaking into her hair.

Columbus took a step back. His eyes widened. The sheer madness of her laughter terrified him.

Suddenly, his cell phone buzzed in his suit pocket. The loud vibration cut through the horrifying sound of her laughter.

He pulled the phone out. He looked at the screen, let out a breath of relief, and practically ran out of the room to take the call.

The second the door clicked shut, Charlene's laughter stopped.

It didn't fade. It just cut off.

The manic look on her face vanished. Her features settled into a mask of pure, terrifying, calculating calmness. Her eyes were dry and cold.

The door handle clicked. The door opened just a crack.

Dotty Brown, the old family maid, slipped into the room. She was carrying a small medical bag hidden under her apron.

Dotty pulled out a heavy, insulated thermos from beneath the fabric. She moved quickly. Her hands shook slightly as she poured a rich, steaming bone broth into a small cup.

"You have to drink this, Miss Charlene," Dotty whispered, her voice cracking as she pressed the warm rim of the cup to Charlene's pale lips. "It's my own recipe. You need to keep your strength up if you're going to fight them."

Charlene lifted her uninjured left hand. She grabbed Dotty's rough, calloused fingers and squeezed them tight.

The warm, savory broth slid down her raw throat. It coated her stomach, and within seconds, the heavy fog in her brain began to clear.

She made a silent vow right then. She would crawl out of this hell. She would tear the Gay family apart piece by piece.

Dotty wiped Charlene's mouth with a soft cloth. She quickly hid the empty thermos back under her apron and slipped back out the door.

Charlene felt a small surge of physical energy.

She reached down with her left hand and threw off the thin white hospital blanket.

She swung her legs over the side of the bed. Her bare feet touched the cold linoleum floor.

She stood up. Her right arm was secured in a sling across her chest. She grabbed the metal IV pole with her left hand.

Using the pole for balance, she dragged her feet across the floor. Every step sent a jolt of pain up her spine.

She reached the door. She pulled the handle down and cracked the door open just an inch.

She looked out into the busy hospital corridor. Doctors and nurses rushed past.

Her eyes scanned the crowd aimlessly. Then, her gaze stopped.

Next to a brightly lit vending machine down the hall, stood a little boy. He looked about four or five years old. He was wearing a very expensive, custom-tailored navy wool coat.

The boy seemed to feel her staring. He slowly turned his head.

Charlene gasped. She slapped her left hand over her mouth.

Her heart slammed against her ribs.

The boy's eyes, the shape of his jaw, the curve of his brow. When his gaze collided with hers, Charlene's heart literally skipped a beat. It wasn't because he was a perfect physical clone, but because looking into those deep, dark eyes felt like staring into a shattered, yet undeniably real mirror of her own soul. There was an unspeakable, visceral familiarity that rooted her to the spot.

Chapter 7

Charlene didn't blink. She couldn't breathe. She stared at the little boy named Leo.

Leo was up on his tiptoes, his small fingers stretching to hit a button on the top row of the vending machine.

Dotty, who was walking back down the hall with a stack of towels, stopped. She followed Charlene's intense gaze.

Dotty gasped. She slapped a hand over her mouth. "Oh my lord," Dotty whispered, her voice carrying through the crack in the door. "He looks exactly like you did when you were a baby."

The words hit Charlene like a physical blow to the chest. Her heart hammered wildly against her ribs.

She pushed the heavy door open and took a massive step out into the hallway.

The wheels of her IV pole caught hard on the metal threshold of the doorway. It let out a loud, screeching scrape.

Leo jumped. He spun around, his coat flaring out.

His eyes met hers.

For one second, time stopped. Two pairs of identical, dark eyes locked onto each other across the sterile hallway.

Then, Leo's eyes widened. He looked like a terrified deer. He took a quick step backward.

He spun around to run. As he turned, something flew out of his shallow coat pocket. It hit the marble floor with a sharp clink.

Leo didn't stop. He bolted down the hallway and disappeared around the corner.

Charlene didn't care about the throbbing pain in her broken wrist. She gripped the IV pole and pushed herself forward, practically dragging her weak legs across the floor.

She reached the vending machine. She was panting, her chest heaving.

She bent down awkwardly, using her left hand to reach for the floor.

Her fingers brushed against cold, heavy metal. She picked it up.

It was a custom black-and-gold cufflink. The metal was intricately engraved with a unique, unfamiliar family crest.

She quickly shoved the heavy cufflink deep into the pocket of her hospital gown.

"Charlene!"

The loud, dramatic cry echoed down the hall. The sharp clack of high heels approached rapidly.

Charlene turned her head.

Her adoptive mother, Mrs. Gay, and Isabela were marching down the corridor.

Isabela was holding a massive, obscenely expensive bouquet of pure white lilies.

"My poor, sweet girl!" Mrs. Gay wailed, loud enough for the passing nurses to hear, her performance flawless. She pulled Charlene into a suffocating, perfume-drenched hug.

Isabela stood slightly behind her mother. She pulled a tissue from her designer purse and dabbed at the corners of her perfectly dry eyes.

As she pressed her perfectly made-up cheek against Charlene's ear, Mrs. Gay's voice dropped into a vicious, barely audible whisper. "This is exactly what you get for having that disgusting blood in your veins. Your biological father gave you his trash genes, and now look at you. Keep playing the crazy stray, or I'll make sure you never leave a hospital again."

Charlene stood perfectly still. She looked down at her adoptive mother's face, taking in the thick layer of foundation and the fake, trembling lips.

Beneath the fake tears, Charlene saw it clearly. The flash of deep disgust and cold calculation in Mrs. Gay's eyes.

Charlene didn't say a word.

She slowly, deliberately pulled her left hand out of Mrs. Gay's grip.

She didn't yank it. She just slid her fingers away, breaking the physical contact.

In that exact moment, the last dying ember of love she had for this family turned to ash. Her heart went completely, permanently cold.

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