Talia stood at the massive front door, her knuckles still hovering in the air after the knock.
Ava stirred in her arms, her tiny fingers gripping the edge of Talia’s sweater like she sensed something heavy in the air.
The door opened almost instantly.
Matthew King was already there.
He hadn’t slept.
It showed in the sharpness of his eyes, in the tension of his jaw, in the way he looked at the folder in her hands like it contained something explosive.
“You’re on time,” he said.
“I said I would be.”
He stepped aside.
“Come in.”
—
They sat in a smaller room this time—not the grand hall, not the marble floors, but a quiet study lined with dark wood and books that looked like they’d never been opened.
Talia placed the folder on the table.
Her hands were steady.
But inside, she wasn’t.
“Everything I have is in there,” she said. “Birth certificate. Hospital records. The death report.”
Matthew didn’t sit right away.
He stared at the folder for a long second… then finally pulled out the chair and lowered himself across from her.
Ava made a soft sound.
His eyes flicked to her instinctively.
And again—just like yesterday—something softened.
Then it was gone.
He opened the folder.
The room fell silent except for the faint rustle of paper.
—
First page.
Birth certificate.
AVA HAYES.
Father: Daniel Hayes.
Matthew’s fingers tightened.
Second page.
Hospital record.
Mother: Talia Reed.
Father: Deceased.
Date…
One year ago.
Matthew’s breathing slowed.
Controlled.
Too controlled.
Then—
The death report.
He read it once.
Then again.
And then a third time.
“No,” he said quietly.
Talia’s stomach dropped.
“What?” she asked.
“This is wrong.”
He slid the paper across the table toward her.
“Read the location.”
She frowned… then looked.
Her eyes scanned the line.
And froze.
“That’s…” she whispered. “That’s not what I was told.”
“Brookfield?” Matthew said. “That’s not where Daniel Hayes died.”
Talia looked up sharply. “What do you mean?”
Matthew leaned back slowly, his face pale but his voice steady.
“Daniel Hayes died ten years ago. On Route 17. I was there.”
Silence crashed into the room.
Talia stared at him like he had just said something impossible.
“That’s not true,” she said, but her voice shook. “I knew him. I—”
“When?” Matthew interrupted.
She hesitated.
“…Two years ago.”
Matthew didn’t blink.
Didn’t react.
But something inside him snapped into place.
“Tell me everything,” he said.
—
Talia looked down at Ava.
At the medal.
At the life she had built around a man she thought she knew.
And slowly… she began.
“I met him at a roadside café,” she said. “He said he worked in construction. Quiet guy. Kept to himself.”
Matthew listened.
Every word.
“He didn’t talk about his past,” she continued. “Said he didn’t have family. That he liked it that way.”
Of course he did, Matthew thought.
“He always wore that medal,” she added, nodding toward Ava. “Never took it off.”
Matthew’s throat tightened.
“He told me it brought him luck.”
That sounded exactly like Daniel.
Exactly.
“And then?” Matthew asked.
Talia swallowed.
“He disappeared.”
The word echoed.
“Just… gone. One day he didn’t come back. No calls. No message. Nothing.”
Matthew leaned forward slightly.
“When?”
“About three months before Ava was born.”
Silence.
Heavy.
Unavoidable.
“And the death report?” Matthew asked.
Talia shook her head slowly. “It came in the mail. No body. Just papers. They said there was an accident. That it was confirmed.”
Matthew let out a long breath.
Cold.
Calculated.
“That’s not a death report,” he said. “That’s a cover.”
Talia’s heart started pounding.
“What are you saying?”
Matthew looked at her.
Really looked at her.
“At best? Someone wanted you to believe he was dead.”
“And at worst?” she whispered.
Matthew’s expression darkened.
“At worst… he was running.”
—
Ava let out a soft cry.
Instinctively, Talia rocked her.
But Matthew was already watching the baby again.
The medal caught the light.
And something clicked.
“May I?” he asked quietly.
Talia hesitated… then nodded.
He reached out slowly, carefully, like he was handling something fragile.
Not the baby.
The medal.
His fingers brushed against it.
Then he turned it slightly.
And there it was.
A tiny engraving on the back.
So worn it was almost gone.
But still visible.
M.K.
Matthew’s breath caught.
He had carved that himself.
Years ago.
With a pocket knife and too much time.
“This isn’t possible,” he whispered.
But it was.
It was right there.
Alive.
Breathing.
Looking back at him through a child’s eyes.
—
Talia watched him carefully.
“You knew him,” she said.
Matthew nodded once.
“He was my best friend.”
She swallowed.
“Then tell me something,” she said quietly.
Matthew looked up.
“If he’s been alive this whole time…”
Her voice broke slightly.
“…why didn’t he stay?”
The question hung in the air.
Heavy.
Painful.
Unanswered.
Matthew didn’t respond right away.
Because for the first time…
he didn’t have control of the situation.
He didn’t have facts.
He had pieces.
And none of them made sense.
—
Until his phone buzzed.
Sharp.
Sudden.
He glanced at the screen.
Unknown number.
He almost ignored it.
But something—
something deep in his gut—
told him not to.
He answered.
“Matthew King.”
Silence.
Then—
a voice.
Low.
Rough.
Familiar.
“…Took you long enough to find me.”
Matthew froze.
Talia’s breath caught.
Because she could hear it too.
Through the speaker.
That voice.
That impossible voice.
“…Daniel?” Matthew whispered.
A pause.
Then—
“Don’t say my name.”
Matthew stood up slowly.
Every muscle tense.
“You’re alive,” he said.
“Not for long if you keep digging.”
The line crackled.
“Listen carefully,” the voice continued. “You weren’t supposed to find her. Or the kid.”
Talia clutched Ava tighter.
Matthew’s eyes flicked to them.
Too late.
“You’ve put them in danger,” the voice said coldly.
“From who?” Matthew demanded.
Silence.
Then—
“From the same people who made sure I stayed dead.”
The call ended.
Just like that.
No explanation.
No answers.
Only a truth that changed everything.
—
Matthew lowered the phone slowly.
The room felt different now.
Smaller.
Tighter.
Dangerous.
Talia’s voice trembled.
“What… what does that mean?”
Matthew looked at her.
Then at Ava.
Then back at the door.
“It means,” he said quietly…
“…this isn’t over.”
And for the first time since she stepped into that mansion—
Talia realized something terrifying.
She hadn’t just brought the truth with her.
She had walked straight into a war she didn’t even know existed.