The very same man who wanted to recover the capsule to erase his own origin, or perhaps worse, to protect the fortune a lie had gifted him.
My mother woke up the next day.
Her voice was weak.
“Did they find it?”
I nodded.
“Yes.”
“My boy?”
I didn’t know how to answer.
“He’s alive.”
She wept.
She didn’t ask if he was a good person.
She didn’t ask if he wanted to see her.
She only asked:
“Has he been eating well?”
That question shattered me.
Fifty-something years without her son, and the first thing she cared about was if he had been fed.
Arthur was initially detained for coercion, obstruction, and potential complicity in a cover-up. His lawyer tried to present him as a concerned husband. Brenda put the messages, the calls, his violent arrival at the clinic, and his attempt to remove my mother without authorization on the table.
My mother-in-law called me that night.
“Linda, don’t destroy my son’s life over a lying old woman.”
I felt a newfound calm.
“That old woman is my mother.”
“Arthur loves you.”
“Arthur ran a background check on me before he proposed.”
Silence.
“You don’t know what you’re saying.”
“I don’t know everything yet. But I know enough to get a divorce.”
I hung up.
The following days were a whirlwind.
The press smelled blood. An illegal adoption ring linked to private clinics, influential families, and an insurance company that for decades had quite literally covered up files. Brenda managed to get protective measures placed on the case. My mom was moved to a safe facility while she recovered.
Edward Sterling didn’t show up at first.
He sent lawyers.
Then press releases.
“Slander.”
“Forged documents.”
“Extortion attempt.”
But the capsule held something nobody expected: a copy of an original birth record with footprints. My mother’s fingerprints, taken while she was sedated. And a clinical note that read: “viable male infant.”
Viable.
Not dead.
Viable.
When Brenda explained that word to me, I felt like my mom was losing her baby for a second time.
The meeting with Edward happened three weeks later.
It wasn’t like in the movies.
He didn’t arrive crying or saying “Mom.” He walked into a District Attorney’s office in an expensive suit, with a hardened face and eyes identical to my mother’s.
That was the worst part.
He had her eyes.
My mom was in a wheelchair, still weak. Upon seeing him, she pressed a hand to her chest.
“Son…”
Edward raised his hand to cut her off.
“Don’t call me that.”
My mother shrank back as if she had been struck.
I stood up.
“Don’t speak to her like that.”
Edward looked at me.
“And who are you?”
“The daughter they actually let her raise.”
The line hit him hard.
But it didn’t soften him.
“I didn’t ask for any of this,” he said. “My father is dead. My mother is too. The people who raised me are my family. I am not going to allow an old story to destroy everything they built.”
My mom spoke up in a tiny voice:
“I don’t want your money.”