PART 19
“Faith was copied.”
The synthetic child’s voice filled the Maternal Origin archive.
Soft.
Young.
Impossible.
On the live feed, a tiny developing body floated inside an artificial gestation chamber.
A label beneath the glass read:
F.C. — DEVELOPMENTAL CONTINUATION
The archive countdown continued.
00:53
00:52
00:51
Mia stood frozen beside the purge controls.
Elaine remained tied to the chair behind her.
Federal agents waited outside the archive, unable to enter without triggering the chemical destruction system.
In my hospital room, Hope’s heartbeat sounded through the independent monitor.
Strong.
Mercy’s followed more slowly.
Faith remained still inside me.
Yet her name was speaking from another building.
“Mommy,” the synthetic voice said again. “Why did you say I died?”
My hands shook against the blanket.
Dr. Evans gripped my shoulder.
“That is not Faith.”
“I know.”
The voice had never belonged to my daughter.
Faith had never drawn breath outside my body.
She had never learned language.
Never cried.
Never called me Mommy.
Someone had built the voice from recordings of me, Derek, and perhaps children whose genetic profiles resembled ours.
They had turned my grief into a password.
The countdown reached forty seconds.
The archive displayed:
MATERNAL RECOGNITION REQUIRED
Mia looked toward me through the screen.
“Sarah, do not answer it.”
The synthetic voice continued.
“Do you recognize me?”
My throat closed.
The system did not only possess Faith’s DNA.
It needed me to identify the chamber child as Faith.
One sentence from me could complete the false identity.
One grieving mother saying, Yes, that is my daughter.
Then the archive would have a second daughter ready to accept succession.
My dead child’s name would become a legal costume.
“No,” I said.
The countdown paused for half a second.
Then continued.
00:31
The synthetic voice asked, “Am I not your baby?”
Every part of me wanted to say that any child created from my stolen genetic material deserved protection.
But that was not the question.
The system wanted identity.
Not compassion.
“You are a child,” I said carefully.
The countdown slowed.
“Someone created you without consent. Someone placed you inside that machine. Someone gave you a name belonging to another person.”
The artificial chamber feed showed one small movement.
A hand.
A leg.
A body developing inside fluid and wires.
“But you are not Faith.”
The timer reached twenty-three seconds.
The synthetic voice changed.
It no longer sounded young.
It sounded like me.
“You promised no one would erase her.”
“I won’t.”
“Then recognize her.”
“I recognize Faith.”
The archive screen brightened.
Dr. Evans inhaled sharply.
I continued before the system could interpret the statement.
“Faith Collins is the daughter whose heart stopped inside my body.”
The screen flashed red.
IDENTITY CONFLICT
“I recognize her life.”
The timer slowed.
00:16
“I recognize her death.”
Mia’s eyes filled with tears.
Elaine struggled against the tape covering her mouth.
“I recognize the child in the chamber as a separate person.”
MATERNAL RECOGNITION FAILED
The timer stopped at eleven seconds.
Every screen in the archive flickered.
The synthetic voice disappeared.
For one second, there was silence.
Then the system displayed:
SECOND DAUGHTER IDENTITY DISPUTED
SUCCESSION SUSPENDED
Mia exhaled.
The chemical purge did not begin.
The shelves remained intact.
The chamber feed remained live.
A child was still floating inside it.
Alive.
Unnamed.
Used.
But not Faith.
I began crying.
Not from relief alone.
Because I had just been forced to deny a child my daughter’s name while still insisting that the child mattered.
That was the kind of cruelty this system created.
It turned truth into rejection.
It made honesty feel like abandonment.
Dr. Evans bent close to me.
“You did not reject the child.”
“I told her she wasn’t mine.”
“No. You told the system she was not Faith.”
“What if she is genetically connected to me?”
“Then that connection will be handled truthfully.”
Hope moved strongly.
Mercy answered faintly.
Faith remained still.
Three realities inside one body.
One child living strongly.
One living precariously.
One dead and still present.
No system would simplify them again.
Mia stared at the chamber feed.
“I did not know this existed.”
Agent Cross’s voice came through the archive speakers.
“Step away from the purge control.”
She looked toward the door.
“I suspended it.”
“You also restarted it.”
“I told you I didn’t.”
“Then move away.”
Mia held the metal case containing the maternal keys.
Her hand trembled.
The need to protect the archive remained visible on her face.
So did fear.
If she surrendered, the records might be mishandled.
If she refused, she became another guardian deciding no one else could be trusted.
I looked at her.
“Mia.”
She turned toward my screen.
“You do not have to lose your own record.”
“You cannot promise that.”
“No.”
“You cannot promise the courts will release it.”
“No.”
“You cannot promise the families will not destroy each other.”
“No.”
Her eyes filled.
“Then what are you offering?”
“Witnesses.”
She said nothing.
“People who know you existed before a document confirms it.”
“That does not restore my mother.”
“Rebecca knows.”
“She knew Sarah.”
“She knows now.”
Mia looked toward Rebecca’s hospital feed.
Rebecca placed one hand against the screen.
“I know now.”
Mia’s face hardened.
“You were told I died.”
“Yes.”
“And you accepted it.”
“Yes.”
“You looked at Sarah and decided one daughter was enough.”
Rebecca began crying.
“I did not decide that.”
“You stopped asking.”
“The clinic told us the second embryo failed.”
“You lived inside a network that invented deaths.”
“I was grieving.”
“So was everyone.”
Rebecca closed her eyes.
The sentence was cruel.
It was also true.
Grief explained why she believed.
It did not make the missing child less missing.
Mia looked toward the archive shelves.
“This is the only place where the name before Mia might still exist.”
“Then find it,” I said.
“I need time.”
“Take time.”
“Cross will arrest me.”
Agent Cross answered before I could.
“Yes.”
Mia flinched.
He continued.
“You held Elaine against her will. You restarted archive systems without authority. You inserted yourself into the custodial agreement.”
“I was protecting evidence.”
“You were also consolidating control.”
“Yes.”
The honesty surprised him.
“I will be charged?”
“Yes.”
“Will the archive remain sealed?”
“Under independent review.”
“Will I have access to my record?”
“You may petition like every other affected person.”
Her expression broke.
“After everything I did to reach it, I become another case number.”
“No,” I said.
“You become a person asking for her own history.”
“That sounds smaller.”
“It is smaller.”
I touched Faith’s ultrasound photograph.
“Smaller does not mean less real.”
Mia looked at me.
For years, she had built legal strategies around large moves.
Injunctions.
Trust freezes.
Emergency hearings.
Guardianship challenges.
The idea that she might have to request one file, wait for review, and accept uncertainty felt unbearable.
That was exactly what every other victim had been forced to do.
The difference was that now no one person would decide whether her pain deserved priority.
Mia slowly placed the maternal-key case on the floor.
Then she lifted both hands.
“Release Elaine,” Cross ordered.
Mia removed the tape from my mother’s mouth.
Then untied her wrists.
Elaine gasped and rubbed her hands.
Mia stepped away.
The archive doors opened.
Verified federal agents entered.
They answered relationship questions before crossing the threshold.
One agent remembered the name of Cross’s first dog.
Another knew which courthouse vending machine Mia had once kicked after losing a hearing.
A third described the scar on Elaine’s hand from a childhood fall Caroline remembered.
No badge alone was enough.
Memory.
Connection.
Experience.
The things a stolen identity could imitate only from the outside.
Agents secured Mia.
She did not resist.
Before they led her away, she looked at me.
“Do you still want me as your attorney?”
“No.”
The answer hurt her.
It hurt me too.
“Do you still want me as your sister?”
“I don’t know what that means yet.”
She swallowed.
“Is that a no?”
“It is not a role you get to write into a contract.”
Mia looked down.
“Will you speak to me again?”
“Yes.”
Hope moved.
I felt Mercy’s smaller flutter several seconds later.
“After truth,” I said.
“After consequences.”
Mia nodded.
“After both.”
She was taken into custody.
Not as a villain.
Not as a hero.
As a woman who had helped me, deceived me, protected children, seized power, and finally stepped away from it.
Complicated.
Responsible.
Real.
The artificial chamber remained on every screen.
The developing fetus moved occasionally.
Its chest did not rise because it did not breathe air.
Transparent tubes circulated fluid and nutrients.
A monitor displayed a heartbeat.
Faster than an adult’s.
Steady.
The camera timestamp showed the feed was live.
Dr. Evans studied the medical readouts.
“How old?” I asked.
“Approximately fifteen to sixteen weeks of development.”
“That is older than Faith.”
“Yes.”
“Then it cannot be her.”
“No.”
The child had existed before Faith’s death.
Before my memorial.
Before the archive claimed continuation.
The identity had been prepared in advance.
“What is the chamber?” Agent Cross asked.
Dr. Evans looked uncomfortable.
“An experimental extrauterine support system.”
“Artificial womb?”
“In effect.”
“Can a fetus that young survive inside it?”
“Not with any publicly established technology.”
“But this one is alive.”
“Yes.”
“How?”
“I do not know.”
Julian appeared through a secure call from his guarded hospital room.
His breathing remained difficult after the gunshot wound.
He stared at the chamber feed.
“She survived.”
“You knew about her?” I asked.
“I knew an embryo had been retained.”
“Retained from what?”
He looked toward Faith’s ultrasound image.
“The embryo transferred into you.”
My body became still.
“Which embryo?”
“Faith.”
Dr. Evans turned sharply.
“Faith was conceived before the unauthorized Mercy transfer.”
“Yes.”
“She was believed to be a naturally conceived twin.”
“She was not.”
The room went silent.
Hope’s heartbeat continued.
Mercy’s remained faintly audible.
Faith’s still body rested beside both.
Julian continued.
“Hope was conceived naturally.”
“And Faith?”
“Created in the first embryo batch using Sarah’s egg and Derek’s genetic material.”
My throat closed.
Faith had been a stolen embryo too.
“When was she transferred?”
“Seven days before the procedure that transferred Mercy.”
I remembered another appointment.
A fertility follow-up Derek insisted I attend because he said the supplements had caused ovarian cysts.
I had been given a muscle relaxant.
The doctor performed what he called a uterine examination.
Derek drove me home.
Faith entered my body that day.
Not through a choice I made.
Not through a pregnancy I understood.
But once she existed inside me, she became herself.
Her beginning had been stolen.
Her life had not belonged to the thieves.
“Why did every scan show Hope and Faith at the same gestational age?” Dr. Evans asked.
“The Faith embryo had been frozen at a later developmental stage. The dating difference was within measurement variation.”
“And the chamber fetus?”
Julian closed his eyes.
“The original embryo divided during laboratory culture.”
My skin turned cold.
“One embryo became two?”
“Yes.”
Identical embryo splitting.
Two genetically matching beginnings.
One half transferred into me.
One half retained.
“The chamber child is Faith’s identical twin,” Dr. Evans whispered.
“Genetically,” Julian said.
The word mattered.
Genetically identical did not mean identical lives.
The fetus inside the chamber was not Faith returned.
She had not lived Faith’s days beside Hope.
She had not survived the kidnapping.
She had not moved under my palm.
She had not died inside me.
She shared Faith’s genome.
Not her history.
The Keeper knew grief might blur the difference.
She created a backup body and prepared to place Faith’s name upon it.
“What did they call the second embryo before Faith died?” I asked.
Julian looked away.
“Reserve F.”
“Not a name.”
“No.”
“What was the purpose?”
“If the transferred fetus failed, Reserve F could preserve the second-daughter genetic key.”
I began shaking.
“They planned for Faith to die.”
“No.”
“They prepared for it.”
“Yes.”
“That is the same thing in this family.”
Julian closed his eyes.
The system always prepared replacements before protecting originals.
A second daughter.
A hidden twin.
A new identity ready before a death was confirmed.
“Why was the fetus moved into a chamber?” Dr. Evans asked.
“It was initially cryopreserved.”
“When was gestation initiated?”
Julian hesitated.
“When Sarah’s pregnancy became public.”
My body turned cold.
“Derek’s accusation?”
“Yes.”
The moment my husband called me unfaithful, the Keeper activated another embryo.
If Faith survived, Reserve F remained hidden.
If Faith died, the other fetus could inherit her identity.
If both survived, one became visible and one remained controlled.
The system could not lose.
Not until we refused to treat people as interchangeable.
“Who carried the fetus before the chamber?” I asked.
“No one.”
“The entire development occurred artificially?”
“After early-stage culture, yes.”
Dr. Evans stared at him.
“That level of fetal support would require technology, specialists, and constant oversight far beyond one hidden clinic.”
“It had all three.”
“Where?”
Julian remained silent.
Agent Cross stepped closer to his screen.
“Location.”
“The Continuity Laboratory.”
“Where?”
“Beneath First Mother House.”
Rebecca’s transition home.
The place June sent pregnant girls.
The place where identities changed between birth and placement.
The first laboratory had been beneath the first prison for mothers.
Cross ordered an immediate operation.
First Mother House stood outside a quiet Virginia town.
From the road, it looked like a retirement residence.
White columns.
A wide porch.
Flower beds.
A sign promising:
DIGNITY, CARE, CONTINUITY
The word continuity appeared everywhere.
On legal forms.
Medical records.
Embryo labels.
Replacement identities.
It sounded gentle.
It meant no person was allowed to interrupt the system.
Federal teams surrounded the property.
No residents appeared through the windows.
No vehicles left.
Thermal imaging showed nine adults aboveground.
Six heat signatures below.
One large chamber with constant power usage.
The laboratory.
Agent Cross appointed a command team with no prior connection to Quinn, Barnes, Rebecca, Elaine, or the Keeper.
Every member was independently verified.
Captain Sol joined remotely because she recognized old First Dawn equipment listed in the building’s supply records.
Dr. Evans guided the medical team from my hospital room.
I watched through body cameras.
I hated watching.
I hated not going.
But my body was not a battlefield I could keep volunteering.
Hope needed me still.
Mercy needed constant monitoring.
Faith remained with us in the only way she could.
I stayed in bed.
That was not weakness.
It was care.
The federal team entered through the kitchen.
No resistance.
The first floor was empty except for tables set for breakfast.
Nine plates.
Nine cups.
Food still warm.
The residents had moved underground.
Agents found the basement door behind a pantry wall.
A mechanical lock.
No electronics.
Rebecca provided the key.
Before agents descended, she said one thing.
“Do not call the women inside nurses.”
“What are they?” Cross asked.
“Mothers.”
The word carried no comfort.
“Whose mothers?”
“Some biological. Some gestational. Some assigned.”
“Armed?”
“Possibly.”
“Loyal?”
“To the children, they believe.”
“Then we speak before firing.”
The basement stairs opened into a brightly lit hallway.
Not abandoned.
Modern.
Sterile.
Doors lined both sides.
Each bore a plaque.
TRANSFER
GESTATION
IDENTITY PREPARATION
MATERNAL RELEASE
The final plaque made Jessica cover her mouth on the secure screen.
Maternal release.
The room where mothers were told to let go.
Sometimes after signing.
Sometimes after sedation.
Sometimes after being told the child died.
The tactical team reached the main laboratory.
Four women stood between them and the artificial chamber.
No masks.
No weapons visible.
The oldest appeared to be in her seventies.
She wore pale-blue medical clothing.
A silver bird carrying a thread rested at her throat.
“Put your hands where we can see them,” the team leader ordered.
The woman lifted both hands.
“You cannot remove the fetus.”
“Step away.”
“The chamber cannot be transported.”
“A neonatal extraction team is prepared.”
“There is no extraction.”
Dr. Evans spoke through the team radio.
“Identify yourself.”
“Dr. Nora Voss.”
“Specialty?”
“Fetal surgery and developmental medicine.”
“Medical license?”
“Expired.”
“Why?”
“I was declared dead.”
Of course.
Every specialist who made the impossible possible had first been removed from ordinary accountability.
“When?” Dr. Evans asked.
“Twenty-two years ago.”
“Did you create this chamber?”
“I improved it.”
“Who authorized fetal development?”
“The Maternal Guardian.”
“Name.”
Nora looked toward the chamber.
“The title has passed through several women.”
“That is not a name.”
“Names create prosecution. Titles create continuity.”
Agent Cross stepped closer to his screen.
“You are under arrest.”
Dr. Voss did not react.
“Then arrest me after the child is stable.”
The chamber fetus moved.
A small arm shifted near the transparent wall.
I felt grief so sharp I could barely breathe.
The child looked like Faith.
Not because I could see a face clearly.
Because I knew the same genome shaped both bodies.
Two beginnings from one embryo.
One had lived inside me.
One had lived entirely inside machines.
Neither had chosen the system that separated them.
“What does she need?” I asked.
Dr. Voss heard my voice through the laboratory speaker.
She turned toward the camera.
“You are Sarah.”
“Yes.”
“You denied maternal recognition.”
“I denied a false identity.”
“She is genetically your daughter.”
“I know.”
“Then recognize her.”
“As a separate child.”
Nora’s expression tightened.
“Difference is socially manufactured.”
“No.”
I looked at Faith’s ultrasound picture.
“History creates difference.”
“They share every genetic marker.”
“They did not share every moment.”
“Memory begins later.”
“Mine does not.”
The room became silent.
I continued.
“Faith was inside me. This child was inside your chamber. You made different choices for them. You exposed them to different dangers. You gave one a number and one a stolen name.”
Nora looked at the chamber.
“Then what do you call her?”
The question struck me.
The fetus needed a medical identifier.
A legal placeholder.
Something other than Faith.
But I refused to assign a lifelong identity under pressure.
“Call her Reserve F only as evidence,” I said.
“That is not a name.”
“No.”
“Children require names.”
“People deserve time.”
Nora almost smiled.
“She may never leave the chamber alive.”
The words entered like ice.
“What?”
“The support system cannot maintain development indefinitely.”
“How long?”
“We do not know.”
“Can she be transferred into a human uterus?”
“No.”
“Can she survive delivery?”
“Not at this stage.”
“Then what happens?”
“We continue development.”
“Until?”
Nora looked toward the machine.
“Until viability.”
“Can the chamber do that?”
“We hope.”
Hope.
The word hurt.
Hope was inside me.
A daughter.
Not a prediction.
Not an experiment.
“What is her condition?” Dr. Evans asked.
“Currently stable.”
“Any organ abnormalities?”
“None identified.”
“Neurological development?”
“Within our expected range.”
“Expected based on how many previous cases?”
Nora became silent.
Dr. Evans repeated the question.
“How many?”
“Five.”
Every person froze.
“Five fetuses were developed artificially?” Cross asked.
“Yes.”
“Outcomes?”
“Two died during early support.”
“And the others?”
“One survived to twenty-two weeks and died after emergency delivery.”
“Two remain?”
Nora glanced toward doors behind the main chamber.
Agents moved.
“Do not open those.”
They did.
Behind the first door stood another artificial gestation chamber.
Empty.
Behind the second—
A child.
Larger.
Approximately twenty-four weeks.
Moving weakly beneath fluid.
The label read:
M.O. — ORIGINAL CONTINUITY
“Who is that?” I asked.
Nora closed her eyes.
“The first successful subject.”
“Whose genetic child?”
“The Keeper’s.”
The original Sarah Price had created a daughter through stored genetic material.
Not carried.
Not born conventionally.
Developed inside a laboratory as a future successor.
“What is her name?”
“Mother One.”
No name.
Only destiny.
“How long has she been in the chamber?”
“Twenty-four weeks.”
“Who is the other genetic parent?”
Nora said nothing.
Cross ordered the records opened.
Technicians searched.
The paternal field appeared.
MICHAEL MILLER
My father.
The room went silent.
Michael stared from his secure screen.
“No.”
His genetic material had been used again.
The Keeper’s egg.
My father’s sample.
A child created to unite the original Sarah Price with the Miller line.
My biological half-sister.
Developing inside a machine.
The network had continued producing family branches long after consent became irrelevant.
“How many children were created from my father?” I whispered.
No one answered.
Because no one knew.
Agent Cross ordered every chamber secured and every sample preserved.
Nora stepped toward Reserve F.
An agent blocked her.
“You cannot interrupt circulation,” she said.
“No one is touching the system until independent specialists arrive.”
“You already interrupted the archive connection.”
“What does that control?”
“Identity synchronization.”
“Explain.”
“The chamber receives data from the Maternal Origin system.”
“What data?”
“Growth authorization. Medical protocols. Legal designation.”
A fetus’s development tied to a legal database.
If the identity was disputed, did the medical system stop treatment?
My blood turned cold.
“What happens because I refused to recognize her as Faith?”
Nora looked toward Reserve F’s monitor.
“Nothing medically.”
Relief arrived.
Then she added:
“Unless the archive completes secondary rejection.”
“What is secondary rejection?”
“The fetus loses priority access to proprietary medication.”
“You withhold treatment based on identity?”
“We have limited supply.”
Scarcity.
Again.
Manufactured.
One fetus prioritized.
Another allowed to decline.
“Which child has priority?” Dr. Evans demanded.
“Mother One.”
The Keeper’s daughter.
The successor.
Reserve F—the child genetically identical to Faith—received whatever remained.
“Share the medication,” I said.
“It is not that simple.”
“It never is when someone wants authority.”
“The dose is prepared specifically for one genetic profile.”
“They have different profiles.”
“Yes.”
“Then why does one child’s treatment affect the other?”
“Manufacturing capacity.”
“Make more.”
“The precursor compound requires six weeks.”
“How much supply remains?”
Nora looked toward the refrigeration unit.
“Enough for one fetus to reach probable viability.”
The room became silent.
There it was.
Another choice.
Reserve F.
Mother One.
One child receives the medicine.
One child loses it.
The system had manufactured even the shortage.
“You chose Mother One,” I said.
“She is further developed.”
“More likely to survive.”
“Yes.”
June’s language.
The stronger child.
The visible child.
The one whose survival justified abandoning another.
Dr. Evans looked toward the medication logs.
“Is there an alternative compound?”
“No.”
“Can the doses be reduced?”
“Possibly.”
“Would both survive?”
“Possibly not.”
“Would one definitely survive with full dose?”
“No.”
Nora’s certainty collapsed under questions.
There was no guaranteed survival.
Only risk managed according to hierarchy.
“Then split the supply while independent experts formulate alternatives,” I said.
Nora shook her head.
“You are emotionally attached to Reserve F.”
“I am emotionally opposed to deciding one child is disposable.”
“One is more viable.”
“One is more advanced.”
“That is viability.”
“No. It is one factor.”
Dr. Evans nodded.
“Correct.”
Nora looked toward the chamber containing Mother One.
“She has been alive longer.”
“So had Faith,” I said.
The room went silent.
“Length of life does not create ownership of another child’s chance.”
Cross instructed the medical team to divide the existing supply only after an independent dosing review.
No single doctor.
No maternal guardian.
No Keeper.
A panel.
Slow.
Imperfect.
Shared.
Nora looked horrified.
“You will lose both.”
“Maybe,” Dr. Evans said.
The honesty silenced her.
“But we will not kill one based on a system built to force selection.”
The archive purge remained suspended.
Mia was placed in federal custody.
Elaine surrendered administrator access.
Rebecca provided every transition-house location.
Michael began dissolving the bloodline trust.
Marcus formally accepted his identity as Michael’s son while signing a declaration refusing inherited custodial authority.
For several hours, it appeared the crisis was finally becoming manageable.
Not resolved.
Not safe.
Manageable.
Then the full medical file for Mercy arrived.
Dr. Evans sat beside my bed in the old delivery theater.
Her face was unreadable.
“What?”
She looked toward Hope and Mercy’s monitor.
“Mercy’s condition is genuine.”
“We know.”
“The mitochondrial variation affects cellular energy production.”
“Is the treatment working?”
“Yes.”
“Then why do you look like that?”
She placed the medication protocol beside the new laboratory report.
“The compound does not affect Mercy alone.”
My stomach tightened.
“What does it do to Hope?”
“We have been monitoring Hope’s heart rate. It remained strong after the reduced dose.”
“Then?”
“The short-term effect is minimal.”
“And long term?”
Dr. Evans looked toward the laboratory specialist on the secure screen.
He answered carefully.
“The compound crosses all placental circulation available to it.”
“Hope has a separate placenta.”
“Yes.”
“But your bloodstream carries the medication to both.”
“What does it do?”
“In a fetus without Mercy’s mitochondrial variation, repeated exposure may suppress normal metabolic signaling.”
I stared at him.
“Plain language.”
Dr. Evans took my hand.
“The medicine helping Mercy could gradually interfere with Hope’s growth.”
My body became cold.
“How badly?”
“We do not know.”
“Could it kill her?”
Silence.
“Could it?”
“Yes.”
The word entered the room.
Hope moved strongly beneath my palm.
Mercy followed with a weaker flutter.
Faith remained still.
Three daughters.
One medicine.
One needed it.
One might be harmed by it.
The Keeper had not created only a fragile fetus.
She had created a treatment conflict.
A child whose survival might threaten the child beside her.
Another forced choice built into my body.
“Stop the infusion,” I said.
Dr. Evans did not move.
“If we stop completely, Mercy’s heart may slow again.”
“Then lower it.”
“We are already below the original protocol.”
“Find another treatment.”
“We are searching.”
“How long?”
“Hours. Possibly days.”
“Mercy may not have days.”
“No.”
Hope’s heartbeat filled the room.
Strong.
Trusting.
Mercy’s rhythm followed.
Slower.
Dependent on a drug that might harm her sister.
I looked toward Faith’s picture.
They had killed one daughter to see whether I would choose the other.
Now they had left me with two living daughters whose medical needs opposed each other.
The final cruelty was not asking which child I loved more.
It was forcing me to make a decision where love could not save both.
Dr. Evans leaned closer.
“We do not decide from fear.”
“What evidence do we have?”
“Mercy improves with the compound.”
“And Hope?”
“No immediate damage.”
“Then continue the lowest effective dose while searching for an alternative.”
“That carries risk.”
“So does stopping.”
“Yes.”
“Monitor Hope continuously.”
“Yes.”
“Measure growth every day.”
“Yes.”
“Bring in specialists who have never worked with the Keeper.”
“Yes.”
“No one person decides alone.”
Dr. Evans squeezed my hand.
“Yes.”
I looked toward both heartbeats.
Hope.
Mercy.
Not stronger and weaker.
Not visible and hidden.
Two daughters with different needs.
The answer was not choosing one.
It was refusing to stop searching for a way that treated both as fully human.
Then the laboratory specialist’s computer alarmed.
He turned toward another screen.
“What is it?” Dr. Evans asked.
“The compound profile.”
“What about it?”
He enlarged the molecular report.
“There is an additional component that was not listed in Julian’s protocol.”
My chest tightened.
“Poison?”
“Not exactly.”
“What is it?”
“A signaling agent.”
Dr. Evans frowned.
“For what purpose?”
The specialist looked toward my fetal-monitor data.
“It binds selectively to cells carrying a specific engineered marker.”
“Mercy’s marker?”
“Yes.”
“What does it signal?”
He hesitated.
“What does it signal?” I demanded.
“Location.”
The room became silent.
The medication was not only treatment.
It was a beacon.
Every dose helping Mercy also made her detectable.
“To whom?” Cross asked through the secure line.
“We need to identify the receiver.”
The specialist searched the seized Continuity Laboratory servers.
One active connection appeared.
Not to First Mother House.
Not to the island.
Not to the Maternal Origin archive.
A satellite channel.
The same private channel used when my father’s live biometric profile authenticated the archive.
Michael leaned closer to his screen.
“That facility held me.”
“Where?” Cross demanded.
“I never knew the location.”
The signal strengthened.
A map appeared.
The receiver was moving.
Not offshore.
Not underground.
Toward the hospital.
A vehicle approached through the city.
Its medical transmitter identified it as an emergency neonatal ambulance.
The hospital had not requested one.
Cross ordered the perimeter closed.
The ambulance accelerated.
It passed the first security checkpoint using valid federal clearance.
Then the second.
The authorization carried Mia’s signature.
Forged.
The third gate opened under Michael’s biometric credentials.
Copied.
The ambulance entered the hospital service tunnel beneath the old delivery theater.
Hope’s heartbeat accelerated.
Mercy’s followed.
The vehicle stopped directly below us.
Dr. Evans looked toward the floor.
A mechanical sound began beneath the tiles.
Metal gears.
An old elevator.
Rebecca went pale.
“There is no elevator.”
Elaine appeared through the archive screen.
“Yes, there is.”
Everyone turned toward her.
“What elevator?” Cross demanded.
“The original infant-transfer lift.”
The one used when babies were moved between the old delivery theater and the hidden nursery.
The floor panel beneath Faith’s ultrasound photograph shifted.
A narrow line opened around it.
Marcus drew his weapon.
Cross ordered the verified agents into defensive positions.
The elevator rose.
Slowly.
Silently.
Mercy’s medication pump began flashing.
EXTERNAL RECEIVER CONNECTED
I reached for the IV line.
Dr. Evans stopped me.
“Do not pull it. Her heart may collapse.”
The floor panel opened.
White light appeared beneath us.
A man stood inside the rising lift.
Not Julian.
Not Derek.
Not Barnes.
He wore a neonatal surgeon’s gown.
A transparent mask covered his face.
In his arms, he carried an empty portable gestation capsule.
A label had already been attached.
MERCY COLLINS
Behind him stood a second man holding another capsule.
That label read:
HOPE COLLINS
The surgeon looked toward me.
“Do not be afraid.”
Cross aimed his weapon.
The surgeon smiled behind the mask.
“We are not here to make Sarah choose.”
The elevator reached the floor.
“We are here to remove the choice from her.”…………………
LAST PART…
TO BE CONTINUED IN LAST PART…