“What truth?”
The room fell silent.
Slowly, Caleb removed a small bracelet from his pocket.
A tiny newborn bracelet.
He placed it in his palm.
“It was on your wrist the night we found you,” I whispered.
Harper stared at me.
“Found me?”
Then Caleb handed her a folded note.
I watched her read words I had memorized eighteen years earlier.
“Please love her. I cannot keep her safe the way she deserves. I am so sorry. Please love her.”
The flowers slipped from Harper’s hands.
Her face drained of color.
A second later, her knees buckled.
I caught her before she hit the floor.
The next thing I remember was sitting in a hospital waiting room with her corsage resting in my lap.
Doctors eventually assured us she was stable.
The collapse had been triggered by emotional shock.
When Caleb tried speaking to me afterward, I only said one thing.
“You need to leave.”
This time, he listened.
Two days later, Harper and I sat together at our kitchen table.
And for the first time, I told her everything.
I told her about the storm.
The abandoned baby carrier.
The bracelet.
The note.