I looked at the packet.

“She’s not going to stop, is she?”

“No.”

I swallowed.

“What do we do?”

Gerald’s thumb moved once across my knuckles.

“We answer.”


The next few weeks were made of paper.

Statements. Copies. Medical records. Billing records. Security reports from the hospital. Witness names. Text messages. Phone logs.

Seventeen unanswered calls.

One text from my mother: Your sister’s baby shower is tomorrow. We can’t leave now.

Another from Claire: Don’t make this a thing.

A hospital note documenting Eleanor Crawford’s attempt to discharge me against medical advice.

A written statement from Dr. Reeves.

A statement from Nurse Maria.

Security footage showing my mother being escorted out of my room.

DNA results.

Gerald’s old letters.

The photograph.

The note Eleanor had written twenty-six years earlier.

Gerald,

I lost the baby.

Please do not contact me again. I cannot bear to be reminded of it.

Ellie.

Every piece of paper was a small blade.

Necessary.

Sharp.

Exhausting.

Richard came to my apartment one evening carrying a cardboard box and the expression of a man who had opened a closet and found it full of ghosts.

“I found something,” he said.