At 10:03 p.m., exactly ninety-three days after Luke Mercer signed the divorce papers and told Elena Ross that he no longer loved her, his phone vibrated across the glass coffee table in his Tribeca apartment.
Outside the floor-to-ceiling windows, Manhattan glittered beneath a sea of lights.
The city looked untouchable.
As if tragedy belonged somewhere else.
As if pain could never climb above the thirty-second floor.
Inside the apartment, however, silence ruled.
Luke sat alone in the darkness.
A half-empty glass of bourbon rested beside him.
The television played muted financial news that he wasn’t watching.
His attention drifted between work emails and the growing emptiness that had settled into his life since the divorce.
When the phone rang again, he frowned.
The number was unfamiliar.
For a moment, he considered ignoring it.
Then instinct persuaded him otherwise.
He answered.
“Mr. Mercer?”
The voice on the other end sounded professional but urgent.
Luke straightened immediately.
Hospitals never called with good news.
His heart skipped once.
Then again.
Confusion crossed his face.
“There must be a mistake.”
The woman hesitated.
“No, sir. We have identified you as the emergency contact for Ms. Elena Ross.”
The name hit him like a punch.
Elena.
His ex-wife.
The woman he had spent nine years loving before spending one painful year convincing himself he didn’t.
The woman he had not spoken to in nearly three months.
Luke swallowed hard.
“What happened?”
There was another pause.
Then the nurse spoke carefully.
“Ms. Ross was admitted after a serious vehicle accident.”
Luke stood so quickly his chair nearly fell backward.
“Is she alive?”
“She is alive.”
Relief arrived briefly.
Then disappeared.
“However, she remains unconscious.”
The room suddenly felt smaller.
The city lights beyond the windows blurred.
Luke gripped the edge of the table.
“What injuries?”
“Multiple fractures. Internal bleeding. A severe concussion.”
The nurse stopped.
Then added the sentence that changed everything.
“And she is approximately twenty-two weeks pregnant.”
Luke felt the blood drain from his face.
For several seconds, he couldn’t speak.
The words refused to make sense.
Pregnant.
Twenty-two weeks.
The timeline collided violently inside his head.
Their divorce had been finalized only ninety-three days earlier.
Three months.
Barely three months.
He opened his mouth.
Closed it.
Then finally whispered:
“Pregnant?”
“Yes, sir.”
Luke stared at the dark television screen.
His reflection looked unfamiliar.
Broken.
Lost.
The nurse continued.
“There is another matter you should know before you arrive.”
Every muscle in his body tightened.
“What matter?”
The woman’s tone became noticeably more careful.
“We believe the accident may not have been accidental.”
A cold sensation crawled down his spine.
“What are you talking about?”
“There are indications that someone tampered with the vehicle.”
The silence that followed felt endless.
Luke’s pulse hammered inside his ears.
“Who would do that?”
“We don’t know.”
The answer came quickly.
But something in her voice suggested there was more.
Much more.
When Luke arrived at Memorial General twenty-eight minutes later, detectives were already waiting near the intensive care unit.
The bright hospital corridors smelled of antiseptic and exhaustion.
Everything felt unreal.
As though he had stepped into someone else’s nightmare.
A detective approached first.
“Mr. Mercer?”
Luke nodded.
The detective introduced himself and led him toward a private consultation room.
Before sitting down, Luke asked only one question.
“How is Elena?”
The detective exchanged a glance with a physician standing nearby.
“She’s stable for now.”
For now.
Those words echoed ominously.
Luke sat heavily.
His hands trembled.
He barely noticed.
The physician opened a folder.
“There are complications.”
Luke’s stomach tightened.
“What complications?”
The doctor took a breath.
“The baby survived the crash.”
Luke closed his eyes.
Relief mixed instantly with confusion.
A baby.
Elena was carrying a baby.
A child he knew nothing about.
A child that might not even be his.
Yet somehow the possibility already mattered.
The doctor continued.
“Unfortunately, the injuries were severe.”
Luke forced himself to listen.
“The next forty-eight hours are critical for both mother and child.”
The detective leaned forward.
“Mr. Mercer, we also need to ask about Elena’s recent relationships.”
Luke looked up sharply.
“What does that have to do with anything?”
The detective slid several photographs across the table.
Luke stared at them.
His chest tightened.
The images showed Elena entering her apartment building.
Walking through a grocery store.
Getting into her car.
Someone had been following her.
For weeks.
Maybe longer.
“Who took these?”
The detective’s expression darkened.
“That’s what we’re trying to determine.”
Luke’s hands clenched into fists.
A terrible realization was beginning to form.
This wasn’t random.
This wasn’t an accident.
Someone had been watching Elena.
Tracking her.
Waiting.
Then another photograph appeared.
Luke froze.
The final image showed Elena arguing with a man outside a restaurant.
The picture had been taken from a distance.
But Luke recognized him instantly.
His younger brother.
Ethan Mercer.
The room became completely silent.
The detective studied his reaction.
“You know him.”
It wasn’t a question.
Luke stared at the photograph.
A thousand memories flashed through his mind.
Family holidays.
Business meetings.
Private conversations.
Trust.
Betrayal.
Slowly, painfully, he nodded.
“That’s my brother.”
The detective’s face hardened.
“Then you need to know something.”
Luke felt dread rising inside him.
The detective opened another file.
Inside were bank statements.
Phone records.
Messages.
Evidence.
Enough evidence to destroy lives.
“Ethan Mercer was in frequent contact with Elena over the last six months.”
Luke’s heart stopped.
“What?”
The detective placed another document on the table.
“We also have evidence suggesting he knew about the pregnancy.”
Luke stared at him.
Unable to breathe.
Unable to think.
The room tilted.
His brother knew.
His brother knew Elena was pregnant.
Yet no one had told him.
Not Elena.
Not Ethan.
No one.
Then came the final blow.
The detective’s voice lowered.
“Our preliminary investigation suggests Ethan may have been the last person to see Elena before the crash.”
The world seemed to collapse inward.
Luke looked through the hospital window toward the intensive care ward.
Somewhere behind those walls, Elena lay unconscious.
Fighting for her life.
Fighting for the life of her unborn child.
And suddenly the divorce no longer mattered.
The arguments no longer mattered.
The resentment no longer mattered.
Only one question remained.
Why had his own brother been hiding such a devastating secret?
And what exactly had happened on the night Elena’s car left the road?
As monitors beeped softly somewhere beyond the corridor, Luke realized he was standing at the edge of a truth far more terrifying than divorce.
Because if the evidence was correct, the woman he had once promised to protect had been betrayed.
Not by a stranger.
Not by an enemy.
But by someone carrying the same family name.
Someone carrying the same blood.
His own brother.