A Fake Hospital Name, A Forged Tape, And The Baby He Came To Save-eirian

Genevieve Romano signed the hospital forms with a name she had practiced in motel mirrors for seven months.

Abigail Mercer looked harmless on paper.

Abigail Mercer had no husband with men watching every gate, no missing-person posters quietly killed before they reached the evening news, and no brother whose ashes sat in a silver urn in a house Genevieve no longer entered.

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The nurse at the private maternity desk smiled at the name and asked if anyone should be called.

Genevieve folded both hands over the curve of her stomach and said no.

Outside the glass, cold rain tapped the Manhattan windows, turning the city into a blur of headlights and wet stone.

Inside the maternity wing, everything smelled like clean sheets, antiseptic, and the peppermint gum Dr. Hayes chewed whenever he was trying not to worry a patient.

“Contractions are close,” he said, studying the monitor.

Genevieve tried to nod, but the pain closed around her spine and stole the movement.

She had imagined labor would make her brave, but it stripped her down to one thought at a time.

The lie that sent her running had arrived in late spring, on a rainless afternoon that still smelled like lemon polish and garden roses.

Vincenzo came to the estate after Sandro left for a meeting, wearing the same soft gray suit he wore to every family dinner.

He had been Sandro’s mentor before he was his adviser, a man who kissed Genevieve’s cheek at family dinners and called her “little sister” whenever Sandro was near enough to hear.

That day, he did not kiss her cheek.

He placed a black phone on the kitchen island and said, “You deserve to hear what kind of man sleeps beside you.”

Genevieve remembered laughing once, not because anything was funny, but because terror sometimes enters the body as disbelief.

Then the recording played.

The voice sounded like Sandro’s, low and tired, ordering someone named Leo removed before the accounts could be traced.

Her brother’s name landed like a hand around her throat.

Leo had been reckless, loud, always borrowing money and always promising one last time, but he had been hers before he belonged to anyone else’s mistakes.

Sandro had brought home his ashes with red eyes and a ruined tie.

He had held Genevieve on the bathroom floor when she could not stand.

Now his voice was coming through a phone, coldly arranging the death he had mourned beside her.

Vincenzo slid a printed transcript across the marble.

Each line had a timestamp, each paragraph a neat label, each page a cruelty dressed as evidence.

“You are pregnant,” Vincenzo said.

Genevieve’s hand went to her stomach before she could stop it.

“Then you already know what is at stake,” he said.

By morning, she was gone.

She left her wedding ring in the safe so Sandro would think she had chosen to disappear completely, but she took the small gold chain he had given her on their first anniversary and threaded the ring through it three towns later.

She told herself she kept it because she might need to sell it.

She never sold it.

For 214 days, she lived quietly enough to become hard to notice.

Back in New York, Sandro Romano turned grief into weather.

He stopped sleeping.

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