I had never played them for anyone.
He looked at me, hurt in his eyes.
“I found them last month. I didn’t understand everything. But I know that voice.”
The knocking came at the door now, once, twice—measured, almost polite.
My father closed his eyes.
Noah pointed the way a witness points in court.
“It’s Grandpa.”
Silence.
The kind that tears through bone.
My mother made a choking sound.
Rachel stared at my father as if the last thread holding her together had snapped.
And then, like a man too exhausted to carry his lies any longer, my father sank onto the bottom step.
“Yes,” he said.
The word shattered everything.
My mother recoiled.
“No.”
He looked at her with hollow, broken eyes.
“I didn’t mean for it to go that far.”
Rachel let out a sob so raw I felt it in my chest.
“You told me Dad knew. You told me he was helping.”
“He was,” I said quietly, because now I understood.
All the pieces I had buried, all the things I had refused to connect, snapped into place with sickening clarity.
Fifteen years ago, I had not become pregnant because of some reckless mistake.
I had become pregnant after finding Rachel in the old storage building behind my father’s repair shop.
I had been the one who discovered the hidden room by accident.
Rachel had been weak, terrified, half-starved—but alive.
I had tried to get her out.
My father caught us before we reached the road.
He told me if I went to the police, Rachel would disappear forever.
He said Daniel Harper, a disgraced detective drowning in gambling debt, had been helping him move Rachel and keep people away.
He said no one would believe a pregnant seventeen-year-old over a decorated officer and a respected church deacon.
He said if I stayed quiet, Rachel would live.
Then one night, Daniel Harper vanished.
And my father told me Rachel had died during transit.
I had believed him.
Mostly.
But not enough to stay.
So I left, smiling through the worst pain of my life because I was already carrying proof of what he had done.
Noah.
Not Daniel Harper’s son.
Not some unknown boy’s son.