The heavy sound of leather shoes on linoleum broke her trance. Dr. Evans, a man whose face was permanently etched with a look of tired sympathy, pushed open the door to his office.
"Mrs. Carlisle?"
Chloe's head snapped up. The paper trembled in her hand. "Is there any chance," she began, her voice a dry whisper, "that the sample was contaminated? A mistake in the lab?"
Dr. Evans's expression didn't change. It was the look of a man delivering a verdict, not a diagnosis. "We ran it twice after the initial flag. Standard procedure for anomalous results. The lab is certain. Genetically, it's impossible."
He didn't need to say more. The unspoken words hung in the sterile air of the hospital corridor, thick with the scent of antiseptic. The child is not yours. Or he is not your husband's.
A wave of dizziness washed over her, so intense she had to grip the back of a nearby chair to keep from falling. Her knuckles turned white, the crisp lab report crinkling under the pressure. Her breath caught in her throat, a tight, painful knot.
She forced herself to take a shallow breath, then another. With deliberate, jerky movements, she folded the report into a tiny, sharp-edged square, again and again, until it was a thick little block. She unzipped her Birkin, her fingers fumbling with the clasp, and shoved the paper into the deepest, most hidden interior pocket. A secret too toxic to see the light of day.
Turning, she walked away from the doctor's office. Her steps were stiff, her heels clicking a hollow, lonely rhythm on the polished floor. The smell of disinfectant was suffocating.
She pressed the down button for the elevator, the polished steel doors reflecting a distorted image of her face-pale, drawn, a stranger's mask of composure. The foundation of her five-year marriage, the very reality of her son, was cracking beneath her feet.
The elevator doors opened into the dim quiet of the underground parking garage. The air was cool and smelled of concrete and exhaust. Her driver, a stoic man named Marcus, was already holding the door of the black Cadillac Escalade open.
"The Hamptons, please, Marcus," she said, her voice raspy. She slid onto the cold leather of the back seat, the door closing with a solid, final thud that sealed her inside her new, terrifying reality.
As the SUV moved out of the garage and into the chaos of Manhattan traffic, Chloe leaned her head against the cool glass of the window and closed her eyes. Her mind, no longer under her control, began to play a reel of memories, now cast in a sinister new light.
Julian, insisting on that specific, boutique IVF clinic downtown. Julian, explaining away his absence during the most critical appointments with vague excuses about board meetings. Julian, brushing off her questions about the procedure with a cool, patronizing smile, telling her to leave the details to the experts.
The seeds of doubt, once tiny and easily ignored, were now sprouting with monstrous speed, their roots tearing through everything she thought was true.
The two-hour drive to the Hamptons passed in a blur of gray highway and muted sounds. When the Escalade finally turned onto the long, gravel driveway of the Carlisle estate, the familiar crunch of the tires did nothing to soothe her.
Before the car had even come to a complete stop, Chloe pushed the door open. She ignored the manicured stone path, her heels sinking into the soft turf as she cut across the lawn toward the French doors that led to the back garden.
She pushed one of the heavy glass doors open and the scene that greeted her stopped her heart.
It was a perfect, sun-drenched tableau. Her five-year-old son, Ethan, was running across the emerald-green lawn, a bright red frisbee in his hand, his laughter echoing in the clear afternoon air.
Kneeling on the grass, her arms open wide, was Sabrina Kowalski. Young, beautiful Sabrina, the daughter of their former housekeeper, now Julian's ward, dressed in a simple white sundress that made her look like an angel.
Ethan shouted with glee and launched himself into Sabrina's waiting arms. They tumbled onto the grass together, a tangle of limbs and joyful shrieks.
And standing a few feet away, watching them, was her husband. Julian. He was dressed in a bespoke charcoal suit, a glass of what was likely single malt in his hand, and on his face was a smile. A soft, genuine smile of a kind Chloe hadn't seen directed at her in years.
A fist clenched around Chloe's heart, squeezing the air from her lungs. Her feet felt rooted to the stone terrace.
Sabrina, as if sensing she was being watched, lifted her head. Her eyes, sharp and intelligent, found Chloe in the doorway. The radiant smile vanished instantly, replaced by a look of startled innocence. She scrambled to her feet, brushing nonexistent dust from her dress, her posture suddenly timid and uncertain.
Following her gaze, Ethan turned. The moment he saw his mother, the bright, happy light in his eyes extinguished. His face fell.
He instinctively took a step back, hiding partially behind Sabrina's legs, his small body tense with a wariness that was far too old for a five-year-old.
Then he pointed a small, accusatory finger at her.
"I want Aunt Sabrina to be my new mommy!" he shouted, his voice high and clear, each word a perfectly aimed stone.
The impact sent a shockwave through Chloe's body. She grabbed the doorframe, her nails digging into the painted wood, the only thing holding her upright.
Julian finally turned his head. His gaze fell on her, cool and indifferent. He didn't reprimand his son. He didn't move to correct the cruel, impossible statement. He simply watched her, his expression unreadable, as if she were a minor interruption to his pleasant afternoon.
Chloe's hand tightened on her purse, her fingers pressing against the hard, hidden square of paper in the inner pocket. The last fragile thread of hope she'd been clinging to-that this was all some terrible misunderstanding-snapped. In the cold, clear light of the Hamptons sun, it was no longer a misunderstanding. It was a conspiracy. And she was the only one who hadn't been in on it.