werful man in the music industry. When the doctor confirmed our baby
wife; I was a substitute. A perfect imitation of his
either. It was a "legacy" for Gi
nto of my dead mother, and Emerson told me it was just a "cheap little figurine." H
lent miscarriage. Then, she threw the ashes of my mother and my un
of it was a calculated sham. I was just
ris. When he finally found me, begging me to come home for t
you talking a
pte
e Comb
ift for another woman-a living, breathing continuation of a
t on the edge of the paper-lined table, my fingers tracing the slight curve of m
d genuine as she pointed to the grainy black-and-white image on the screen. "A
me, so potent it al
intensity that made my heart ache with love. He' d murmur reassurances, his voice a low, soothing melody that calmed all my fears. Today, a last-minut
ne, my fingers flyi
The baby is healthy a
that rare, breathtaking smile he reserved just for m
of the private clinic, my phone remained silent. I pushed down a sliver of disappointment. He w
movement outside caught my eye. A sleek black car, Emerson' s car, was pulli
lready on the sidewalk, his back to me, moving with
he was leaning down, his arm wrapped around
out, my voice thin a
ll. He opened the passenger door of his car, his mo
ual pull towards him, towards the man I loved. I followed him, my steps silent on the
as turned away from me, but the cascade of dark, silky hair was an exact mirror of my own. My
one of Emerson's producers, Liam
ty, Emerson?" Liam chuckled. "You found a pre
thickened, pressing in on m
was low, devoid of the warmth I knew so well. It was th
ul second, my world righted itself. Then he continued, "She i
y trembled so violently I had to press my han
se
who had been in a coma for the last three years following a tragic car accident. The woman whose
had made my childh
brother, died, leaving me orphaned. She' d delighted in tormenting me, her cruelty a sharp, constant sting. My father, a composer of qui
championed my music, shielded me from critics, and loved me with a fierce, all-consuming passion that h
hing, including my father' s manuscript. Emerson had rushed in without a second' s thought, shielding the manuscript with
e had looked at me with tears in his eyes. "Adeline," he' d whispered, "
? I had fallen complete
to the casual destruction of my life, ano
"Getting that scar just to win her over? A bit dramatic, but
hed. My entire
eard it as clearly as if he' d screamed it
y hero, my entire world-all
d. "What happens when Gi
Gisele' s. It will be her heir, the Gonzales legacy. Adeline can be i
f and robotic. I walked out into the blinding afternoon sun, but I felt
needed him. Not Emerson. The him that was bur
he cemetery and the long, winding path up the hill. I fell to my knees be
Beloved Father
stering my hair to my face and soaking me to the bone in seconds. I didn't care. I just kept wipi
itting me. A large black umb
on' s voice was laced with worry, with a sharp edg
e, the face I had loved more than life itself, was a mask of con
ve suit heedless of the mud. "Were you thinking of him a
cticed. "Let's go home. I'll run you a hot ba
ered it, his voice instantly tense. He spoke in rapid, fluent Spanish, a language he though
ás seguro?" What? She
for me vanished, replaced by an urgent
hand, his movements abrupt. "
s focus entirely on getting to his car, on getting to her. H
ve me. And then, a sound escaped my lips. It wasn't a sob. It was a laugh.
he real thing. The imitat
hill, my hand instinctively cradling my stomach. I stumbled once, twice, my ar
a legacy for a woman who despised me? A gift fr
s terrifyingly clear. The photographs on the wall, the music sheets on the grand piano, t
fingers numb as I picked u
oice flat and devoid of emotion
tory that had offered me a full scholarship three
t time all day. "I' d like to accept my pla
rade wa