
“Please, can you read this letter? It’s very urgent.g. Hello everyone, welcome to our story. Please don’t forget to like,
subscribe, and tell us in the comments where you are watching from. 9-year-old Mirabel Carter stood in the middle of
the shiny marble floor, her tiny hands holding a wrinkled white envelope against her chest as if it were the most
precious thing in the world. Behind Mirabel’s big brown eyes was a kind of bravery that didn’t match her small size
or her faded pink jacket. She had traveled across the city all by herself, figured out which buses to take and
found this tall, scary building, all because her sick mother had asked her to. Mirabbel wasn’t just a little girl.
She was a warrior in sneakers. The morning sun tried to break through the gray Seattle clouds, making the glass
windows of the Williams Tower sparkle like diamonds. The building stretched 40 stories high into the sky, so tall that
Mirabel had to bend her head all the way back to see the top when she stood outside. Inside the lobby, everything
was fancy and expensive. Business people in suits rushed past like they were in a race, their shoes clicking on the floor
like tap dancers. Nobody seemed to notice the small girl standing there holding her letter and trying to be
brave. Mirabbel walked up to the big desk where a woman with red hair and glasses sat typing on a computer. The
desk was so high that Mirabbel had to stand on her tiptoes just to see over it. “Excuse me, ma’am,” Mirabbel said
softly. The woman whose name tag said Linda Mitchell looked down and gasped in surprise. “Oh my, hello there, sweetie.
Are you lost? Where’s your mommy?” Mirabbel shook her head quickly, making her ponytail swing back and forth. “I’m
not lost. I need to give this letter to the most important man who works here. My mom said it’s very, very urgent.” She
held up the envelope with both hands, showing Linda the name written on it in careful handwriting. Jackson Williams
sear urgent and personal. Linda’s eyebrows went up. She looked around the lobby, not sure what to do. This had
never happened before. Honey, what’s your name? Mirabbel Carter. And this letter is for Mr. Williams. My mom wrote
it and she said I have to make sure he reads it today because Mirabel’s voice got quieter and sadder because she might
not be strong enough to write another one. Something about the way Mirabbel said those words made Linda’s heart feel
heavy. She could see that Mirabel was trying very hard not to cry. “The little girl’s hands were shaking, but she kept
holding that envelope tight.” “Sweetheart, Mr. Williams is a very busy man,” Linda said gently. “He has
meetings all day long. Maybe I could give him the letter for you.” “No,” Mirabbel said louder than she meant to
then softer. “Please, my mom said I have to give it to him myself.” She said, “It’s the most important thing I’ll ever
do.” She said, “She said this letter might save us both.” Linda felt a lump form in her throat. Something about this
little girl’s desperate hope touched something deep inside her. Even though it was against all the rules, she picked
up her phone and called the very top floor of the building, 40 floors above the lobby, in an office so high it felt
like touching the clouds. Jackson Williams sat behind a massive desk made of dark polished wood. Big windows
surrounded him on three sides, showing the whole city of Seattle spread out below. The gray water of the bay, the
boats, the streets, the buildings. But Jackson barely looked at the view anymore. He’d stopped noticing beautiful
things a long time ago. At 35 years old, Jackson was one of the most powerful men
in Seattle. He owned the biggest real estate company in the city. He bought and sold buildings worth millions of
dollars. He wore suits that cost more than some people earned in a month. His dark hair was perfectly combed, his tie
was perfectly straight, and his office was perfectly clean. Not a single thing out of place. But if you looked closely
at Jackson’s eyes, you’d see they were tired. Sad even. His office had awards
on the walls and expensive furniture, but there were no pictures of smiling people, no photos of family or friends,
just cold, empty success. Jackson was reading a boring report when his phone buzz. Mr. Williams, Linda’s voice came
through the speaker. I have a very unusual situation in the lobby. There’s a little girl here who says she must
deliver a letter to you personally. She says it’s urgent. Jackson’s face became hard and annoyed. “Linda, you know I
don’t have time for this. I have three meetings this afternoon.” “Sir,” Linda said, and her voice sounded different,
worried, and serious. “I really think you should see this child.” The letter says, “Personal and urgent. And this
little girl, there’s something special about this situation. She came all the way here by herself. Jackson closed his
eyes and rubbed his forehead. He was tired. He was busy. He didn’t want to deal with whatever this was. But Linda
had worked for him for 6 years and had never asked him to do something like this before. Fine, he said, his voice
sharp like a knife. Send her up, but make it quick. Linda took Mirabel’s hand
gently. Come on, sweetie. Mr. Williams will see you. Mirabbel’s eyes went wide.
Really? He will? Yes. We’re going to take a special elevator all the way to the top floor. As they walked across the
lobby toward the shiny silver elevator doors, Mirabel looked around with wonder. Everything sparkled and gleamed.
There were paintings on the walls and plants bigger than she was. “A waterfall made of glass and metal poured water
down one wall with a peaceful trickling sound.” “Is Mr. Williams nice?” Mirabbel
asked quietly as they stepped into the elevator. Linda thought about how to answer that. He’s very serious and very
busy, but I think deep down he has a good heart. He just forgot where he put it. The elevator zoomed up so fast that
Mirabbel’s stomach felt funny, like when you go down a big hill. She watched the numbers light up. 10, 20, 30, 38, 39,
Ding. The doors opened onto a quiet hallway with thick carpet that was so soft, Mirabbel’s footsteps made no
sound. Everything up here was even fancier than the lobby. The walls were painted a calm gray color and more
expensive artwork hung everywhere. At the end of the hall was a big wooden door with gold letters. Jackson Williams
chief executive officer. “Are you ready?” Linda asked. Mirabbel squeezed the envelope tighter and nodded. Even
though her heart was beating so fast it felt like a drum in her chest. She thought about her mom lying in the
hospital bed at home so weak and tired. Her mom had held Mirabel’s face in both hands that morning and said, “You’re my
brave girl. I know you can do this. Linda knocked on the door. Come in, said
a deep voice from inside. The door opened and Mirabel stepped into the biggest office she’d ever seen. It was
like a whole apartment. The windows showed the entire city, but Mirabel barely noticed the view. Her eyes went
straight to the man behind the desk. Jackson Williams stood up slowly. He was tall, really tall. He wore a dark suit
and a blue tie. His face was handsome but serious with lines around his eyes that made him look tired. And his eyes,
his eyes were the same dark brown color as Mirabbel’s own eyes. The same shape, the same way of looking at things.
Please, if you ever loved me, if any part of you remembers what we had, please don’t let our daughter grow up
alone. The girl who still loves you, Susan. P.S. Mirabbel doesn’t know you’re her father yet. I wanted you to have the
choice to be in her life before I told her. Don’t break her heart, Jackson. She’s already going to lose her mother.
Don’t let her lose her father, too. Jackson read the letter three times. Then four. His eyes burned, but he
didn’t cry. He’d forgotten how to cry years ago. Veronica had taught him that tears were weakness. But his hands were
shaking so badly now that the paper rattled. Mirabbell is your daughter. The words echoed in his head like thunder.
He thought about the little girl who just left his office. Her brown eyes, her serious expression, the way she
stood with her shoulders back trying to be brave, the dimple in her chin that matched his own. She looked exactly like
the baby photos of him that his mother kept in old albums. Jackson’s mind raced backward through time. 8 years ago, he’d
been happy, truly deeply happy, for the first time in his adult life. He’d been dating Susan Carter for 2 years, and
he’d been planning to propose. He’d already bought the ring, a simple diamond on a gold band because Susan
didn’t like flashy things. Then Veronica, his business partner’s sister, had come to him with photos. Photos that
appeared to show Susan with another man, Daniel Brooks. Photos of them laughing together, holding hands, kissing outside
a restaurant. “I’m so sorry to be the one to tell you this,” Veronica had said, her voice dripping with false
sympathy. “But I thought you deserve to know the truth. Susan’s been seeing Daniel for months. Everyone knows but
you. Jackson had been devastated, destroyed. He’d confronted Susan over
the phone, refusing to see her in person because he couldn’t bear to look at her lying face. It’s not what you think.
Susan had cried. Jackson, please just let me explain. Explain what? He’d
shouted. I’ve seen the photos, Susan. I’m not an idiot. Those photos are fake
or taken out of context. Daniel is just a friend from college who was in town. We had coffee one time and someone must
have. Stop lying to me. Jackson had roared. Just stop. We’re done. Don’t
call me again. Don’t come to my office. Don’t contact me ever again. It’s over.
He’d hung up on her while she was still crying, still trying to explain. And then Veronica had been there. Veronica
with her perfect makeup and her designer clothes and her cold, calculating mind. She’d comforted him, taken him out for
drinks, helped him move on. Within six months, they were dating. Within a year,
she’d moved into his penthouse. And for eight years, she’d been by his side, slowly, turning him into the cold,
emotionless businessman he’d become. Jackson stood up abruptly, his chair rolling backward and hitting the window
with a thud. He paced across his office, his mind spinning. Had Veronica really lied? Had she manufactured the whole
thing? He remembered now things that hadn’t seemed important at the time. How Veronica had always been around after
the breakup, almost like she’d been waiting for it. How she discouraged him every time he’d thought about calling
Susan. How she’d thrown away letters that came to the apartment without letting him see who they were from? Just
junk mail. She’d always said nothing important. But what if some of those letters had been from Susan? What if
she’d been trying to tell him about Mirabel and Veronica had hidden the messages? Jackson’s phone bust. A text
from Veronica. Running late for dinner. Meet me at Cascades at 7:00 instead of 6:30. You stared at the message.
Veronica, his girlfriend of 8 years. The woman he built his life around, even
though something inside him had always felt wrong, empty, incomplete. Did she really lie about everything? Jackson
looked down at Susan’s letter again, at the phone number written in crayon by a 9-year-old girl who’d crossed the city
alone to deliver it. His daughter, maybe his daughter. He needed to know the truth. Jackson grabbed his suit jacket
from the back of his chair and his keys from the desk. He pressed the intercom button. Linda, cancel all my meetings
for the rest of the day. Sir, Linda sounded shocked. Jackson never canled
meetings. Never. But you have the Henderson deal at 3:00 and the board conference at 4:00. Cancel them, Jackson
said firmly. Reschedule everything. Something urgent has come up. Is
everything okay, Mr. Williams? Jackson looked at Mirabbel’s phone number written in shaky crayon numbers. I don’t
know yet, but I’m about to find out. He left his office, stride long and purposeful. The elevator ride down felt
like it took forever. His mind kept showing him images of Mirabel. Her brave little face, her trembling hands holding
that letter. Her words, “My mom told me you were a good man.” When he reached the lobby, Linda was at her desk. She
looked up surprised to see him. “Mr. Williams, did you need something? That
little girl, Mirabel, how long ago did she leave? Linda checked her watch about
20 minutes ago. She said she was going to catch the bus back home. Which direction? She walked toward Third
Avenue. The number 12 bus stop. Jackson was already moving toward the doors. 20
minutes. She might still be there. Seattle buses could be slow during lunch hour. He burst out of the building into
the gray afternoon. The air was cold and damp, threatening rain. He turned toward
Third Avenue and started walking fast, his expensive shoes clicking on the sidewalk. “Please still be there,” he
thought. “Please don’t be gone yet.” He reached the bus stop and scanned the small crowd of people waiting. At first,
he didn’t see her. His heart sank, but then there sitting on the bench, her
pink jacket standing out against the gray surroundings. Mirabel was there, her backpack on her lap, her legs
swinging because they were too short to reach the ground. She was crying, not loud, dramatic crying, quiet, sad
crying, the kind that breaks your heart because you can see the person is trying so hard to be brave, but just can’t
anymore. Tears ran down her cheeks, and she wiped them away with the sleeve of her jacket. Jackson walked over slowly.
“Mirael?” She looked up, gasping. Her eyes went wide with shock. “Mr.
Williams, what are you? Why are you here? Jackson sat down on the bench beside her, not caring that his
expensive suit was getting wet from the damp seat. Up close, the resemblance was even more striking. She had his nose,
his eyebrows, even the way her ears curved at the top. I read the letter, he
said quietly. Mirabbel’s lip trembled. And are you are you going to help my
mom? Mirabbel, I need to ask you something important. Can you be honest with me? She nodded, wiping her eyes.
Your mom, Susan, did she ever tell you who your father is? Mirabbel shook her head. She said she’d tell me when I was
older. She said he was a good man who made a mistake and that someday maybe I’d get to meet him, but she always
looked really sad when she talked about it, so I stopped asking. Jackson’s throat felt tight. What if I told you
that I might be your father? Mirabbel’s eyes went huge. She stared at him, her mouth opening and closing like a fish.
You You’re my But how? Why didn’t you? Does that mean mom didn’t lie? Does that
mean you’ll help her? The questions tumbled out in a rush and fresh tears spilled down her cheeks. But these were
different tears. Confused tears. Hopeful tears. I don’t know anything for certain
yet, Jackson said carefully. But I’m going to find out. And Mirabel. No matter what, I’m going to make sure your
mom gets the medical care she needs. I promise you that. Really? Mirabbel’s
voice was so small, so full of desperate hope that it physically hurt Jackson to hear it. “Really?” he said firmly. “Now
come on, let’s get you home. I need to talk to your mother.” Mirabbel suddenly threw her arms around Jackson’s waist,
hugging him tight. “Thank you,” she whispered into his expensive suit jacket. “Thank you. Thank you. Thank
you.” Jackson froze. He couldn’t remember the last time someone had hugged him. Veronica wasn’t
affectionate. His business associates certainly didn’t hug. His own parents had died years ago. Slowly, carefully,
he put one arm around Mirabel’s small shoulders. Something inside his chest, something that had been frozen solid for
8 years, cracked just a little bit. Jackson’s car was parked in the executive garage beneath the building.
It was a sleek black Mercedes, the kind that cost more than most people’s houses. Mirabbel’s eyes went wide when
she saw it. “This is your car?” she breathed. “It’s so shiny. Come on,
Jackson said, opening the passenger door for her. Tell me your address. As Mirabbel climbed into the seat so big
her feet barely touched the floor, she recited the address carefully like she’d memorized it for emergencies. 432 Maple
Street, apartment 2B. It’s in the Greenwood neighborhood. Jackson knew that area. It wasn’t dangerous, but it
wasn’t fancy either. Small apartment buildings, aging homes, workingclass families, a world away from his
penthouse downtown. He started the car and pulled out of the garage. As they drove through the city, Mirabel pressed
her face against the window, watching everything pass by. “Mom used to have a car,” she said quietly. “But she had to
sell it last year when she got too sick to work. That’s why I had to take the bus today.” “What does your mom do for
work? I mean,” Jackson asked, keeping his eyes on the road. “She used to be a teacher, third grade. She loved it so
much. But when the cancer came back, she couldn’t work anymore. The kids were too loud and standing all day made her too
tired. Mirabbel’s voice got sadder. Now she just stays home. Sometimes her
friend Nicole comes to check on her when I’m at school. The cancer came back. Jackson’s hands tightened on the
steering wheel. You mean she had it before? Mirabel nodded. When I was six,
she got really sick, but the doctors fixed her. She was better for almost 2 years. We thought it was gone forever.
Her voice dropped to a whisper, but it came back 3 months ago. And this time the doctors say it’s in too many places.
They say the treatment costs too much money and even if we had the money, it might not work. Jackson felt anger
rising in his chest. Not at Mirabel, not even at Susan, at himself, at the
universe, at the unfairness of it all. If Mirabbel really was his daughter, and looking at her, he was becoming more
certain by the minute. Then Susan had been raising their child alone for 9 years, teaching while pregnant, having a
baby without him there, fighting cancer not once but twice, all while taking care of a little girl by herself. And
where had he been? Living in luxury with Veronica, believing lies, building walls
around his heart. “We’re here,” Mirabbel said, pointing to a three-story brick building that had seen better days. The
paint was peeling in places and the front steps were cracked. But there were flower boxes and some windows and a
child’s bike chain to the railing showed that families lived here tried to make it home. Jackson parked on the street
and got out. Mirabbel scrambled out of her seat and ran to the building entrance, pulling a key on a string from
around her neck. This way, she said, unlocking the door. We’re on the second floor. The hallway inside smelled like
old carpet and someone’s cooking. Maybe soup or stew. The walls were a faded yellow and the stairs creaked under
Jackson’s feet, but it was clean. Someone had swept recently and there were no trash or broken things lying
around. At apartment 2B, Mirabel stopped. She looked up at Jackson with worried eyes. “Mom doesn’t know I went
to see you,” she whispered. “She thought I was at school. She’s going to be really mad at me for skipping.” “Let me
handle that part,” Jackson said. “Just open the door.” Mirabbel unlocked it slowly. Mom, she called out. Mom, I’m
home. And I brought someone. Mirabbel. A woman’s voice came from inside, weak but
worried. Sweetheart, why are you home so early? Are you sick? They walked into a
small living room. The furniture was old but well cared for. There were photos on every wall. Mirabbel as a baby.
Mirabbel’s first day of school. Mirabbel blowing out birthday candles. The apartment was tiny, maybe 1/10th the
size of Jackson’s penthouse, but it felt like a home, like love lived here. A woman appeared in the doorway of what
must have been the bedroom. She was leaning against the frame like she needed it to hold her up, and Jackson’s
world stopped spinning. Susan, 8 years had passed, but he would have recognized her anywhere. Her hair was shorter now,
and there were dark circles under her eyes that spoke of pain and sleepless nights. She’d lost weight, too much
weight. Her skin was pale, almost gray. She wore sweatpants and an oversized sweater that hung on her thin frame, but
her eyes, those beautiful green eyes, were exactly the same. Susan saw him, and all the color drained from her face.
She grabbed the door frame harder. “Jackson,” she whispered. “It wasn’t a question, just his name spoken like a
prayer and a curse at the same time.” “Hello, Susan,” Jackson said. His voice
came out rougher than he intended. Mirabbel looked between them, sensing the tension in the air. Mom, I’m sorry.
I know you didn’t want me to go yet, but I thought you went to see him. Susan’s eyes went wide. Mirabbel, you promised
you’d wait until she stopped, pressing a hand to her chest. She was breathing hard like just standing was difficult.
Mom. Mirabbel rushed to her side. Sit down, please. You’re supposed to stay in
bed. Susan let Mirabbel guide her to the couch. She sat down slowly, carefully,
like every movement hurt. And Jackson realized with a cold shock just how sick she really was. This wasn’t someone with
a bad flu. This was someone dying. “You shouldn’t have come,” Susan said to Jackson. But there was no anger in her
voice. Just sadness and maybe a little bit of hope that she was trying to hide. “I sent the letter, but I didn’t expect.
I didn’t think you’d actually. She’s mine, isn’t she?” Jackson said quietly.
He sat down in the armchair across from the couch. Mirabbel, she’s my daughter.
Susan’s eyes filled with tears. She nodded. “Yes, she’s yours. She’s always
been yours.” Mirabbel gasped. She looked at Jackson, then at her mother, then back at Jackson. “He asked, “My dad?”
“For real? For real, baby?” Susan whispered. “But why didn’t you tell me?”
Mirabbel’s voice was confused and hurt. “Why didn’t you tell him? Why have I never met him before today? Susan
reached out and took Mirabel’s hand. It’s complicated, sweetheart. Dull stuff. Misunderstandings and mistakes
and people who told lies. She looked at Jackson, but none of it was your father’s fault. He didn’t know about
you. I tried to tell him, but circumstances kept us apart. Jackson leaned forward, his elbows on his knees.
Susan, I need to understand. The letter said Veronica lied about everything. About you and Daniel, about you
cheating. Was any of it real? Susan shook her head. None of it. Daniel was
an old college friend who came to Seattle for a business conference. We had coffee one afternoon. One time,
Jackson, just coffee. We talked about old times, about his new job in Boston about nothing important. Someone must
have taken pictures and given them to Veronica. Or maybe she hired someone to take them. I don’t know. Why would she
do that? Jackson asked. But even as he said it, pieces were clicking into place in his mind. Because she wanted you,
Susan said simply. She’d always wanted you. Even when we were together, I could see the way she looked at you at company
parties. Like you were a prize to be won. And when she saw her chance to get rid of me, Susan’s voice broke. She took
She destroyed us. Jackson felt sick. Eight years. Eight years of his life
built on lies. Eight years with a woman who had manipulated and deceived him from the very beginning. Eight years of
missing his daughter’s life. Her first steps, her first words, her first day of school, every birthday, every Christmas.
I tried to tell you I was pregnant. Susan continued, wiping her eyes. I called. I came to your office. I sent
letters, but you wouldn’t see me. You’d made up your mind that I was a liar and a cheater, and nothing I said made any
difference. I’m sorry, Jackson said, and the words felt completely inadequate.
Susan, I’m so sorry. I should have listened. I should have let you explain. We were both young, Susan said quietly.
And Veronica was very, very good at what she did. She knew exactly how to manipulate you, exactly which buttons to
push. I don’t blame you for believing her. She was convincing. Mirabbel had
been listening to all of this with wide eyes. Now she spoke up, her voice small and scared. So, so what happens now? Are
you going to be my dad for real? Or are you just here because mom asked you to be? Jackson looked at this little girl,
his daughter, sitting there scared and hopeful and trying so hard to be brave. He thought about Susan dying in this
small apartment with no money for treatment. He thought about the letter written in desperate hope. He thought
about Veronica and her lies and the 8 years he’d wasted. And he made a decision. Mirabel, he said, looking
directly into her brown eyes, his eyes. I’m going to be your dad. Not because your mom asked me to. Because I want to
Because you’re my daughter and I’ve missed 9 years of your life that I can never get back. But I’m not going to
miss anymore. Mirabbel burst into tears. Big gulping happy tears. She ran across
the room and threw herself into Jackson’s arms. He caught her and held her tight. And this time, he didn’t
freeze. This time, he hugged her back with everything he had. Over Mirabel’s head, Jackson looked at Susan, and I’m
going to get you the best medical care in the country. Whatever you need, doctors, treatments, specialists, money
is no object. I don’t care what it costs. Susan was crying too now, but she was shaking her head. Jackson, I can’t
ask you to. You’re not asking. I’m telling you, you’re going to fight this, Susan, and you’re going to win because
Mirabel needs her mother and I. His voice caught. I need to make this right.
Let me make this right. Susan nodded, unable to speak. The hope in her eyes was almost painful to see. Jackson
pulled out his phone with one hand, still holding Mirabel with the other. He dialed a number from memory. Dr.
Peterson, this is Jackson Williams. I need you to clear your schedule. Yes, I know it’s short notice. I have someone
who needs the best oncologist in Seattle, and I need them to see her today. No, not me. Someone very
important. Her name is Susan Carter and she has stage 4 cancer. I’ll pay whatever it costs. Thank you. I’ll have
her at your office in 2 hours. He hung up and looked at Susan. Dr. Peter Peterson. He’s the head of oncology at
Seattle Medical Center. He’s the best in the state, maybe the best in the country. He’s going to see you today,
run tests, and figure out a treatment plan. Jackson, I look terrible. I can’t go to a doctor’s office like this. I
need to. You look fine, Jackson said firmly. And we don’t have time to waste.
Can you walk to the car or do I need to carry you? Despite everything, Susan laughed. A weak, watery laugh, but a
real one. I can walk. I’m sick, not helpless. Mom’s really sick though,
Mirabbel said quietly, still in Jackson’s arms. Sometimes she falls down. Yesterday, she fainted in the kit.
Margaret Jackson’s jaw tightened. Then I’m definitely carrying her. Jackson.
Susan started to protest. Don’t argue with me, Susan. For once in your life, just let someone take care of you. And
something in his voice, something protective and determined and maybe even a little bit loving, made Susan stop
arguing. 20 minutes later, they were in Jackson’s Mercedes heading towards Seattle Medical Center. Susan sat in the
passenger seat, wrapped in a blanket Mirabel had insisted she bring. Mirabbel was in the back, leaning forward between
the seats, chattering nervously. “Is Dr. Peterson nice?” she asked. Mom doesn’t
like mean doctors. The last one we saw said we should just accept reality and he made mom cry. Jackson’s knuckles went
white on the steering wheel. What was his name? Jackson, don’t. Susan said quietly. He was just being honest. Stage
4 cancer has a very low survival rate. He was preparing us for for giving up,
Jackson interrupted. That’s not being honest. That’s being cruel. And Dr. Peterson is nothing like that. He
believes in fighting until there’s nothing left to fight with. They pulled into the medical center parking lot. It
was a massive glass building, modern and expensive looking. Susan stared up at it through the window. I can’t afford this,
she whispered. Jackson, even one appointment here probably costs more than I told you. Money is not an issue.
He parked in a spot near the entrance marked reserved executive parking. Let’s go. Inside the lobby was pristine.
marble floors, abstract art on the walls, a reception desk that looked like it belonged in a five-star hotel. Other
patients sat in plush chairs, well-dressed, comfortable, like they belonged here. Susan suddenly felt very
conscious of her sweatpants and the way she had to lean on Jackson’s arm to walk. Mr. Williams. A woman in a crisp
white coat approached them, smiling warmly. Dr. Peterson is ready for you. Please come this way. They followed her
down a hallway to a private office. Inside, a man in his 50s with salt and pepper hair stood up from behind a desk.
His eyes were kind, intelligent. “Jackson,” he said, shaking hands. “It’s been too long.” “And you must be Susan.”
He turned to her, and his expression shifted to professional concern. “Please sit down. You look exhausted.” Susan
sank into the chair gratefully. Mirabbel immediately went to her side, holding her hand. Dr. Peterson was making notes.
How long has this been going on? Three months, Susan said. The cancer came back
three months ago. It’s in my lungs, my liver, and they think it might have spread to my bones. What treatment have
you received so far? Susan looked down. Just pain medication. My insurance
wouldn’t cover the chemotherapy drugs the oncologist recommended. They said it was too expensive for the projected
outcome, and I couldn’t afford to pay out of pocket. Jackson made a sound like a growl. Your insurance company decided
you weren’t worth saving. That’s how it works when you’re poor, Susan said simply. They do a costbenefit analysis
and I didn’t benefit enough. Dr. Peterson’s expression hardened. Well, you’re in my care now and I don’t do
costbenefit analyses on human lives. Susan, I’m going to run a full panel of tests today. Blood work, scans,
everything. I need to see exactly what we’re dealing with. It’s going to take a few hours. Is that all right? Susan
nodded, tears streaming down her face. Yes, thank you. I don’t know how to thank you. Thank Jackson, Dr. Peterson
said. He’s the one who made this happen. He pressed a button on his desk. Nurse
Williams, could you come in, please? A young nurse appeared. Mr. Williams, there’s a family waiting room just down
the hall. Why don’t you and Mirabel wait there while we run the tests? It’ll be more comfortable than sitting in the
exam rooms. I want to stay with mom, Mirabel said immediately. Susan squeezed
her hand. Sweetheart, it’s going to be boring. Lots of needles and machines and waiting around. Why don’t you go with
your dad? I’ll be fine. But what if you need me? I’ll always need you, Susan
said softly. But right now, I need you to be brave and let the doctors do their job. Can you do that? Mirabbel
hesitated, then nodded. Okay, but you have to promise to come get us as soon as you’re done. I promise. Jackson and
Mirabel followed nurse Williams to the waiting room. It was nicer than most living rooms. comfortable couches, a TV,
a table with coloring books and puzzles for children, even a coffee machine and snacks. Mirabbel went straight to the
coloring books, but Jackson could see she was just flipping through them without really looking. Her mind was
somewhere else, probably in one of those exam rooms with her mother. Jackson sat down on the couch and pulled out his
phone. Three missed calls from Veronica. Before he could decide whether to call her back, the phone buzzed in his hand.
Veronica’s name flashed on the screen. He answered. “Hello, Jackson. Finally.
Where have you been? You left the office hours ago without a word. You’ve been ignoring my calls. What’s going on?”
Jackson glanced at Mirabel, who was watching him with those wide brown eyes. His eyes. I’m at Seattle Medical Center.
There was a pause. What? Are you okay? What happened? I’m fine. I’m here with
someone else. He took a breath. Veronica, I need to tell you something. I have a daughter. Silence on the other
end. Then what are you talking about? Her name is Mirabel. She’s 9 years old
and she’s mine. Susan’s daughter. My daughter. That’s impossible, Veronica
said. And Jackson could hear the edge of panic in her voice. Susan left you 8 years ago. You never heard from her
again. Because you made sure I didn’t. The photos, the lies about her and Daniel. You orchestrated all of it,
didn’t you? Jackson, you’re not making sense. You’re clearly upset about something. Why don’t you come home and
we can talk about this calmly? I saw the letter of Veronica. Mirabbel brought me Susan’s letter. She told me everything
about the lies about you manipulating me about keeping me away from Susan when she was trying to tell me she was
pregnant. A letter? Veronica’s laugh was sharp. Nervous. Jackson. Susan is
obviously trying to manipulate you. She probably needs money and figured she’d make up some story about you being the
father of her child. You can’t possibly believe. I saw her Veronica. I saw
Mirabel. She looks exactly like me. Same eyes, same face. She’s mine. So, she
looks like you. That doesn’t prove anything. Jackson, please don’t do something stupid because some woman from
your past showed up with a convenient story and a child who we’re running a DNA test, Jackson said quietly. We’ll
have proof soon enough, but I already know the truth. I can feel it. There was a long, dangerous silence. When Veronica
spoke again, her voice had changed. Harder, colder. Where is Susan now? She’s sick. Stage 4 cancer. That’s why
we’re at the hospital. I’m getting her treatment. You’re paying for her treatment, Jackson. Have you lost your
mind? Some woman you haven’t seen in 8 years shows up with a Saab story, and you just throw money at her. She’s not
some woman. She’s the mother of my child. You don’t know that? Yes, I do.
Jackson looked at Mirabel, who was trying very hard to pretend she wasn’t listening to every word. I have to go,
Veronica. We’ll talk when I get home. Jackson, wait. He hung up. His hands
were shaking slightly. That had gone about as well as he’d expected, which was to say terribly. Mirabbel was
staring at him. She’s mad, isn’t she? the lady on the phone. Her name is Veronica, and yes, she’s upset. But
that’s not your problem to worry about. Is she your girlfriend? Jackson hesitated. She lives with me, but that’s
going to change very soon. Before Mirabbel could ask what he meant, the door opened and Dr. Peterson walked in
carrying a tablet and looking tired but satisfied. “Good news,” he said, sitting down across from them. “Susan did very
well with the test. I have a clear picture of what we’re dealing with now and I’m confident we can start an
aggressive treatment plan. What kind of treatment? Jackson asked. Combination therapy, chemotherapy, targeted
radiation, and an experimental imunotherapy drug that’s showing promising results in advanced cases.
It’s not going to be easy on her. She’ll be sick, exhausted, probably lose her hair. But it’s our best shot at getting
the cancer into remission. When can you start? Tomorrow. I want to admit her
tonight for observation and to prep her system. She’ll be hospitalized for at least two weeks, maybe longer depending
on how she responds to the initial treatment. Jackson nodded. Whatever she needs. Dr. Peterson glanced at his
tablet, then back at Jackson. His expression became more business-like. I should mention the total cost of the
treatment program, hospital stay, medications, procedures, follow-up care will be somewhere in the range of
$200,000 to $400,000. That’s over the course of 6 months to a year, assuming everything goes according
to plan. Does that present a problem? Mirabbel gasped softly. Jackson heard
her whisper. For $100,000? Jackson didn’t blink. No problem at all.
I’ll have my accountant set up direct billing to my personal account. Whatever Susan needs whenever she needs it. Cost
is not a concern. Dr. Peterson looked relieved. Good. [clears throat] Then I’ll get the admission paperwork
started. Susan should be able to see you both in about 30 minutes. She’s getting settled into her room now. After Dr.
Peterson left, Mirabbel tugged on Jackson’s sleeve. That’s so much money. Like, so so much money. Your mother’s
life is worth more than money, Mirabbel. But what if what if the treatment doesn’t work? What if you spend all that
money and she still she couldn’t finish the sentence? Jackson knelt down in front of her, taking her small hands and
his. Then at least we’ll know we did everything we could. We fought as hard as we could and your mom won’t have to
suffer because someone decided her life wasn’t worth the cost. Do you understand? Mirabbel nodded, tears
streaming down her face. You’re a really good dad. The words hit Jackson like a punch to the chest. I’m trying to be.
They spent 20 minutes with Susan in her hospital room. She looked small and fragile in the hospital bed, hooked up
to monitors and IVs, but her eyes were brighter than they’d been at the apartment. Hope. Jackson realized she
had hope again. I’ll bring Mirabel back tomorrow, Jackson told Susan. Right now,
I need to take her home and get some things figured out. She can stay with my neighbor, Susan said weekly. Mrs.
Margaret across the hall. She watches Mirabel sometimes when I have doctor appointments. Actually, Jackson said
carefully, I was thinking Mirabbel could stay with me just while you’re in the hospital. That way, she’s not a burden
on your neighbor and I can bring her to visit you everyday. Susan’s eyes widened. “Jackson, you don’t have to. I
want to. Please, let me do this.” Susan looked at Mirabel, who was nodding enthusiastically. “Okay,” she whispered.
“Okay.” An hour later, Jackson and Mirabel were back at Susan’s apartment, packing a bag of Mirabel’s things:
clothes, toiletries, her favorite stuffed rabbit, some books. The apartment looked even smaller and sadder
now that Jackson knew Susan had been living here for 9 years, struggling, barely surviving. Is this all you need?
He asked as Mirabel zipped up her backpack. Yeah, I don’t have much stuff. Jackson made a mental note. Tomorrow
he’d take Mirabel shopping, get her new clothes, whatever she needed. But tonight, he had something else he needed
to do. It was almost 8:00 when Jackson pulled into the underground garage of his building. His penthouse took up the
entire top floor. Floor to ceiling windows, marble floors, designer furniture. The kind of place that
belonged in architecture magazines. Mirabbel’s eyes went wide as they stepped into the elevator. You live at
the very top. I do, and now you do, too. At least for a little while. The elevator opened directly into the
penthouse. Veronica was waiting in the living room, pacing, a glass of wine in her hand. She turned when she heard them
enter, and her eyes locked onto Mirabel. “So, this is her,” Veronica said, her
voice cold. “The supposed daughter.” “Her name is Mirabel,” Jackson said firmly. Mirabbel, why don’t you go pick
out which bedroom [clears throat] you want to stay in? Down that hallway any of the guest rooms. Mirabbel looked
between Jackson and Veronica nervously, then scured down the hallway with her backpack. As soon as she was out of
earshot, Veronica set down her wine glass with a sharp click. What is she doing here? She’s staying with me while
her mother is in the hospital. Jackson, you can’t just bring a random child into our home. She’s not a random child.
She’s my daughter. You don’t know that. You’ve known about her existence for all of 5 hours and you’re already
reorganizing your entire life. Do you hear how insane that sounds? Jackson studied Veronica. Really looked at her
maybe for the first time in years. The perfectly styled hair, the designer clothes, the calculated expressions. How
had he never seen through her before? I’m getting a DNA test done, he said calmly. We’ll have definitive proof in a
few days. And what if the test shows she’s not yours? What then? You’ll have gotten attached to some child who isn’t
even related to you. You’ll have wasted hundreds of thousands of dollars on her mother’s treatment. Susan is dying,
Veronica. So, that’s not your responsibility. You haven’t seen that woman in 8 years. She made her choices
and now she has to live with the consequences. The consequences of your lies, you mean? Veronica went very
still. Excuse me. Susan told me everything about Daniel being just an old friend. about the photos being
innocent, about you manipulating me, feeding me lies, keeping us apart. That’s ridiculous. Susan is obviously
trying to rewrite history to make herself look better. Is it true? Jackson’s voice was quiet but hard as
steel. Did you lie to me about Susan cheating? Veronica’s mask slipped just for a second. Jackson saw calculation
flash across her face, saw her weighing her options. Then she laughed, a brittle defensive sound. Of course I didn’t lie.
Jackson Susan is manipulating you. She’s sick. She’s desperate. And she’s using this child to get money out of you.
Can’t you see that? Then why are you so scared? I’m not scared. I’m concerned.
Concerned that you’re throwing away 8 years of our relationship for some fairy tale about a long-lost daughter. 8 years
built on lies. I never lied to you. Really? Jackson pulled out his phone
because I’ve been thinking about it. About how convenient it was that you had those photos of Susan and Daniel ready
to show me about how you were always there with advice. Always telling me Susan wasn’t worth my time. Always
pushing me to forget about her because she was a cheater. Veronica’s voice rose. I was being a good friend trying
to protect you from getting hurt again. Stop. Jackson held up his hand. Just
stop. I don’t want to hear any more lies tonight. We’ll finish this conversation tomorrow. Right now, I need to make sure
Mirabel is settled. So, that’s it. You’re just going to ignore me for some child you met today. That child is my
daughter. And yes, right now, she’s my priority. Veronica’s face twisted with something ugly. Rage, jealousy,
desperation, all mixed together. You’re making a huge mistake, Jackson. When that DNA test comes back and proves that
little girl isn’t yours, don’t come crying to me. I won’t, Jackson said quietly. Because even if by some miracle
she wasn’t mine, which she is, I still wouldn’t come back to you. Not after learning what you did. Not after seeing
who you really are. He walked away, leaving Veronica standing in the living room, her wine glass trembling in her
hand. Jackson found Mirabel in one of the guest bedrooms, sitting on the edge of a bed that was easily three times the
size of what she probably had at home. She looked tiny in the enormous room. “Is everything okay?” she asked quietly.
That lady seemed really mad. Everything’s fine. Jackson lied. Are you hungry? Have you eaten dinner? Mirabbel
shook her head. Mom was supposed to make spaghetti, but then she trailed off. Then she got too sick and you had to
take care of her instead. Jackson’s chest tightened. Let’s order something. What do you like? I don’t know. We
mostly eat whatever mom can afford. Rice and beans, peanut butter sandwiches.
Jackson pulled out his phone and opened a food delivery app. Well, tonight you can have anything you want. Pizza,
burgers, Chinese food. Mirabbel’s eyes lit up. Can I have pizza with extra
cheese? You can have pizza with all the cheese in Seattle if you want. While they waited for the food, Jackson made
another call. This one to Dr. Richard Collins, his personal physician. Dr. Collins? It’s Jackson Williams. I’m
sorry to call so late, but I need a favor. A DNA test. Paternity test specifically. Yes, it’s urgent. Tomorrow
morning if possible. I’ll bring my daughter to your office first thing. Thank you. I appreciate it. He hung up
to find Mirabel watching him carefully. A DNA test. She said to prove you’re my
dad. Just a formality for legal purposes. He sat down next to her on the
bed. I already know your mind, Mirabbel, but having official documentation will help with well with a lot of things.
Medical decisions, school records, that sort of thing. And it’ll prove to the mean lady that mom wasn’t lying. Jackson
smiled sadly. Yes, that too. The pizza arrived 20 minutes later. They ate in
the massive dining room. Mirabbel’s legs swinging under the table because the chairs were too tall for her. She ate
three slices, more than Jackson had seen her eat all day. This is really good, she said, mouth full of cheese. Mom
never orders pizza because it’s too expensive. Well, we can order it whenever you want now. Really?
Mirabbel’s eyes went wide. Even like everyday? Maybe not everyday, but
definitely more than never. After dinner, Jackson helped Mirabbel unpack her small backpack. He hung her few
clothes in the closet. They barely took up one rack and placed her stuffed rabbit on the bed. “Do you need anything
else?” he asked. pajamas, toothbrush. I have my toothbrush and I usually just
sleep in a t-shirt. She pulled out a faded oversized shirt from her backpack. It had a cartoon character on it that
Jackson didn’t recognize. “Okay, well, the bathroom is right through that door. Do you think you’ll be okay sleeping
alone? This is a new place. I’ll be fine,” Mirabbel said, but her voice was
small. “I’m nine. I’m not a baby. I know you’re not, but it’s okay to be a little
scared in a new place. My room is right across the hall. If you need anything, anything at all, you can come get me.
Okay. Mirabbel nodded. She clutched her rabbit tighter. Jackson left her to get
ready for bed and went back to the living room. Veronica was gone, probably to the master bedroom. He didn’t have
the energy for another confrontation tonight. He poured himself a scotch and stood by the floor to ceiling windows
looking out at Seattle’s skyline. The city glittered below him, millions of lights spreading out in every direction.
He’d worked for years to get to this view, this life. And in one day, it had all shifted. Money and success suddenly
seemed less important than the little girl sleeping in his guest room or the woman fighting for her life in a
hospital bed. His phone buzzed. A text from Veronica. We need to talk about this. He didn’t respond. another bus.
You can’t just shut me out, Jackson. I deserve better than this. He turned off his phone. Around midnight, Jackson
heard a soft knock on his bedroom door. He opened it to find Mirabel standing there, still clutching her rabbit, tears
on her cheeks. “I can’t sleep,” she whispered. “Everything’s too quiet. At
home, I can hear the neighbors in the street and mom breathing in the next room. Here it’s just empty.” Jackson’s
heart broke a little. Do you want to sleep in here? I can take the couch. Can you just sit with me for a while until I
fall asleep? Of course. He followed her back to the guest room and sat in the armchair by the window while Mirabbel
climbed into bed. She looked impossibly small in the enormous bed, surrounded by luxury linens and designer pillows.
“Dad,” she said quietly. “Can I call you that, or is it too soon?” “You can call
me whatever you’re comfortable with.” “I want to call you dad. I’ve never had a dad before.” Well, I had you, but I
didn’t know it. So, it’s like having one for the first time. Then, Dad is perfect. Dad, can you tell me a story?
Mom always tells me stories before bed, but she’s not here. Jackson realized he didn’t know any children’s stories. He
never had to. I’m not very good at stories. That’s okay. Just tell me about when you and mom met. She never talks
about it. She always gets too sad. So Jackson told her about meeting Susan at
a coffee shop 7 years before Mirabbel was born. About how Susan had spilled her latte all over his laptop and been
so apologetic she’d bought him three replacement lattes and insisted on paying for any damage. About how they’d
started dating, how happy they’d been, how he thought she was the one. He left out the painful parts, the breakup, the
lies, the eight lost years. Mirabbel didn’t need to hear that tonight. By the time he finished, Mirabel’s breathing
had evened out. She was asleep, her rabbit tucked under one arm. Jackson stayed in the chair for a long time,
watching his daughter sleep, wondering how he’d missed 9 years of this. How many nights had Susan sat like this,
watching Mirabel sleep, wishing Jackson was there to share it? How many times had Mirabel asked about her father, and
Susan had to explain that he didn’t know she existed? He thought about Veronica sleeping in his bed across the hall and
felt nothing but contempt. She’d stolen eight years from him. Eight years of Mirabel’s life. Eight years of Susan’s
life. For what? Money, status. Well, whatever Veronica felt for him, it
wasn’t love. Love didn’t destroy. Love didn’t manipulate. Love didn’t lie.
Jackson finally stood up, tucked the blanket around Mirabbel, and went back to his room. Not the master bedroom
where Veronica was, one of the other guest rooms. He couldn’t bear to sleep next to her tonight. Tomorrow he’d get
the DNA test done, and then he’d figure out how to untangle his life from Veronica’s, how to be the father Mirabel
deserved, and how to help Susan fight for her life. But tonight, he just needed to sleep. The next morning,
Jackson woke to sunlight streaming through unfamiliar windows. It took him a moment to remember he’d slept in a
guest room. He checked his phone. 7:30 a.m. Dr. Collins could see them at 9:00.
He found Mirabel already awake, sitting at the dining table in yesterday’s clothes, looking lost. Morning, he said.
Did you sleep okay after I left? Yeah, the bed is really comfortable, like sleeping on a cloud. She paused. Is mom
awake yet? Can we call her? The hospital visiting hours start at 8:00. We’ll call
then. Okay, first let’s get you some breakfast. Jackson opened the massive refrigerator stocked with organic
vegetables, expensive cheeses, champagne, and not much else. Not exactly kid-friendly. “Do you like
pancakes?” he asked. Mirabbel nodded enthusiastically. “Me, too, but I have
to confess something. I have no idea how to make them. I usually just have coffee for breakfast.” “Just coffee? That’s not
a real breakfast.” I know. I’m a terrible adult. He pulled out his phone.
How about we order breakfast and then we need to go see a doctor for your DNA test? Will it hurt? Just a little poke.
You’ll barely feel it. They had breakfast delivered. Pancakes with syrup and fruit for Mirabel, coffee, and an
egg white omelette for Jackson. While they ate, Jackson’s phone rang. Dr. Peterson. Jackson, just wanted to give
you an update on Susan. She had a stable night. We’re starting the first round of treatment this morning. How is she
feeling? Nervous but determined, she asked about Mirabbel. Can you bring her by for a visit? We’ll come this
afternoon. We have an appointment this morning first. After breakfast, Jackson drove Mirabel to Dr. Collins’s private
practice in downtown Seattle. It was in a sleek medical building, all glass and steel, nothing like the run-down clinic
Susan probably took Mirabel to. Dr. Collins was warm and professional. He talked to Mirabel about school and her
favorite subjects while he swabbed the inside of her cheek. Then he did the same for Jackson. I’ll have the results
rushed, Dr. Collins said. Should be ready in 3 to 4 days. I’ll call you as
soon as they come in. Thank you, Richard. On the drive back, Mirabbel was quiet. Jackson glanced over at her. What
are you thinking about? What if the test says you’re not my dad? That’s not going to happen. But what if it does? What if
mom was wrong? What if my real dad is someone else? Jackson pulled the car over to the side of the road and turned
to face her. Mirabbel, look at me. You have my eyes, my nose, my stubborn chin.
You’re mine. I know it in here. He tapped his chest and no test is going to tell me otherwise. Okay. Mirabbel’s eyes
filled with tears, but she was smiling. Okay, now we have a few hours before we can visit your mom. What do you say we
go shopping? Get you some new clothes? Really? Really? You can’t wear the same
outfit every day. They spent the next two hours at an upscale children’s boutique. Mirabbel was overwhelmed by
the choices, hesitant to pick anything expensive. Jackson had to keep encouraging her. Mirabbel, you can get
whatever you want. But this shirt costs $60. That’s like, “That’s our food budget for a week.” Not anymore it
isn’t. Come on, pick out what you like. By the time they left, Mirabel had new clothes, new shoes, a new backpack, some
books, and a huge smile on her face. Jackson loaded the bags into the car, his heart warm. This, he realized, was
what being a father felt like. Not the expensive gifts, though those were nice, but the look on Mirabbel’s face, the
trust, the joy, the simple act of taking care of someone who depended on you. They arrived at the hospital around 2:00
p.m. Susan was sitting up in bed, looking pale but alert. Her face lit up when Mirabbel ran in. “Baby, how are
you? Did you sleep okay? Mom, you should see Dad’s apartment. It’s huge.” And we
had pancakes for breakfast. And look, Mirabbel started pulling new clothes out of shopping bags. “Dad bought me all
this stuff.” Susan’s eyes found Jackson’s. Jackson, you didn’t have to.
Yes, I did. She needed clothes. Thank you, Susan whispered. They spent an hour
with Susan. Mirabel chattered about the penthouse, about the shopping trip, about everything except the DNA test.
Jackson was grateful. Susan was dealing with enough without worrying about that too. As they were leaving, Susan grabbed
Jackson’s hand. Can I talk to you for a minute alone? Jackson asked Mirabel to
wait in the hallway. When she was gone, Susan spoke softly. The nurses told me how much all this is costing. Jackson,
it’s too much. I can’t ask you to. You’re not asking. I’m giving. Susan,
please just let me do this. Let me help you. Let me make up for the eight years I wasn’t there. Tears streamed down
Susan’s face. I don’t deserve this. I don’t deserve you being so kind after everything. Stop. You deserve everything
good. You’ve been fighting alone for too long. Let me fight with you now. Susan
nodded, unable to speak. 3 days later, the days fell into a rhythm. Jackson
worked from home in the mornings while Mirabbel did her remote school work. Susan had already arranged for her to do
online classes during the hospital stay. Afternoons were spent visiting Susan. Evenings Jackson and Mirabel had dinner
together and he’d sit with her until she fell asleep. Veronica stayed in the master bedroom, emerging only for tense,
silent meals that Jackson started avoiding altogether. They hadn’t spoken more than a few words since the night
Mirabel arrived. Jackson knew he needed to end it properly, but he was waiting for the DNA results. Once he had proof,
there would be no argument. Mirabbel was settling in surprisingly well. She was smart, funny, braver than any 9-year-old
should have to be. She talked about her mom constantly, worried, constantly, but she never complained. Jackson found
himself falling in love with being a father. The way Mirabbel laughed at his terrible jokes. The way she explained
her homework to him like he was the student and she was the teacher. The way she trusted him completely without
reservation. On the evening of the third day, Dr. Collins called. Jackson, I have
your results. Jackson’s heart hammered. Mirabbel was in her room doing homework.
Veronica was in the master bedroom. He was alone in his office. And there was a
pause. A long pause. Jackson, I don’t know how to tell you this, but the test came back negative. According to the DNA
analysis, you are not Mirabel’s biological father. The world stopped. That’s impossible. I double checked the
results myself. I’m sorry, Jackson. I know this isn’t what you wanted to hear.
Run it again, Jackson. I said run it again. There has to be a mistake. She
looks exactly like me. She has my eyes. My Sometimes people look similar without
being related. I’m sorry. The science doesn’t lie. Jackson hung up. He sat in
his chair staring at nothing, feeling like he’d been punched in the gut. Not his daughter. Mirabbel wasn’t his
daughter, which meant Susan had lied. Susan had used him, manipulated him,
made him believe he had a daughter just to get money for her treatment, just like Veronica had warned. The office
door opened. Veronica stood there and from her expression, Jackson realized she’d been listening outside the door.
“I’m sorry,” she said, but there was something else in her voice. “Relief, vindication. I know this is hard to
hear, but get out, Jackson. I’m trying to help. You’ve been taken advantage of.
That woman lied to you, used you, and now I said, “Get out.” Veronica left,
closing the door softly behind her. Jackson sat there for a long time, feeling everything he built over the
past 3 days crumbling around him. The bond with Mirabbel, the hope for Susan’s recovery, the fantasy of a family. All
of it based on a lie. There was a soft knock on the door. Mirabbel’s voice. “Dad, are you okay?” I heard yelling.
Jackson closed his eyes. He couldn’t face her. Not right now. Not knowing what he knew. I’m fine, Mirabbel. Just a
work call. I’ll be out in a bit. Okay. He heard her footsteps retreat. 20
minutes later, there was another knock. This time, Veronica entered without waiting for permission. She held her
phone and her expression was triumphant. I did some research, she said. After
what Susan told you about Daniel being just a friend, I found something interesting. She turned her phone to
show him a document. This is a marriage certificate. Susan Carter married Daniel Morrison 5 months after you two broke
They were married for 2 years before getting it anulled. Guess when Mirabel was born. Jackson looked at the date. 8
months after Susan married Daniel. Susan lied to you, Jackson. Mirabbel is probably Daniel’s daughter. She saw you
were wealthy and successful. She’s desperate for money because of her illness and she fabricated this whole
story. The letter, the tears, all of it. Manipulation. Jackson felt sick. How did
you get this public records? Anyone can access them if they know where to look. The question is, why didn’t Susan tell
you she’d married someone else? Why did she pretend Mirabbel was yours? Jackson stood up abruptly. I need to go where?
To the hospital. I need to hear this from Susan. I need to hear her admit what she did. Jackson, wait. But he was
already grabbing his keys, already heading for the door. Mirabbel appeared in the hallway. Dad, where are you
going? Are we visiting mom? Not tonight, Jackson said, his voice harsh. Stay
here. What? I said stay here. Mirabbel flinched like he’d hit her. Tears filled
her eyes. Jackson saw the hurt on her face and felt a stab of guilt, but the anger was too strong. He’d been played,
used, made a fool of. He left without another word. At the hospital, Jackson
stormed into Susan’s hospital room. She was sleeping but woke when she heard the door slam. Jackson, what’s wrong? Were
you married to Daniel? His voice was cold, controlled. Susan’s face went pale. Yes. After you and I broke up, I
So Mirabel is his daughter. What? Oh, Jackson. Where is this coming from? He
pulled out his phone, showed her the DNA results. Dr. Collins ran a paternity test. I’m not Mirabbel’s father, Susan,
which means you lied to me. You used me just like Veronica said you would. No,
Jackson, that’s not Something’s wrong with that test. Mirabbell is yours. I’ve never been with anyone else. Daniel and
I got married because I was pregnant and alone and scared and he offered to help me, but we never we were never intimate
ever. The marriage was enulled because it was never consummated. Mirabbel is yours. Then why does the DNA test say
otherwise? I don’t know. But Jackson, please, you have to believe me. I wouldn’t lie about this. Why would I lie
about this? For the money, Jackson said flatly. You’re dying. You’re desperate
and I’m wealthy. It’s a perfect con. Susan was crying now, her monitors beeping faster with her distress. It’s
not a con. Jackson, please look at Mirabbel. Really, look at her. She’s yours. You said so yourself. I was
wrong. I saw what I wanted to see. He turned toward the door. I’ll continue to pay for your treatment. I’m not cruel.
But Mirabbel needs to go back to your neighbors. I can’t have her in my house anymore. Jackson, no. Please. She’ll be
heartbroken. She loves you. She thinks you’re her father. Then you should have thought of that before you lied to her
and to me. He left. Susan sobbs following him down the hallway. Back at the penthouse, Jackson returned home to
find Mirabel waiting by the door, still crying. Dad, what happened? Why are you
so angry? Jackson looked at her. this little girl who’d called him dad who trusted him, who’d been so happy the
past three days. He should tell her gently. “Sit her down and explain carefully.” But he couldn’t. The hurt
was too raw. “Pack your things,” he said. “You’re going to stay with your mother’s neighbor.” “What? What? Did I
do something wrong?” “Just pack your things, Mirabbel.” “But I don’t understand. I thought we were a family.
I thought you were my dad. I’m not your dad.” The words came out harsher than he intended. The DNA test came back. We’re
not related. Your mother lied to both of us. Mirabbel’s face crumpled. No. No,
that’s not true. Mom wouldn’t lie. She said you were my dad. She promised.
Well, she was wrong. Or she lied. Either way, you can’t stay here anymore. But I
don’t want to leave. Please. I’ll be good. I promise. I won’t ask for anything else. I won’t. Mirabbel, stop.
This isn’t about you being good. This is about This is just how it has to be. Veronica appeared in the hallway
watching the scene with barely concealed satisfaction. Mirabbel saw her and something seemed to click. It’s because
of her, isn’t it? She doesn’t want me here. She’s making you send me away.
This has nothing to do with Veronica. Yes, it does. She hates me. She hates mom. She’s lying to you. Enough.
Jackson’s voice was sharp. Go back now. Mirabbel ran to her room sobbing.
Jackson heard the door slam. He sank onto the couch, his head in his hands. Veronica sat next to him, placed a hand
on his shoulder. I know this is hard, but you did the right thing. You can’t let yourself be manipulated by. Don’t
touch me. Jackson shrugged off her hand. Just don’t. Veronica pulled back, her
expression flickering between concern and something else. Something that looked almost like triumph. 30 minutes
later, Mirabel emerged with her backpack. Her eyes were red and swollen. She changed back into her old clothes,
leaving all the new things Jackson had bought her in the room. “I’m ready,” she whispered. The drive to Susan’s
apartment building was silent, except for Mirabel’s quiet crying. Jackson’s jaw was clenched so tight it hurt. He
told himself he was doing the right thing. He’d been manipulated, used, lied to. He had every right to be angry. But
looking at Mirabbel in his rearview mirror, small and broken and clutching her rabbit, he felt like the worst
person in the world. He pulled up to the building. Mirabbel didn’t move. “Do you have your key?” he asked. “Yes, Mrs.
Margaret knows you’re coming.” “I don’t know. You didn’t let me call her.” Jackson side. I’ll walk you up. Make
sure she’s home. They rode the elevator in silence. Knocked on Mrs. Margaret’s door. The elderly woman answered, took
one look at Mirabel’s tear stained face, and immediately ushered her inside. “Mr. Williams, what happened?” Susan said,
“Mirael was staying with you.” “Plans changed?” Susan can explain. “Thank you
for taking her on short notice.” He turned to leave, but Mirabbel’s voice stopped him. “Dad,” he looked back. She
was standing in Mrs. Margaret’s doorway, her rabbit clutched to her chest, tears still streaming down her face. “I don’t
care what the test says. You’re still my dad. You’ll always be my dad. Jackson
felt something crack in his chest, but he didn’t let it show. Goodbye, Mirabel.
He left before he could change his mind. Before he could see Mirabel collapse into Mrs. Margaret’s arms, sobbing like
her heart was breaking because it was back in his car. Jackson sat in the parking lot for a long time. His phone
buzz. A text from Mirabel’s number. He bought her a cheap phone so they could stay in touch. I love you, Dad. I’m
sorry for whatever I did wrong. Please don’t hate me. Then another. Mom says the test is wrong. She says you’re my
real dad and something bad happened to make it say you weren’t. Please believe her. And another. I know I’m just a kid
and you’re a grown-up and you probably know better, but I know you’re my dad. I can feel it. Doesn’t that count for
something? Jackson turned off his phone. He drove home, went straight to his office, and poured himself a scotch.
Then another, then another. He was on his fourth when Veronica appeared in the doorway. “You did the right thing,” she
said again. “Did I?” Jackson’s voice was hollow. “Because it doesn’t feel right.
It feels like I just destroyed a little girl who never did anything wrong. She’s not your responsibility, Jackson. Her
mother lied to you. Maybe. Or maybe the test was wrong. Maybe there was a mistake.” Veronica’s expression
tightened. The test wasn’t wrong. Dr. Collins is the best in the city. You said so yourself. Then why does Mirabel
look exactly like me? Why does she have my eyes, my expressions, my stubborn chin? Coincidence? Genetics are strange.
People who aren’t related can look similar. Jackson studied Veronica. Really studied her. And for the first
time, he saw something in her eyes. Something that made his blood run cold. How did you get that marriage
certificate so quickly? He asked slowly. What? The document about Susan and
Daniel. You found it within 20 minutes of me getting the DNA results. How? I
told you. Public records. I searched. Public records take time to access.
Background checks. Record searches. They take days. Unless you already knew where to look. Unless you’d already done the
research before tonight. Veronica’s face went pale. Jackson, you’re being paranoid. Or unless you already knew
about the marriage because you’re the one who arranged it 8 years ago when you broke Susan and me up. Jackson stood up,
his mind racing. Susan said she married Daniel because she was pregnant and alone. What if you paid him to marry
her? To make her look like she’d moved on, like she’d been unfaithful all along. That’s insane. Is it? You
orchestrated the photos. You fed me lies. Why wouldn’t you go further? Why wouldn’t you make absolutely sure Susan
and I could never reconcile? You’re drunk. You don’t know what you’re saying. And the DNA test. Jackson’s
voice was getting louder. You were listening outside my office when Dr. Collins called. You knew the results
immediately. Almost like you knew they’d come back negative. Almost like you’d made sure they would. Veronica back
toward the door. Jackson, stop. You’re scaring me. Dr. Collins’s office. You’ve
been there with me before for my annual physicals. You know his staff. You know his office manager. Jackson pulled out
his phone. What if I called Dr. Collins right now? What if I ask him if anyone contacted his office about my DNA test?
What if I ask if the samples could have been tampered with? You’re being ridiculous. Why would I tamper with a
DNA test? Because you’re losing control. Jackson was shouting now. For 8 years,
you’ve controlled me. Isolated me. Made sure I never looked back at Susan. And then Mirabbel showed up with that
letter. And suddenly everything you’d built was falling apart. So you did what you always do. You lied. You
manipulated. You sabotaged. Tears were streaming down Veronica’s face now, but Jackson couldn’t tell if they were real
or another manipulation. I did it because I love you, she cried. Everything I’ve done has been because I
love you. Susan wasn’t right for you. She was weak, poor, ordinary. You needed someone like me, someone strong,
ambitious, someone who could stand beside you. So, you admit it. You sabotaged Susan and me. She wasn’t good
enough for you. That wasn’t your decision to make. Jackson’s voice cracked. You took eight years from me,
Veronica. Eight years of my daughter’s life. Susan’s cancer might have been caught earlier if she’d had access to
good health care. If she’d had my insurance, my money. She might not be dying right now if you hadn’t torn us
apart. I didn’t give her cancer. That’s not my fault. No, but you made sure she
faced it alone. And you made sure Mirabel grew up without a father. All because you wanted me for yourself.
Veronica was sobbing openly now. What was I supposed to do? Just watch you be happy with someone else? Watch you build
a life that didn’t include me? I’ve loved you since college. Jackson, before Susan, before any of them, you were
supposed to be mine. Jackson felt disgusted. Disgusted with Veronica. Disgusted with himself for not seeing it
sooner. Disgusted with the entire situation. Get out, he said quietly.
What? Get your things and get out of my home. Tonight, Jackson, please. Now he
picked up his phone. I’m calling Dr. Collins. I’m ordering a new DNA test from a different lab with samples that
never leave my site. And if I find out you tampered with the first test, if I find out you stole eight more years from
me with Mirabel, I will destroy you. I will press charges. I will make sure everyone knows what you did. Do you
understand? Veronica stared at him, her mask finally completely gone. What was left was ugly, desperate, possessive,
unhinged. You’ll regret this,” she hissed. “When that test comes back negative, too. When you realize Susan
really did lie to you, you’ll come crawling back, and I won’t be waiting.” “Good, because I never want to see you
again.” Veronica turned and stormed out. Jackson heard her in the bedroom throwing things into suitcases, slamming
drawers. 30 minutes later, she was gone. The penthouse felt empty without her,
but it didn’t feel lonely. Felt clean, like poison had been drained from the air. Jackson pulled out his phone and
turned it back on. 17 text messages from Mirabbel. He read them all, his heartbreaking with each one. Please
answer me. I’m sorry. I miss you. Mom’s crying. She says she didn’t lie. I believe her. Do you believe her? Please
say you believe her. Mrs. Margaret says you might need time to think. Is that true? Are you thinking? Oh, wait. I’m
good at waiting. I waited my whole life for a dad. I can wait a little longer. I love you. Jackson typed a reply with
shaking fingers. Mirabbel, I’m sorry for how I acted. I was hurt and angry and I took it out on you. That was wrong. You
didn’t deserve that. I’m going to fix this. I’m going to find out the truth. And no matter what that truth is, you’ll
always be special to me. I promise. The reply came immediately. Does that mean you’re my dad again? Jackson stared at
the message. He wanted to say yes. He wanted to believe it, but he needed proof first. Real proof. Untainted by
Veronica’s lies. I don’t know yet, but I’m going to find out. Trust me. I trust
you, Dad. Jackson closed his eyes. Tomorrow, he’d call Dr. Collins. He’d
order a new test. He’d watch the samples himself, make sure there was no possibility of tampering. And if
Mirabbel really was his daughter, if she was his daughter, he’d spend the rest of his life making up for the 10 years he’d
missed and for the horrible things he’d said tonight. He just hoped it wasn’t too late. Jackson didn’t sleep that
night. He sat in his office staring at his phone, reading and rereading Mirabbel’s texts. Each one was a knife
to his heart. Around 3:00 a.m., a new message came through. Dad, are you awake? Mom’s really sick tonight. The
nurses are worried. Can you come? Jackson was out the door in minutes. The hospital was eerily quiet at night. His
footsteps echoed down the empty corridors as he rushed to Susan’s room. A nurse was inside checking monitors,
adjusting IVs. Susan looked worse than he’d ever seen her. Pale, sweating, breathing, labored. What happened?
Jackson demanded. The nurse turned. Her body’s having a severe reaction to the chemotherapy. It’s not uncommon, but we
need to monitor her closely. Are you family? I’m Jackson hesitated. Was he?
The DNA test said no. But his heart said something different. Yes, I’m family.
The nurse nodded and left them alone. Jackson sat in the chair beside the bed. Susan’s eyes fluttered open. Jackson.
Her voice was barely a whisper. You came. Mirabbel texted me. She said you
were sick. Mirabbel, is she okay? Mrs. Margaret said you brought her back tonight. Said you were upset. Susan, I
need to know the truth and I need you to be completely honest with me no matter how much it hurts. He pulled out his
phone, showed her the DNA results. This test says I’m not Mirabel’s father. Susan’s eyes filled with tears. That
test is wrong. How can you be sure? Because I’ve never been with anyone else, Jackson, ever. You’re my first, my
only. Even when I married Daniel, her voice broke. It was never consummated.
He knew I was pregnant with your baby. He offered to help me to give Mirabel a father’s name, but I couldn’t. I
couldn’t be with him that way. I still loved you too much. Then why would the test say? I don’t know. Susan tried to
sit up, but fell back too weak. But I know my body, Jackson. I know my truth.
Mirabbel is yours. She’s always been yours. Jackson studied her face. The
desperation, the fear, the absolute conviction. She was either telling the truth or she was the best liar he’d ever
met. Veronica admitted she sabotaged us, he said quietly. 8 years ago. The
photos, the lies about you cheating. She orchestrated all of it. Susan closed her
eyes. I knew it. I knew she was behind it. She also found your marriage certificate to Daniel suspiciously fast,
like she’d been prepared to use it. Susan’s eyes snapped open. You think she tampered with the DNA test? I don’t
know, but I’m going to find out. I’m ordering a new test tomorrow. A secure one. One she can’t touch. And until
then, Susan’s voice was small, scared. What happens to Mirabbel? Jackson. She’s
heartbroken. She thinks you hate her. I don’t hate her. I could never hate her.
Jackson leaned forward, took Susan’s hand. It was so cold, so fragile. I’m sorry for what I said tonight to both of
you. I was angry and hurt, and I lashed out. That was wrong. You have every right to be angry. If the test is wrong,
if someone did tamper with it, Susan’s breathing was getting more labored. Jackson, promise me something. Anything.
If I don’t make it through this treatment, if the cancer wins, promise me you’ll take care of Mirabbel. Even if
the test says she’s not yours, even if you’re not legally obligated, she needs someone. She can’t go into the system.
Please, Susan, promise me. The heart monitor started beeping faster. Susan
was getting agitated, and the nurse stuck her head in the door, concerned. Everything okay? Fine, Jackson said
quickly. To Susan, I promise. But you’re going to make it through this. You’re going to fight and you’re going to win.
Mirabel needs her mother. But if I don’t, then I’ll take care of her. Test or no? Test, DNA or no DNA? I promise.
Susan relaxed slightly. The monitor slowed. She squeezed Jackson’s hand with what little strength she had. Thank you,
she whispered. Thank you for giving us a chance. Jackson stayed with Susan until the sun came up. She drifted in and out
of sleep, her body fighting both the cancer and the treatment meant to kill it. He watched her, this woman he’d
loved, lost, and maybe was finding again. and wondered how everything had gotten so twisted. Around 6:00 a.m., his
phone buzzed. A text from Mirabel. Is mom okay? The nurses won’t tell me anything because I’m just a kid. Jackson
replied, “She’s stable. I’m with her now. She had a rough night, but she’s resting. Can I come see her?” “Not yet.
Let her sleep a bit. I’ll call you when she wakes up.” “Okay, Dad.” Thank you for going to her. Even if you’re mad at
us, thank you for not letting her be alone. Jackson stared at that message for a long time. Even if you’re mad at
us, like Mirabbel had already accepted that she might not be his daughter, but she still called him dad. Still thanked
him. Still loved him. What kind of monster had he become last night to hurt a child like that? At 7:00 a.m., he
called Dr. Collins. Jackson, it’s early. I need you to run another paternity
test. Today, there was a pause. Jackson, we just ran one. The results were
conclusive. I think they were tampered with. That’s impossible. My lab has the
highest security standards. Veronica had access to your office. She’s been there with me before. She knows your staff.
Another pause longer this time. You think Veronica interfered with the test? I think it’s possible and I need to know
for sure. Can you run another one? Different lab, different processed samples that never leave my site. Dr.
Collins. Yes, I can send the samples to a lab in New York. They’re completely
independent. No connection to my practice. But Jackson, you need to prepare yourself for the possibility
that the first test was correct. I know, but I need to be sure. Come by at noon.
Bring Mirabel. We’ll do new swabs and I’ll personally drive them to New York myself. Thank you, Richard. Jackson hung
up and texted Mirabbel. Can Mrs. Margaret bring you to Dr. Collins’s office at noon? We’re doing another
test. The response was immediate. Really? You believe, Mom? I believe there might have been a mistake. That’s
all. Don’t get your hopes up too high. Okay. Okay. But I’m hoping anyway. I can’t help it. Jackson smiled despite
everything. That was Mirabel. Eternally hopeful. Even when the world gave her every reason not to be. He looked at
Susan still sleeping. The morning light made her look younger, less sick. He could see traces of the woman he’d
fallen in love with 9 years ago. beautiful, kind, full of life. How much time did she have left? Wait, months.
Dr. Peterson had said the treatment was aggressive, but even with the best care, stage 4 cancer was brutal. Jackson
pulled out his laptop and started researching. Experimental treatments, clinical trials, alternative therapies.
Money was no object. If there was something out there that could save Susan, he’d find it. Around 9:00 a.m.,
Susan woke up. She looked better. The crisis had passed. You’re still here?” she said, surprised. “I promised Mirabel
I’d stay until you woke up. How is she really?” Jackson hesitated, heartbroken,
scared, trying to be brave. He looked at Susan. “She’s remarkable, you know.
Despite everything, the poverty, your illness, not having a father, she’s smart, kind, hopeful. You did an amazing
job raising her.” Tears slipped down Susan’s cheeks. “I tried, God. I tried
so hard, but I always felt like I was failing her. [clears throat] She deserved so much more than I could give
her. She had love. That’s more than a lot of kids get. But love doesn’t pay for school supplies. Love doesn’t put
food on the table. Love doesn’t. Susan’s voice broke. There were nights I had to
choose between paying the electric bill and buying groceries. Nights Mirabel went to bed hungry because I couldn’t
afford both. What kind of mother does that make me? The kind who did the best she could with what she had. The kind
who fought every day to keep her daughter safe and happy. Susan, you’re not a failure. You’re a hero. Susan
shook her head. I’m dying, Jackson. Some hero. You’re fighting. That’s heroic.
They sat in silence for a moment. Then Susan spoke quietly. What happens if the new test says you’re not Mirabbel’s
father? What happens to us? Jackson had been thinking about that all night. I don’t know, but I made you a promise and
I keep my promises. Mirabbel won’t go into the system. I’ll make sure she’s taken care of. Even if she’s not yours.
Even then, Susan’s expression was unreadable. You’ve changed. The Jackson I knew 9 years ago wouldn’t have said
that. The Jackson you knew 9 years ago didn’t know what it was like to lose a child he never knew he had. Or to see
that child’s heartbreak because of his own cruelty. You weren’t cruel. You were hurt. I was cruel, Jackson said firmly.
I said terrible things to Mirabel. I made her feel like she’d done something wrong when she was completely innocent.
That was cruel, Susan, and I’ll regret it for the rest of my life. Before Susan could respond, there was a knock on the
door. Dr. Peterson entered with his tablet. Good morning, Susan. How are you
feeling? Like I got hit by a truck. That’s the chemo. It’s brutal, but it’s
working. Your latest blood work shows the tumor markers are already starting to drop. Not by much, but it’s early
days. This is a good sign. Susan’s eyes lit up. Really? It’s working so far?
Yes. We’ve got a long fight ahead of us, but you’re responding to the treatment. That’s what we want to see. Dr. Peterson
glanced at Jackson. Mr. Williams, can I speak with you outside for a moment? Jackson followed him into the hallway. I
wanted to talk to you about Susan’s prognosis, Dr. Peterson said once they were alone. The treatment is working,
but her body is weak. The cancer has done significant damage. Even if we get it into remission, her recovery is going
to be long and difficult. She’ll need around the clock care, physical therapy, regular monitoring. What are you saying?
I’m saying that apartment she’s living in, no elevator, fourth floor walk up, no air conditioning, it’s not suitable
for someone in her condition. She needs somewhere more accommodating, somewhere with help available. Jackson’s mind was
already racing. I have a penthouse, elevator access, spare bedrooms, space for a living nurse if needed. Dr.
Peterson raised an eyebrow. You’re offering to have Susan move in with you? She’s the mother of Jackson paused.
She’s Mirabel’s mother and Mirabel is staying with me. It makes sense for them to be together. Even if the DNA test
proves Mirabbel isn’t your daughter. Even then, Dr. Peterson studied him for a long moment. You’re a good man, Mr.
Williams. Susan and Mirabbel are lucky to have you. Jackson wasn’t so sure about that, but he nodded anyway. Back
in the room, Susan was sitting up slightly, looking more alert. What did Dr. Peterson want? she asked. To tell me
you’re going to need help when you’re discharged. More help than you can get in your current apartment. Susan’s
expression closed off. I’ll manage. I always do. Or you and Mirabel could move
in with me. Susan stared at him. What? I have more than enough space. You’d have
your own room access to whatever care you need. Mirabbel would be there. It makes sense. Jackson, I can’t ask you
You’re not asking. I’m offering. And before you argue, think about Mirabel.
She needs her mother and she needs stability. Moving in with me gives her both. But if the test comes back and
you’re not her father, then we’ll figure it out. But until then, and even after, you both need help. Let me help you,
Susan. Please. Susan was crying again. She seemed to cry so easily these days.
The illness, the medication, the overwhelming emotion of everything. Okay, she whispered. Okay, thank you.
Jackson checked his watch. Almost 11:00 a.m. I need to go pick up Mirabbel. We
have an appointment with Dr. Collins at noon for the new DNA test. Is there anything you need before I leave? Just
Susan reached out and took his hand. Just don’t give up on us. No matter what the test says, don’t give up. I won’t,
Jackson promised. And as he left the hospital, heading toward Mrs. Margaret’s apartment to collect Mirabel, he
realized he meant it. Whether Mirabel was his biological daughter or not, she’d already claimed a piece of his
heart, and he wasn’t going to let her go without a fight. Mrs. Margaret’s apartment was small, but immaculately
clean. She opened the door with a warm smile that didn’t quite hide the concern in her eyes. “Mr. Williams, Mirabbel’s
been waiting for you.” Mirabbel appeared behind her, wearing the same old clothes from yesterday. She’d left all the new
things at the penthouse. “Hi, Dad,” she said quietly, uncertainly, like she wasn’t sure she was still allowed to
call him that. “Hi, sweetheart. Ready to go?” Mirabbel nodded and grabbed her
backpack. She hugged Mrs. Margaret goodbye, and the elderly woman whispered something in her ear that made Mirabel
nod seriously. In the car, Mirabbel was silent. She sat in the back seat, staring out the window, clutching her
rabbit. “You can sit in the front if you want,” Jackson said. That’s okay. I’m
fine back here. Jackson glanced at her in the rearview mirror. She looked small, scared, nothing like the happy,
chattering girl from a few days ago. Mirabbel, I’m sorry about last night. It’s okay. No, it’s not. I said terrible
things. I hurt you. That wasn’t okay. Mirabbel was quiet for a moment. Then,
were you lying when you said you weren’t my dad? The test said I wasn’t, but I think the test might have been wrong.
So, you might still be my dad? Maybe. And if you’re not? Her voice was so
small, so scared. Jackson pulled the car over to the side of the road. He turned around to face her. Mirabbel listened to
me very carefully. Even if this test comes back and says I’m not your biological father, even if the science
says we’re not related, you’re still going to be special to me. You’re still going to be important, and I’m still
going to make sure you and your mom are taken care of. Do you understand? But you won’t be my dad. I, Jackson,
struggled with how to answer that. Family isn’t always about blood. Mirabbel, sometimes it’s about choice,
about loving someone and choosing to be there for them. So, you choose me, even if I’m not really yours. Yes, Jackson
said, and realized he meant it completely. I choose you. Mirabbel burst into tears. She scrambled over the
center console and into Jackson’s arms, sobbing into his shoulder. He held her tight, his own eyes burning. I’m sorry,
she kept saying. I’m sorry if I’m not yours. I’m sorry. Mom might have been wrong. I’m sorry for crying. I’m sorry.
Sh. You have nothing to be sorry for. Nothing. This is all adult mess. Adult mistakes. None of it is your fault. They
sat like that for a long time. Father and maybe daughter holding each other in a car on the side of the road while
traffic rushed past. Finally, Mirabel pulled back, wiping her eyes. We should go. We’re going to be late for Dr.
Collins. Right. Okay. Jackson helped her back into her seat, made sure her seat
belt was fastened. As he pulled back onto the road, Mirabbel spoke again. Dad, can I ask you something? Anything?
That lady who was at your house, Veronica, is she your wife? No. She was
my girlfriend, but we broke up last night because of me. Because of lies she
told? Because I finally saw who she really was? Mrs. Margaret says some people wear masks. She says they pretend
to be nice, but really they’re mean underneath. Was Veronica wearing a mask? Jackson thought about that. Yes, I think
she was. Mom never wears a mask. Even when she’s sick and sad, she’s still really her. That’s how I know she’s not
lying about you being my dad. Mom doesn’t know how to lie. Out of the mouths of babes, Jackson thought.
Mirabbel had seen in one day what he’d been too blind to see in 8 years. They arrived at Dr. Collins’s office a few
minutes before noon. The receptionist showed them straight back to Dr. Collins’s private office. Mirabbel, Mr.
Williams. Right on time. Dr. Collins smiled warmly at Mirabbel. How are you
feeling today, young lady? Okay, I guess. Nervous. Nothing to be nervous
about. Just a quick swab. Same as last time. It won’t hurt at all. Dr. Collins
performed the swab on both of them, carefully sealing each sample in separate containers. He wrote on the
labels himself, signed and dated them. I’m going to drive these to New York myself this afternoon, he explained. The
lab there will process them in a secure environment. No one else will touch these samples except the technicians.
Results should be back in 72 hours. 3 days, Mirabel said quietly. 3 days, Dr.
Collins confirmed. Can you be patient for three more days? Mirabbel nodded, but Jackson could see the anxiety in her
eyes. 3 days might as well be 3 years to a 9-year-old. As they left the office, Mirabbel slipped her hand into
Jackson’s. Dad, can we go see mom now? Actually, I have a surprise for you.
About your mom? What kind of surprise? When she gets out of the hospital, she’s going to come live with us. Both of you
are together. Mirabbel stopped walking. She stared up at Jackson with wide eyes.
Really? Even if even if the test says even then, Jackson confirmed. Your mom
needs help and you need to be with your mom. So yes, really. Mirabbel’s face broke into the biggest smile Jackson had
seen since this whole thing started. She threw her arms around his waist. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. This is the
best surprise ever. Jackson hugged her back, hoping desperately that the test would confirm what his heart already
knew. that this little girl with her brown eyes and stubborn chin and unshakable faith was his daughter, his
real daughter. Because if she wasn’t, if Veronica had been telling the truth, and Susan had somehow been mistaken, Jackson
wasn’t sure how he’d survive losing her twice. They spent the afternoon at the hospital with Susan. Mirabbel climbed
onto the bed beside her mother, careful not to disturb the IVs, and chattered about the new DNA test, about moving in
with Jackson, about everything being okay again. Susan caught Jackson’s eye over Mirabbel’s head. Her expression was
cautious, hopeful, but also terrified. She mouled, “Thank you.” After Mirabel
fell asleep in the chair beside Susan’s bed, Susan spoke softly. “The detective called me today about the restraining
order Veronica is trying to file against you.” “You, too? Me, too. She claims
we’re both harassing her, trying to extort money. She’s building a case. Jackson, let her. My lawyer is
investigating her. If she tampered with that DNA test, she’s going to face charges. Susan held his gaze steadily.
You are her father, Jackson. I’ve never been more certain of anything in my life. Then we’ll prove it. And once we
do, Veronica is finished. The third day crawled by. Jackson tried to work, but couldn’t focus. Mirabbel was anxious,
jumping every time his phone rang. Finally, late in the afternoon, Dr. Collins called. Jackson, I have the
results from New York. Jackson’s heart hammered and the test confirms with
99.9% certainty that you are Mirabel’s biological father. Relief flooded
through him. You’re sure? Completely sure. There’s no doubt, Jackson. Mirabbel is your daughter. What about
the first test? Dr. Collins’s voice was grim. We found a gap in our security
footage 15 minutes where the camera in the sample storage room went offline and Jackson Veronica Brown signed in as a
guest that day. She claimed she was picking up your prescription refill. I didn’t have a prescription to pick up. I
know. I’m reporting this to the medical board and cooperating fully with your lawyer’s investigation. Jackson closed
his eyes. Send me the official results. I need to show Susan and Mirabbel. He
immediately called Mirabbel. She answered on the first ring. Dad, did Dr. Collins call? He did. Sweetheart, pack
your things. We’re going to the hospital to tell your mom the good news together. Good news. Does that mean it means I’m
your dad, Mirabbel? Officially, biologically, no doubt about it. You’re mine. Mirabbel’s scream of joy was so
loud, Jackson had to hold the phone away from his ear. 20 minutes later, they burst into Susan’s hospital room.
Mirabbel was clutching the official test results, tears streaming down her face. Mom. Dad’s my dad. The test says so.
99.9%. Susan, read the results. Tears flowing freely, she looked at Jackson and the
expression on her face was pure joy mixed with vindication. I told you, she whispered. Jackson sat on the edge of
Susan’s bed. Mirabbel climbed up between them and for a moment they were a family, father, mother, daughter
together at last. What happens now? Susan asked. Now Veronica faces the
consequences of what she did. My lawyer is building a case. She’ll be angry.
Desperate people do dangerous things. Let her be angry. She can’t hurt us anymore. But even as Jackson said it,
his phone buzzed with a text from an unknown number. You’re going to regret this, Jackson. All of you. Jackson
deleted it without showing Susan or Mirabel. He’d deal with Veronica’s threats later. Right now, he just wanted
to enjoy this moment. His first official day as Mirabbel’s father. Nothing was going to ruin that, not even Veronica
Brown. 2 days later, Jackson was in his office working when his phone rang. Detective Martinez. Mr. Williams, I
wanted to update you. We’ve reviewed the evidence regarding Ms. Brown’s restraining order request and it’s been
denied. The text messages she provided as evidence were fabricated. The metadata doesn’t match. We’re now
investigating her for filing a false police report. Good. There’s more. Based
on information from your lawyer and Dr. Collins, we’re opening a criminal investigation into evidence tampering.
Ms. Brown may face serious charges. Jackson felt a grim satisfaction. Thank
you, detective. After he hung up, Mirabbel appeared in the doorway. Was that about Veronica? Yes. She tried to
lie to the police, but they figured it out. Good. She shouldn’t be allowed to hurt people and get away with it.
Mirabbel came over and climbed into his lap, something she’d started doing more often. Dad, when is mom coming home? Dr.
Peterson says maybe next week if she keeps improving. And then we’ll all live here together. Like a real family. Like
a real family, Jackson confirmed. Mirabbel was quiet for a moment. I used
to dream about this. Having a dad, having a nice home, mom being healthy. I thought it was just pretend, but it’s
real now. Jackson hugged her tighter. It’s real, sweetheart. And I’m going to make sure it stays real. That evening,
Jackson received a call from Marcus. Jackson, we have a problem. Veronica’s disappeared. What do you mean
disappeared? She’s not at the hotel where she was staying. Her phone’s off. Her credit cards haven’t been used in 2
days. The police want to question her about the evidence tampering, but they can’t find her. A chill ran down
Jackson’s spine. You think she ran? Either that or she’s planning something. Jackson, I think you should hire
security. Just until she’s located. You think she’s dangerous? I think she’s
desperate. And desperate people are unpredictable. Jackson looked toward Mirabbel’s room where she was doing
homework. I’ll call a security company tonight. Good. And Jackson, be careful.
Watch your back. After Marcus hung up, Jackson sat in his office, staring at his phone. That threatening text from 2
days ago suddenly felt more ominous. You’re going to regret this, Jackson. All of you. He pulled up his contacts
and called a private security firm he’d used before for corporate events. Within 2 hours, a security consultant was at
his penthouse assessing vulnerabilities and recommending 24-hour protection. “Is
this really necessary?” Mirabbel asked, watching the security expert checked the windows. “Just a precaution,
sweetheart.” “Because of Veronica?” Jackson didn’t want to scare her, but he also didn’t want to lie. “Yes, she’s
upset about the breakup and the investigation. We’re just being careful.” Mirabbel looked worried. Will
she try to hurt us? No. The security is just to make sure she doesn’t bother us.
That’s all. But that night, as Jackson lay in bed unable to sleep, he wondered if that was true. How far would Veronica
go to maintain control? What was she capable of when everything she built was falling apart? He got his answer the
next morning. Jackson woke to his phone ringing at 6:00 a.m. Dr. Peterson.
Jackson, there’s been an incident at the hospital. Jackson sat both upright. What
kind of incident? Someone tried to access Susan’s room last night. A woman matching Veronica Brown’s description.
Security stopped her, but she got away before police arrived. Is Susan okay?
She’s fine. Shaken, but fine. I’ve increased security on her floor, and I’ve contacted the police. But Jackson,
I think you should get down here. Jackson was dressed and out the door in minutes. He left Mirabel with the
security guard who’d stayed overnight, promising he’d be back soon. At the hospital, he found Susan surrounded by
nurses and a police officer taking a statement. Jackson. Susan reached for
his hand when she saw him. She was trembling. Veronica was here. She tried to get into my room. What did she want?
I don’t know. The nurse said she was dressed in scrubs trying to blend in, but someone recognized her from the
photos the police circulated. When security approached her, she ran. The police officer turned to Jackson. Mr.
Williams, do you have any idea where Ms. Brown might be? No, I haven’t spoken to her since she moved out. We need to find
her before she does something we’ll all regret. Based on her behavior, we’re treating her as potentially dangerous.
I’m recommending protection for both you and Miss Carter. Susan squeezed Jackson’s hand harder. I’m scared. What
if she comes back? What if she tries to hurt Mirabel? She won’t get near Mirabel. I have security at the
penthouse and I’m not leaving you alone here. Dr. Peterson cleared his throat.
Actually, I think it might be time to discharge Susan. She’s stable enough to continue treatment as an outpatient.
She’d be safer at your home with security than here where anyone can access the hospital. Then let’s do it
today. Within hours, the discharge was arranged. Susan was weak and still needed help walking, but she was mobile
enough to leave. Jackson helped her into his car while a security escort followed them. Mirabbel was waiting at the
penthouse, practically bouncing with excitement. Mom, you’re home. You’re really home. Susan hugged her daughter,
tears streaming down her face. I’m home, baby. Jackson helped Susan to the guest
room that had been prepared for her. A hospital bed borrowed from Dr. Peterson. Medical equipment. Everything she might
need. But Susan stopped in the doorway. It’s beautiful, she whispered. Jackson,
this is too much. Nothing is too much. You need to rest and get better. This room has everything for that. Over the
next few days, they settled into a routine. A nurse came twice daily to check on Susan and administer her
medications. Mirabbel helped her mother with small tasks, bringing her water, reading to her, just sitting with her.
Jackson worked from home, never far from either of them. But Veronica’s shadow hung over everything. She still hadn’t
been found. Then one week after Susan came home, Jackson received a package.
No return address. Inside was a letter in Veronica’s handwriting. Jackson,
you’ve destroyed everything. My life, my reputation, my future. All because of a
woman who lied to you and a child who might not even be yours. You chose them over me. Over 8 years together. You’ll
regret this choice. They’ll regret it, too. You think you’ve won, but this isn’t over. Not even close. Jackson
immediately called Detective Martinez and forwarded the letter. She promised to intensify the search. That night,
Jackson couldn’t sleep. He got up around 2:00 a.m. and checked on Mirabel, sleeping peacefully with Mr. Whiskers
curled beside her. Then he checked on Susan, who was also asleep, her breathing steady. Everything seemed
fine, quiet, sick. But Jackson couldn’t shake the feeling that something was coming. That Veronica wasn’t done yet.
And he was right. The next morning would change everything. The alarm woke Jackson at 6:00 a.m. He went through his
morning routine. Shower, coffee, checking emails, trying to maintain some sense of normaly despite the constant
undercurrent of anxiety about Veronica. Mirabbel wandered into the kitchen around 7, still in her pajamas, rubbing
her eyes. Morning, Dad. Morning, sweetheart. Want some breakfast? Can I
have pancakes again? You can have pancakes every day if you want. While Jackson cooked, his phone rang.
Detective Martinez. Mr. Williams, we’ve located Veronica Brown. Jackson’s grip
tightened on the spatula. Where? She’s at Seattle Medical Center. In the
emergency room. What? Why? Apparent overdose. Pills and alcohol. A hotel
maid found her and called 911. She’s stable, but Detective Martinez paused.
She’s asking to see you. Absolutely not. I understand. But Mr. Williams, she’s
making claims about the DNA test, about Susan, about a lot of things. She says she has information that could change
everything. She says she’ll only talk to you. Jackson looked at Mirabel, happily munching on a pancake, completely
unaware of the conversation. I’ll be there in an hour. He called the nurse to come early and stay with Susan and
Mirabel, then headed to the hospital with his security guard following discreetly behind. Detective Martinez
met him outside the emergency room. She’s in room 4. I’ll be right outside the door. If you feel uncomfortable at
any point, just leave. Jackson nodded and entered the room. Veronica looked terrible. Her normally perfect hair was
matted, her face pale and blotchy from crying. And four dripped into her arm and monitors beeped steadily beside the
bed. “Jackson,” she whispered when she saw him. “You came. You have 5 minutes.”
The detective said you had information. Veronica’s eyes filled with tears. I’m
sorry. I’m so so sorry for everything. The photos of Susan, the lies, tampering
with the DNA test, all of it. I destroyed your life because I was obsessed with you. I already know all of
this. If that’s all you wanted to say. Wait. Veronica struggled to sit up.
There’s more things you don’t know about Susan’s marriage to Daniel. Jackson’s jaw tightened. What about it? I didn’t
just find those marriage records, Jackson. I arranged the marriage. I paid Daniel Morrison $15,000 to marry Susan.
The room seemed to tilt. You what? After you broke up with her, Susan was pregnant and desperate. I found Daniel,
an old college friend of hers who was struggling financially. I offered him money to marry her to make it look like
she’d moved on, like maybe the baby was his. I thought if you ever tried to reconcile with her, you’d see she was
married to someone else and give up. Jackson felt sick. You manipulated her entire life. I manipulated everything.
The enulment 2 years later, I arranged that too. Paid Daniel even more to leave and never contact Susan again. I wanted
her alone, struggling. So if you ever found out about Mirabel, Susan would look like a failure. Like someone
unworthy of you. You’re a monster. I know. Veronica was sobbing now. I know
what I am. But Jackson, I loved you. I’ve loved you since we were in college together. I watched you fall for Susan
and it destroyed me. When I finally had a chance to be with you, I took it. I did terrible things to keep you. And
then you tried to hurt Susan at the hospital. Why? Veronica’s face crumpled.
I was going to beg her to leave, to take Mirabel and disappear. I was going to offer her money, a lot of money, to just
go away and leave you alone. But I never got the chance to talk to her. Security caught me first. Jackson stared at this
woman he’d spent 8 years with. How had he never seen the depth of her obsession, the lengths she’d go to? Is
there anything else? He asked coldly. Just Veronica reached out toward him, but Jackson stepped back. Just that I’m
sorry. I know you’ll never forgive me. I know I destroyed everything. That’s why I That’s why I tried to end it. I
couldn’t live with what I’d done. That’s not my problem, Veronica. You made your choices. Now you live with the
consequences. You turned to leave. Jackson, wait. There’s one more thing
about Daniel. Jackson paused at the door. What about him? He’s in Seattle.
He arrived 3 days ago. I called him, told him about Mirabbel about the DNA
results. I thought maybe if he showed up claiming to be Mirabel’s father, it would cause enough confusion that you’d
She trailed off. I’m sorry. I’m so sorry. Jackson left without another
word. Outside the room, Detective Martinez was waiting. Did you get all that? Jackson asked. Every word. We’re
recording with her consent. This is enough to press formal charges. Conspiracy, fraud, evidence tamp g,
stalking, harassment. She’s looking at serious prison time. Good. Jackson felt
no satisfaction, only exhaustion. Detective, she mentioned Daniel Morrison. Said he’s in Seattle. We’ll
locate him. If he’s planning to interfere, we need to know. Jackson drove back to the penthouse, his mind
racing. Daniel was in Seattle. Veronica had called him, fed him information.
What was Daniel planning to do with it? When he arrived home, Susan was in the living room looking stronger than she
had in days. The nurse had helped her shower and dress in real clothes instead of pajamas. Mirabbel was doing homework
at the dining table. Jackson, you look upset. What happened? Jackson sat down
beside Susan and told her everything. Veronica’s confession, the arranged marriage, Daniel being in Seattle.
Susan’s face went white. She paid Daniel to marry me, $15,000.
Then paid him again to leave. I always wondered why he offered to help me. We weren’t that close in college. And then
why he suddenly wanted an anulment out of nowhere. Susan covered her face with her hands. My entire life has been
manipulated by her. Not anymore. She’s facing criminal charges. She’ll be
locked up for years. But Daniel Jackson, what if he tries to claim Mirabel is his? What if he causes problems? He
can’t. The DNA test proves Mirabbel is mine. But what if he lies? What if he
produces some fake evidence? What if? Jackson took Susan’s hands. Susan, stop.
We have proof. Scientific, undeniable proof. Nothing Daniel says or does can
change that. But Susan’s fear was contagious. Jackson couldn’t shake the feeling that this wasn’t over yet. His
phone rang that evening. A known number. Against his better judgment, he answered. Mr. Williams, a man’s voice
unfamiliar. This is Daniel Morrison. I believe we need to talk. Jackson’s blood
ran cold. I have nothing to say to you. I think you do. I’m standing outside your building right now. Come down and
talk to me or I’ll start making phone calls. To newspapers, to gossip blogs, to anyone who will listen to my story
about how you stole my wife and daughter. Susan was never your wife in any real sets. And Mirabel is proven to
be my daughter. Proven how? With a DNA test. Test can be wrong. Mr. Williams or
tampered with. The public doesn’t need proof. They just need a good story. Rich co steals dying woman and her child from
her devoted husband. That’s the kind of story that goes viral. Jackson looked at Susan and Mirabel through the doorway.
Both were watching him, sensing something was wrong. I’ll be down in 5 minutes, Jackson said quietly. But
Daniel, if you think you can blackmail me, you’re making a serious mistake. He hung up and turned to his security
guard. There’s a man outside the building. Daniel Morrison, I’m going down to talk to him, but I want you
nearby. If anything seems off, intervene, “Jack, no.” Susan said, standing up. “Don’t go down there. He’s
dangerous when he’s cornered. I learned that during our marriage, he hurt you. Not physically, but emotionally. He was
cruel when he didn’t get what he wanted. Please don’t go. I have to. If I don’t,
he’ll make good on his threats. Our lives will become a media circus. Mirabel will be caught in the middle of
Jackson took the elevator down to the lobby. Through the glass doors, he could see Daniel Morrison standing on
the sidewalk. He was in his late 30s, well-dressed, handsome in a polished way. He smiled when he saw Jackson
approaching. Mr. Williams, thanks for coming down. You have 2 minutes. Talk.
Daniel’s smile widened. Straight to business. I like that. Here’s the situation. Veronica Brown contacted me 3
days ago. Told me all about you and Susan and this miraculous daughter who suddenly appeared. She offered me money
to come here and cause problems for you. And you took it? Of course, I took it. Do you know how much money Veronica has?
I should say. She liquidated everything. stocks, bonds, her trust fund. $5
million, Mr. Williams. That’s what she paid me to destroy your happy little family. Jackson’s fists clenched. What
do you want? More money. Veronica’s $5 million is nice, but you have more. Much
more. So, here’s my offer. You pay me $10 million and I disappear forever. No
media stories, no custody claims, no problems. I just vanish. And if I
refuse, then tomorrow morning I hold a press conference. I tell the world that Mirabbel is my daughter from my marriage
to Susan. I show the marriage certificate, the timeline of Mirabel’s birth, 8 months after our wedding. I cry
about how you used your wealth and power to steal my family. I demand custody rights. Even if the DNA test proves
you’re the biological father, the legal battle will take years. And the whole time, Mirabbel will be caught in the
middle. Is that what you want for her? Jackson studied Daniel carefully. The man was smooth, confident, clearly used
to manipulation. But there was something desperate in his eyes, something that suggested he wasn’t as in control as he
pretended to be. “Here’s my counter offer,” Jackson said quietly. “You get
nothing, not a dollar. You disappear anyway, or I have you arrested for extortion. Detective Martinez is already
looking for you.” One phone call and you’re in custody. Daniel’s smile faltered. You’re bluffing. Am I?
Veronica confessed everything this morning. The arranged marriage, the payoff, all of it. It’s all on record.
You’re an accomplice to fraud, Daniel. You might want to check with a lawyer about what that means for you. I had a
contract with Susan. Illegal marriage. A marriage you entered under false pretenses for money. That’s fraud. And
now you’re trying to extort me. That’s another crime. Jackson pulled out his phone. Last chance. Walk away now or I
call the detective. For the first time, fear flashed across Daniel’s face. You
don’t understand. I need that money. I have debts. Serious debts. The kind of
debts where people get hurt if they’re not paid. Then I suggest you call the police because you’re not getting money
from me. Daniel’s composure cracked completely. Please. You don’t understand. These people, they’ll kill
me if I don’t pay. Veronica promised me enough to clear my debts and start over. But now she’s in the hospital. Her
accounts are frozen and I have nothing. I’m desperate here. That’s not my problem. Make it your problem. Help me
and I’ll disappear. I’ll sign whatever you want. Legal documents saying I have no claim to Mirabel, no claim to Susan.
I’ll testify against Veronica if you need me to. Just help me. Jackson considered this. Daniel was pathetic,
desperate, but he could still cause problems. A media circus, legal battles, stress on Susan and Mirabel. All things
Jackson wanted to avoid. How much do you owe? 300,000. Maybe a bit more with
interest. I’ll give you 200,000, not a penny more. But you sign legal documents
first, prepared by my lawyer, relinquishing any and all claims to Mirabel or Susan. You testify against
Veronica if needed, and you leave Seattle tonight. If I ever see you again, if you ever contact my family
again, I’ll have you arrested. Deal? Daniel nodded frantically. Deal? Yes.
Thank you. Don’t thank me. I’m not doing this for you. I’m doing it to protect my
family from the mess you and Veronica created. Jackson called Marcus and explained the situation. Within 2 hours,
Daniel was in Marcus’ office signing documents. By midnight, $2 million had been wired to an account to pay off
Daniel’s debts, and Daniel Morrison was on a redeye flight to somewhere far away. Jackson returned home exhausted.
Susan was still awake, waiting for him. What happened? Jackson told her everything. You paid him $200,000.
Susan looked shocked. It was worth it to make him go away to protect you and Mirabel from the circus he would have
created. Jackson, that’s so much money. Susan, stop. Money doesn’t matter. What
matters is that he’s gone. Veronica is going to prison and we can finally move forward without looking over our
shoulders. Susan started crying big relieved sobs. Jackson held her and for
the first time in weeks, he felt like maybe things were actually going to be okay. “It’s over,” he whispered. “It’s
finally over.” But as he said it, a small voice in the back of his mind whispered that it wasn’t quite over yet.
Not until Veronica was officially charged and sentenced. Not until Susan was healthy again. Not until they were
truly finally safe. Three months later, Jackson stood at the floor to ceiling windows of his penthouse, watching the
sunrise paint Seattle skyline in shades of gold and pink. Behind him, he could hear Mirabel’s laughter and Susan’s
softer voice responding. The sound of his family. His family. 3 months had
passed since Daniel disappeared. 3 months since Veronica had been formally charged with fraud, evidence tampering,
stalking, and conspiracy. Her trial was set for next month, but Jackson had already moved on. She was no longer his
concern. “Dad, breakfast is ready.” Mirabbel called from the kitchen.
Jackson turned to find Susan standing at the stove flipping pancakes. She’d gained weight. Her hair was growing back
in soft curls after the chemo, and the color had returned to her cheeks. Dr. Peterson called it a miracle. The cancer
was in complete remission. Jackson called it determination. Susan had fought like hell and she’d won. You’re
supposed to be resting, Jackson said, coming up behind her. I’ve been resting for 3 months. I’m making my daughter
breakfast. Susan turned and smiled at him. That same smile that had made him fall in love with her 9 years ago.
Besides, you can’t cook pancakes to save your life. That’s true. Mirabbel chimed in, setting the table. She was wearing
one of her new school uniforms. She’d started at a private school last month and was thriving. “Dad burns
everything.” “I don’t burn everything,” Jackson protested. “You burned toast last week,” Susan said. “Toast is harder
than it looks.” They ate breakfast together, the morning sun streaming through the windows. Mr. Whiskers sat on
Mirabbel’s lap, hurring contentedly and begging for scraps. After breakfast, Mirabbel went to her room to finish some
homework. Susan and Jackson cleaned up together, moving around the kitchen with an easy familiarity that had developed
over the past months. Jackson, Susan said quietly. I’ve been thinking about
about us about what happens next. She dried her hands on a towel and turned to face him. I’m getting better. Dr.
Peterson says in another month or two, I’ll be strong enough to to live on my own again. Mirabel and I could get our
own place. No. Jackson. Susan, do you want to leave? She hesitated. I don’t
know. I don’t want to overstay our welcome. You’ve done so much for us already. That’s not what I asked. Do you
want to leave? Susan looked down. No, but I don’t want to assume. Jackson took
her hands. Susan, I’ve been thinking too about us, about our family, about how
much I lost 8 years ago and how lucky I am to have gotten a second chance. He took a deep breath. I don’t want you and
Mirabbel to leave ever. I want you to stay, both of you, permanently. Jackson,
I’m not asking you to marry me. Not yet. I know it’s too soon and you need time and we need to rebuild what we had, but
Susan, I love you. I never stopped loving you and I want the chance to prove it. To court you properly this
time, to do things right. Tears streamed down Susan’s face. You love me. I’ve
always loved you. Even when I thought I hated you. Even when I was with Veronica, some part of me always loved
you. And now that I have you back, now that I know the truth, I’m not letting you go again. Susan threw her arms
around his neck. I love you, too. I never stopped. Even when you wouldn’t see me, even when I thought I’d lost you
forever, I loved you. They stood there in the kitchen holding each other while the morning light filled the room with
warmth. A throat cleared behind them. Mirabbel stood in the doorway, grinning. Are you guys kissing? Because if you’re
going to kiss, I want to watch. I’ve been waiting for this forever. Susan laughed, pulling away from Jackson. How
long have you been standing there? Long enough to hear Dad say he loves you. Mirabbel came over and hugged both of
them. Does this mean we’re staying? We’re not moving out. We’re staying. Jackson confirmed. Yes. Mirabbel pumped
her fist. I knew it. Mrs. Margaret said you guys were in love but trying to pretend you weren’t. She says grown-ups
do that a lot. Mrs. Margaret is very wise, Jackson said dryly. The rest of
the day passed in a blur of happiness. They went to the park, had lunch at Mirabbel’s favorite burger place,
visited a bookstore where Mirabbel picked out a dozen new books. Just a normal family doing normal things, but
it felt extraordinary to Jackson. Every moment felt precious, hard one. That evening, after Mirabel was in bed,
Jackson and Susan sat on the couch together, her head on his shoulder. I got a call from Detective Martinez
today. Jackson said Veronica accepted a plea deal. 8 years in prison for the
fraud and evidence tampering charges. She’ll be eligible for parole in five. How do you feel about that? I feel
nothing. She’s not my concern anymore. My concern is here. He kissed the top of
Susan’s head. With you and Mirabel 8 years, Susan said softly. The same
amount of time she stole from us. Poetic justice, I suppose. They sat in comfortable silence for a while. Then
Susan spoke again. You said you weren’t asking me to marry you yet. When will you ask? Jackson smiled. Are you rushing
me, Miss Carter? Maybe. I’ve waited 9 years for you, Jackson Williams. I think
I’ve been patient enough. Well, I was thinking maybe in 6 months after you’re
completely recovered after Mirabel settled in her new school, after we’ve had time to be a real couple again. 6
months, Susan repeated. I can wait 6 months. Good, because I want to do it
right this time. Romantic proposal, big wedding, everything you deserve. I don’t
need a big wedding. I just need you. You’re getting both. 6 months later, the
wedding was held in a garden overlooking Puet Sound. Small, intimate, just close friends and family. Mirabbel was the
flower girl, wearing a white dress she picked out herself, grinning so wide her face hurt. Susan walked down the aisle
in a simple ivory gown, her hair fully grown back, her body healthy and strong. She was beautiful, radiant, and Jackson
felt his throat tighten as she approached. The ceremony was short and sweet. They exchanged vows they’d
written themselves promises to love, to honor, to cherish, to never let lies or misunderstandings come between them
again. When the officient said, “You may kiss the bride,” Jackson pulled Susan close and kissed her thoroughly to the
applause and cheers of their guests. Finally, Mirabbel shouted. You guys took
forever. Everyone laughed. At the reception, Jackson watched Susan dance with Mirabbel. Both of them laughing.
Both of them healthy and happy. His wife and his daughter, his family. Dr. Peterson approached with a glass of
champagne. Congratulations, Jackson. You’ve come a long way from that day you burst into my office with Susan. We all
have. Jackson clinkedked his glass against the doctors. Thank you, Peter, for everything. You saved her life. I
just did my job. Susan saved her own life by fighting, and you gave her something to fight for. Later, as the
sun set over the water, painting the sky in brilliant oranges and purples, Jackson found himself alone with Susan
for a moment. “Happy?” he asked. “Happier than I ever thought possible,” Susan said. “A year ago, I thought I was
dying. I thought Mirabbel would grow up without either parent. And now,” she gestured to the party around them. “Now
I have everything.” “We have everything.” Jackson corrected. Mirabbel ran up to them, breathless and excited.
“Dad, Mom, they’re about to cut the cake. Come on.” She grabbed both their
hands and pulled them toward the reception tent. Jackson and Susan exchanged a smile over their daughter’s
head, a smile full of love, gratitude, and hope for the future. As they walked together into the golden light of the
setting sun, surrounded by the people they loved, Jackson thought about the letter that had started it all.
Mirabbel’s childish handwriting, her desperate plea for help, her unshakable faith that her father would come if she
just asked. She’d been right. Love had been more important than the letter. But the letter had brought them together.
And now, finally, they were a family complete. Oh, forever. I hope you
enjoyed watching it as much as I enjoyed creating it. Like, share, and comment on the lessons you’ve learned. Let me know
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