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Chapter 7

  • I didn’t know how long I’d been walking. I didn’t even know where I was going.
  • The city’s noise felt like it belonged to another world.
  • I walked barefoot in my pajamas down the sidewalk, ignoring the stares.
  • My world had shrunk to a gaping hole in my chest. I could still hear the long, unbroken beep of Grace’s monitor screaming in my head.
  • Grace was dead.
  • That thought chewed me up over and over.
  • We’d promised to leave together. To go somewhere without pain, without torture.
  • In the end, she’d gone first and left me here to face this world alone.
  • I sat on a bench in a park.
  • Dusk turned the sky orange, just like when Grace handed me that note.
  • I reached into the hidden lining of my bra and pulled out the note she’d left me.
  • There was a tiny line on the back.
  • “Ella, go to the bottom drawer of my desk. The password is your birthday. Take what’s inside and live.”
  • My birthday?
  • What day is my birthday?
  • Mom said they found me in winter and brought me home on New Year’s Day, so my birthday became January first.
  • A new life. What a sick joke.
  • Grace’s desk drawer… My heart clenched.
  • I’d seen that drawer. Grace had guarded it like it had treasure. She had never let anyone touch it.
  • What the hell was inside?
  • An urge slammed into me.
  • I needed to go back and get whatever was in there. That was the hope she left me to survive.
  • I got up from the bench and ran home, trusting my memory.
  • By the time I stood at the mansion door again, night had fallen.
  • Lights blazed inside, but it was quiet.
  • I pushed open the front door. It hadn’t been shut all the way.
  • The living room was a wreck—papers still scattered. Nobody had cleaned up.
  • Mom and Dad weren’t on the first floor.
  • Holding my breath, I tiptoed up to the second floor.
  • The master bedroom door was shut tight. There was no sound coming from inside.
  • Grace’s door stood open. The room was empty too.
  • They’d probably taken her body away.
  • I rushed into Grace’s room, went to her desk, crouched, and found the drawer with the combination lock.
  • The password was my birthday….
  • With shaking hands, I punched in 0101.
  • The lock didn’t open.
  • No? That can’t be right.
  • My brain spun.
  • How would Grace know my real birthday? I didn’t even know it.
  • Wait.
  • I remembered the time I’d had a high fever and Martha had secretly taken me to the community clinic.
  • The doctor had asked my age and birthday. Martha couldn’t answer.
  • Grace, sitting in her wheelchair, had passed the doctor a note.
  • He’d read it, then filled out my info on the chart.
  • Could it be…?
  • A thought surged up.
  • Had Grace known where I came from? Had she known all along?
  • I shut my eyes and searched my life for any other special date besides 0101.
  • Nothing.
  • My life was a flat line. No ripples, except when they dragged me off to ‘treat’ Grace.
  • Wait! The orphanage!
  • The paperwork said I was sent to the orphanage fifteen years ago.
  • That year, Mom and Dad’s small factory had gone under. They’d been drowning in debt.
  • Grace had been diagnosed with a heart defect.
  • Then Mom got pregnant.
  • My mind went blank.
  • I wasn’t picked up off the street. I was sent away.
  • I was born just to be thrown out, to be cashed in for Grace’s treatment.
  • So my birthday…
  • I opened my eyes and punched in another set of numbers on the lock.
  • Grace’s birthday.
  • 0912.
  • Click. The lock opened.
  • My heart almost stopped.
  • She’d used her own birthday as the password to my “new life.”
  • I pulled the drawer open.
  • Inside were only a plush bunny and an MP3 player.
  • A small key hung around the bunny’s neck.
  • I picked up the MP3 player, put on the earbuds, and hit play.
  • After a burst of static, Grace’s voice came through.
  • Not her usual voice—a tear-choked confession.
  • “Ella, if you’re hearing this, I might already be gone.”
  • She paused. “I overheard Mom and Dad talking. I heard it a long time ago.”
  • “I know everything,” she revealed.
  • “I know you weren’t found,” Grace continued. “Mom gave birth to you. You’re my real sister.”
  • “That year, they sold you to pay for my first surgery,” she confessed.
  • “Later, when they had money again, they pretended they didn’t know and ‘adopted’ you back from the orphanage.”
  • I stared at the MP3 player, trying to take it all in.
  • “They treated you like my walking blood bank and organ backup,” Grace said.
  • “I’m sorry… Ella.” Her voice shook with guilt. “I was too much of a coward… I didn’t dare say it out loud….”
  • “I was scared they’d throw you away again. I was scared they’d… they’d kill you….”
  • Grace took a deep, shuddering breath. “I could only protect you in my own way.”
  • “I saved money in secret and rented you a small place under my name,” she said.
  • “The key is hanging on the bunny.”
  • I stared at the key.
  • “I also got you a new debit card. It’s hidden inside the bunny.”
  • My hands tightened around the bunny. I could feel the card inside.
  • “It has all the allowance I’ve saved up over the years.”
  • Grace’s voice softened.
  • “It’s not much, but it’ll keep you going for a while.”
  • Then she added gravely, “Ella, leave this place and never come back.”
  • Tears formed in my eyes as the recording kept playing.
  • “Forget us. Forget everything here.”
  • Her voice held me to my spot, clinging to every word.
  • “Promise me you’ll keep living,” she said.
  • “Live for me, too. Live for both of us.”
  • At the end of the recording came a gut-wrenching scream from Grace.
  • “I’m sorry… my sister.”
  • Tears flooded my eyes.
  • I curled up on the floor, clutching the bunny, sobbing until I was shaking and couldn’t breathe.
  • So she knew everything.
  • In this whole damn world, the only person who truly cared about me, who fought like hell to protect me, was my Grace.
  • And I didn’t even get to see her one last time.
  • Just as I was drowning in grief, the master bedroom door opened.