Marcus froze. The needle hovered over my jugular.
“I remember the night your father took me,” I continued, my voice steady. “He wasn’t a doctor. He was an investor who lost everything when my father died. He didn’t want to save me. He wanted to ransom me, but I saw his face. So he decided to erase mine instead.”
“Quiet,” Marcus hissed.
“He used you, Marcus. He made you his accomplice when you were just a resident. He tied your medical license to a kidnapping. You’re not a genius. You’re just a janitor cleaning up your father’s crimes.”
Marcus’s hand shook. The precision he prided himself on was fracturing.
He lunged with the needle.
I wasn’t as weak as I pretended. I had been practicing yoga for two years under his “supervision” to improve my focus. I knew how to use my core. I arched my back, throwing Mrs. Ellen off balance, and grabbed Marcus’s wrist with both hands.
We struggled, the gurney creaking under the weight. Mrs. Ellen screamed, reaching for a heavy glass carafe on the side table.
“Sign it!” she shrieked. “Marcus, just kill her and we’ll forge the rest!”
“I can’t forge a live biometric scan!” Marcus roared, trying to force the needle into my arm.
I twisted his wrist, using his own momentum against him. He was a man of books and labs; I was a woman fueled by two years of stolen autonomy and a mother’s silent tears on a screen.
The needle plunged, but not into me. It sank into Marcus’s own thigh as we tumbled off the gurney onto the cold tile floor.
He gasped, his eyes going wide. He tried to pull the syringe out, but the amber liquid was already disappearing into his muscle.
“No,” he whispered. “No, no…”
“What is it, Marcus?” I asked, crawling away from him, my breath coming in ragged gasps. “The ‘Final Phase’? What does it do?”
He didn’t answer. His tongue seemed to thicken in his mouth. He looked at his mother, his hand reaching out like a child’s.
Mrs. Ellen didn’t move toward him. She moved toward the red folder.
“Useless,” she muttered, looking at her son with a chilling detachment. “Just like your father. All that brilliance, and you let a drugged girl outsmart you.”
She grabbed the folder and turned toward the hidden door.
“You’re not leaving,” I said, standing up on shaky legs. I grabbed the heavy black notebook—the record of my torture—and threw it at the monitor. It didn’t break the screen, but it hit the ‘unmute’ button I had seen Marcus press.
My mother’s voice filled the room again, but this time, it wasn’t a plea.
“The police are in the driveway, Ellen,” my mother said, her face hardening on the screen. “I didn’t just find the feed. I gave them the coordinates of the hidden room. They’re five minutes away.”
Mrs. Ellen froze. She looked at the hidden door, then at me, then at her son, who was now twitching on the floor, his eyes rolling back into his head.
“You think you’ve won?” Ellen sneered, reaching into her coat pocket. She didn’t pull out a gun. She pulled out a small remote. “This house is registered as a medical research facility. It has a ‘biohazard’ protocol. If I press this, the ventilation seals and the oxygen is scrubbed. We all go to sleep, Lucia. Forever.”
“You’d kill your own son?” I asked, horrified.
She looked down at Marcus. “He’s already gone. That dose… he designed it to be irreversible. Total cognitive wipe. He’s the vegetable now.”
The cruelty in her voice was the final piece of the puzzle. These people hadn’t just stolen my past; they had replaced it with a nightmare.
“Press it then,” I said, taking a step toward her. “I’ve been dead for two years, Ellen. I’ve been living in a fog, waking up in a body I didn’t recognize, married to a ghost. You think I’m afraid of the dark?”
I kept walking.
“I’ll do it!” she screamed, her thumb hovering over the red button.
“Do it. But look at the screen first.”
She glanced at the monitor. My mother wasn’t alone anymore. Behind her stood a team of men in tactical gear. And next to her was a man I hadn’t seen in the photos. He was older, gray-haired, but he had my eyes.
“Hello, Ellen,” the man said.
“Arthur?” Ellen whispered, her face turning ashen. “You’re dead. The accident…”
“The accident Marcus staged?” my father said, his voice trembling with rage. “I survived. It took me ten years to find where you hid my daughter. Ten years of reconstructive surgery and searching every medical record in the country.”
Ellen’s hand shook. The remote slipped from her fingers, clattering to the floor.
The sound of shattering glass echoed from the floor above. The police were in the house.
I didn’t wait for them. I walked over to the table and picked up the red folder. I looked at the photo of the fifteen-year-old girl—Lucia. She looked so happy. She didn’t know about neurologists or inheritances. She just knew the sun was warm.
I looked down at Marcus. He was still breathing, but his eyes were vacant. The “Masterpiece” had become the victim of his own art.
“The memory hasn’t returned,” I whispered, repeating the words he had said to me at 2:47 AM. “And now, yours never will.”
The hidden door burst open. Men in black uniforms flooded the room, their flashlights cutting through the clinical glare.
I didn’t look at the police. I didn’t look at Mrs. Ellen as they handcuffed her. I walked straight to the monitor. I put my hand on the screen, over my mother’s face.
“Mom?” I whispered.
“I’m here, Lucia,” she sobbed. “I’m right here. We’re coming to get you.”
I turned away from the gurney, away from the syringes, and away from the life of Valentina Rhodes. As I walked through the hidden passage and out into the cool night air of New York, the first thing I noticed wasn’t the sirens or the flashing lights.
It was the smell of the air. It didn’t smell like clinical alcohol.
It smelled like rain.
And for the first time in two years, I didn’t feel sleepy at all.
I walked toward the gates, my bare feet hitting the pavement, each step a reclamation. I was Lucia Armenta. I was the girl who woke up.
And I was going to make sure that the name Valentina Rhodes was buried so deep that even Marcus, in his empty, hollow mind, would never find it again.
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