Cherreads

Chapter 9 -  Flight & Shelter

Mei considered leaving again. Renée would have none of it. "You don't run from your life when life needs you," Renée said, stern and tender at once. The women formed a rotating schedule: grocery runs, doctor check-ins, and guard-checks at night. The pampering became ritual and armor.

One night Mei woke from a dream with the sound of a child laughing in a voice she did not recognize: a memory or a hint—she couldn't tell. She found a post-it stuck to the inside of the sonogram envelope: Beware Victor. No signature. No other clue.

Adrian, sleepless and skeletal, rented a small office two blocks from Renée's salon and paid a man to watch the store-fronts. He learned the baristas' names, bought a lemon tart in the mornings, and left a tip on a napkin with a single line: For Mei—please keep safe.

That morning the barista handed Mei a napkin with a slightly smudged note. She read it three times before she allowed the world to tilt at all: I will not leave you alone. I will fix this. —A.

The two of them did not speak. They had not honored the distance she wanted—but the gesture landed like a pebble in still water, sending waves outward.

In the weeks before the legality notice, Elena (a childhood friend of Mei's who had stayed out of the scandal) arrived with a battered ledger. It was small and bound in cheap leather. "If they say family papers are missing, they're lying," Elena whispered. "I kept what I could."

They poured over the ledger in Renée's backroom, where steam from a kettle blurred edges. The ledger contained ledgers: adoption entries, name redactions, and marginal scribbles—one in particular caught Mei's eye: a single faint stamp that matched a family crest she had seen on Eleanor's stationary.

Mei's stomach lurched. Someone had gone to extraordinary lengths to obscure a truth.

Cliffhanger: Elena folded the ledger to a page with a single sentence, written in a child's hand: "I remember the music and the man with cold hands." A doorbell ring froze them—two men stood outside asking whether Renée's salon rented rooms by the hour.

More Chapters