A baby’s cry cut through the sterile room.
Just once.
Thin. Fragile.
Then silence.
Fear surged through Scarlett as she strained against the chains binding her wrists and ankles to the hospital bed.
“Where’s my baby?” she asked, her voice barely steady.
The nurse hesitated.
Then, quietly, “We’re sorry. He didn’t make it.”
….
“Commander?”
Scarlett opened her eyes.
The private jet cabin sharpened into view.
For a brief second, her breathing remained uneven. Then the emotion vanished, buried beneath the same calm control she had worn for years.
Howard stood a respectful distance away.
“We’ll be landing any minute now.”
Scarlett turned toward the window.
Below, the city stretched beneath the clouds-the same skyline that had once destroyed her.
Her reflection stared back at her in the glass.
Cold. Composed. Untouchable.
Outside-
“Clear the terminal!”
The command rang across the airport.
Within seconds, armed personnel moved into position with flawless precision, locking down the arrivals hall and forming two rigid lines along the center path.
On the tarmac, military helicopters circled overhead while black armored SUVs stood in perfect formation. Officials, business leaders, and decorated officers waited in silence.
No one spoke.
No one moved.
Every eye remained fixed on the private jet as its door opened.
Then she stepped out.
She moved through the aircraft doors in black tactical gear, the tailored fit sharp against her frame. Every step was measured, effortless-yet the quiet authority in her presence made the entire crowd hold its breath.
She looked far too young for the kind of power that followed her.
But the instant her boots touched the tarmac, no one questioned who she was.
“Commander Hayes.”
The senior officer nearest the runway lowered his head.
In the next breath, every soldier dropped to one knee.
The sound rolled across the airstrip.
Scarlett paused, her expression unreadable as she took in the display.
Then her gaze shifted to the man behind her.
“Howard,” she said, calm but unmistakably displeased, “I asked for discretion.”
Her voice was quiet.
It carried anyway.
Howard straightened at once.
“My apologies, Commander. I wasn’t aware they planned this.”
For a brief moment, the tension in the air sharpened.
Then Scarlett looked away.
“Stand them down.”
“Yes, ma’am.”
Within minutes, the helicopters peeled off, the vehicles cleared, and the officials dispersed.
The spectacle vanished as quickly as it had formed.
Howard stepped closer.
“Where to now?”
Scarlett’s gaze remained fixed on the runway ahead.
“Prison.”
For the first time, Howard faltered.
“…Prison?”
She didn’t answer right away.
Her expression remained still, unreadable.
Five years ago, she’d been dragged back into a family that had never wanted her.
Raised far from the city, she was treated like a stain on their polished reputation-the forgotten daughter they only acknowledged when it suited them.
She spent years trying to earn their acceptance.
Trying to be enough.
Trying to belong.
So when they told her to marry James Whitmore-the heir to one of the city’s most influential families-she agreed.
She thought maybe, just maybe, that if she played the role they wanted, things would finally change.
She was wrong.
On the day of the wedding, everything unraveled.
James had already been sleeping with her stepsister, Sadie.
Together, they accused Scarlett of infidelity.
They claimed she was pregnant with another man’s child.
That was when Scarlett realized the truth.
The man she had spent the night with weeks earlier-the one she believed was James-had never been him.
It had all been arranged.
Every detail.
And when Sadie staged a miscarriage to make it look as though Scarlett had attacked her, the family turned on her without hesitation.
Her parents never asked for the truth.
They never cared.
They made their choice.
Scarlett was beaten, humiliated, and thrown into prison.
Later, Sadie came to visit.
Smiling.
She admitted everything.
The pregnancy had been fake.
The blood had been staged.
The miscarriage had never happened.
It was all a performance.
Scarlett had lunged at the glass, desperate to tear her apart.
But bars and chains had a way of making fury useless.
There was only one reason she survived those months.
The child growing inside her.
The child whose father she had never known.
And then, after a brutal labor in a prison infirmary-the baby died.
She never got to hold them.
Never saw their face.
James took the body.
And that was the end of it.
Or at least, that’s what they thought.
New Book: Back Home to Marry Off Myself
Loredana’s father left the family for his mistress, leaving them to fend for themselves abroad. When life was at its toughest, her father showed up with “good news” after 8 years of absence: To marry off Loredana to a paralyzed son of the wealthy Mendelsohn family.