He sh0ved his nine-month-pregnant wife off an icy cliff just to pocket a $50 million life insurance policy. Today, at the funeral they think is mine, he’s standing with his secret lover, smirking like a winner. They think I’m d:ea:d… but they have no clue I’m still clinging to life, fighting my way back for revenge.

Chapter 1: The Fall

At the funeral, I later found out that my husband, Maverick Weaver, showed no trace of grief.

“They both froze to death,” he said flatly while adjusting his silk tie. “That useless woman finally got what she deserved, and I am glad the burden is gone.”

Those words still replay in my mind like a jagged, rusted curse that refuses to leave my consciousness.

Only hours before the nightmare began, I had been begging him to stop the heated argument and just take me home because the biting wind was becoming unbearable.

We were standing at the edge of a jagged, frozen cliff in the snowy peaks of Mount Rainier National Park in Washington, surrounded by an endless, suffocating white silence.

Then, without any warning or hesitation, he shoved me with all his strength toward the drop.

I fell into nothingness, my body twisting in the freezing air as the world became a blur of gray and white.

I remember screaming at the top of my lungs as the freezing wind swallowed every sound, reaching desperately for a branch or rock that simply wasn’t there.

High above, Maverick looked down with an expression I will never be able to forget or forgive, a calm, chilling smile that still haunts my waking hours.

“Don’t worry, sweetheart,” he called out casually as if we were discussing the weather. “Neither you nor that pathetic baby will have to suffer for long.”

Then, the world turned completely white as my body slammed into a narrow, icy ledge halfway down the jagged cliff face.

Pain exploded through every nerve in my body, warning me of broken ribs and a shattered wrist, while dark blood began spreading into the pristine snow beneath me.

Instinctively, I wrapped my freezing arms around my swollen belly, trying to protect the only thing that mattered in this dying world.

“Please stay with me, little one,” I whispered over and over, my voice barely audible against the roar of the mountain. “Please, you have to be strong, you cannot leave me alone here.”

The storm roared on, snow slowly burying my body while each breath burned colder and deeper than the last one.

I wasn’t thinking about my own survival anymore, because I was fighting with every ounce of my fading strength for my son.

Then, I heard voices rising above the howl of the wind, and my heart skipped a beat.

Maverick  hadn’t left the scene; he was still standing at the edge with Piper, his so-called executive assistant who had been poisoning his mind for months.

“Is she finally dead, Maverick?” Piper asked with a tone of impatient annoyance that made my skin crawl.

Maverick let out a quiet, satisfied chuckle that echoed through the valley.

“For fifty million dollars in insurance money, she better be completely gone,” he replied without a shred of remorse.

That was when I truly understood the horrific truth of my life.

This wasn’t a tragic accident, and it certainly wasn’t a heat-of-the-moment burst of rage.

It was a cold, calculated plan that had been set in motion long before we left our home.

The surprise hiking trip, the choice of an isolated mountain, and the massive life insurance policy were all pieces of a puzzle.

Even my pregnancy had been carefully factored into their plan, because the payout would be significantly higher if both I and the unborn baby died in the mountains.

Piper shivered violently and muttered, “Let’s get out of here, I am absolutely freezing and I can’t stand being near this wreck anymore.”

And just like that, they turned their backs and walked away, leaving me broken on a frozen ledge as if I were already a ghost.

For nearly two hours, I lay there drifting between life and death as the cold sank deeper into my bones.

Darkness constantly pulled at the edges of my vision, tempting me to just give in and stop the pain.

But every time I started slipping away into the void, I felt a faint, rhythmic movement beneath my hands.

My baby was still alive, fighting just as hard as I was to see the dawn.

That tiny, beautiful reminder kept me breathing when everything else suggested I should quit.

Then, suddenly, a powerful searchlight cut through the heart of the blizzard.

The heavy, rhythmic roar of helicopter blades shook the entire mountain as snow swirled violently around my fragile hiding spot.

I thought the official rescue teams had finally arrived to save us.

But instead of a bright rescue craft, a black, unmarked helicopter hovered dangerously above the cliff.

A man dressed in heavy alpine rescue gear descended on a cable with mechanical precision.

When he finally landed and removed his goggles, I froze in absolute disbelief.

He had shock-white hair and piercing ice-blue eyes.

It was a face I had only seen once before in a yellowed, secret photograph my mother had hidden away in an old sewing kit.

He knelt beside me, and all his professional composure shattered into a million pieces.

“Peyton,” he whispered, his voice cracking with an emotion I couldn’t name.

His gloved, trembling hand brushed my frozen, blood-stained cheek.

“I finally found you, after all these years of searching,” he said.

My heart stopped as I realized this mysterious stranger knew exactly who I was and where I came from.

Chapter 2: The Echo of the Past

The first thing I remember after waking up in the sterile hospital room was the terrifying sound of my own heartbeat.

It was slow, uneven, and felt distant, like it belonged to someone else entirely.

The man who had rescued me, a man I would soon learn was named Joshua, was kneeling beside my bed even though the room was quiet and safe.

His blue eyes locked onto mine with an intensity that made it feel like I was being pulled back from a dark place I wasn’t supposed to return from.

“Peyton, can you hear me?” he asked again, his voice much more gentle than it had been on the mountain.

My lips were far too numb and swollen to respond, but I squeezed his hand as a sign of life.

He suddenly turned toward the door as a nurse entered and spoke sharply about my vitals.

I caught broken pieces of his transmission: pregnancy, hypothermia, multiple fractures, and the need for immediate, high-level protection.

His voice was steady and professional, but his hands, which were still gripping the side of the bed, told a different, more desperate story.

He was terrified for me, and he was terrified of what was coming next.

Chapter 3: The Truth Beneath the Silence

Joshua stayed frozen in the doorway for several long seconds, framed by the dim hallway light casting long shadows into my room.

His face had gone deathly pale, and the steady, rhythmic beeping of the hospital monitor beside my bed suddenly felt deafeningly loud.

It felt like the only thing in the room still telling the absolute truth.

I lifted the torn letter my mother had left behind for me to find after she passed.

“Who removed the very last page of this letter, Joshua?” I demanded, my voice raspy.

Joshua looked at the paper, then back at me, his lips parting slightly, but no words came out to defend himself.

That heavy, suffocating silence was enough of an answer for me.

Something deep inside me folded inward, a feeling of betrayal that was far worse than physical pain.

It wasn’t even anger, as anger would have been much easier to process and release.

What I felt first was a crushing disappointment settling into my chest like freezing water.

“You promised me that there would be no more secrets between us,” I said quietly, tears pricking my eyes.

He stepped closer, reaching out as if to comfort me, but I pulled away.

“Peyton, please listen to me,” he started.

“No, stop,” I interrupted, my voice shaking but holding steady. “Don’t say my name like it can fix the years of lies you told.”

“Piper called me,” I continued, my gaze sharpening. “She said the letter wasn’t complete and told me to ask you about the baby at Gordon’s Landing.”

Joshua closed his eyes as if he were trying to hold back a flood of painful memories.

Everything in the room seemed to shift when I mentioned that specific place.

When he finally opened his eyes again, his posture had changed, becoming less controlled and more burdened.

He looked like a man who had carried a mountain on his back for far too long.

I lowered the letter, my hands still trembling. “What baby are you hiding from me?”

He sat down slowly at the edge of my bed, his hands tightly clasped together to stop them from shaking.

“Your mother wasn’t the only pregnant woman at Gordon’s Landing,” he began, his voice barely a whisper.

My entire body went perfectly still, and I felt as though the oxygen had been sucked out of the room.

My hand instinctively moved toward my stomach, as if remembering the shape of my own son, Lucas, even now while he was being watched in the nursery.

“Who was she?” I asked, bracing myself for the worst.

Joshua hesitated for far too long, looking everywhere but at me.

“Joshua, tell me right now.”

“The child disappeared the night of the massive fire,” he finally admitted, his voice hollow.

A deep chill spread through my core as the implications settled in.

“Disappeared? That is not an answer, that is an excuse,” I snapped.

“I know it is, but it is the truth of that night,” he replied.

I stared at him, feeling my patience fraying. “Was the baby alive when you left?”

“We believed so, but we were never sure,” he said.

“We? Who is we?”

“Your mother, Martha, and myself,” he said, mentioning the woman who had raised me.

My mother’s name hit the room like a second heartbeat I didn’t recognize.

For my entire life, she had been ordinary in my memory, filled with images of warm kitchens, folded laundry, and quiet, peaceful mornings.

Now, that version of her felt like only half of a much darker story.

“What actually happened that night?” I asked, needing the full picture.

Joshua moved closer, but didn’t sit again until I nodded in permission.

“Gordon’s Landing wasn’t just a home, it was my family’s old estate, filled with offices, docks, and underground archives. My father kept everything there, including illegal contracts and secrets.”

“And my mother worked there?”

“Yes, she was hired in the finance department. She noticed strange irregularities, like money moving through false names, hidden trusts, and even records related to illegal adoptions.”

“Adoptions? You mean children were being trafficked?”

He nodded once, his jaw tight. “That is exactly what changed everything and put a target on all of our backs.”

I looked at the letter again, realizing my mother hadn’t written it blindly.

She had written it knowing it might one day serve as a shield for me.

“She found something critical,” I stated.

“Yes, something tied to sealed records and a missing child that was never supposed to be found.”

My attention flicked to the NICU monitor showing Lucas sleeping peacefully in his isolated crib.

“What does the woman, Elise, have to do with any of this?”

Joshua lowered his voice, checking the door once more.

“She had access to the restricted archives. Your mother and Martha helped her copy the files because they were trying to understand what my father was truly hiding.”

“And you, where were you in all of this?”

“I found out way too late, and by then, the fire had already been set,” he said.

His jaw tightened as he recalled the tragedy.

“At first I thought your mother just feared my family’s reputation, but then I realized she feared what it meant to actually know too much.”

“Meaning what?”

“Meaning being erased from the story entirely,” he said quietly.

The phrase landed like a block of ice in my stomach.

I swallowed hard. “And the missing page in the letter?”

Joshua hesitated again, looking pained. “Your mother wrote down names, a location, and a theory about what happened to the child.”

“So you tore it out, didn’t you?”

“I removed it because I believed it would keep you in danger, and I was terrified someone would kill you for it.”

“You didn’t even know I existed when she wrote it,” I pointed out, my voice laced with bitterness.

“No, but once I found you, once I saw Maverick was involved, I knew the past was reaching out for you again.”

I exhaled shakily, feeling the weight of his “protection.”

“So you decided exactly what I was allowed to know about my own heritage,” I said.

“I was trying to protect you from the same people who burned down Gordon’s Landing.”

“Maverick said the exact same thing to me before he threw me off that cliff.”

That made him flinch, and he looked down at his shoes.

“You’re right to say that, and I deserve your anger,” he whispered.

Silence followed, heavy and suffocating.

Outside, the snow drifted past the hospital window in thin, silver streaks, blurring the world outside.

Somewhere in the city, Maverick was disappearing, and Piper was running out of places to hide from the authorities.

And my father, Joshua, was sitting beside my bed with a truth he had kept half-buried for years.

“Where is the page?” I asked, extending my hand.

He reached into his coat, and for a moment, I thought he would finally give it to me.

Instead, he placed a small brass key in my hand, attached to an old, faded blue ribbon.

It was my mother’s favorite ribbon.

“I didn’t want to bring it here because this place isn’t safe,” he said.

“It opens a private vault in a facility near Boulder. The page is inside, along with every single record of what happened.”

My fingers tightened around the cold metal key. “Why not just bring the documents to me?”

“Because I don’t trust who is watching us right now,” he said, looking at the door with suspicion.

That sentence shifted the air in the room, making it feel dangerous.

“What do you mean by that?”

Joshua glanced toward the door. “Piper shouldn’t have been able to reach you in this wing. Your hospital access was restricted, and only a few people could override those security measures.”

My chest tightened as I processed his words.

“You think someone inside this hospital helped her?”

“Or someone with enough access to influence the people inside,” he replied.

“Maverick? He wouldn’t have that kind of pull.”

“He doesn’t have that level of reach on his own,” Joshua admitted. “But his family definitely does.”

The implication was clear, and it made my head spin.

“Your family is still running things, aren’t they?”

Joshua didn’t deny it, which was all the confirmation I needed.

A sudden, sharp knock interrupted our conversation.

I flinched, and a bolt of pain shot through my fractured ribs.

Joshua immediately stepped between me and the door, his body tense.

Detective Kinsley Crawford entered the room, holding a thick, manila folder.

Her eyes moved from Joshua to me, then lingered on the letter in my hand.

“I have some updates regarding the investigation,” she said.

“No, you have perfect timing for once,” I replied, trying to sit up.

She closed the door behind her, locking it with a click. “Maverick Weaver is officially missing.”

The words settled heavily in the room.

“Since when?” Joshua asked sharply.

“He was supposed to come in for questioning an hour ago, but he never showed up. His lawyer says he is unstable and his phone is turned off, and his car was found abandoned near the airport.”

My breathing tightened as I felt the panic rising. “He left the state?”

“We don’t know that for sure yet, but it is likely,” the detective said.

“And Piper?” I asked.

“She is gone too, and there is no trace of her credit card usage.”

The room went still again, save for the rhythmic beeping of my heart monitor.

I thought of her voice on the phone when she called me, the warning, and the underlying panic in her tone.

“She called me,” I said.

The detective’s expression sharpened. “When did she call you?”

“Tonight, just before you arrived.”

“What did she say?”

“She said Maverick was running for his life and mentioned something about my mother’s files.”

The detective frowned. “Did she mention who gave him access to the facility records?”

“No,” I replied.

Joshua spoke quietly. “But someone clearly did, and they are still out there.”

The detective opened her folder and placed a photo on my thin hospital blanket.

Maverick stood at a private airfield, looking haggard and desperate.

Beside him was a man named Victor, a notorious fixer in the city.

And behind them, standing in the shadows, was Martha, the woman I thought was my mother.

She was holding something tightly against her chest, a thick blue notebook.

My stomach dropped as I recognized it immediately.

“That is my mother’s private ledger,” Joshua said, his voice trembling.

The detective nodded. “We believe so, and we think it contains the final pieces of the puzzle.”

Joshua stared at the image with pure rage. “Then they have already opened it, and we are already losing this war.”

The phone on the side table rang, and we all froze in collective dread.

The detective answered and put it on speaker so we could all hear.

A violent gust of wind filled the line first.

Then, Martha’s voice came through, sounding strained and terrified.

“Peyton, I don’t have much time, so listen to me very carefully.”

My grip tightened on the blanket as I leaned in.

“Martha, where are you?” I whispered.

Her breathing was uneven and ragged.

“The baby from Gordon’s Landing did not disappear, Peyton. They took him.”

My pulse seemed to stop entirely.

“Then what happened to him? Where is he?”

There was a long, agonizing pause.

Then, her voice broke the silence of the room completely.

“Peyton, the child that Elise gave birth to was not just a random person. It was your mother, and you are the key to everything they are trying to destroy.”

THE END.