My sister called at exactly 12:08 a.m., her voice tight with urgency, the kind that instantly pulls you out of sleep. “Turn off every light. Go to the attic. Don’t tell your husband.” For a second, I thought something had gone terribly wrong with her—but Mara worked for the FBI. She wasn’t dramatic, and she didn’t make late-night calls without a serious reason. That alone was enough to silence my doubts. Without waking Caleb, I slid out of bed, my heart already racing, and moved through the house switching off lights one by one. The silence felt unnatural, like the walls were holding their breath. Then I climbed into the attic, shut the door behind me, and locked it. Before I could ask anything else, the call dropped.
I sat there in the darkness, trying to slow my breathing, when I heard it—voices downstairs. One of them was Caleb’s, calm and steady, almost too controlled. The other voice belonged to a stranger. “Lights are off,” Caleb said. A pause followed, then the stranger replied, “Then she knows.” My stomach dropped. The words didn’t make sense, but the tone did. Something was very wrong, and it involved me.
Carefully, I lowered myself to the floor and peered through a narrow gap in the boards. What I saw made my chest tighten. The stranger handed Caleb a small, hard case. Caleb opened it slowly, like he’d done it before. Inside were three passports. I leaned closer, trying to make sense of it—and then it hit me. The photos were ours. Mine. Caleb’s. Even Noah’s. But the names printed beneath them were completely different. My hands started shaking. In that moment, everything I thought I knew about my life cracked apart. My husband wasn’t who I believed he was.
My phone buzzed suddenly, lighting up the darkness. A message from Mara appeared: “Police are two minutes out. Stay hidden. Noah is safe.” I read it twice. Noah is safe. Relief rushed through me so fast it almost hurt, but it didn’t erase the fear. If Noah was safe, then what was Caleb planning? And how long had this been going on?
Downstairs, Caleb’s phone rang, cutting through the tension. He answered quickly, but this time his calm slipped. “What do you mean they took him?” he said sharply. His voice carried anger now, mixed with something else—panic. The shift made everything even more terrifying. This wasn’t part of his plan.
Then the sound of sirens shattered the night. Loud, urgent, closing in fast. Blue and red lights flashed through the windows below, and within seconds, the house was no longer quiet. Doors slammed, voices shouted, and heavy footsteps moved in with purpose. FBI agents had arrived.
I stayed frozen in the attic, barely daring to breathe. Down below, chaos unfolded, but through it all, Caleb didn’t sound afraid. Instead, everything went strangely still for a moment. Then, slowly, he turned his head—toward the attic. Toward me.
Even without seeing his eyes clearly, I felt it. He knew.
A faint, unsettling smile crossed his face. “Your sister should have stayed out of this,” he said coldly.
And then the door downstairs crashed open.