Part 2: The Woman I Thought I Knew
Part 2: The Woman I Thought I Knew
The nursery fell silent again.
Not the peaceful silence I had expected when I came home.
This silence carried the weight of too many unanswered questions.
Emily sat on the edge of the daybed, wrapped in a blanket, staring at her swollen hands as if willing them to move.
Neither of us spoke for nearly a minute.
The only sound was the soft breathing of Oliver and Olivia sleeping peacefully in their cribs.
I looked from my children to the woman who had protected them for hours despite her own injuries.

Then I looked at the wineglass again.
The crimson lipstick stain seemed almost impossible to ignore.
It belonged to Victoria.
There was no doubt in my mind.
"Emily," I said quietly, "I need you to tell me everything. Don't leave anything out."
She lowered her eyes.
"I've tried to forget today already."
"You don't have to carry it alone anymore."
She drew a slow breath before beginning.
"It started this morning."
"The hospital called around nine."
"I answered because I thought they were updating Ethan's treatment schedule."
Her voice trembled.
"But it wasn't about his treatment."
"They told me his fever had spiked overnight."
"The chemotherapy had weakened his immune system."
"They weren't sure how his body would respond."
She stopped for a moment.
"I asked if I should come."
"The doctor said..."
She swallowed hard.
"'If you're able to get here, you should.'"
Those words settled heavily between us.
"You asked Victoria immediately?" I asked.
Emily nodded.
"I found her in the breakfast room."
"She was drinking wine while reading a magazine."
"I apologized for interrupting."
"I explained what the doctor had said."
"And I asked if I could visit Ethan for just a few hours."
She gave a faint, humorless smile.
"I promised to come back before dinner."
I clenched my jaw.
"What happened?"
"She didn't answer right away."
"She just looked at me."
"Then she asked..."
Emily repeated the words exactly as she remembered them.
"'Your son again?'"
"'Every week it's another emergency.'"
"I told her it wasn't another emergency."
"I said it might be the last time I ever saw him."
Emily's voice cracked.
"I thought..."
"I thought she'd understand."
I reached for a chair and sat opposite her.
"What did she do?"
"She stood up."
"I thought she was finally going to say yes."
"Instead..."
Emily instinctively touched the bruise on her cheek.
"She slapped me."
The room felt colder.
"The babies heard it?"
Emily nodded.
"Oliver started crying."
"Then Olivia joined him."
"I tried to go upstairs."
"But she stepped in front of me."
Her breathing became uneven.
"She said I hadn't finished my work."
I closed my eyes briefly.
"Emily..."
"I told her I'd finish everything after I came back."
"I promised."
"I begged."
She looked toward the sleeping twins.
"I even offered to work through the night."
"But nothing mattered."
"What happened next?"
"She said..."
Emily stared blankly ahead.
"'You were hired to take care of my children.'"
"'Not yours.'"
I felt my hands curl into fists.
"Then she grabbed my arm."
"I tried to pull away."
"The babies upstairs were crying harder."
"I only wanted to comfort them."
"So I ran."
"You ran?"
"I made it halfway up the stairs."
"She followed me."
Emily's voice became almost inaudible.
"When I reached the nursery, both babies were standing in their cribs crying."
"I picked Olivia up first."
"Oliver reached for me too."
"I was trying to calm them."
"Then Mrs. Cole walked into the room."
Emily paused.
"I've never seen her look like that before."
"What do you mean?"
"It was like..."
"Like she wasn't angry."
"She was enjoying herself."
A chill ran through me.
"She told me to put Olivia down."
"I refused."
"It was the first time I'd ever refused anything she asked."
Emily managed a sad smile.
"I couldn't leave a frightened baby crying."

"What did Victoria do?"
"She took Olivia from my arms."
"Gently."
"So gently that I thought maybe..."
"Maybe she had changed her mind."
Emily shook her head.
"She hadn't."
"She laid Olivia in the crib."
"Picked up a bedsheet."
"And looked at me."
I didn't interrupt.
"I remember thinking..."
"'Why is she holding a sheet?'"
"Then she smiled."
"The same smile."
"The one that frightened me downstairs."
Emily wrapped the blanket tighter around herself.
"She told me..."
"'If you want to spend your life with children...'"
"'Then that's exactly what you'll do.'"
I looked toward the torn sheets lying on the floor.
"They were from the bed?"
Emily nodded.
"She ripped them herself."
"Then she..."
Emily stopped speaking.
Tears filled her eyes once more.
I leaned forward.
"You don't have to describe every detail."
She gave a grateful nod.
"I couldn't stop her."
"When she finished..."
"I couldn't move."
"My hands were already numb."
"She picked up both babies."
"I thought she was finally going to let me comfort them."
"Instead..."
Emily looked toward Oliver and Olivia.
"She fastened the carrier around me."
"So tightly I could barely breathe."
"But the babies were safe."
"That was all I cared about."
I followed her gaze.
Both children were still asleep.
Completely unaware of the courage the woman across from me had shown.
"You stayed with them all afternoon?"
"Yes."
"They cried."
"I sang."
"They got hungry."
"I fed them as best I could."
"I couldn't reach their bottles easily."
"So it took a long time."
She looked down.
"I'm sorry."
I stared at her.
"For what?"
"I should have protected them better."
The words stunned me.
"You did protect them."
"I should have found a way to stop everything."
"You made sure my children were safe for hours while you were injured yourself."
"You have nothing to apologize for."
For the first time since I had entered the nursery, Emily's expression softened.
Just a little.
A single tear rolled down her cheek.
"Thank you."
I stood and walked to the window.
Outside, the last traces of daylight had disappeared.
The house looked perfectly ordinary from the street.
Anyone driving past would have seen warm lights glowing through the windows.
A beautiful home.
A happy family.
No one would have imagined what had happened inside.
I turned back toward Emily.
"There's one thing I still don't understand."
She looked at me.
"Why didn't you call for help?"
She lowered her eyes.
"My phone."
"It was taken."
"Did Victoria take it?"
"Yes."
"And before she left..."
Emily hesitated.
"She said something."
"What?"
"'No one is coming for you.'"
A heavy silence settled over the room.
Then Emily looked at me with an expression I couldn't quite read.
"There is something else."
"What is it?"
"It isn't about today."
"It's about Mrs. Cole."
I frowned.
"What do you mean?"
She hesitated for several long seconds.
"I don't think this started today."
My heartbeat slowed.
"What are you saying?"
Emily met my eyes.
"I think she's been hiding something from you."
Before I could ask another question, a sound echoed from downstairs.
The front door opened.
Then closed.
Footsteps.
Slow.
Measured.
Confident.
Emily's face lost what little color remained.
May you like
Her whisper was barely audible.
"She's home."