Miles stared at the file Monica had sent, the glow of the screen illuminating the lines that traced his mother's hard-won journey. She had fought her way back from unimaginable loss—losing him as a child, rebuilding her life from shards of heartbreak. She married again, found a good man in Daniel, and built a family with twins. Yet, just when life seemed to settle, fate struck cruelly: Daniel fell gravely ill, his coma dragging on, the mounting bills weighing heavily on her shoulders.
Reading through the daily schedule laid out in the file, Miles saw her tireless routine — waking early to get the twins ready, walking them to school, heading to work with determined purpose, returning in the evenings to care for Daniel. It was a fragile balancing act, a mother holding everything together against all odds.
Miles pulled out his phone and swiftly dialed zero, his fingers moving with practiced efficiency. The line connected almost instantly, and a calm, steady voice answered without hesitation.
"Dr. Reyes speaking," the doctor said, his tone respectful but familiar, a clear indication of years spent working closely together. "What's the situation, boss? You rarely call me personally unless it's important."
Miles paused for a moment, collecting his thoughts, then spoke with a quiet authority. "There's a patient in Star Harbor who needs immediate attention. I want you there as soon as possible. Monica will send over the full details and the location. This has to be handled by tomorrow. No mistakes. You know how critical this is."
Dr. Reyes didn't hesitate, his voice carrying the weight of unshakable loyalty and commitment. "Understood, boss. You've always trusted me with the tough cases, and I won't let you down this time as well. Just send me the files and coordinates, and I'll make the arrangements. You have my word that I'll do everything in my power to get this done quickly and efficiently."
Miles felt the familiar surge of relief that came from knowing he had someone like Reyes on his side. "Good. I'm counting on you, Reyes. This isn't just any case."
"Never is with you," Dr. Reyes replied with a faint edge of a smile in his voice. "But you know I'm ready. I'll pack immediately and be enroute as soon as I get the details. No one else can handle these situations like we do, boss."
Miles ended the call and quickly sent Monica a message, instructing her to forward all the necessary files and information to Dr. Reyes without delay.
Miles slipped his phone back into his pocket, the weight of the conversation still settling in his mind. He sat back in the sleek leather seat of the Bentley as Ethan navigated the quiet streets toward the penthouse Monica had arranged. The city lights blurred outside the window, but his thoughts were far from the glittering skyline.
The file Monica sent wasn't just a summary of Elena's life — it was a testament to her resilience. After everything she'd lost, she had rebuilt herself from the ashes. She'd found love again, a good man in Daniel, and created a family despite the scars of the past. Yet fate had dealt her another cruel hand with Daniel's illness. The mounting medical bills, the quiet struggle against relentless debt collectors — it was a battle fought mostly alone, hidden behind a calm exterior.
Miles allowed himself a rare moment of reflection. He had spent years running from the past, burying the pain beneath layers of armor and silence. But now, seeing her fight to survive, to keep her family together, ignited something deep within him — a determination not just to find answers, but to protect what remained.
He glanced at the clock. Night had fallen fully, and the city's pulse slowed into a softer rhythm. Tomorrow, he decided, he would meet them — Elena and the twins. There was no more time for hesitation. The past was no longer a distant shadow. It was here, waiting.
The phone buzzed softly in his hand. Monica's message confirmed Dr. Reyes had received the files and was preparing to depart immediately. Miles's mind shifted to logistics. He needed rest — but not just any rest.
As Ethan pulled up to the penthouse, the quiet luxury felt foreign and cold compared to the warmth of the house he had just left behind. Inside, Miles shed his jacket and sank into the chair by the window, staring out at the sprawling city below.
Night cloaked the penthouse in shadows as Miles finally drifted into restless sleep. But peace was a stranger tonight.
In his dreams, the air was thick with a cold, suffocating fog. He stood in a dimly lit corridor, the walls damp and cracked, echoes of distant whispers bouncing around him. Suddenly, the soft cry of a child pierced the silence — fragile, desperate.
Ahead, a woman appeared, her face blurred, features shifting like smoke. She was struggling, being pulled away by unseen hands, her voice breaking through the haze as she reached out with trembling arms.
"Mama...!" Miles shouted, the word tearing from his throat with raw agony.
But the woman was slipping further into darkness, fading away with every desperate plea. The corridor stretched endlessly, and no matter how fast he moved, he couldn't close the distance.
He woke abruptly, heart pounding, sweat slick on his skin. The room was still, the city's night sounds distant behind the thick glass windows.
His knuckles pressed hard to his lips, grounding himself. The ghost of that cry lingered, a haunting echo of a past he could never fully outrun.
Outside, the first hint of dawn began to tint the horizon.
Miles exhaled slowly. Tomorrow, he would face the living — not the ghosts.
The first pale light of dawn seeped through the penthouse windows as Miles stirred awake, muscles tense but mind restless. Without hesitation, he slipped on his running shoes and stepped out onto the balcony. The cool morning air kissed his skin as he inhaled deeply, the city still wrapped in its early quiet.
He jogged down the stairwell and out onto the streets, the rhythmic pounding of his feet on pavement a grounding cadence. His breath came steady as he entered the nearby park, where dew still clung to blades of grass and the faint chirp of waking birds filled the air. The park was alive with the slow stretch of early risers—elderly couples walking dogs, children chasing after squirrels, and solitary figures lost in their thoughts.
Miles moved past the fountain, where water sparkled under the tentative sun, and circled the jogging trail, muscles awakening with each stride. The air smelled faintly of earth and damp leaves, a quiet reminder that life moved forward, even when memories threatened to hold him back.
Finishing his run, he headed toward the neighborhood where his mother lived. The streets were beginning to stir with morning routine — cars pulling away, shopkeepers raising shutters, neighbors exchanging greetings. Then, through the slight morning haze, he saw her.
Elena moved with the practiced grace of a woman who bore her burdens quietly. Her dark hair was pulled back in a loose bun, a few stray strands catching the light as she walked. She wore simple, worn clothes — nothing extravagant, but neat, practical. Her eyes held a distant look, as if carrying invisible weights, but softened whenever the twins tugged on her hands.
The twins were a mirror of each other, energetic and bright-eyed. The little girl's curls bounced as she skipped ahead, giggling, while her brother's wide smile revealed a gap where a tooth had recently fallen out. Their laughter was light, a fragile bubble of innocence in the midst of hardship.
Miles felt his chest tighten. Seeing them—his mother, alive and real after years of absence, and the children she bore—stirred a mixture of awe, regret, and longing. Every instinct screamed to run to them, to reach out, to say the words that had long been left unsaid.
But fear anchored him. He followed at a distance, careful to stay hidden, watching as she dropped them off at the nearby school gates. The children waved goodbye, their faces brightening as they turned toward the building. Elena lingered for a moment, her gaze lingering after them, lips pressed thin in quiet worry.
Miles wanted to call out—to break the silence, to bridge the gap that had grown between them. But the courage faltered like a flame in the wind. He was a stranger, an intruder in this life she had built without him. His voice caught in his throat.
Instead, he stood there, invisible, feeling helpless. She was carrying burdens he couldn't see, living a life that had continued without him. How could he step into that? How could he risk shattering the fragile peace she'd fought so hard to create?
Slowly, he turned and walked back toward the penthouse, each step heavy with conflicted emotions. Back in the sanctuary of his sleek apartment, he moved through his routine mechanically — checking messages, sipping bitter black coffee, eyes drifting to the window where the city stirred to life.
He knew he needed help, someone who could understand the tangled web of past and present he was trying to navigate. He picked up the phone and sent a message to April, asking to meet at a café near the elementary school.
The café was modest, cozy, with soft morning light filtering through lace curtains. The faint aroma of roasted coffee beans mingled with the murmur of quiet conversations.
April arrived shortly after, her warm smile a balm against the turmoil Miles felt inside. They settled into a corner table, a safe haven amid the gentle bustle.
"Coffee?" April asked, already signaling the waitress.
"Black, no sugar," Miles replied, voice low but steady.
As the drinks arrived, Miles stared into the dark liquid, gathering courage.
"I saw her this morning," he began, voice rough with emotion. "Mama… She's real. She's alive. And she has twins." He paused, the weight of the words almost too much. "But she's struggling. Her husband is… ill. The bills, the stress. She's barely holding on."
April's eyes softened. "It's a lot to carry. Especially alone."
Miles nodded, fingers clenched tightly around the cup. "I want to be there. I want to help. But I don't know if she even wants me. Or if I have any right to step back into her life after all these years."
April reached across the table, her hand brushing his. "You do have that right, Miles. Blood ties don't just vanish. And the fact that you're standing here, wanting to be part of their lives—that means more than you realize."
He looked up, meeting her gaze, the vulnerability laid bare between them.
"But what if I'm too late? What if the damage I left is too deep?"
She shook her head gently. "It's never too late to try. And you don't have to do this alone. Let people in. You don't have to carry everything on your own."
A fragile hope kindled inside him, fragile but real.
"Thanks, April. I don't know what I'd do without you."
She smiled, squeezing his hand briefly. "You'll never have to find out."
The conversation between Miles and April lulled into a thoughtful silence. The café's soft ambiance continued around them—murmurs of customers, clinks of cutlery, the occasional hiss of the espresso machine. But Miles's attention drifted elsewhere.
His gaze shifted to the wide glass window of the café, and in an instant, the world around him blurred.
Across the street, he saw her.
Elena was there, walking hand in hand with the twins, their small backpacks bouncing with every step. The children were animated, chatting, laughing—until they weren't.
Something was wrong.
Two uniformed officers stepped in their path, abruptly halting them on the sidewalk. Elena instinctively moved in front of the children, shielding them with her body. Her expression was composed but wary, the kind of look that came from too many brushes with cruelty disguised as authority.
Miles's body tensed, fingers tightening around his cup until it creaked.
April noticed. She turned, following his line of sight. "Miles," she said gently, "go now."
He didn't hesitate.
He stood, dropped enough cash on the table to cover the bill, and crossed the café floor in long strides. The door swung open as he stepped into the afternoon light, his pulse rising with every step.
Across the street, the confrontation was escalating.
"Ma'am, you've been issued multiple warnings," one of the officers barked, tapping a pad. "You know what debtors with unpaid bills look like to the system?"
"I'm doing everything I can," Elena replied, her voice calm but strained. "I've been paying in installments. Please… just give me more time."
"Time's up," the second officer sneered, smirking as he loomed over her. "Maybe your boyfriend in the coma can pay up when he wakes up, huh?"
The first officer let out a laugh, and the twins clutched their mother's coat tighter, faces pale with fear.
People on the sidewalk had begun to slow down. Some stopped. A small crowd gathered, eyes watching but no one intervening. No one stepped forward.
Then one of the officers reached out and grabbed Elena by the wrist—not hard enough to arrest, but enough to assert control. Enough to humiliate.
"Don't touch me," she said, low and firm.
The officer only grinned wider. "Or what?"
And that's when the air changed.
April had just emerged from the café, her mouth opening to call out—but she didn't get the chance.
Miles was gone.
Not walking. Not running. Moving like a shadow slicing through the crowd.
April gasped as she saw him.
A blur of black cut between onlookers. Miles closed the distance in seconds.
Before anyone could process what was happening, he was there—in front of Elena, and the children—his hand clamping around the officer's neck and lifting him off the ground in a single, furious motion.
The officer's eyes bulged in shock, boots kicking mid-air, the crowd erupting into gasps and exclamations.
Elena spun in alarm. The twins screamed.
The other officer reached for his gun.
But Miles… Miles was no longer the man in the café.
He was something else.