part 2 At 2 a.m., trapped in my office during another endless work night..008

“Sedatives?”

“I’m not saying that’s what happened. I’m saying we need to test.”

Across the foyer, Penelope heard him.

Her expression did not change.

That terrified me more than panic would have.

They took Sophie and Julian to the hospital. I rode with them.

Penelope was not arrested immediately.

Power has gravity. It bends rooms. It slows consequences.

She gave her statement in the foyer with perfect posture and tearful eyes, telling officers she had spent months trying to save her son from a troubled wife. She mentioned Sophie’s exhaustion, her tears, her supposed paranoia. She used clinical words she had no right to touch.

Depression.

Delusion.

Episodes.

Risk to the baby.

But Gabriel arrived before she finished.

He walked in wearing a charcoal coat and the expression of a man who had never been charmed by anyone in his life.

He handed the older officer a tablet.

“Full video archive,” he said. “Time-stamped. Cloud-backed. Multiple incidents. I’ve preserved the metadata and sent a copy to your department’s evidence portal.”

Penelope stopped talking.

Gabriel looked at her.

“Hello, Penelope.”

She smiled faintly. “Gabriel. Still making a living dramatizing private family matters?”

“Still committing crimes in rooms you think are private?”

Her smile died.

At the hospital, Sophie refused to let anyone take Julian out of her sight. The nurses accommodated her, moving mother and baby into a private room with glass walls and a security officer outside.

I sat beside her bed, useless.

There is no boardroom skill for watching your wife stare at nothing while doctors photograph bruises you failed to prevent.

There is no executive training for hearing your infant son whimper while a nurse draws blood from his tiny heel.

I signed forms.

I answered questions.

I gave permissions.

Every task felt like punishment because it was simple, and the thing I should have done weeks ago had apparently been impossible for me.

Sophie did not speak for nearly two hours.

Then, when Julian finally slept in the bassinet beside her bed, she said, “She started before he was born.”

I looked up.

Her eyes remained on the baby.

“At first it was comments,” she continued. “About my body. My family. The way I decorated the nursery. The way I held my stomach. She said I looked smug when you touched me.”

My hands closed slowly.

“She told me Sterlington women don’t complain. Then she said I wasn’t really one.”

“Sophie—”

“Please let me finish.”

I shut my mouth.

Her voice trembled but did not break.

“When Julian was born, she became worse. She said I was keeping him from her. She said breastfeeding was vulgar. Then she said formula would make him stupid. Then she said I was starving him. Then overfeeding him. Everything I did was wrong.”

She finally looked at me.

“And when I tried to tell you, she always got there first.”

I remembered.

Of course I remembered.

My mother in my study, pouring bourbon I didn’t ask for.

“Nicholas, darling, don’t be alarmed, but Sophie is becoming very sensitive. Don’t pressure her. Just let me handle things.”

My mother at dinner, touching my hand.

“She cried today because I folded a blanket differently. Hormones can be cruel.”

My mother outside our bedroom.

“Don’t wake her. She finally stopped spiraling.”

I had mistaken sabotage for support.

“She isolated you,” I said.

Sophie gave a small, empty smile.

“She isolated us both.”

That was the truth I least wanted and most needed.

Because it would have been easier to believe I had simply been absent.

But I had been present sometimes.

And still manipulated.

I had loved Sophie through a fog Penelope pumped into the house one whisper at a time.

“What were the pills?” I asked.

Sophie swallowed.

“I don’t know. She said they were vitamins at first. Then something for sleep. Then she told me if I didn’t take them, she’d tell you I was refusing treatment.”

“Did you take them?”

Her silence answered before her mouth did.

“Sometimes,” she said. “When she threatened to call social services. When she said she’d have Julian taken away.”

A coldness passed through me.