“I am not the woman you think I am, Travis,” Eleanor whispered, her voice cracking under a weight that seemed to span decades. “And you are not the man they told you you were.”
The candlelit suite, once a sanctuary of soft shadows and romantic promise, suddenly felt suffocating. The air grew thick with the scent of lilies and cold sweat. I stared at the irregular, dark mole on her shoulder—a mark seared into my earliest childhood memories. My mother, the woman who had supposedly died in a hit-and-run when I was barely five years old, had that exact same mark. I used to trace it with my tiny fingers when she tucked me in.
“What are you talking about?” I stammered, stepping backward until the back of my knees hit the edge of the mahogany bed. “My mother died twenty years ago. I saw the grave. I went to the funeral! Why do you have her mark? Who are you, Eleanor?”
Eleanor let out a ragged sob, a sound so raw it tore through the quiet luxury of the room. She didn’t look like a poised, wealthy sixty-year-old woman anymore. She looked fragile, broken, and terrified. She reached into the pocket of her silk robe and pulled out a small, faded photograph, laying it gently next to the stack of hundred-dollar bills and the truck keys.