He Found Three Hidden Daughters, Then Fought the Man Who Wanted Them-lequyen994

The call came while Nathan Carter was standing at the head of a glass conference table, listening to people argue over numbers that suddenly meant nothing.

His phone vibrated once, then again, and the name on the message made the room narrow around him.

Clare Evans had been admitted to St. Matthew’s Hospital, and she had asked for him.

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Seven years had passed since Clare had walked out of his life after a fight neither of them had known how to survive.

He left the meeting without explaining.

A nurse gave him the room number, and Nathan walked down the corridor feeling like he was moving toward a past that had not finished with him.

He stopped outside Clare’s door because three little girls were sitting on the bench beside it.

They wore matching pink dresses with ribbon belts, and their shoes dangled above the tile.

They were not playing or crying, only waiting with the solemn patience of children who had already been told too much.

The first girl looked up, and Nathan forgot how to breathe.

Her eyes were his.

The second girl turned next, and her mouth tightened exactly the way his did when he was trying not to react.

The third held a notebook against her chest and stared at him with a guarded kind of hope.

“Are you Mr. Carter?” the first one asked.

Nathan heard his own voice answer from far away.

“Yes.”

The second girl said their mother had told them he might come today.

The third girl said nothing, but her fingers tightened around the notebook until the cardboard cover bent.

Nathan had walked into the hospital expecting an old wound, not three daughters.

Inside the room, Clare looked smaller than she ever had in his memory.

Her hair was loose against the pillow, her lips were pale, and the machines beside her bed gave the room a rhythm too steady to be comforting.

When she saw him, her eyes filled.

“Nathan,” she whispered.

He stepped closer because anger could wait, because the woman in the bed looked like she had been carrying a mountain alone.

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