And then came the part that made my chest go completely hollow.
“He’s lost everything,” she said.
Every account. Every reserve. Every last accessible dollar.
And now—
“They’re holding him.”
The word hung between us.
“They’re demanding money to release him,” she added. “Three hundred thousand.”
I stared at her.
Three hundred thousand.
For a man who had locked his wife and child in a house to slowly suffer.
I waited for something inside me to break—for love, for panic, for instinct to rush in and save him.
Nothing came.
Only a cold, steady clarity.
“What are you going to do?” I asked.
Margaret held my gaze.
“That depends,” she said quietly. “On you.”
I blinked.
“What?”
“I can pay it,” she said. “I can get him out quietly.”
She paused.
“Or… we let the police move in.”
My breath caught.
“Tony has already contacted people he trusts,” she continued. “They can act. But once they do… there’s no protecting him from the consequences.”
Silence stretched between us.
In another life—in another version of this story—I might have said yes immediately. Might have clung to the idea of saving my husband, of putting things back together, of pretending none of this had happened.
But all I could see was Noah’s flushed face.
His small body burning in my arms.
Locked inside a house that had been turned into a cage.
“He planned it,” I said slowly. “He planned for us to suffer.”
Margaret didn’t argue.
I swallowed hard.
“Then he can face what he walked into.”
Her eyes closed briefly, and she nodded once.
“Alright.”
Not relief.
Not approval.
Just acceptance.
An hour later, my phone rang.
Unknown number.
I answered.
A woman’s voice—soft, urgent, almost trembling.
“Hannah, please… you need to listen carefully. Daniel is in serious danger—”
I recognized her instantly.
The woman.
“I know who you are,” I said quietly.
A pause.
Then Daniel’s voice broke through—hoarse, desperate.
“Hannah—please—just do what they say—”
A sharp noise cut him off.
A man’s voice in the background. Low. Threatening.
“Time is running out.”
I closed my eyes.
For a moment, I saw him as he used to be.
And then I saw Noah.
“I won’t send anything,” I said.
The silence on the line turned heavy.
Then the call ended.
I lowered the phone slowly, my hands steady.
Margaret watched me.
“It’s done,” I said.
And somewhere deep inside me, something окончательно shifted—
Not into anger.
Not into grief.
But into something far more final.
The end of who I thought my husband was.