
Betrayed in the Basement, Rising in the Garden
Chapter 3
Cold. So cold.
Darkness pressed against me from all sides as water filled my lungs. Death was supposed to be peaceful, but this—this was agony.
Then suddenly, strong arms wrapped around me, pulling me upward. My body felt impossibly heavy as I was dragged through the water. A voice shouted in my ear, but I couldn't make out the words over the roar of the river.
"Stay with me!" The voice was deep, urgent. "I've got you!"
My consciousness flickered as I was hauled onto what felt like riverbank. Rain pelted my face as hands pressed against my chest, forcing water from my lungs.
"Breathe!" the voice commanded. "Come on!"
I gasped, coughing violently as air rushed back into my lungs. My eyes fluttered open to darkness and rain.
"Hang on," the stranger said, lifting me into his arms. "I'm getting you somewhere warm."
I wanted to ask who he was, why he was helping me, but darkness claimed me again before I could form the words.
---
Three days passed in fevered dreams. I drifted in and out of consciousness, aware of someone tending to me—changing bandages, pressing cool cloths to my forehead, speaking in soft tones.
When I finally opened my eyes fully, I found myself in a small wooden cabin. Sunlight streamed through windows covered with thin curtains. The air smelled of pine and woodsmoke.
"Hey there." A man appeared beside the bed, his face coming into focus slowly. He was handsome in a rugged way, with dark hair and eyes that seemed familiar somehow. "How are you feeling?"
"My head hurts," I whispered, my voice raspy. "Where am I?"
"My cabin. I'm Lane." He offered a gentle smile. "Lane Willis."
Willis. The name stirred something in me.
"You pulled me from the river," I said, the memory suddenly clear.
He nodded, sitting on the edge of the bed. "I was driving home when I saw your car go off the road. Lucky I was there."
I tried to sit up, wincing at the pain in my ribs. "Thank you."
"Don't thank me yet." Something in his expression shifted. "You look like someone I've been searching for."
My heart skipped a beat. "What do you mean?"
"The timing can't be coincidence." He reached for something on the nightstand—a worn photograph. "I've been looking for my sister for fifteen years. She was taken from us when she was six years old."
He handed me the photo. It showed a small girl with dark hair and familiar eyes—my eyes.
"Laurie," he said softly. "Your real name is Laurel Willis."
Tears welled in my eyes as memories surfaced—a woman singing lullabies, a man lifting me onto his shoulders, a house that smelled like cookies.
"Lane?" I whispered, recognition dawning. "You're my big brother?"
He nodded, tears in his eyes too. "I never thought I'd find you."
I reached for him, and he gathered me into his arms. We clung to each other, both crying as fifteen years of separation dissolved.
"I remembered the scar on your knee," he said finally, pulling back to look at me. "From when you fell off your bike."
"And I remember you teaching me how to skip stones," I added, the memory suddenly vivid.
We talked for hours as I recovered, Lane telling me about his search, how he'd never given up hope of finding me.
---
As my strength returned over the next few days, I told Lane everything—about the Carpenters, about Miles, about Blakely.
"She drugged me," I said, my voice breaking as I described what happened in the basement. "Our baby died because of her."
Lane's face darkened with rage. "I'll kill him."
"No." I grabbed his arm. "That won't bring my child back."
He calmed, but I could see the fury still simmering beneath the surface. "What do you want to do?"
"I don't know," I admitted. "I just know I can't go back there."
"You don't have to." Lane squeezed my hand. "I've built a good life, Laurie. A company that's doing well. You can come with me. Start fresh."
I looked around the cabin—small but warm, nothing like the cold mansion I'd called home for so long.
"They think I'm dead," I said slowly, an idea forming. "Maybe that's best."
Lane studied me carefully. "Are you sure?"
I nodded, feeling something stir within me—not quite strength yet, but perhaps its beginning.
"I'm sure," I said. "Laurel Willis died in that river."
And as I spoke those words, I wondered who would rise in her place.
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