Her Parents Kicked Her Out for Getting Pregnant at 19, But 10 Years Later She Came Back With Her Son, and One Sentence Destroyed the Entire Family — Part 2

Frank could not look away from the photograph.

Diane wept quietly.

“Yes, sweetheart,” Hannah said, kneeling in front of Owen. “His name was Caleb Morris. And yes, he was your father.”

Owen swallowed.

“Did he know about me?”

Hannah closed her eyes for a moment.

“No. He disappeared before I could tell him.”

Frank clutched the back of a chair.

“Caleb Morris…”

His voice sounded as though he were speaking the name of someone already dead.

“You knew him,” Hannah said.

“He was an intern at the plant,” Frank murmured. “Brilliant kid. Stubborn as hell.”

Diane looked at her husband.

“Why did you never talk about him?”

Frank slowly shook his head.

“Because after that week… everything got cloudy.”

Hannah pulled out the USB drive.

“He gave me this before he disappeared.”

Frank stepped back as if the drive might burn him.

“Don’t plug that in.”

“Why?”

He didn’t answer.

But Hannah saw something in his eyes.

It wasn’t anger.

It was fear.

“Dad, I spent ten years believing you hated me because I got pregnant. I thought you chose your pride over your daughter. But now I can see there’s something you know.”

Frank sank into a chair.

“I don’t know if I know it… or if they made me forget it.”

Diane shivered.

“What are you talking about?”

Frank covered his face with his hands.

He explained that ten years earlier, workers had accused the Silver Creek Chemical Plant of dumping waste into the river.

Several townspeople had become sick.

Children with skin conditions.

Women losing pregnancies.

Elderly people developing cancer.

But no official report ever moved forward.

The owner, Victor Hayes, paid off doctors, lawyers, police officers, and political campaigns.

“Caleb started asking questions,” Frank said. “He checked reports, collected samples, recorded conversations. One night, he came to me. He said he needed help.”

Hannah tightened her grip around the USB drive.

“And did you help him?”

Frank began to cry.

“I think I did.”

The words split the room open.

Owen stood silently, his fists clenched.

“What do you mean, you think?” Hannah asked.

Frank struggled to breathe.

He said he remembered seeing Caleb that night.

He remembered a folder.

Some maps.

A sharp chemical smell.

After that, nothing.

He only remembered waking up in his pickup on a dirt road, mud on his shoes and dried blood on his sleeve.

“Whose blood?” Diane whispered.

Frank lowered his gaze.

“It wasn’t mine.”

Hannah went cold.

“Did you kill him?”

Frank lifted his head, shattered.

“I don’t know.”

Diane let out a broken sob.

Owen moved closer to Hannah.

At that exact moment, the landline rang.

All four of them turned toward it.

Nobody used that phone anymore.

It rang again.

Frank slowly got up.

“Don’t answer it,” Hannah ordered.

But he picked it up.

His face changed within seconds.

The voice on the other end was male, calm, and old.

Frank barely managed to speak.

“How did you know she was here?”

Then he listened.

And hung up.

“What did they say?” Hannah asked.

Frank looked at Owen.

“They said Caleb should have stayed buried.”

Diane screamed.

Hannah grabbed Owen’s backpack.

“We’re leaving.”

“Where?” Frank asked.

“To someone who doesn’t owe Hayes any favors.”

They left in the light rain.

Hannah drove to Syracuse, where her college friend Rebecca Lane, an independent journalist, lived.

Rebecca already knew part of the story.

In fact, she had been the one to warn Hannah not to hand the USB drive to just any police officer.

“In this country, honey, there are good cops, and then there are cops who belong to somebody,” she had told her.

When they arrived, Rebecca opened the door with her laptop already running.

“I copied your files,” she said. “But there’s one folder I couldn’t open.”

Frank looked at the screen.

The folder was labeled: LIGHTOFPORT.

His face turned pale.

“That name…”

Rebecca looked at him.

“Does it mean something to you?”

Frank moved closer as though a memory were pulling him forward.

“It was an old warehouse near the bus terminal. We used to store things there when we worked double shifts.”

Hannah felt the truth moving toward them like a storm.

That same night, three of them went there: Rebecca, Hannah, and Frank.

Diane stayed with Owen, even though he begged to come.

“This is my story too,” the boy said.

Hannah touched his hair.

“That’s exactly why I’m coming back alive to tell it to you.”

The old terminal was almost abandoned.

A security guard who recognized Frank let them in after hearing two sentences and seeing Caleb’s photograph.

“I never thought this would come out,” the man muttered.

Inside a warehouse with rusted doors, they found locker 214.

Frank cut through the lock with pliers.

Inside was a cardboard box.

Old newspapers.

A yellow hard hat.

A handkerchief stained with dark marks.

And beneath a false bottom, another USB drive.

Black.

Unmarked.

Rebecca picked it up with gloves.

But before they could leave, a voice stopped them.

“What a touching family reunion.”

Continue to Part 3 Part 2 of 3

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *