The card in Mother Catherine’s hand was smaller than a prayer card, but it hit harder than a confession.
Her name was written at the top.
CHECK THE FILES.
For one long second, she could only stare at it. The hallway outside the office stayed silent, the kind of quiet that made every old floorboard, every radiator pipe, every ticking second feel loud enough to betray you.
Then the truth of it landed in her chest.
Someone had known this was coming.
Not just the pregnancy. Not just Grace. All of it.
Mother Catherine looked down at the medical tape again, then at the folded card, then toward the door Grace had just closed behind her.
And for the first time since the first impossible pregnancy, she stopped asking, How can this happen?
The office ledger was still open on the desk, the neat columns of donations and supply orders suddenly looking less like routine convent business and more like a record of something hidden in plain sight. Mother Catherine crossed the room and pulled the file drawer open so hard it stuck for a second.
Inside were folders she had seen a hundred times before.
Food orders. Chapel repairs. Insurance papers.
And one thick tan folder she did not remember putting there.
It had no label on the outside.
Her fingers trembled as she opened it.
At the top was Sister Grace’s name.
Below it were dates.
Not prayer dates. Not medical checkups she had been told about.
Dates that lined up with the three pregnancies.
Each page had a doctor’s note attached. Each note was signed by Dr. Palmer.
Mother Catherine felt the blood drain from her face.
There were lab results, prescription logs, and typed instructions she had never seen before. One page had been stamped twice and then initialed in the margin. Another had been clipped to a handwritten note that said, Do not discuss around the sisters.
Her throat tightened.
She heard Grace’s voice in her head from moments earlier, calm and almost serene.
The same things started happening.
The nausea. The dizziness.
Mother Catherine turned another page.
There it was again. Dates. Medication. A follow-up appointment. A line about hormone levels.
And then a remark in a different hand.
I told her it was vitamin support.
Mother Catherine stood very still.
That was not Dr. Palmer’s handwriting.
She looked closer.
The note had been signed by Sister Eleanor, the former Mother Superior who had retired two years earlier and now lived in a small cottage on the edge of town.
Suddenly, the convent did not feel like a place of prayer anymore.
It felt like a place built on layers of secrets so old they had started to look like stone.
Mother Catherine sat down slowly, the folder open in her lap. She remembered every visit from Dr. Palmer now with painful clarity. The clipboard at the door. The gentle smile. The way he had always said Grace was “healthy enough” and “resting fine” and “nothing to worry about.”
She remembered trusting him because he wore a white coat and spoke softly.
She remembered Sister Eleanor insisting some things were better handled privately.
And now she understood why the whole convent had gone so quiet every time Grace needed an appointment.
Because they had all been helping hide something.
Or someone had.
Mother Catherine read until the words blurred.
The first pregnancy was listed as an “anomaly.”
The second was marked as “monitored successfully.”
The third had a note beside it that made her stomach twist.
Transfer completed.
Transfer.
Not miracle.
Not blessing.
Transfer.
She looked up so fast the chair scraped the floor.
A knock came at the office door.
Three soft taps.
Mother Catherine shut the folder before she could think twice.
Grace stepped inside carrying the baby on her hip and the toddler at her side. Her face was still calm, but now Catherine noticed something else under the calm. Tension. Not fear exactly. Something closer to resignation.
“You found the folder,” Grace said quietly.
It was not a question.
Mother Catherine could only stare at her.
Grace adjusted the baby against her shoulder and looked at the desk, then at the card still in Catherine’s hand.
“Who gave you that?” Catherine asked.
Grace almost smiled, but not with happiness.
“I left it where you’d find it,” she said.
The words took a moment to land.
Mother Catherine blinked.
“You did what?”
Grace’s jaw tightened once, just enough to show she was tired of carrying this alone.
“I didn’t know how else to make you look,” she said. “You kept calling it a blessing. Dr. Palmer kept calling it unusual. Sister Eleanor kept calling it necessary. Nobody wanted to say what it really was.”
Mother Catherine rose from the chair so slowly it felt like standing up inside a storm.
“What is it, Grace?”
Grace finally looked at her directly.
“A cover-up,” she said. “At first I thought it was just secrecy. Then I thought maybe it was for the convent. Then I realized it was for him.”
The baby stirred against her shoulder. The little boy clung to her habit and stared at Mother Catherine with wide, uncertain eyes.
Grace lowered her voice.
“Dr. Palmer has been using this place for years. Not just for me. For records. For procedures. For women who never wanted anyone else asking questions. He told us it was all aboveboard. He told us the paperwork stayed locked away for everyone’s protection.”
Mother Catherine could feel her pulse in her temples now.
“Who is us?”
Grace looked at the closed folder on the desk.
“You, too,” she said, and there was no cruelty in it. Just fact. “You signed the first authorization. You just never read the full packet.”
The room went still.
That hit harder than the pregnancy itself.
Mother Catherine’s mouth opened, then closed again.
She thought of the stacks of forms she had signed while answering phone calls, while settling arguments, while keeping the convent alive with donations and repairs and borrowed time. She thought of all the places she had trusted because she had been too busy to be suspicious.
Grace saw the realization hit and looked away.
“The first time, I didn’t understand what they were doing,” she said. “I thought it was some kind of medical help. The second time, I knew enough to be afraid. By the third, I knew enough to leave that card on the floor.”
Mother Catherine’s hands began to shake again.
“Why didn’t you tell me?”
Grace let out a breath that sounded almost like a laugh, except there was no humor in it.
“Because every time I tried, someone told me to trust the process,” she said. “Because the sisters looked at me like I was carrying hope itself. Because when a place like this wants a miracle, it stops asking who pays for it.”
The words struck like a slap because they were true.
Not all at once. Slowly. Ugly and undeniable.
Mother Catherine sat back down, but this time not because she was weak. Because she needed the chair under her before her legs gave out.
Outside, a car door slammed in the courtyard.
Both women froze.
Then came footsteps. Measured. Familiar.
Dr. Palmer had arrived.
Grace’s face changed first. Not to fear. To anger.
“He’s too late,” she whispered.
Mother Catherine turned toward the office window and saw him crossing the gravel path with his leather bag in one hand, looking exactly like the kind of man everyone trusted because he looked harmless.
She hated how ordinary he seemed.
He knocked once and opened the outer door before anyone answered, as if he still belonged here.
Mother Catherine stood.
Grace set the baby in the crook of one arm and took one step forward.
The toddler tightened his grip on her habit.
When Dr. Palmer entered the office, his smile faltered the moment he saw the folder open on the desk.
“Mother Catherine,” he said, too smoothly. “There’s been some confusion. I was just coming to confirm the pregnancy.”
Grace laughed once under her breath.
It was a small sound, but it changed the room.
“Confirm it?” she said. “You already know more about that baby than I do.”
Dr. Palmer’s eyes flicked to the card in Catherine’s hand.
That tiny movement told her everything.
He was afraid.
Not of scandal.
Of exposure.
Mother Catherine felt something in her chest go hard and cold.
She picked up the folder, held it to her chest, and said, “You’re going to explain every page in this file. Right now.”
Dr. Palmer’s smile disappeared.
For the first time, he looked like what he was.
Not a healer.
Not a helper.
A man who had been using holy silence as cover.
And then Grace reached into the baby blanket, pulled out a second folded paper Mother Catherine had not noticed before, and placed it on the desk.
It was an ultrasound printout.
Fresh.
Dated yesterday.
Mother Catherine looked down at it, expecting to see one heartbeat.
Instead, there were two.
And beside the second one, in the corner of the report, was a handwritten note in Dr. Palmer’s own script.
Do not tell Mother Catherine yet.
Mother Catherine lifted her eyes slowly.
This time, there was no confusion left in her face.
Only dread.
Because she knew, with sick certainty, that whatever had been happening in this convent was not over.
It had only just reached her door.